Wednesday, June 9, 2010
Strange times in Cambodia
It's been a weird time for us since our last post, which was quite a while ago. We have been feeling a bit homesick, a bit tired of restaurants, tired of visiting tourist sites, tired of the heat, tired of touts and beggars, tired of Asia -- tired of travelling, perhaps? We both have had occasional dreams about home. Now they are no longer the job nightmares of the first few months. Instead we both dreamt about going home for the weekend. That's impossible, of course, but there we were, dreaming about seeing family and friends for a few days before resuming our Asian adventure. Weird, huh? Perhaps the negativity at the start of this post can be attributed to our visit to the Killing Fields memorial outside Phnom Penh, Cambodia, and the Genocide Memorial at the main Khmer Rouge torture prison. But how did we get here? In our last post, we were in Ubud headed for 10 days of fun in the Gili islands. The Gilis are three specks on a map and we stayed on Gili Meno, the quiet middle one, which is why we chose it for our rest break. We stayed at the Sunset Gecko and it lived up to its name and our expectations. We chose it for the sunsets and stayed because of the owner's environmental attitude. The resort makes its own biodegradable soap, recycles its grey water in the gardens and spearheaded a composting program for the whole island. Gili Meno is surrounded by coral reefs and is criss-crossed with dirt trails. There's also a trail that encircles the island which took us about 90 minutes to walk. The only other choice of transport besides a bicycle is a horse-drawn cart, which we used one evening to cross to the other side of the island for pizza after dark. Bob tried snorkelling because the coral was so easy to reach straight out from our beach. It took him a while to adjust to the moustache leak, the sound of his own breath and the creepy feeling of hanging over the deep ocean past the coral wall. He went out longer every day, saw thousands of fish and followed a sea turtle, though if he'd known that first day that that would be his only turtle he would have watched it for a lot longer. Karen got to enjoy some of the coral sites when we took a two-hour glass-bottom boat tour. For someone who can't swim and doesn't like boats, she sure has been in a lot of them this year. We read a lot of books while on Gili Meno, mostly flaked out on the beach-side platforms that had huge pillows, a low table and a thatched roof to keep off the afternoon sun. At day's end, they were great places to lean back with a beer and a fresh tuna dinner while watching the sun set over Gili Trawangan and the more distant volcanic mountains of Bali, which dominate the skyline. Ten idyllic days later we bounced back to Ubud and pushed ourselves through a horrific flight combination that included a night in a Kuala Lumpur airport lounge (seats with armrests) listening to a three-year-old shriek for hours on end. But we arrived in one piece in Siem Reap, Cambodia, home of the country's one major (non-genocidal) tourist site -- Angkor Wat. We visited a healthy sampling of the associated Buddhist and Hindu temples which are jaw-droppingly amazing, especially the trees busting through the walls at Ta Prohm and the giant heads and the elephant wall at Angkor Thom. However, after three days in the 35-degree heat we grew temple-tired, even though they all have unique features and designs. So we moved on, taking one of the few six-hour bus rides of our tour. Now we've been in Phnom Penh for three days and it feels like it's been 10. At least we caught Games 4 and 5 of the Stanley Cup finals. Strange scenario: drinking 50-cent draught, the only two people watching the game on a giant screen in an Irish sports bar in Phnom Penh. There's some fine French dining here, but the underlying odour of Cambodia is chasing us away. It smells something like a mix of fish sauce (which they make by letting it rot), composting household garbage and a soupcon of human waste. Which brings us back to our first point. No more temples, no more Asia. Okay, maybe some architecture and scenery in Vietnam, but one more country and then we quit. We just booked our flights out of Hanoi on July 30. That's seven long weeks away and yet it already feels like this tour is almost over. Nine months on the road sure does strange things to your sense of time.
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5 comments:
Oh Bob and Karen...we miss you too so much and cannot wait to see you again. Your latest pics are amazing!Enjoy Vietnam-I hear its one of the most beautiful countries,and don't visit anymore depressing spots.
Love Lisa
B&K ... we miss you terribly too. Those dreams you're having ... sure sounds like your mind is telling you to head on home. And like Lisa said, stop visiting depressing sites. Can't wait to see you guys again !!!!
Lots of love, Angie.
Home will always be here - and and your friends and family. Asia, on the other hand, you may not get to again for eons...enjoy your time there. It sounds like you're having an amazing experience and getting to see such great sights.
9 months already! Man, apparently times flys for us working saps too!
PS - game 6...2-2 tied in 15 minutes into the 2nd period.
Just seven more weeks. You can do it! That which doesn't kill you... Love your pictures. Sunset Gecho reminds Dad of Holbosh. Glad I wasn't at Gili Meno to see Bob swimming out farther every day! Savor Vietnam. You'll never get tired of travelling. Love Mum
The not so great can make the great even greater. Contrast!
Enjoy your last bit to the fullest. We'll be here when you get home. Actually, we might be on vacation or just getting back.
Great pictures!
Love Jen, Scott and Cal
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