Get ready, set, go.. Cambodia is about to mind f–k you! Our Journey began in Siem Reap not the capital of Cambodia but still a thriving city due to its tremendous tourist appeal and all thanks to the great Angkor Wat temples! For those of you who don’t know Angkor is the biggest temple in a of Asia and is one of the seven wonders of the world! Its huge and spectacularly beautiful . Its almost like a small city of temples, each one different in its own way.
The Journey There…
The journey to Cambodia from laos was interesting to say the least, firstly we had purchased some sketchy bus ticket to take us to the the border but instead of dropping us off at the border the driver of the minibus left us at this random road stop where we were told to wait for someone to get us, who? we didn’t know! when ? they never said! He basically kicked us out of the car and said “wait here they’ll find you!” After about 2 1/2 hours we had given up finally some man came along and said ” I heard some tourists got abandoned on the side of the road ! That must be you! lol . Come with me ill take you to the border” How he knew we were there is a mystery but we were very grateful he found us! He stuffed us into an already full car and we made our way to the border.
So we survived and made it to the border, the next mission was crossing the actal border. From Laos to Cambodia you must cross by foot and you must, i repeat must have lots of cash to cross cause it aint cheap! you pay to leave Laos, you pay to physically cross the border, you pay to get a medical exam ( they take your fever), you pay for you visa and then you pay to be in cambodia! Alex and I like the geniuses we had no money on us whatsoever, we were screwed, thankfully my very intelligent and generous co travelers Jeanette and Tom saved the day came to the rescue and bailed us out!
Border check! Now we just have t get to SiempReap, the bus ride was a long a grueling 15 hours, with a changeover 3/4 of the way thru. The second bus we took was jam packed with people everywhere sitting on the floor and doubling and tripling up in chairs, we all got smushed into the last row. It was like sitting on a cement block, hard like a rock and you absolutely could not recline not to mention the ride was so bumpy that I felt like a boble head on crack !
Siem Reap…
Siem Reap became the kind of adventure that was exciting and filled with unexpected problems!
Problemo numero uno, Alexandre has become bed ridden due to an insatiable cold consisting of flaming hot fever, cold sweats , coughing maybe some stuffiness and the 24 hour a day desire to sleep! So yeah day one in Siem Reap is off to a great start! I wake that same morning feeling about 90% except for this increasing redness in my left eye. No problem, I go to the pharmacy I grab some drops and some antibiotics! Done, Tom Jeanette and I decide to soldier on without Alex, so we left him behind with a handful of codeine and some valium that jeanett bought in vietnam (well i hope it was valium)and forged onwards to the mystical temples. The day went relatively smoothly from there on. Sighseeing, wondering , loosing Tom and the Tuk Tuk driver for 2 hours they miraculously finding each over at the end of the day! Going to see one last temple and then having torrential downfall that forces you to hide in a shelter for the fear that your SLR will be permanently f—ed. You know the usual. We finally decided to make a run for it. Get in the monkey swarmed Tuk Tuk and ride out the storm . We get home wet soggy ,cold but a little more knowledgeable!
By day 2 Alex is still out of commission I’m scared hell have to go the hospital because his fever won’t break but he’s tough and were both a little stupid so we try to self medicate! Being the good fiancé I am I abandon him again for the Temple ( I did pay 40$ for a three day pass, and were on a budget). With my two Aussie companions by my side we return to the faithful temples for another day of sightseeing! At this point my eye is clearly infected and its causing me some pain. Im in complete denial that I most definitely have pink eye, even though my eyeball is the color of crimson and so swollen I can barely see through it, not to mention blurred vision to top it off. Regardless of my injuries we set out and I put some sunglasses on ( wich eventually i will never remove ) and go about our day. Today we go see the biggest temple of the all, the actual “Angkor Wat”. We tried to hold off for Alex but he didn’t seem to be recovering. So we got scammed into some shitty fake tour, got some lame explanation and a half ass visit. As we were leaving with our shoulders shrugged and this ooh of confusion over our faces the guard quizzed us on our visit.The guard was appalled that we had missed so much of history so he decided to give the proper tour to us in Cambodian and half slang vietnamese. Jeanette speaks fluent vietnamese and she still couldn’t understand him, it was torture. Tom loved every minute but I was hungry ,in pain and plain old bored, anyone who knows me knows not to mess with me when I’m hungry!!!!!!!!!So after three hours of looking at beautiful and amazing wall carvings that I couldn’t care less about, I said “I quit your either with me or against me, I have to get out here and eat a pork bun very badly, I might hurt someone otherwise!” So we left.
As we left however we saw the coolest thing happening in the grass, hordes of kids were running towards this small body of water. I was told that after it rains and the water drops a little the fishes all get left on the grass, so all the kids try to grab what they can and bring home some grub for mom and dad! I thought it was pretty cool that right here in the middle of all these ancient relics and tourists kids were just being kids and the chaos was amazing to whatch.
We skipped touring the next day and just chilled , waiting for Alex to recover. My pink eye which was now officially diagnosed thanks to Web MD was getting worse and worse, it wasn’t so much the oozing that got to me because the puss seemed pretty under control it was the massive swelling and quasi-moto style I was rocking. Then to top it off when i shut my “good” eye I could barely see out the bad one. I thought for sure I had done some permanent damage. I obsessed compulsively about it and only wore sunglasses ( yah even at night) i becomes one of the cool people that wear them in clubs and where ever we went and maybe a home made burka on one special occasion!
Finally the next day Alex felt a little better and looked 15 pounds lighter, so for out last day at the temples the four of us were together. We toured , we took lots and lots and lots of photos and we all got to experience the last day together. Lucky for Alex his cold wasn’t the problem anymore, on the tuk tuk ride home he had a visit from a little friend. Being the lucky man he is Alex somehow managed to get bitten by a mysterious creature on his elbow. It left what looked a huge oven burn about 6-8 inches long and 4 inches wide across his elbow. It was so strange. BUt it didn’t end there as the days went by the skin began to deteriorate but almost in a flesh eating manner. The scab soon became wet and green and flaky and just generally creepy looking. Poor Alex didn’t know what to do lucky for him I started a fight that very night which turned into huge blowout, or as J likes to say “a domestic”. So in the morning he took himself to the Cambodian hospital all alone (so i would feel really bad) and got diagnosed with a spider bite. The doctor gave him some pills and sent him home saying that he should be fine, but in the unlikely case it doesn’t heal and it starts to spread rapidly please come back and well “fix it” (if you know what the means). So here we are the lovely couple , me with insatiable pink eye , and Alex with a potentially life threading skin eating disease! What a pair!!!
There was one day however in Siem reap that was no laughing matter. We went to see the war museum. I did not take any pictures because it did not seem appropriate at the the time. The museum was not that impressive to see at first it just kind of get like an old junk yard. Other then the plexi case of skulls and bones and clothes that greeted you out front it didn’t look like much. Just a lot of old war guns, bombs, gun and some tanks and what not.We had seen some of this type of stuff already along the way . However what really made this special was the young man who guided the tour. He was a soldier and survivor of the war. And he gave us a personal account and very detailed story about what happened to him and his friends. He showed us the guns he used and the bombs that he built. He showed us how he the lost his finger and the shrapnel that was left inside his face and chest. He showed us pictures of the people he had lost . The most touching moment was when he started to cry . We were standing by a wall of photos of which he did not have the strength to look at. Soldiers that were deformed or had lost limbs, people who had died and suffered. These people were his friends and in some cases his family and it was too hard for him to look at the pictures. He began to tell us how lucky we were to be alive and healthy and to have our family, to have a home and money to travel , to be able to live a normal lives free from all that violence and loss. He just kept saying how lucky we are to have a family to be able to make our family grow, to have money to eat and clothe ourselves. To have somewhere to sleep .You couldn’t help but cry and think how right he was. The tour only lasted about 25 minutes but it was the best 25 minuted I spent in Siem Reap. I use made you think about how cagy our priorities have begun, whats really important to us. Im not saying it bad to think about superficial things, were lucky we have the luxury to worry about such banalities, but just keep in mind that we are so blessed in so many ways. Just to be Canadian and live in such an amazing country, just to have ruff over your head and pod to eat! For a lot of people he things that we take for granted on day to basis are the things they cherish and dream of most. So the next time I start to worry about how i ned to lose five pounds or that I can’t afford the new Christian Louboutains, ill remember that day in Cambodia and things won’t seem that bad.