Part of Phnom Phen's Grand Palace. Lovely place to visit and the King spends some time here. One of the buildings has a tiled silver floor but unfortunately it's covered over. Most of the visible tiles were loose but we couldn't fit one in the rucksack.
This is a boulevard in Kampot. Lovely town but in need of TLC.
Ref the flooding in the earlier photo's above, this is the rain that caused it. What this guy is doing with the brush is anybodys guess.
Colin and Charmaine a lovely Kiwi couple we met in Kampot. Hopefully we'll see them again in New Zealand.
Hammocks are everywhere. It's not easy to take pictures of them as they usually have somebody sleeping in them but you see them in the strangest places. This was in Utopia! It's just outside Kampot if you're looking for it!
See what we mean about Hammocks. This is in the middle of the pavement in Phnom Phen.
Alison enjoying a cocktail in Raffles in Phnom Phen. We went there to use the internet but the bobbing rastards wanted $10's an hour. It's free everywhere else. Still the cocktails were good. Check out the Elephant shaped glass.
Another thing we did in Phnom Phen, which unfortunately we don't have a photo of, was to BBQ our own food at the table. It's a bit like that witches hat thing you have when you go skiing but you have to contend with a wobbly table, boiling oil and glowing charcoal. We got through it without major injury but Alison was covered in fat and red wine. They say Cambodia and particulary Phnom Phen is a bit like the wild west, we haven't experienced this but there was a little set to outside the BBQ restaurant following a motorcycle collision. It was more "hand bags at dawn" than AK47s.
How did this photo get here. Al, what have you been doing. I told you only write the blog after a few beers!
Kin hell, another duplicated photo. Alison is blaming the electricity supply. Compulsary electric shock everytime you plug in. In fairness to her it is a bit distracting.
Garry trying to wash the "slippery as snot" bat pooh off his "no traction control" sandals.
These two little guys - 7 and 14 years old were our guides through the caves. They made us torches from candle wax and sticks. Great chaps.
Our tuk tuk driver in front of a still in a pepper farm. The farmer makes rice wine here using heat from methane made from cow and pig pooh. He shovels the pooh into a hole in the ground and then pipes off the gas to burners under the still. Amazingly, he doesn't pay tax on his alcohol or gas production. Our kind of recycling!
This what you would call a fully loaded tuk tuk - a 100cc motorbike towing a trailer with two people and about a tonne of goods. Nothing is ever overloaded over here! You see some heroic efforts on motorbikes. We'll try and get a picture of 5 up for you.
A Cambodian fashion that is apparently absolutely normal according to David, our favourite tuk tuk driver.
This was funny - a bunch of locals on the beach in Sihanoukville. The game was to put on a pair of undies, run to the other end and back, then switch them to your team player, who would do the same. Nobody could stop laughing, including us. (see blue undies - far left).
The russians are building an internet cafe inside this aeroplane.
A fishing village, just outside Sihanoukville.
You can even wear them on a motorbike, whilst carrying small children - kevlar lined?
Short trouser jim jams - good in the heat.
More rain - on the beach this time.
Jim jams in the rain - the next step will be waterproof ones!
Pretty cool riding your motorbike, wearing your pjs and carrying an umbrella. Not an unusual sight.
Time for a few beers now, off to Ankor Wat and other cultural sites in the next few days.
Ciao
Alison and Garry
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