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IMG_0852 by ryansigg
IMG_0852 a photo by ryansigg on Flickr.

Just one of many wonderful hotel signs in Cambodia…

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Kompong Cham, Kratie, and weeee’re ouutttaaa heeere

Kompong Cham is a town that nobody visits. Which is kind of sad, because it’s lovely, but also nice…the town is mercifully left alone and it continues on with its normal non-touristy business.

The big attraction in KC is the bamboo bridge.Crossing the bamboo bridge Locals build it every year by hand after the wet season! You might wonder how much a bamboo bridge can fit. A few pedestirans? A couple crazy moto drivers? All this and more…like a van. When a vehicle drove past us on our bikes, we had to edge ourselves to the side of the bamboo, hovering and wavering over the Mekong River. Awesome!

The bridge leads to an island that has to be the friendliest place on Earth. Wait, is that Disney’s bullshit theme? Disney has nuthin’ on this town—the kids dashed out of their houses, big grins on their faces, shouting HELLO and waving wildly to us. It was amazing–we felt like  rock stars.

One thing we got used to in Cambodia was being on Cambodian bus time. If they tell you a bus takes 5 hours, it’s more like 7. So our 4/6 hour bus ride north lands us in Kratie, another small Mekong town but the big draw here was freshwater dolphins. The Irrawaddys are on the verge of extinction, sadly, so protection methods are in effect i.e. no more fishing on this particular stretch of the river. We took a small boat out and surprisingly saw quite a few (fast) glimpses of grey silver and heard water bursting out of blowholes. Our boat driver offered to take us up the river to a swimming hole for $3. Yes!

Swim break after dolphin watchingWe rented another moto that day, and man it is nice to have our own wheels. Moto-rin'.

We wonder about getting a scooter for Madison. Would drivers make way for us? Would it be too cold for most of the year? Things to consider…

After Kratie we took the quickest route to Phnom Pehn–“4” hours via mini-bus. I had visions of getting a good seat. HA! We got crammed in the back, natch, and started counting how many people they could fit in our built-for-11 van. 19! (We were a little sad we didn’t reach the 20 threshold. Just for record keeping’s sake.) As soon as Ryan and I piled in the locals started snickering at us (still not sure why, but we just smiled) and whispering “farang.” Sometimes we are hilarious and we don’t even try!

We were sad to leave Cambodia. It is truly a special country and I know this won’t be our last time here.Sunset over the Mekong

Next up, Vietnam!

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Of Duck Fetuses and Spider Asses

This is a post about food.

Cambodians, it is said, will eat anything (except dog, which they leave to the Vietnamese). Whether this is from the starvation years under the Khmer Rouge or simply a function of a traditional culture that has changed little over a thousand years… that seems up for debate.

Until our bus ride to Siem Reap, I hadn’t really seen this phenomenon in action. True, when you are a tourist, many times the food on offer at even the most “authentic” seeming restaurant/food stall is limited to your presumed palate. The countless offerings of “fried noodle or rice with [insert meat here]” were broken up with respites of amok (a coconut curry, distinct from but not unlike a Thai curry) lok lak (stir-fried beef with a lemon pepper sauce), a preserved lemon soup, and bor bor (a standard meal for Khmers, rice porridge with meat and fermented soybeans). But sometimes the really great stuff is in the most innocuous food stall or cart, and you’ll never find the good stuff unless you are willing to try the boring or bad.

Coconut rice and beans inside bamboo One wonderful bus stop snack is called krahon, and consists of a bamboo tube with a concoction of coconut milk, sticky rice and dried soybeans inside. Another delightful surprise was nehm; raw spiced river fish wrapped in edible leaves (mine was fresh and wonderful, but sadly at first Courtney didn’t get to try hers, a sad little banana-leaf-wrapped package that had mold on the inside. Er-er. But we went back and bought a bundle of them later). There are also small freshwater clams carried around on head-balanced baskets. These are everywhere, and were very tempting, but then I found out these little guys are just dried, and even Cambodian doctors are trying to get people to stop eating these due to worms and bacteria giving people food poisoning and diarrhea. Thanks, but we’ve already done that this trip.

Then there are the insects, which we yet hope to try.

IMG_0859 The idea of eating a bug almost seems like a novelty, something meant to intrigue kids and show up on “weird food” programs and reality shows. We thought these would be trotted out for the tourists, and indeed Courtney said she did see some crickets frying in that tourist mecca, Khao San Rd. But in Cambodia the closest we’ve come to these is passing through the town of Skuon on the way to Siem Reap. There they were among the market stalls at the bus rest stop, giant piles of crickets in baskets next to… big-ass spiders, the kind that most definitely had some “fur” on them when they were still crawling. I got excited; to me this was like breaking some sort of lock that was preventing me from being able to say “I will eat anything once”. I stood for a moment, fishing for some small bills in my pocket, as excited as a child (for example, one who’s about to eat a bug)…

But…

There was this smell. At first I thought it was like rotten vegetables. Then it reminded me of a diaper. A full one. I couldn’t do it. After I had backed away, I returned a few times, but always left in revulsion. The door would have to stay shut. I would not eat a shitty-smelling bug. Not today.

So what was I talking about? What I’m driving at (digressions aside), is that while Cambodia is not known for having as diverse of a culinary range as Thailand or Vietnam, so far I’ve just covered some of the street food. And the most ubiquitous street food, here in the eastern portion of the country, is the innocent-looking egg.

IMG_1425 In Kompong Cham and Kratie, the two Mekong river towns we’ve stayed in for the last few days, there are tons of food and beer stalls along the riverfront. They’re the perfect place to grab a cold beer and watch the sun go down, which is especially satisfying since the temperature is doing the same. These places usually have a blender to make you a fresh fruit shake and maybe a propane heater to make you some greasy noodles with a farm-fresh fried egg on top. But they always have a charcoal-heated pot of water with eggs in it. We were curious, do people really love hard-boiled eggs in this place? But we had also heard something else, something that would slam the doorway to “I’ll eat anything” forever. We needed to confirm it. After a couple sunset beers, we went up to the pot of eggs, peering at one that was partially cracked.

“Are those….?” we asked the woman who ran the place.

Jaaaa” she said, grinning happily, as she started to flap her hands like little wings, and make bird noises. “Cheep-cheep” she chirped, giggling sweetly.

The door sealed shut like a tomb. One more bit of personal myth-making obliterated.

Perhaps in Cambodia, cheep-cheep is what baby ducks say, or what they would say, if there were not still fetuses. The people who eat them first crack open the top of the egg and suck out the juice before consuming it (for long life!). I was not shocked by the fact that someone would eat duck fetus, but what I was, and still am shocked by is the popularity of the duck fetus. There are perhaps 30-40 food stalls across the street from our guesthouse, each with a large pot of these eggs and small groups of people enjoying a large plate of them (along with a vast and delicious-looking array of condiments, I might add).

The people of Cambodia have consistently impressed us; they are so warm and welcoming, quick with a smile and genuinely excited when you stumble through an attempt at a Khmer phrase. By the time I post this, we’ll be in Vietnam, but I know we’ll be missing it here, the people and the (surprisingly) the food.

But if they won’t eat anything (and I’m thinking dog here, because I can’t think of anything else) I’m not going to beat myself up for not trying everything.

Cricket? Update: Courtney and I did finally get to eat some bugs. After we returned to Phnom Penh in order to catch a bus to Saigon, I took a walk to the Central Market. I had to search forever, and if I hadn’t know that the word for spider was “ah-ping”, I would never have found them, right near the entrance to all the clothing stalls instead of among the freshly butchered chicken and fish, where I had been looking. Along with the assortment bag of bugs (including tiny frogs?), I had brought Courtney back a couple of gifts, including some freshly made banana sticky buns… in order to soften the blow. Courtney ate the leg of a spider, as did I, but she stopped at the crickets and the beetles. She definitely was less than happy to see the largest member of the group, the sausage-sized cockroach, but she held it for a sec and then looked on in horror as I forced my self to take a bite… The abdomen of a cockroach is probably not the best place to start, but I decided to not go for the head (“I can see it’s FACE”) or it’s legs (“who knows where those have been”). I quickly regretted my decision as my teeth tore out a chunk of its side; the inside of a cockroach, if you haven’t seen it before, is apparently filled with some sort of sponge-y looking thing, and for whatever reason this immediately triggered my gag reflex. I forced the sharp pieces down, but I’d already eaten enough roach for a lifetime.

P.S. One of the great things going on in this country is the self-sufficient NGO phenomenon. Many of them have started restaurants, boutiques, or various programs to free themselves from international aid and become a self-funding entity. One of our favorites: Smile, an NGO-run restaurant that serves more than your regular Khmer fare (in fact some really outstanding dishes that we saw no-where else). “The aim of the project is to teach orphans and vulnerable children a trade, thus giving them a chance on the job market while also providing them with a safe place to live and a community of peers.”

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Siem Reap and the temples of Angkor

Oh, hey there! While most of you are (or…were) piled under inches or feet of snow, we are becoming exhausted every day by the heat. Two extremes.  By simply walking for 10 minutes to downtown Siem Reap at 5 pm, Ryan’s entire back is drenched in sweat. I’m trying to avoid being a stinky farang, but daaaang. I curse what my friend Sam calls my English Rose skin, while Ryan gets all tan and more resistant to the sun.

I’m not complaining though (except to Ryan, when it gets really awful) because we are seeing some incredible stuff here! (more…)

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Kampot, Kep and Bokor National Park

Heading east from Shianoukville we arrived in Kampot after a two hour mini-bus ride. Kampot’s a small town with a winding river down the middle and lots of leftover French colonial architecture. There is a small alley where most of the guesthouses and small eateries exist and thrive off Westerners.

The real jewel of this area, though, is Kep. Ahhhh, Kep. We hired a tuk-tuk driver to take us the 25 miles or so there and although you eat a lot of dirt and inhale noxious  petrol fumes, it was well worth the scenery along the way. More chickens, cows, children, large wooden houses built on stilts with hammocks swinging underneath (instant shade), dried out rice fields, motos, students on bikes. Road side stops with cold drinks and Pepsi bottles full of gasoline, should your moto run out.  We even saw some water buffalo ducking in the various muddy ponds and streams. (more…)

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Cambodia pt 1.

When we finally hopped on a bus to cross the border, we were expecting lots of scamming and hassle. But since we had our e-visas in hand, we had already paid… The only thing we had to pay was for a medical “check-up” where we paid an official 30 baht to point a little temperature reader at our heads and get a form saying we weren’t sick. After that, besides the monopoly-style prices at the border it was pretty easy. We did encounter an Indian couple who had apparently fallen prey to one of those scams we heard about in Bangkok: you buy a ticket for someone to take you all the way from Bangkok to somewhere in Cambodia, and when you arrive at the border, they have you cross through and after that they disappear, leaving you less some cash and still needing a ride. Instead of getting on another bus Cambodia’s sole beach resort, Sihanoukville, we decided to stay for a day in Koh Kong, a formerly seedy border town that is apparently trying to get some eco-tourism going since they are located near a virtually uninhabited island, several waterfalls and an endangered mangrove forest. You wouldn’t be able to tell any of that, unfortunately, from the state of the town and the fact that the information. Cambodia is most definitely one of those place where all business is tied together; you will be taken to your taxi driver’s friend’s hotel, your hotels will sell bus tickets and tours from companies they’re tied into, so you only know what is available by how many different people you talk to.
Anyways… eventually we arrive in Sihanoukville, which is right now in full boom-town mode…. Everywhere you look there is a new hotel going up, and even in our guesthouse they are adding a whole new section of rooms. Just on the street we were staying on there must have been six places under construction.IMG_0549
Once we arrived at the main tourist beach, Serendipity, I wanted to leave. Like Koh Samet, there was nothing but restaurant after restaurant down 3km of the beach, filled with bronzed Europeans shooing away souvenir toting children and land-mine wounded amputees.

(more…)

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