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Showing posts with label 113 THAILAND (12). Show all posts
Showing posts with label 113 THAILAND (12). Show all posts

Wednesday, 18 October 2017

112-113 VIETNAM CAMBODIA (5) & THAILAND (12) - WITH TANIA – PART 2

A Journey Through Rural Wonders 



112 CAMBODIA (5) & 113 THAILAND (12) 
3 October – 17 October 2017
14 Days – 1,099 Km



MAP

PHOTOS - THAILAND (12)

PHOTOS - CAMBODIA (5)

PDF

VOICEOVER

FLIP-BOOK

 

Prelude

Some journeys announce themselves with clear plans and straight lines. This one did not. It began instead with a shared optimism that bordered on recklessness. Cambodia lay ahead — humid, unpredictable, bureaucratic, generous — followed by a narrow strip of Thailand that promised both an ending and a beginning.


 112 CAMBODIA
8 Octoober-15 October 2017
7 Days - 483Km

 

8 October – From Chau Doc to Phnom Penh, Cambodia – By Boat and Minivan

Our adventure kicked off with a surprise boat ride — the kind of surprise where you realise the ticket price was suspiciously cheap because the boat only takes you to the border. Not Phnom Penh. Not even close. But honestly, the ride was so lively and colourful that I forgave the logistical betrayal almost immediately. As we skimmed across the water, I admired houses perched on stilts like flamingos with mortgages, and fishing boats that zipped around us with the swagger of creatures who knew exactly what they were doing. Meanwhile, I clung to the seat like a Victorian aunt on her first rollercoaster.

Once we reached Phnom Penh, we dove straight into the bureaucratic circus of visa preparations. We photocopied flight tickets, bank statements, and possibly our own shadows. After surviving the paperwork gauntlet, we rewarded ourselves with the city’s lively chaos and the company of friends — Mat, Chop, and Teresa — who helped us rehydrate with cold beers. Laughter bubbled over like the foam in our glasses.

 

9 October – A Day in Phnom Penh

Bright and early, we marched to the Thai embassy, documents in hand, optimism in our hearts. The embassy, however, had other plans. It was closed. Completely closed. Their website, naturally, said nothing about this. A setback? Perhaps. A cosmic prank? Definitely.

But fate intervened in the form of the “Lucky Motorbike Shop,” which, despite sounding like a place that sells helmets shaped like cartoon animals, also functioned as a visa agent. They cheerfully offered to handle Tania’s application. A miracle! With time running short, this was a blessing wrapped in a motorbike-shaped disguise.

I opted for the 14‑day border visa, knowing I’d be back in Cambodia soon to meet my sister. Saving a page in my passport felt like a small but meaningful triumph — the kind of victory only travellers and stamp collectors truly understand.

 

10 October – A Ride to Prey Lovea – 86 km

We began the day with coffee and Mat’s company, which was as energising as the caffeine. Then we set off in search of hidden paths along the Mekong River. The ride started like a dream — peaceful, scenic, and full of curious locals who stared at us as if we were a travelling circus act.

Soon, the dream morphed into slapstick. The paths dissolved into potholes, mud, and surfaces so slippery our bikes behaved like newborn giraffes learning to walk. Every twist and turn revealed a new scene: people weaving mats, men herding cattle with enviable calm, monks in bright orange robes gliding through the chaos like spiritual traffic cones.

A second ferry carried us across the Bassac River, and by the time we crawled toward Prey Lovea around 17:00, we were ready to collapse. We briefly considered sleeping at a temple, but the siren call of a guesthouse with actual beds and walls was too strong. First, though, food — because in Cambodia, deliciousness is never far away.

 

11 October – Prey Lovea – Kampot – 127 km

“It’s Cambodia, baby!” Tania declared, her signature phrase slicing through the morning air as we pedalled out of Prey Lovea. The landscape was a patchwork of green rice fields and wooden carts overflowing with colourful odds and ends. The aromas of steamed pork buns drifted from roadside eateries, seducing us with their warm, doughy charm. Naturally, we surrendered and devoured a few.

We cycled through villages filled with chatter and laughter. Tiny kids rode their bicycles to school with the skill of circus performers, some giving lifts to friends with the casual confidence of seasoned Uber drivers. It was impossible not to smile.

 

12 October – Kampot – Sri Amble Temple – 127 km

Leaving Kampot felt like pedalling through a postcard. The river shimmered, fishing boats huddled together like gossiping aunties, and oyster farms bustled with activity. Children helped with the day’s work, monks collected alms, and we soaked it all in.

Dark clouds gathered as we reached Vinh Real, so we ducked into a cosy restaurant. The storm passed quickly — Cambodia’s weather has the emotional range of a theatre kid — and we continued toward the Thai border, still two days away.

At Sri Amble, ominous skies nudged us down a dusty path to a small community temple. We set up camp in the dining hall, which doubled as a dormitory for energetic children aged 8 to 13. Privacy? Absolutely not. Entertainment? Constant.

 

13 October – Sri Amble – Trapeang Rung – 80 km

Morning greeted us with a steaming bowl of noodle soup served in a corrugated‑iron eatery with a dirt floor. The locals watched us with fascination — women on bikes were rare, and we exchanged shy smiles as we attempted to slurp our soup with dignity. We failed, but gracefully.

The ride was short but sweaty, with gentle hills leading us into the Cardamom Mountains. Children fished with creative techniques, others tended buffalo or cattle, and the scenery made every uphill push worthwhile.

We reached Trapeang Rung for lunch, where the food was so good it felt like a reward from the universe. As rain clouds gathered, we surrendered to the lure of a brand‑new homestay. Moments later, the skies opened, unleashing a monsoon. Our timing was impeccable.

 

14 October – Trapeang Rung – Koh Kong – 63 km

Our final day in the hills began with another comforting bowl of noodle soup. The mountains tested us, but we pushed on. Halfway to Koh Kong, the heavens unleashed yet another dramatic downpour. We zipped up our rain jackets and pedalled through the Cardamom Mountains like determined, soggy warriors.

At the highest point, we flew downhill at 53 km/h, adrenaline pumping, water streaming across the road, potholes lurking like hidden traps. It was thrilling, ridiculous, and unforgettable.

We reached Koh Kong earlier than expected. Tania practically levitated with relief when she discovered her passport had arrived. With that weight lifted, we were ready to tackle the border crossing into Thailand — though the small matter of cycling 340 km to Pattaya in three days still loomed. But hey… the adventure was only getting started.

 

113 THAILAND (12)
THE FINAL STRETCH
3 Days – 358 km

 

 

15 October – Koh Kong to Trat (108Km)

Leaving Cambodia felt like closing a small, bright chapter. One last bowl of noodle soup, one last swirl of motorbikes and colour, and then across the river toward Thailand. The border crossing was almost comically quick — a stamp, a smile — and suddenly the world shifted. New country, same sun, same two bicycles carrying us forward.

We drifted through villages stitched along the coast, stopping for coffee where the sea breathed against the land. When the sky darkened, we slipped into our plastic raincoats and kept going, the drizzle soft rather than punishing. By the time we reached Trat, the clouds had parted, and the sunset felt like a welcome.

 

16 October – Trat to Klaeng (135km)

That morning, Tania surprised me: she wanted to ride alone. Not out of frustration or distance, but curiosity — a tug toward her own road. I felt a flicker of worry, then pride. We agreed to meet again in Pattaya, and I set off with a new kind of urgency. Amanda would arrive in two days, and the kilometres between us suddenly felt charged with purpose.

 

17 October – Klaeng to Pattaya (115)

 I rose before the heat, eager to move. The road was smooth, the wind gentle, and by midday I was rolling into Jomtien. The simple pleasures — dropping my panniers, washing the salt from my skin, watching laundry spin — felt like small celebrations.

Later, at the pub downstairs, a cold beer in hand, I let the anticipation of Amanda’s arrival settle into me. After days of motion, it felt good to sit still and wait.

 

Epilogue

Looking back, the days blur into a single rhythm: pedals turning, visa stamps drying, rain falling hard and stopping without apology. Cambodia gave generously — colour, chaos, kindness, soup bowls always a little too hot to eat politely — then let us go with barely a pause. Thailand welcomed us with efficiency, smoother roads, and the strange emotional weight of an approaching finish line.

My bicycle would roll again. It always does. But this stretch into Thailand marked a small, bright completion.