Now, if you’re a normal human being, you’d have laid low on
Wednesday evening owing to this ridiculous pre-determined schedule. But Heidi
and I are not normal human beings. Decidedly not. It was her final night in
Hong Kong, and Wednesday here makes for one of the biggest parties I know.
There are mid-week horse races at Happy Valley Racetrack,
just around the corner from my apartment, which attract a huge crowd of expats
looking to mark the hump day leading towards the coming weekend. And most
revelers continue the fun in nearby Wan Chai, where a slew of sidewalk-fronting
bars on Lockhart Road hand out free drinks to female imbibers as part of their
Ladies Night promotions.
It’s one of the easiest places I know to make new friends,
sing, dance and have an all-around amazing night. I look forward to it
literally every week. And there was no way I wasn’t showing it off to Heidi
during her all-too-brief romp in the Pearl of the Orient.
So, after the races, off we went to Wan Chai…
I’ll spare you the grimmest specifics, but it was not a particularly
pleasant wake-up when Heidi nudged me out of a sound sleep to say it was time
to leave. And, in the end, I didn’t actually get around to packing. Nope, when
4am arrived and it was time to hail that cab, I literally put my passport and
phone in my pocket, wrapped my Olympus around my neck, grabbed a pair of shades and headed off with the
clothes on my back. That was all I brought along in the way of luggage.
When we landed in Siem Reap, it was just 8:30am. Pich, the outgoing
tuk tuk driver sent by our Airbnb host, Sovong, to collect us at the airport, met us
as scheduled and drove us to our charming pad, the Old Khmer House. There
wasn’t much to unpack. I still only had the passport, the phone, the camera, the shades and
the clothes I was wearing. So I put the passport in a drawer and headed out
with the rest of my worldly possessions, to explore the famed ruins of Angkor. I
was incredibly excited for the next five days, and I wasn’t about to let
my unpreparedness muck up a trip I’d been looking forward to for some time.
Pich was waiting alongside his vehicle in front of the
house as we came out. “Do you guys need a driver for today?” he asked as he
touted his services. “I know all the temples and can take you around.”
Heidi and I exchanged a glance and wordlessly communicated
that this seemed like a logical, efficient way to maximize our time. Pich
immediately won us over with his friendliness, so off we went with him to the
gates of the ruins.
Angkor is, without doubt, one of the world’s great tourist
attractions. And the Cambodian government knows they stand to make a windfall
on admission fees. Imagine the two million visitors last year, who paid a
collective sixty million just to get in! So as you can probably guess, access
to the site is tightly controlled.
You have to make a choice right away. Do you want a one-day
pass to squeeze everything into a very short window? Twenty dollars. Or would
you prefer to spread the wealth over three days? If so, make it forty.
But then again, you could go for a seven-day pass. This is a
nifty alternative because, for only sixty bucks, you can enter on seven
different days within one month of purchase. A guard examines your laminated
ticket as you approach and, as long as it’s been under a month since your
purchase date and there are less than seven holes, he pokes a new one and in
you go. Once there are seven punches, it’s no longer valid, but you get to keep
the ticket as a souvenir.
Decisions… decisions…
Heidi was heading down to Bali on Sunday morning, continuing
her Asian extravaganza on the Island of the Gods before flying to Singapore for
the tail end of her trip. That meant Thursday, Friday and Saturday would be the
only days she had the ability to visit the ruins anyway. It would have been
silly for her to get anything other than the three-day pass. So, she bought
one.
But I was staying until Monday evening and had planned to
spend five full days exploring these treasures, including all day Sunday after
Heidi left and most of Monday before my own flight. Since there was no five-day
pass, I went for the seven-day option.
And then, we were in.
We left the exact order of our itinerary to Pich, who had
not overstated his expertise. He selected Ta Promh as our introduction to this
fabled collection of splendors. And what a hello it was.
Colloquially known as the Tomb Raider Temple, this overgrown
structure is the Angkor of your dreams. Picture huge trees that have flourished
amongst the stones, roots pushing them up in certain spots, and down in others,
yielding uneven floors and walkways. Imagine vines creeping through ancient
windows and moss encroached rocks, Mother Nature’s humidity and tenacity clearly
trumping mankind’s architectural prowess. In short, everything you envision a
jungle-set Southeast Asian temple to be.
They say that when the French arrived and decided to restore
Angkor to its former glory, they figured one temple should be left in the
rugged state of affairs in which they first encountered the whole lot of them. Well,
for whatever reason, Ta Promh won the contest. And it’s a sight to behold. From
certain angles, the whole thing looks on the verge of collapse. Still, from
others, it appears remarkably sturdy.
Now, there are over a thousand ruins spread throughout the
one hundred and fifty-five square miles that comprise the Angkor Archaeological
Park. And Pich quickly surmised that Heidi and I really did wish to see as many
of them as possible. It would be tedious and, indeed, very boring to simply
talk you through the next string of hours that followed, as we just started
chalking up temple visits. So, I’m not about to do it. Better leave you to
scroll your way through the photos and make up your mind to get on a plane and
visit for yourself. You won’t be disappointed.
That’s not to suggest, of course, that each site in and of
itself wasn’t worthwhile. Like snowflakes, no two were identical. Indeed, few
were even similar. And we must have seen close to twenty that day. Maybe more.
They ranged from immaculately restored structures to mounds of rubble. Yes,
there was Thomanon and Ta Keo, and a particularly vertigo-inducing heap of
rocks called Phimeanakas, and Wat Preah Ngok. And you could just tell, at each
of these gems, that Pich was examining our reactions to gauge the future stops
of our tour.
And a few really are worth more time to describe.
Possibly the highlight of the entire five-day stretch came
close to the beginning for me, with the Bayon, a temple within the ruined
ancient city of Angkor Thom, said to once have been home to over a million
people. It was a spot I’d return to on multiple occasions before flying out
again.
Enigmatic, mysterious, exotic, pure magic. Those are the
first words that come to mind as I sit here trying to recap our adventure. The
Bayon is most famous for the carved rock faces gazing out from its walls, which
the French noted as having furtive sourires Khmers, or Khmer smiles.
There was a light rain—somewhat akin to a mist, really—steadily
falling as we explored. It made the faces seem even more lifelike and mobile.
But it also turned the stone floors and staircases into Slip ‘N Slides. Still,
we thoroughly discovered every inch of the place, entirely wowed at its complexity,
scale and attention to detail.
Those faces are like two hundred Mona Lisas in mossy stone, their
immovable eyes somehow following you about as you navigate the rambling space, which
you share with camera-toting tourists and a perpetual gaggle of orange-clad
monks, everybody wandering about in muted astonishment at the marvel of it all.
Yes, perhaps more than even Angkor Wat itself—more on that later—the Bayon is
Angkor to me.
Scattered between ruins, there are a few restaurants and
little stalls selling souvenirs, bottled drinks, fruit juice and simple snacks.
By this point, we’d already stopped for our first Angkor beer, and I’d procured
a one-dollar fridge magnet and absorbed the electrolytes from a one-dollar coconut.
But soon we cruised past a humble banana stand, and Pich
could just sense we needed to stop. Not that we were hungry ourselves, you see.
These bananas are destined for a throng of local monkeys, who climb all over
visitors as they feast away. You pay a nominal sum—probably a dollar, but I
don’t exactly remember… everything seems to cost a dollar here—and all of a
sudden, you’re covered in new best friends.
The monkeys certainly didn’t add to any feeling of personal
cleanliness I had. By this point, I had flown, climbed, sweated, and now
practically rolled in the mud with wild animals. And all in the same clothes in
which I had woken up, in another country. What’s more, I didn’t even have
anything to change into once we would get back to our Airbnb. But it was all,
er, pretty wonderful?
The South Gate of Angkor Thom is perhaps the most iconic
spot in the park. I mean, it really feels straight out of a 1940s
adventure flick from Paramount, the kind of thing Ray Milland would stumble
upon during some scientific jungle expedition, only to espy a sarong-clad
Dorothy Lamour swimming in the adjacent pond with her pet tiger Ullah.
Pich proved himself adept not only at setting our course and
guiding us from place to place, but also at selecting the perfect vantage
points for photographs. At the picturesque gate, he seemed to know exactly
where to park his tuk tuk, and in what manner to position Heidi and
myself alongside it under the gate, and even how to crouch down with my camera to just the right level,
to ensure a dramatic perspective for the shot.
As it was nearing sunset, Pich next delivered us unto Angkor
Wat itself, the largest religious building in the world and, undoubtedly, the centerpiece
of Cambodia’s tourism industry. With a six hundred and fifty-foot-wide moat
that stretches nearly a mile in each direction, the complex is unfathomably
massive. And, at that hour, it was also unfathomably photogenic.
Somehow, it was also pretty empty, at least once we had
pervaded to the inner sanctum, standing just below the towering central gopura.
The soft evening light was falling on the timeworn stones, lending them an
almost honey-gold hue. Mix in the setting sun beyond and the vista was
impossibly lovely.
Heidi’s guidebook suggested several specific vantage points around
the sprawling compound to catch the best views, and we gamely made our way to
each one, to snap pictures and drink in the heavenly scene. I will never forget
it.
Words tend to fail with places like Angkor. Photographs can’t fully capture them either. Once seen, they really live on mostly in one's memory. The experience is made up of so many sensory details: the colors, the breeze, birds flying overhead, billowy clouds, the chatter of the crowds, so many monks. But this was a sensational experience, capping off our first day inside the park.
Words tend to fail with places like Angkor. Photographs can’t fully capture them either. Once seen, they really live on mostly in one's memory. The experience is made up of so many sensory details: the colors, the breeze, birds flying overhead, billowy clouds, the chatter of the crowds, so many monks. But this was a sensational experience, capping off our first day inside the park.
Heidi—gem of a friend that she is—loaned me the most unisex
of her tee shirts after we both cleaned up back at the Old Khmer House. And
then we headed out to Siem Reap’s hopping downtown, with a specific objective
to find a street market.
Our aim was not souvenir shopping yet, but something more
along practical lines. I wanted clothes and toiletries to get me through the
next few days, and soon I’d need a charger for both my phone and my camera,
though these requirements were slightly less pressing than a clean wardrobe, a toothbrush
and a deodorant stick.
We also wanted to procure “crazy pants” for our next day’s
temple explorations. You see, in Cambodia—and many other Southeast Asian
nations—temple access is restricted to those who are properly dressed. No bare
shoulders. No exposed midriffs. And pants must extend beyond the knees. Most
Westerners would instinctively wear shorts in a climate like this, to combat
the ubiquitous stickiness, but doing so would inevitably preclude your entry to
the main attractions. Jeans, which we had worn this first day, are remarkably
uncomfortable under the circumstances. But “crazy pants,” as we affectionately
call them… “Crazy pants” are a perfect compromise.
These bright-colored garments are breathable (to combat the temperature)
yet ankle length (to satisfy the entry requirements of the temples). What’s
more, they are universally covered in wiggy designs: elephants, squiggles,
geometric patterns. An exceedingly comfortable, instant fashion statement. You’ll
often see people donning them even once they’ve left the confines of the park.
Or bringing home multiple extras as presents for friends back home. Naturally,
Heidi and I each wanted a pair for the coming days.
Mission accomplished, it was time to focus on more important
endeavors, namely dinner. Heidi’s guidebook lists over forty restaurants in
town, ranging from humble street kiosks to fine dining experiences. It also
splits by cuisine, focusing on Western, Asian, and, specifically, Khmer styles.
Well, I probably don’t have to tell you that Heidi and I were both in agreement
that our inaugural Cambodian dinner should definitely be of the Khmer
variety.
We selected Chanrey Tree as our venue of choice, an elegant
riverside establishment with a mix of traditional and contemporary local
favorites. And it was an incredible meal—including a highlight of stuffed frog
in Khmer spices—savored in the restaurant’s graceful al fresco garden
with twinkling lights and a balmy breeze.
Our next day began early. About as early, in fact, as the
previous day had. But much more agreeably. You see, Pich recommended catching
the sunrise at Angkor Wat, so he picked us up outside the house in the pitch
black and whisked us straight into the Archaeological Park.
The sunrise that morning was a few minutes before six
o’clock, and Heidi and I staked out a prime spot alongside throngs of other
tourists whose guides had given them the exact same advice. It was crowded,
make no mistake, but it was entirely worthwhile.
A darkened sky slowly illuminated, sapphire substituting in for
what moments before had been black, underscored with a few dim clouds, as the
silhouette of the temple remained a hulking shadow in the foreground, backlit
and magnificent. Suddenly, as the scene continued to brighten, the lake was
perceptible, and Angkor’s famous towers were now reflected in the still waters,
while the sky changed to saffron.
Later still, and before our very eyes, the clouds became airborne spools of cotton
candy against a clear sky, but Angkor was still black against it all. Each
Angkorian gopura, every stately palm, even the clouds were now perfectly
mirrored in the motionless canvas of the pond. Pure unadulterated life goal material,
folks. Add sunrise at Angkor to your bucket list.
Many tourists, understandably, prefer to return to their
hotels for breakfast after this quotidian spectacle has run its course, to
return to the park later, which, incidentally, is also when the crowds
literally arrive by the busload. But, as we were here already and not
particularly hungry, Heidi and I asked Pich to jump right back into temple-going,
to explore in relative solitude. And, boy, did he oblige.
Through that old South Gate, we passed once more, to discover
the day’s treasures, in the dominion of dragon flies and lily pads and water
buffalo and stone elephants and detailed bas-reliefs and further sourires
Khmers. Preah Khan, East Mebon, Pre Rup, Ta Som. Along the lengthy wooden
causeway to Neak Pean, an otherworldly island temple in the midst of a lake.
The hours just dissipated, evaporated, vanished, and somehow
it was nearing dusk already. As fabled as Angkor Wat itself may be for its daybreaks,
it seems everybody in the know heads up to Phnom Bakheng for at least one
sunset during their Angkorian extravaganza. It’s a steep, arduous climb of
about twenty minutes, but we saw a sign offering a far easier (and memorable)
alternative: an elephant ride. So up we went.
You can actually see Angkor Wat from Bakheng, making for
very memorable viewing, as the sun dips in the evening azure and darkness once
again encroaches on the scene. The crowds came, the sun went, the crowds
disappeared almost immediately afterwards, yet we lingered, as the spot went
from empty to jam-packed to empty once more, and it was again time to conclude
the day’s exploration. We walked down and reunited with a waiting Pich, who has
got to be among the world’s most patient men. Then again, I guess it’s a
necessary character trait, common to all Angkor tuk tuk drivers.
Having sampled the glories of Khmer cuisine our first night,
we decided it would be fitting to indulge in a French feast for our second. And
the trusty guidebook steered us to Kanell, a five-minute walk across the river,
which we easily found on foot.
It seems there is an indoor dining room at Kanell, but we
opted for a gazebo in the lush tropical garden near the pool. And we spoiled
ourselves with our ordering, going all out on first-rate Gallic classics at
bargain prices, at least compared to what an equivalent meal would cost you in
Hong Kong or the Upper West Side.
The previous night, we had been plum wore out from the day’s
travel travails and made a beeline from Chanrey Tree to our Airbnb via tuk
tuk. But tonight, we were determined to get at least a little taste of Siem
Reap nightlife.
First things first. When we spied fried scorpions (among
other insects) at a roadside stall at the Night Market, we knew we just had to
sample one. Very chewy. Not bad tasting in any way. But I must have chomped on
it for a good three minutes before I could swallow. I prefer the crickets I
usually eat when I’m in Thailand. But it made for a fun diversion.
Then we popped up to X Rooftop Bar, purported to be one of
the hippest joints in town. Now, when I think of “rooftop bars,” they’re
usually pretty high up. I mean, only a few day’s before, I had taken Heidi to
Ozone atop the International Commerce Centre in Kowloon, which sits on the one
hundred and eighteenth floor. So, to head to the third floor here was a bit
underwhelming, but… c’est la vie.
There was actually a nice little view over the Night Market
and Pub Street, and I’m really glad we gave it a try. But, at that hour, at
least, things were fairly quiet, so we decided to venture further down Pub
Street itself in pursuit of livelier venues.
And we found one…
Opened all the way back in 1998, Angkor What? Bar not only
lays claim to the most cleverly named nightspot in town, it was actually filled
to the brim with tipsy partygoers when we rocked up. So we took our seats and ordered
a jug of Anchor beer, a different brand than the Angkor beer we had consumed up
to this point. You’d think both would be pronounced exactly—or, at least,
almost exactly—the same, but in Cambodia, it seems, you pronounce Anchor with
a chhh sound: An-chore. This is done, we were told, purely to
differentiate the two beer brands, both of which have their devotees and haters,
who can get supremely vexed if served the wrong varietal.
Before leaving Angkor What? Bar, Heidi and I both added our
signatures to a graffiti wall, where it seems anyone who’s anyone in Siem Reap
leaves their mark.
As we made our way up and down Pub Street scoping out our
next destination, we realized that in addition to the brick-and-mortar
establishments inside the actual buildings, there appeared to be bar carts on
the street itself. These had bright lights and signs like, “Jaeger Bomb $2” and
“Gin and Tonic $1.5” and, perhaps most enticingly, “Play YOUR Music” emblazoned
across their frontages.
A pre-teen in a leopard print hat appeared to be running one
such establishment, and sure enough, drinks were dirt cheap and an iPad was on
hand, with YouTube access and speakers, so, as the only imbibers, Heidi and I
were free to set our own playlist. In a word, paradise.
Of course, with Halloween on the horizon, the Monster
Mash was one of my first selections, but I’m almost embarrassed to carry on
listing our choices. I’d also prefer to omit the hour we finally returned to
the Old Khmer House, so let’s just cut this night short right here.
As I mentioned, Saturday was to be Heidi’s last full day,
since she had to head to the airport very early the next morning. And one of
her top picks for our brief time in Siem Reap was a foodie tour, which had come
highly recommended by—among others—the New York Times. Well, let’s just say,
whatever Siem Reap Food Tours lacked in inventive naming skills, they more than
made up for with a rip-roaring, sensational excursion.
Run by American-Scottish couple Lina and Scott (a travel
writer and chef, respectively), the tour was a blast, in spite of the 8am
pick-up. (Come to think of it, this was actually our latest start in several
days.) We began with top-notch coffee in the local market and eventually made
our way out to Khmer villages, where we got a chance to taste authentic rice
noodles, unknown tropical fruits, homemade Cambodian whisky and, probably most memorably, a hard-boiled
egg with the developing chicken embryo still inside! (Said Scott, “Some people
just watch me eat this one. I’m not sure if you actually want to try it.” He
was impressed with the gusto with which Heidi and I both consumed these supposed
delicacies.)
It was a great time through and through. And while we never
got to meet Lina, Scott was just such a cool, down-to-earth (and, according to
Heidi, wildly attractive) guy that we both really enjoyed spending the morning
cruising around in the back of a tuk tuk with him. We had great
conversations, and it was a ton of fun to learn about his career trajectory,
which has brought him from the United Kingdom to Siem Reap, where he’s now
chosen to base his life.
Mixed in with the fascinating glimpses of village life and
tons of tasty morsels, it was a grand way to spend the morning, and a refreshing
change from the previous two days chock full of temple time.
But, of course, we weren’t done with the famed ruins yet!
Pich knew we had other plans for our morning, but we arranged for him to pick
us up later in the afternoon to take us on a trip further afield, to Kbal
Spean—the River of a Thousand Lingas—and Banteay Srei—the so-called Citadel of
Women—both deep within the Angkor Archaeological Park.
Midway through the breezy tuk tuk ride to our first destination, disaster struck when my
“crazy pants” ripped right at the crotch seam. This could have been bad, folks.
Really bad. But luckily, as soon as we alighted at the Kbal Spean parking lot,
a friendly Cambodian lady had set up shop, peddling the iconic product, so I
was able to procure a new pair. Phew!
It was a steep walk up to the top of Kbal Spean, made
slightly nerve-wracking by written warnings that we shouldn’t stray too far
from the well-trod path, since the area hasn’t been completely cleared of land
mines left over from the Khmer Rouge era. Still, the winding river with its
ancient carvings—plus a group of young novice monks cooling down under a
waterfall, their bright robes soaking wet—made for an unforgettable interlude.
But Banteay Srei may have been even more stunning. Most of
the temples we had seen by this point all appeared to be constructed out of the
same type of rock. By that, I mean that the colors were almost identical
everywhere we went: a sort of darkened taupe. Not here! This temple had a
unique, almost crimson tone, completely unlike any of the other spots we had
yet visited. And combined with the soft afternoon light, it was enchanting.
What’s more, the carvings on the rocks were by far the most elaborate
we had encountered, incredibly detailed. And when about two dozen monks showed
up shortly after our own arrival, the juxtaposition of their bright orange
robes against the rose-colored temple was the stuff of legend.
It was a long ride back to town later—after all, Banteay
Srei is almost twenty-five miles from the center of Siem Reap and tuk tuks aren’t
famous for their speed—but, as Heidi had pointed out, “these long rides through
beautiful Cambodian countryside have been some of the best parts of the day.”
Now, owing to our timing, it was an especially accurate
appraisal, because the most breathtaking sunset imaginable was coloring the
scene, followed by an equally beautiful moonrise on the other side of the
highway moments later.
So much so that, not once, but twice, did I have to scream
out to Pich, imploring him to stop and let me out to properly capture the scene
with my camera. (Of course, the pictures still don’t do justice to the reality,
but at least we got to pause and soak it all in.)
Scott from Siem Reap Food Tours had supplied the
recommendation for our final shared meal in town, the airy and charming Mie
Café, set in the ground floor of a traditional Khmer dwelling. The
Swiss-trained Cambodian chef made expert use of local ingredients while
managing to combine European cooking techniques, resulting in the most
memorable meal of our trip. (I’m talking grilled beef perfectly marinated in
Khmer herbs, served with red ant eggs!)
In case you couldn’t guess from my recap of Friday’s night
on the town, which consisted of $2 Jaeger bombs and YouTube, Heidi and I
actually consider ourselves to be quite a swanky couple of swells. Or, perhaps
put differently, we feel our range spans the gamut from smut to swish.
And there was one watering hole we had both singled out long
ago as a must visit during our time in Siem Reap, the Elephant Bar at the
historic Grand Hotel d’Angkor. Constructed all the way back in 1932—when ritzy
French travelers first started finding their way to Angkor to see what all the
fuss was about—and now run by the Raffles group, the hotel is luxe all the way.
And although we weren’t staying within its storied walls, there was no way we
were skipping out on a round of classy cocktails.
Heidi asked for one of the bar’s signature concoctions off
the extensive list. “Make mine a Gibson,” I said to the friendly mixologist,
ordering my go to drink. I wish I had packed a nice shirt for the occasion—well,
actually, I guess I wish I had packed any shirt—but I had to make do
with the Angkor beer tee I had purchased at the Night Market two days earlier.
Still, our gin-soaked idyll at the legendary lodging was a memorable one
indeed.
I pinched a book of matches to remember the experience.
That’ll have to do until a return visit when, as God as my witness, I’ll be
reserving a suite at the Grand.
There was a slew of other spots we popped into afterwards,
from sleek Miss Wong to Picasso Bar—were we amused ourselves with Jenga—before
finally calling it a night. And, all in all, it was a pretty fabulous sendoff for
our joint exploits.
That next morning, Heidi was up at the crack of dawn to
continue her journey. And I was promptly back to bed after a quick goodbye hug,
content to steal a few hours of shut eye before Pich returned for more temple
tantrums. It had been so nice to have one of my best friends finally make her
way to Asia to visit, after living in Hong Kong for seven years. But it was an
even greater pleasure for me to have such a perfect travel companion for my
maiden visit to Cambodia!
But, remember, I wasn’t done yet! In fact, in actuality, I
had almost two full days remaining. And I had a long list. Heidi had left me
her guidebook to help me through my solo time, and by and with the advice and
consent of Pich, we were soon en route to Beng Mealae, technically outside of
the Angkor Archaeological Park and not included in my seven-day pass, but with
a ticket price of only USD 5, I hardly cared.
The guidebook is what sold me, introducing the site thusly:
“More than any temple in the Angkor Archaeological Park, Beng Mealea is an
experience. Overgrown by forest and collapsed on itself, the compound is a huge
jumble of broken towers, underground galleries, unidentifiable piles of rubble,
massive walls and corridors, adorned with false doors and windows and split
open by roots that have been pushing apart the brickwork for centuries. Temples
don’t come any more Lost World than this.”
Beng Mealae was far—forty-five miles from town—but it was
well worth the journey. And while there were certainly other visitors to the
site during my time there, the place is big enough that you can really get away
from them, to gain a real feeling of adventure. I loved wandering about in
almost perfect solitude, like a true Indiana Jones.
It was practically a full day trip, but Pich did find the
time to squeeze additional Angkor temples into my Sunday itinerary, most
memorably a cluster called the Roluos Group: Preah Ko, Bakong and
Lolei.
To me, Bakong was easily among the most interesting of all,
as it was reached via a walkway fringed with colorful flowers, something that
none of the other Angkor temples could boast. It added a wonderfully attractive
quality, and I’m eternally grateful that Pich decided to make a detour here.
That afternoon, I also found the time to squeeze in a late
lunch (or early dinner, depending on your preference) at a Burmese restaurant
in the heart of town. I had spotted it earlier in the trip, but figured it made
sense to wait until Heidi departed. I’d had a craving for hearty Burmese fair
since my own trip to the country back in February, and this was a perfect
chance to satisfy it.
I also, at last, did some proper souvenir shopping in the
Old Market. Days earlier, on the walkway leading to Neak Pean, I had spotted
some colonial-era bank notes that were absolutely gorgeous. Truth be told, I
had kind of regretted not purchasing them then and there—and was even
considering asking Pich to drive me back before heading out, so I could snag a
few. Luckily, it turned out they are a somewhat common souvenir, and several
stalls in the market had specimens on display, which I thoroughly scrutinized
before selecting the ones I would take home.
That night, I wound up imbibing solo in a cool little live
music venue near the river. The staff was super friendly, and my Kampot pepper
margaritas were exceptional. And although I was seated on one of the bar
stools, I noticed an older couple at a nearby table who were clearly having a
blast, singing out loud and interacting with anybody who’d give them the time
of day, which, naturally, I did. And they coaxed me and another young lady into
dancing together.
During a break between sets, the four of us all sat down to
chat, and we got along like a house on fire. It turned out the couple’s daughter lives in Hong Kong. “Oh, you must
know her! She’s around your age and her name’s Philly,” they told me. “She runs
her own business selling fresh New Zealand produce.”
I’m always saying how small a place Hong Kong is, especially the expat set, so
perhaps you’ll be surprised to learn that I don’t know Philly… at least not yet.
But in all likelihood, I’ll bump into her at some point in the not-too-distant
future and—telling her how I spent a random night in Siem Reap drinking and
dancing with her sexagenarian parents—we’ll become equally fast friends.
As it happens, I was invited to spend my next holiday with
them on the remote South Island of New Zealand, and I hope I can take them up
on the offer. I love meeting people like that when I travel. And although I could
only imagine how much more fun things would have been if Heidi had still been
around that night, it still turned out to be an incredibly enjoyable evening.
Pich was there again that final morning, trusty as ever, to ensure
my last hours in Siem Reap were milked to their full potential. My flight wasn’t
until 5:15pm, so that meant heading to the airport a little after three. From
my perspective, I had had a wildly successful string of days, and there didn’t
seem to be much I had missed.
There were a few smaller wats I explored, ones not even worth
a mention according to my guidebook, though I sure enjoyed them, before heading back to re-visit my
favorites, to bid them a fond farewell: the South Gate, the Bayon and, needless
to say, Angkor Wat itself.
By the time Heidi and I had gotten to its core back on our
first day, the central tower was already closed, and I was bent on scaling the structure,
to survey the view from on high and brag to my friends for the rest of my days
that I’d been to the very top of one of the most famous tourist attractions on
earth. And it really was worth the effort.
Then, as a last little gift, Pich mentioned that, in fact,
there was one remaining temple we could squeeze in, one he hadn’t taken me to
yet, but that many people seem to adore. Called Banteay Samre, it was a fitting
location to say goodbye to the Angkorian splendors I had discovered over this
wonderful trip.
“Do most people spend as much time at the temples as we did?”
I asked Pich as he pointed me towards the entrance.
“No. I’ve never had customers who wanted to see everything
like you,” he grinned with a sourire Khmer.
The legend of Banteay Samre was one of the most interesting
of all, a Cambodian fairy tale with grim elements but a proverbial happy ending.
The Samre, it seems, were an indigenous minority living in this then-remote corner
of the kingdom. Somehow, a local farmer named Pou got hold of some magic seeds,
à la “Jack and the Beanstalk,” which sprouted the most wonderfully
delicious cucumbers anyone had ever tasted.
Eventually, the renown of Pou’s cucumbers became so great
that even the king got wind of them, and, too, fell under their spell.
Summoning the farmer to his court, the king declared that Pou should kill
anyone who attempted to enter his fields, for fear outside contamination might spoil
cucumber production.
Well, lo, and behold… One night, the king himself runs out
of cucumbers and can’t wait until the morrow, and ventures to Pou’s field in
the darkness to dig up some of the goods. Not knowing who this mysterious intruder
is—and following the royal decree he had been given—Pou unknowingly spears the
king, thus killing him, and buries the corpse in the middle of his field.
Having died childless, the king leaves no hereditary heir to
the throne, so royal advisors seek the counsel of a wise animal called the Victory
Elephant, who promptly marches to Pou’s field and signals that it’s the farmer
himself who is the king’s rightful successor!
Not all the former king’s dignitaries liked the suggestion,
since the Samre were just a lowly minority, but Pou was crowned nonetheless, and
moved the seat of power from the former capital to the place now called Banteay
Samre. What’s more, he called all the court dignitaries to join him, and
decapitated those who disrespected him by showing fealty to his predecessor’s royal
regalia.
Those who remained were understandably convinced it paid to
be loyal to their new monarch, and he ruled over a harmonious and unified
kingdom, happily ever after, this monument now standing as a testament to his successful
reign.
It was a fitting final complex to explore, representative of
all the other temples I had seen over the past days. Representative of all the
myths and histories. Representative of all the magic and all the adventure.
At the check-in counter at the airport, the Hong Kong
Express ground crew asked if I had any baggage.
“No,” I replied.
“Any hand luggage?”
“Only this,” I answered, holding up the plastic bag that contained
the few shirts I had purchased, Heidi’s guidebook, and those Cambodian bank
notes. I put the passport back in my pocket, the Olympus still wrapped around
my neck.
“Well I never…” she mumbled, dumbfounded, as she handed over
my boarding pass.
So I left Siem Reap with nearly nothing, just as I had
arrived. Nothing that is, except some of the best memories—and best stories and
best photographs—of all my globetrotting days. Next month, I turn thirty years
old. Thirty. Three-Oh. And what a perfect ta-ta to my twenties this trip
had turned out to be. I’m slightly shocked it took me seven years of life in Asia
to make my way to the fabled kingdom of Cambodia, but I know I’ll be back again
to discover more of this fascinating, friendly place.
Then again, apparently closer to his eightieth birthday, Sir
Winston Churchill once remarked, “I have lived seventy-eight years without hearing
of bloody places like Cambodia.” So maybe I’m not doing so badly after all. I wonder
if Sir Winston ever made it there in the end. And, if so, I wonder if he
remembered to pack.