Cambodia
Kampong Chhnang Province

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    • Day 53

      ROULER SUR UNE PISTE D'AEROPORT

      December 28, 2015 in Cambodia ⋅ 🌧 3 °C

      C'est plutôt original, rouler en scooter sur une piste d'aéroport. Je vous rassure, l'aéroport n'est plus en service, c'était un aéroport qui appartenait au Khmers Rouges à l'époque de leur contrôle sur le pays.Read more

    • Day 53

      KAMPONG CHHNANG

      December 28, 2015 in Cambodia ⋅ 🌧 3 °C

      On quitte Battambang et on prend le bus direction une petite ville qui s'appelle Kampong Chhnang. Pas très touristique, on se demande un peu ce qu'on fait là et ce qu'il y a de réellement intéressant à voir....nous avons reloué un scooter et sommes partis dans les environs. La campagne semble plus aride et sèche qu'à Battambang, cette région paraît bien plus pauvre que ce qu'on a pu voir auparavant au Cambodge. Cela n'enlève rien à la beauté des paysages et à la curiosité encore plus prononcée des habitants...Read more

    • Day 12

      Kampong Chhnang

      July 30, 2011 in Cambodia ⋅ ⛅ 28 °C

      http://www.travelark.org/travel-blog-entry/tofo…

      I woke up about 6am in our Phnom Penh hotel room, exhausted, staring at the roof. What I wouldn't do for an extra couple hours sleep. We had to bounce up, pack our things and head off early on our way to Khampong Chang about 3 hours away.
      The journey would take another 3 hours, via public bus. Sleep on the bus was not an option, due to a bumpy ride and an excessively loud, brutal horn, which the driver hooted with great frequency.
      At the half way point, we stopped for a break at a place called 'Spiderville' named so eloquently for the delicacy sold here: Deep fried Spiders... they looked even worse than you could imagine. I'll upload photos at the next opportunity. They were crawling with flies, looked old, and were accompanied by deep fried cockroaches Tasty..

      From here, we headed on to our destination.
      This town wasnt particularly impressive. A bit dirty, barron, not a tourist location, and more... fragrant than usual.
      Our activity of the day was a Tuk Tuk drive. The first destination was Nokor Wat, a buddhist temple initially constructed in the 12th century. It has since been renovated and the interior was built in 1920. At times, the lack of reverence and respect shown by the locals at these places surprises me. Much of this was built some 900 years ago, and im not sure the ancestors of the locals would have appreciated people lying around, smoking and laughing as their cats ran across old statues. Furthermore, old paintings, statues, are now coated in $$$ figures of donations. Culture smeared with the stench of currency seems to trivialize it all for me..?

      From here, we went for a drive through farming fields, to see the lifestyle and activities of the local farmers. 80% of Cambodias population are farmers. We then ventured to the hillside to visit the 'man and woman'mountain temples, reflective of old mythology. We're now off to dinner! Tomorrow, the adventure to Siem Riap beckons. We will stay there for 3 nights, and have the oppertunity to see the renowned Ankor Wat.
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    • Day 14

      Kampong Chhnang to Phnom Penh

      November 17, 2016 in Cambodia ⋅ ⛅ 25 °C

      Sitting behind the driver is no place for the feint of heart. So it’s a good thing that Paul and I long ago relinquished our Western sensibilities and accepted the realities of travel. We rattle and bounce down a road built for lighter loads and slower speeds. Overtaking means hurtling headlong into oncoming traffic at breakneck speed. It’s just now it’s done here. As a passenger you just hold on an watch the world approach.

      Arriving in Phnom Penh is a shock to the senses. It’s loud, dirty, busy and obnoxious after our ten days in quieter towns. I can only imagine what a shock it would be to young men and women who have left a farming community in search of big city fortune. Dust fills the air. Horns blast. Rubbish litters the ground. Advertising signs visually holler. It’s no better or worse than other global capitals. It’s just that here the contrast between the rest of the country and its capital city is so stark.
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    • Day 50

      Countryside Around Tonle Sap

      April 6, 2018 in Cambodia ⋅ ⛅ 31 °C

      Our first excursion off the boat was to the village of Kampong Tralach, which is on the banks of the Tonle Sap lake. Some of the houses actually float on the lake, while others are on stilts, which shelter them from flooding. Beyond the banks of the lake are small villages. According to Sophea, approximately 70% of the population of Cambodia lives in small, rural villages like this one, where farming is the sole source of income. These villages are incredibly poor. Most of these villages do not have running water, and electricity was only installed in most of these villages in the last 2-3 years. Refrigeration is non-existent. Air-conditioning is literally unheard of. Yet, many of the young people seem to have some type of mobile phone, and presumably there is some access to cellular data.

      We were met at the river bank by a local residents with ox-carts that we were to ride to another village. Although the notion of riding an ox-cart seemed ridiculously touristy, Sophea suggested that the rides provided a source of income for carts that otherwise were underutilized. Hard to know whether this is true, but anything that brings money into these communities — including money spent by tour companies for these rides — is probably a good thing. So, we hoped in, and enjoyed a bumpy ride through the countryside.

      Our next stop was the village of Kampong Luong, in which the primary trade is silversmithing. While silversmithing must be a more lucrative profession than farming, the village did not seem any more prosperous than the first village. Again, everyone lives in small huts, with huge amphorae outside the houses to collect rainwater that is used for cooking, and bathing.

      And, as is true throughout Cambodia, as there is no garbage collection services, litter is everywhere. (We actually saw one woman burning garbage, and learned that she does this twice each week. I noticed that her property was considerably cleaner than the neighboring lots.). Sophea told us that two developments have really contributed to problems of trash throughout the country — plastic bags and plastic water bottles. Until about 10 years ago, when people bought foods at the market, they were unwrapped, or were wrapped in large leaves (typically banana leaves). But, it is incredibly cheap to buy plastic bags from China, and it is less work than going outside and cutting down leaves. Moreover, most shopkeepers refuse to put multiple items into a single bag, so if you buy mangos, pineapples and guava, you are given three bags. Once people get home, they don’t reuse them, and the bags pile up everywhere. Single use water bottles are also everywhere.

      Sophea told us that before he began as tour guide, he worked for an NGO that was working on environmental issues. His organization advertised an event to talk about recycling. They invited almost 200 people, and expected that between 50 and 100 people would attend the event. But, only a handful of people came. The next time, they sent invitations with $5 bills, and many people came, but no one was the least bit interested in learning about recycling. The problem is expected to become acute over the next ten years, but the government has no interest in addressing the problem and there is no awareness of environmental issues. It is sad, as the countryside is quite beautiful, but the trash mares the vistas.
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    • Day 23

      Oxcart Ride and School visit.

      September 12, 2018 in Cambodia ⋅ 🌧 28 °C

      On the bus again this time for a 50k drive to visit a school and a ride on a oxcart.

      The oxcart ride was very bumpy and as it raining we got slightly wet but still fun although not something I would recommend as a mode of transport on regular occasions.

      The oxcarts dropped us off at a school, the kids were great, they sang some songs in English and we played a game like Pictionary. They also had a compeition of witing english words.

      It was a fun way to spend the afternoon.
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    • Day 13

      Tonle Sap River

      November 16, 2016 in Cambodia ⋅ ⛅ 16 °C

      Our skipper motors the boat upriver for half an hour against the wind and tide. The engine splutters away behind us as we pass a workshop building composite plastic river boats, houses on stilts and mechanic workshops lining the banks of Tonle Sap, which is no longer a lake; it’s now a river.

      Floating villages come into view and the engine is cut. Poverty surrounds us at every turn. Tin shacks, huts made of bamboo and leaves, children who should be in school and hardworking people. That’s what comprises the floating villages. Like all communities some people have done better than others. But modern floating houses are the exception not the rule.

      That said, smiles abound. Children wave and call “hello”. It’s the only English word they know (except “one dollar”). Young men wearing nothing but underwear seem to be having a swimming race, diving from one boat and stroking quickly towards another. A boy rows from one house to another down a watery “street”. It’s not idealic but humans are resilient and this is home to them.
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    • Day 12

      Kampong Chhnang

      November 15, 2016 in Cambodia ⋅ ⛅ 29 °C

      At first Kampong Chhnang doesn’t seem like much. It’s dusty and quiet. We walk past a prison on our way to our guesthouse. Hmm. But the guesthouse is lovely with friendly staff. Our room set in a garden with a bench out the front and cold aircon inside.

      Right on dusk we head out to explore the town and find some food. The hour out of the heat has given us a second wind (the bus had aircon but it was old and ineffective).

      We eat diner at a Chinese restaurant where two meals and drinks cost us $US5.50 (everything is cheaper once you leave Phnom Penh and Siem Riep). We are charged in Cambodian Riel for the first time in this trip and the staff don’t look happy to be handed dollars (the unofficial official currency of Cambodia). We haven’t needed Riel until now so have given our small money as donations at temples along the way. It’s okay though because we will collect a few dollars worth here in town.

      We sit in a big park eating coconut cake for desert watching people. There’s teenagers kicking a small soccer ball around. A group of men play hackey sack. Some children let off fire crackers. Groups of young people hang out on the grass talking or playing guitar. Children run around. Families eat picnic dinners on colourful straw mats. And we are asked whether we can be in peoples’ photos (or they just snap a shot if they think we’re not looking).

      What we don’t know yet is that we’ve arrived in the middle of a big festival. On our way home we come across it and stop off.  We will later learn it’s a Cambodia-Thailand friendship festival. It lasts a full week. We wander the stalls.  play a side show game (and lose). We try a sausage that ends up being randomly filled with some sort of mince and rice noodle mix that tastes awesome.And we watch the concert. People walk past us gawking as though we are aliens. Street urchins beg for money (no we do not cave in even when they stand batting their eyes at us for half an hour).
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    • Day 53

      LE VILLAGE FLOTTANT DE KAMPONG CHHNANG

      December 28, 2015 in Cambodia ⋅ ⛅ 8 °C

      Vers la fin de l'après - midi, nous décidons de terminer notre journée avec le village flottant de Kampong Chhnang...c'est un village très pauvre, où les habitants vivent essentiellement de la pêche. Ce sont pour la plupart des vietnamiens qui ont fui leur pays, et comme ils n'avaient pas l'autorisation de s'installer sur le sol cambodgien, ils se sont mis sur l'eau...Read more

    • Day 15

      Artisanat Khmer

      October 20, 2023 in Cambodia ⋅ ☁️ 30 °C

      Sur la route en direction de la capitale, nous faisons quelques haltes dans des petits villages d’artisanat khmer, notamment la fabrique de poteries dont la technique est inchangée depuis 1000 ans.

    You might also know this place by the following names:

    Kampong Chhnang, Kampong Chhnang Province, Propinsi Kampong Chhnang, Кампонг Чнанг, Provincia de Kompung Chinang, Province de Kampong Chhnang, Provinsi Kampong Chhnang, Provincia di Kampong Chhnang, コンポンチュナン州, ខេត្តកំពង់ឆ្នាំង, 캄퐁치낭 주, Kampong Chhnang Lalawigan, صوبہ کمپونگ چھنانگ, Кампонгчнанг, จังหวัดกำปงชนัง, 磅清扬省

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