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- May 1, 2025, 9:00 AM
- ☁️ 32 °C
- Altitude: 25 m
CambodiaKrous13°21’3” N 103°51’7” E
Siem Reap

After crossing the border from Laos, our first stop in Cambodia was Siem Reap, whose major economic activity is Angkor Wat tourism. As a city previously under French control, the bread and coffee options have vastly improved. Our host at the ‘Villa du Bonheur’ was the extremely flamboyant Michel, who spent the evening getting increasingly drunk and enthusiastic about his own 80s playlist. What a life.
We explored the Angkor National Museum to learn a bit about the ancient Khmer empire. They claim to have been the largest in the world between the 6-9th centuries, which perhaps needs a fact check. It boasts the Gallery of 1,000 Buddhas, which did seem accurate, because they have a LOT of Buddhas.
The next day we made a very early morning visit to Angkor Wat (see previous post) and then scurried back to the cool of the hotel pool to rest. The temperatures are hitting the high 30s every day, with +70% humidity; it’s a sweaty exercise just going for lunch. Fortunately, the Grab app operates in Cambodia—we felt its absence in Laos—so a tuktuk across the city costs less than £1.
We zipped around on a food tour with recurring pals Jess and Ian, plus two horrifically hungover lads from Kent. One of them could barely speak, except to express sweaty regret after eating a whole birdseye chilli. Not such a big man after all. We tried several new dishes (pin noodles, amok, deep fried garlic dough balls). Cambodian fare is much lighter than Thai, with chilli available as a side so you can manage your own spice levels. The tour concluded with a pick-and-mix selection of fried bugs and frogs from a street vendor. Chelsea braved an unusually spicy locust and Jess retched on silk worms, while Dan and Ian peeled a few water beetles. The crickets were the least objectionable option.
Friends back home tipped us off to the Phare Circus as an absolute must in Siem Reap. They were right! Incredible gymnastics, virtuosic musicians, live painting, and lots and lots of rice (surely a trip hazard?!). It’s got it all. The circus is an empowerment programme to enable artists to earn a living in Cambodia; it pays to fund the arts!
Chelsea wandered around town, exploring the markets, and happily stumbled across a book fair. The stalls sold mostly earnest academic fare, self-help, and children’s books. However, a few were more ambitious, selling Korean lesbian romance and gay Buddhist demon love triangle smut (see photo). Chelsea’s opinion of Cambodians is even more positive now.
We finished Siem Reap with a night out, starting on ‘Night Market St’, which contained no night market. Disappointed, we headed instead for the famous Pub Street, which did in fact contain pubs. After putting on a bold defence in beer pong (played with vodka-cranberry buckets), the girls danced into the early hours at a bar playing 00s club hits, while Ian read a chapter of The Count of Monte Cristo and Dan caught up on his beauty sleep.
Next up is a hungover 6hr bus ride to the capital. More to come...Read more
Traveler
I really want to know what’s going on with the cats here.
Traveler I reckon cats are the character trait of Buff Cat Guy that the couple must overcome to find true love
Traveler
I actually thought I’d just made up the conversation we had about this in my drunken state 😂😂😂 10/10
Traveler 😂😂😂 happy to report that was all real 🤙🏼