Since getting home many people have asked me what my favourite place was, best experience, that sort of thing. And the truth is, I don't have an answer. The scope of the 10 month trip had me spend anywhere from a few days in one place, to several weeks, from hangin' out with a couple of fellow travellers for a couple of hours, to working with a local tour company, to travelling with a bunch of folk for close to three weeks, to being alone. A lot.
So I don't have a good answer for that. I haven't distilled it down to saying I prefer one country, or city, over another, or one culture, group of people, mode of travel, style of living, or anything like that, over another. Each comes with it's pros and cons, and all come with experiences that are worth having.
With that said though, I do have a favourite day. And this is it.
The morning of our second day in Cambodia, the majority of us climbed on the bus and went to the Killing Fields of Choeung Ek, a little outside of Phnom Penh. This now museum/historical site/memorial is the site of one of the 343 known killing fields throughout Cambodia. Here, under the rule of Pol Pot (which incidently means Political Potential) and the Khmer Rouge, during a three year period between 1975-1978, over 17,000 men, women, children, and infants, who had been held captive and tortured at Security Prison 21 (S-21) in Phnom Penh, were brought to be exterminated.
Now it is a memorial museum, where you can walk around the sites of the mass graves, see the tree where infants were taken to be beaten, and witness the remnants of what has to be some of the worst of what we can do to each other as humans.
Pot, a former monk and school teacher, who had worked in the palace, and then became a communist and worked under Ho Chi Minh, believed that society would be better if it were simpler. Got back to it's rural roots. Education was bad. Technology was bad. Those who were educated, understood technology? Threats to be eliminated. Wearing glasses meant you could read. Eliminate. Soft hands meant you weren't a labourer. Eliminate. Phnom Penh was forcibly evacuated in April 1975. People who had no idea how to farm were sent to do so. More and more deaths due to malnutrition, starvation. Pot and the Khmer Rouge had been at this for years as part of the civil war, but their ending of that war with the march on Phnom Penh took it to a whole new level.
We then returned to the city to visit the former high school that became the "re-education centre" S-21, now the Tuol Sleng Genocide Museum, walk through it's buildings and cells, meet Chum May, one of S-21's survivors, and again witness the remnants of a time that Cambodia is still trying to recover from, and will be for a very long time.
We were shown these places by a gentleman who is one year older than I am. Said differently, while he was living through this, while somewhere between 1.7 and 2.5 million of his people, or close to a third of Cambodia's population were murdered , I went to see Star Wars in the theatre seven times.
Cambodia is a place that has proven that post-traumatic stress disorder is hereditary. Children learn these behaviours from their parents. Corruption runs through all levels of society, poverty being a major cause of it, in that, for doctors to earn enough to live, they take bribes from patients to receive care; for teachers to earn enough to live, they take bribes from students to get good grades. The amount of foreign aid that is given to the Cambodian government that never sees the light of day is enormous.People are still disappeared. Cambodia's PM is a former member of the Khmer Rouge. He apparently has set things up so that his son takes over. The King is a ballet teacher. (Perhaps I'm not the only one expecting Yule Brynner to come along.) People believe that Pol Pot actually faked his death. The UN established an International Court to handle the war crimes - only five people have been arrested so far, and that's taken years, and is moving incredibly slowly.
But it's not all like that. It's just what is lying underneath.
There's also, back in Phnom Penh, David's noodles, where Channa and I had a delicious quick lunch before getting on the bus to head for Chambok and our homestay that night.
David makes the noodles, out on his restaurant patio in the street.
And the result is amazing.
This is when Channa lent me her copy of the book, Cambodia's Curse, and where we started to talk a lot about what is going on. This is the lunch where she asked me "How do I fix my country?", and really was looking for an answer. This is also the lunch where Channa asked that we stop talking about certain things till we were on the bus again, because she wasn't sure who would be listening.
It's a complicated country.
And then there's people celebrating weddings.
That's the bride, from the wedding outside our hotel, that I got to see when I went to grab my bags before hopping on our bus to Chambok.
And there is a beautiful country, full of kind, generous, people.
This is the road to Chambok, and one of the bridges we crossed over.
And for whatever reason, here's some of the Australians from the group posing with a kangaroo statue. Why is there a kangaroo somewhere in the 25km between Phnom Penh and Chambok? Not a clue.
And this is the tree that blocked the road.
As you can see, there was a fire at the base of the tree and it had fallen across the road, blocking all traffic. Well, not all. Scooters and some smaller vehicles (the very few that came along) were able to go into one of the ditches on either side of the road and figure their way through.
Not our bus though.
We were stuck. So Channa took her phone to call ahead to the homestay. Unfortunately her phone was dead. Fortunately though, she had helped me buy a SIM card before we ate at David's noodles, so I had a working phone. She called, and they said they'd be along to clear the road.
See, they were able to get around.
Us, nope.
But, we had time to kill. I suggested to the group that we use the time to try and clear up some of the debris. Even if we couldn't clear the big stuff, the smaller things still needed to be gotten out of the way. So that's what we did.
Cue lady from the farm up the hill walking down towards us with a couple of axes in her hand.
Phil's a farmer. He's good with an axe. Whether that syllogism is valid or not I will leave to the fellows in the uttarasangas.
Our driver also happened to be handy with an axe.
As did nearly everyone in this picture.
That's us having moved the tree and cleared the road.
Just us. Just the folks on the bus. The people from the homestay hadn't arrived yet, and Channa called them off.
So we hopped back up on the bus and kept going.
Now, the ride up until now had been pretty quiet. As you might imagine, the morning had been pretty intense, and we were all just trying to process it in our ways. Now though, we'd had an opportunity to hack apart a tree, take control of our own destinies (in no matter how small a way), and bond over something way better than the shared feeling of helplessness and despair that comes with learning about Cambodia's history.
So the road trip got a bit merrier, and Channa agreed that we deserved some sort of little reward for our efforts.
So, at the next available pit stop we stopped the bus, got out, bought a dozen coke bottles filled with petrol, and guzzled them down.
Actually, we got beer.
Back on the bus and travelling along, Channa told us about her learning English from watching Disney movies. Mulan is her favourite by the way. She's also read The Hunger Games. She mentioned that one of her last tour groups had suggested she read 50 Shades of Gray, but she hadn't gotten to it yet. She did however ask us "What's S and M?"
Um...
Channa wants to learn everything. "How do engines work?"
Phil explained.
"Dishwashers?"
Christina has never cleaned a dish by hand.
Channa giggles.
Channa laughs at us for taking pictures of chickens - "what, you haven't seen a live one before?" One of us hadn't. She giggles.
Channa is now Giggles. Like I said, nearly everyone got a name.
Giggles got given a smart phone from a friend so that should could play Candy Crush. I mention that I met one of the coders for Candy Crush in Sweden. Giggles giggles.
Muffin - that's Patrick if you recall, and I (Evil Bastard) help Channa work on her English. Lots of new words and ideas all the time. Defining cool. Discussing the four elements of the body. The Khymer are the indigenous people of Kampouchea, the earlier name for Cambodia. Kampu was a monk. Gangnam style.
It might have only been 25km, but we covered a lot of ground on that bus.
By now we were definitely running late to arrive at the homestay. Naturally, this was therefore the best time to have the road blocked by a herd of cows.
Somehow the axes didn't seem like the right response.
Eventually though we made it to the home stay. Two houses on stilts, each with a large common room to be shared by the lot of us. Comfy mats with mosquito netting, all just waiting for our weary selves.

First though was dinner.
The homestay in Chambok is a cooperative, with a community youth outreach programme, and all sorts of good stuff. They run these homestays for touring groups such as ourselves as a means to generate money that goes back into the community - healthcare, education, food. All those things a community needs.
After dinner, by the light of the fire, Nigel, Patrick, and I, played some shuttlecock - hacky sack with some of the local kids and men. Lots of laughter, a fair amount of eating of dirt. No one caught fire though, so I consider that a small victory.
And then there was the show. Traditional music and dance performed by the local kids. Lots of blurry pictures of that, but I'll just give you this one of all of us afterwards.
And then, with mosquitoes cheering us on, we headed to our stilt homes. I can't speak for the other house, but the eight people I shared space with that night couldn't believe that had all been one day.
I still can't.
So I don't have a good answer for that. I haven't distilled it down to saying I prefer one country, or city, over another, or one culture, group of people, mode of travel, style of living, or anything like that, over another. Each comes with it's pros and cons, and all come with experiences that are worth having.
With that said though, I do have a favourite day. And this is it.
The morning of our second day in Cambodia, the majority of us climbed on the bus and went to the Killing Fields of Choeung Ek, a little outside of Phnom Penh. This now museum/historical site/memorial is the site of one of the 343 known killing fields throughout Cambodia. Here, under the rule of Pol Pot (which incidently means Political Potential) and the Khmer Rouge, during a three year period between 1975-1978, over 17,000 men, women, children, and infants, who had been held captive and tortured at Security Prison 21 (S-21) in Phnom Penh, were brought to be exterminated.
Now it is a memorial museum, where you can walk around the sites of the mass graves, see the tree where infants were taken to be beaten, and witness the remnants of what has to be some of the worst of what we can do to each other as humans.
Pot, a former monk and school teacher, who had worked in the palace, and then became a communist and worked under Ho Chi Minh, believed that society would be better if it were simpler. Got back to it's rural roots. Education was bad. Technology was bad. Those who were educated, understood technology? Threats to be eliminated. Wearing glasses meant you could read. Eliminate. Soft hands meant you weren't a labourer. Eliminate. Phnom Penh was forcibly evacuated in April 1975. People who had no idea how to farm were sent to do so. More and more deaths due to malnutrition, starvation. Pot and the Khmer Rouge had been at this for years as part of the civil war, but their ending of that war with the march on Phnom Penh took it to a whole new level.
We then returned to the city to visit the former high school that became the "re-education centre" S-21, now the Tuol Sleng Genocide Museum, walk through it's buildings and cells, meet Chum May, one of S-21's survivors, and again witness the remnants of a time that Cambodia is still trying to recover from, and will be for a very long time.
We were shown these places by a gentleman who is one year older than I am. Said differently, while he was living through this, while somewhere between 1.7 and 2.5 million of his people, or close to a third of Cambodia's population were murdered , I went to see Star Wars in the theatre seven times.
Cambodia is a place that has proven that post-traumatic stress disorder is hereditary. Children learn these behaviours from their parents. Corruption runs through all levels of society, poverty being a major cause of it, in that, for doctors to earn enough to live, they take bribes from patients to receive care; for teachers to earn enough to live, they take bribes from students to get good grades. The amount of foreign aid that is given to the Cambodian government that never sees the light of day is enormous.People are still disappeared. Cambodia's PM is a former member of the Khmer Rouge. He apparently has set things up so that his son takes over. The King is a ballet teacher. (Perhaps I'm not the only one expecting Yule Brynner to come along.) People believe that Pol Pot actually faked his death. The UN established an International Court to handle the war crimes - only five people have been arrested so far, and that's taken years, and is moving incredibly slowly.
But it's not all like that. It's just what is lying underneath.
There's also, back in Phnom Penh, David's noodles, where Channa and I had a delicious quick lunch before getting on the bus to head for Chambok and our homestay that night.
David makes the noodles, out on his restaurant patio in the street.
And the result is amazing.
This is when Channa lent me her copy of the book, Cambodia's Curse, and where we started to talk a lot about what is going on. This is the lunch where she asked me "How do I fix my country?", and really was looking for an answer. This is also the lunch where Channa asked that we stop talking about certain things till we were on the bus again, because she wasn't sure who would be listening.
It's a complicated country.
And then there's people celebrating weddings.
That's the bride, from the wedding outside our hotel, that I got to see when I went to grab my bags before hopping on our bus to Chambok.
And there is a beautiful country, full of kind, generous, people.
This is the road to Chambok, and one of the bridges we crossed over.
And for whatever reason, here's some of the Australians from the group posing with a kangaroo statue. Why is there a kangaroo somewhere in the 25km between Phnom Penh and Chambok? Not a clue.
And this is the tree that blocked the road.
As you can see, there was a fire at the base of the tree and it had fallen across the road, blocking all traffic. Well, not all. Scooters and some smaller vehicles (the very few that came along) were able to go into one of the ditches on either side of the road and figure their way through.
Not our bus though.
We were stuck. So Channa took her phone to call ahead to the homestay. Unfortunately her phone was dead. Fortunately though, she had helped me buy a SIM card before we ate at David's noodles, so I had a working phone. She called, and they said they'd be along to clear the road.
See, they were able to get around.
Us, nope.
But, we had time to kill. I suggested to the group that we use the time to try and clear up some of the debris. Even if we couldn't clear the big stuff, the smaller things still needed to be gotten out of the way. So that's what we did.
Cue lady from the farm up the hill walking down towards us with a couple of axes in her hand.
Phil's a farmer. He's good with an axe. Whether that syllogism is valid or not I will leave to the fellows in the uttarasangas.
Our driver also happened to be handy with an axe.
As did nearly everyone in this picture.
That's us having moved the tree and cleared the road.
Just us. Just the folks on the bus. The people from the homestay hadn't arrived yet, and Channa called them off.
So we hopped back up on the bus and kept going.
Now, the ride up until now had been pretty quiet. As you might imagine, the morning had been pretty intense, and we were all just trying to process it in our ways. Now though, we'd had an opportunity to hack apart a tree, take control of our own destinies (in no matter how small a way), and bond over something way better than the shared feeling of helplessness and despair that comes with learning about Cambodia's history.
So the road trip got a bit merrier, and Channa agreed that we deserved some sort of little reward for our efforts.
So, at the next available pit stop we stopped the bus, got out, bought a dozen coke bottles filled with petrol, and guzzled them down.
Actually, we got beer.
Back on the bus and travelling along, Channa told us about her learning English from watching Disney movies. Mulan is her favourite by the way. She's also read The Hunger Games. She mentioned that one of her last tour groups had suggested she read 50 Shades of Gray, but she hadn't gotten to it yet. She did however ask us "What's S and M?"
Um...
Channa wants to learn everything. "How do engines work?"
Phil explained.
"Dishwashers?"
Christina has never cleaned a dish by hand.
Channa giggles.
Channa laughs at us for taking pictures of chickens - "what, you haven't seen a live one before?" One of us hadn't. She giggles.
Channa is now Giggles. Like I said, nearly everyone got a name.
Giggles got given a smart phone from a friend so that should could play Candy Crush. I mention that I met one of the coders for Candy Crush in Sweden. Giggles giggles.
Muffin - that's Patrick if you recall, and I (Evil Bastard) help Channa work on her English. Lots of new words and ideas all the time. Defining cool. Discussing the four elements of the body. The Khymer are the indigenous people of Kampouchea, the earlier name for Cambodia. Kampu was a monk. Gangnam style.
It might have only been 25km, but we covered a lot of ground on that bus.
By now we were definitely running late to arrive at the homestay. Naturally, this was therefore the best time to have the road blocked by a herd of cows.
Somehow the axes didn't seem like the right response.
Eventually though we made it to the home stay. Two houses on stilts, each with a large common room to be shared by the lot of us. Comfy mats with mosquito netting, all just waiting for our weary selves.

First though was dinner.
The homestay in Chambok is a cooperative, with a community youth outreach programme, and all sorts of good stuff. They run these homestays for touring groups such as ourselves as a means to generate money that goes back into the community - healthcare, education, food. All those things a community needs.
After dinner, by the light of the fire, Nigel, Patrick, and I, played some shuttlecock - hacky sack with some of the local kids and men. Lots of laughter, a fair amount of eating of dirt. No one caught fire though, so I consider that a small victory.
And then there was the show. Traditional music and dance performed by the local kids. Lots of blurry pictures of that, but I'll just give you this one of all of us afterwards.
And then, with mosquitoes cheering us on, we headed to our stilt homes. I can't speak for the other house, but the eight people I shared space with that night couldn't believe that had all been one day.
I still can't.


















































