Through my eyes

living my life without regrets

Tuesday, March 24, 2020

Cambodia 2020 - 17. Jeep Tour – Kampong Khleang


17.  Jeep Tour – Kampong Khleang
The Red Dust Devil

The roads are dusty, red dust is everywhere, including my clothes, face, and hair. I look like powdered, I look red.

That’s what happens when you are in the backseat of an open Jeep.
I feel fine with it, but everybody seems to stare a bit and laugh, I am a sight to behold for locals anyhow, but now I really stand out.
Red-Beard and Having Fun With It


Our destination is a town that gets flooded each season during the rainy season. Kampong Khleang is mainly on the shore of Lake Tonle Sap. (Please open the link for this lake, scroll down and there is a map that shows how the size of this lake changes during the year. The volume of water change from dry to wet seasons is amazing.)
Even This Dusty Road Is Under Water During the Rainy Season

Every House Has Several Boats (For Fishing and Transportation) in Rainy Season
We are here in the dry season, so our experience is just a glimpse of what Kampong Khleang is all about. The town changes, changes a lot within each calendar year. (I attached a video of what it is like to ‘walk’ through the village in the dry season, please watch it HERE.) This is an EXCELLENT VIDEO.
Houses Backing on the River Are On Huge Stilts (Chopsticks)

Most Oncoming Boats Slowed Down
We are also scheduled for a boat ride onto the remaining lake to see the part of the village that floats all the time. Our boat had a tough time negotiating the river since the water level was very low. We were floating just above the mud instead of over deep water, the propeller of the boat stirred through brown juicy mud behind us.  

Oncoming boats were courteous and lowered their speeds in order to not spray us with this mud. We did the same for them. The water level on the River was really very low.

The Tonle Sap River is called the “Nile of the East”, it is that important to Cambodia.
Hostel Dormitory

Lunch was first, though, before our boat ride.  If you did not know exactly where this eatery was, you would have a difficult time finding the ‘restaurant’ which is also a hostel if you want it to be. For $3/night you get a large mattress under a mosquito net with neighbors immediately next to your bed. The communal washroom is just a few steps away. I told you, the concept of privacy in Cambodia is different.
Noodles and Fish

Mango and Lychee?
The lunch we were served was very good; the food tasty, the inside of the Restaurant/Hostel was clean and orderly. 

Spirit House Also On Stilts On the River
 Living along this river, living in this town is so unusual for me, I could spend days here, staring at this and that. There is just too much to list, this place is really different. The videos above, the links and pictures should give you an idea.
It Was a Great Joke But I Forget What It Was


Chop Stick Houses
Primary School, A Floating Building
It is difficult to say if the people are poor. They seem happy; they might have other preferences besides material wealth. It’s really, really hard to say. Yes, of course the houses look like shacks. The kids play in this water, maybe even drink it. There is dirt and dust all over; it seems helter-skelter, all those lollypop sticks with a shack (house) on top.
The people here call them chopstick houses.

But when you chat with them, they are all smiles, they seem to be resigned that that is their life. Some might even not want to move given that family is so important to them.
Buddha Is Across the River

We saw a few schools along our ride on the river. Do they learn anything there?

We saw, on a bit of a hill a huge Buddha statue which is visible for miles around. It acts like a light house, a beacon; you can tell where you are from far away.
Haven't You Always Wanted to Ride in the Shade?

We saw life like it would be in an ant hill; everybody had their thing to do.

Traveling along our 40 minute ride (one way) on the river into deeper parts of the river/lake we saw ‘farms’ and farmhouses. This is a very productive area and this lifestyle along the river has been going on for 1000 years or more.

I just don’t understand the intricacies of it all. I have no clue what to do and when to do it. I would be cleaning up the mess I see but it would be for naught, because when the river floods, the waters will clean the grounds, or make it dirtier, I just don’t know.


Boat Filled With Cockles Like We Saw In the Market

It was a village life, with some tourists, yes, but not as many as I would have thought.
Bagging the Cockles

Boats were everywhere, on our way to the Lake smallish ‘canoe’ like boats with motors met us loaded to the top with the cockles that we saw at the market place. Those small clams are a delicacy in Asia and tons of them are being harvested just now and shipped to canneries to be then shipped across Asia.
Floating Houses

The people here know what to do, they work hard.

What is frightening though, is the over-fishing, the raping of this River system. It will have some effect down the road in a few decades.


Some of the Floating Houses on Lake Tonle Sap
Lake So Low He Harvest Fish Caught in Net By Standing on Bottom
Another problem everybody knows about is the idea of ‘taming’ the Mekong River. Setting up hydro dams, channeling the water to avoid flooding is in the planning stages. This would harm all these people here; harm the ecology of the Tonle Sap River the most.

Maybe what Carol and I saw will not be here in years to come. For us, though, it was an experience to visit Kampong Khleang; one can hardly forget these sights.
Couldn't Live There But Sure Had Fun There

Yes, I was dirty after our trip, but also happy to have witnessed something I had no idea existed. No, I could not live there.

The Brochure Called It Jeep Tour - Receipt Called It Red Dust Adventures - and It Was!




And This Is How We Got So Dusty









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