mikehohman
Senior Member
- Joined
- Aug 20, 2011
- Bikes
- KLX250
Heading for Cambodia for Songkran again this year, so it got me thinking about last year's Songkran trip to Cambodia. What a blast. And a great way to avoid all the waterplay nonsense in Thailand.
Map of our 5 Day trip to Cambodia for Songkran (Thai and Khmer New Year), April 10-15, 2011
Adrian, ready for trouble in our first (and only) night in the Khmer captial (trouble redacted)
Village Women & Children
A young girl who sold us some desperately needed water
Adrian presses the flesh with some local dignataries, stumbling home from a pre New Year's party
La Java Bleue, our base camp in Kampot for 3 nights
My Timberlands, end Day 2
Our bikes, moring of Day 3
Monks watching the beachgoers in Kep
A Khmer temple, very similar in style to Thai. Most Khmer are Theravada Buddhists, just like most Thai's, but there are scattered communities of Muslims as well
Kampot River, and the old bridge
Rusty Keyhole after dark
A monument to the noble Durian, the provincial fruit, i guess. This was in the middle of a traffic circle. Unlike Thailand, Cambodia makes regular and efficient use of the roundabout (and they drive on the right...)
Kampot River Delta. The town is just upriver (left) from the split in the river at center left.
New Year's Day holiday makers stop for photos on the road up to Bokor Hill Station - the road is only open on Khmer holidays, and April 14th is the Khmer New Year (the day after Songkran, Thailand's New Year)
The ruined Bokor Palace Hotel & Casino, floating on the clouds at Bokor Hill Station. Built by the French in the 1920's, the site was one of the last strongholds of Khmer Rouge in the 1990's.
The Grand Ballroom
The Hotel was built on the edge of an escarpment in the 'Elephant Mountains' west of Kampot, about 1,000 feet up. It offered stunning views and a cool escape from the tropical heat below.
Tropical jungle below the Hill Station
The old Catholic Church near the hotel. Government and Khmer Rouge soldiers would battle each other between the Hotel and Church, often switching sides from time to time. The site might make an excellent map for the next release of Call of Duty.
The old bridge in Kampot (the other bridge is called, as you might have guessed, the new bridge).
Golden temple rising from the water palms
Along the Kampot River
Kampot River view near sunset
Kampot River view near sunset
Tradional Khmer farmhouse
Khmer fisherman
And a video:
[VIDEO]http://vimeo.com/23095639[/VIDEO]
Map of our 5 Day trip to Cambodia for Songkran (Thai and Khmer New Year), April 10-15, 2011

Adrian, ready for trouble in our first (and only) night in the Khmer captial (trouble redacted)

Village Women & Children

A young girl who sold us some desperately needed water

Adrian presses the flesh with some local dignataries, stumbling home from a pre New Year's party

La Java Bleue, our base camp in Kampot for 3 nights

My Timberlands, end Day 2

Our bikes, moring of Day 3

Monks watching the beachgoers in Kep

A Khmer temple, very similar in style to Thai. Most Khmer are Theravada Buddhists, just like most Thai's, but there are scattered communities of Muslims as well

Kampot River, and the old bridge

Rusty Keyhole after dark

A monument to the noble Durian, the provincial fruit, i guess. This was in the middle of a traffic circle. Unlike Thailand, Cambodia makes regular and efficient use of the roundabout (and they drive on the right...)

Kampot River Delta. The town is just upriver (left) from the split in the river at center left.

New Year's Day holiday makers stop for photos on the road up to Bokor Hill Station - the road is only open on Khmer holidays, and April 14th is the Khmer New Year (the day after Songkran, Thailand's New Year)

The ruined Bokor Palace Hotel & Casino, floating on the clouds at Bokor Hill Station. Built by the French in the 1920's, the site was one of the last strongholds of Khmer Rouge in the 1990's.

The Grand Ballroom

The Hotel was built on the edge of an escarpment in the 'Elephant Mountains' west of Kampot, about 1,000 feet up. It offered stunning views and a cool escape from the tropical heat below.

Tropical jungle below the Hill Station


The old Catholic Church near the hotel. Government and Khmer Rouge soldiers would battle each other between the Hotel and Church, often switching sides from time to time. The site might make an excellent map for the next release of Call of Duty.

The old bridge in Kampot (the other bridge is called, as you might have guessed, the new bridge).

Golden temple rising from the water palms

Along the Kampot River

Kampot River view near sunset

Kampot River view near sunset

Tradional Khmer farmhouse

Khmer fisherman

And a video:
[VIDEO]http://vimeo.com/23095639[/VIDEO]