Archive for Facts
Places to visit in Cambodia
Posted by: | CommentsWe are often asked what sights we think are worth seeing, which places we found interesting and what would we recommend doing. These are our thoughts. There is much more detail in our Journal for Cambodia. We came to Cambodia in 2006 and we lived there until February 2008. As we travelled around Cambodia this feature was expanded and refined.
The details may change so we suggest you check with a good guide book. We prefer the “Rough Guide” series because they are well written and kept up to date. You can get more information on www.roughguides.com.
Clicking on the pictures will expand them
Seam Reap
The ancient Angkor Temples are the jewel in the crown of the Cambodian Tourist Industry. There is nothing quite like these huge impressive archaeological marvels anywhere else in South East Asia. The recent popular poll of the Wonders of the Modern World placed the Angkor Temples at number 10, ahead of the Statues on Easter Island, Pyramids at Giza and Timbuktu.
The biggest and most impressive is Angkor Wat, closely followed for interest is the faces carved into the rock at Bayon.
The trees growing through the huge stone blocks at Ta Prohm and Ta Som really capture the imagination.
The carvings in the red stone temple at Banteay Srey are exquisite and well worth travelling a bit further north of the main temple sites to see it.
In the evening relax in a wide range of restaurants and bars and take in one of the traditional dance performances in some of the bigger restaurants.
Phnom Penh
Many people fly into Cambodia and spent only a day in Phnom Penh passing through but there is so much more to do and see. We recently designed a tour for our friends and three weeks just wasn’t enough. Here are some of our recommendations.
Royal Palace and Silver Pagoda
The Royal Palace and Silver Pagoda are best visited in the morning because these magnificent buildings are seen at their best when illuminated by the early sun. There are several buildings within the precincts of the Palace and one entry ticket will give you access to an interesting morning of sight seeing.
National Museum
The National Museum is adjacent to the Royal Palace and contains many fascinating and well organised and explained exhibits. These include carved Buddha images and many sculptures and carvings from the Angkor temples.
Water Front
There is a nice walk along the Tonle Sap River promenade from across from the Royal Palace up to the where the passenger boats leave for Vietnam. On the other side of the street there are plenty of cafes, pubs, hotels and restaurants to keep you well watered and nourished. The famous Foreign Correspondents Club, FCC, is on this walk.
Independence Monument
An prominent land mark in the centre of Phnom Penh. If you spend more than a day in Phnom Penh you will probably drive past it more than once. Here visiting dignitaries lay wreaths.
Wat Phnom
Wat Phnom is a park in the north of Phnom Penh in which there is a small hill with a Buddhist pagoda on the top. There is also a Chinese temple and it is worth just sitting quietly watching the locals making offerings of fresh meat and fruit to the spirits of their ancestors. There are also caged wild birds which can be bought and released as a token of benevolence. The monkeys around the park look a bit scruffy but they are well fed. An elephant ride can easily be arranged, on Sambo, the only elephant still working around Wat Phnom. With so many tourists and visitors to the park there are inevitably more beggars here than in other parts of the city.
Psar Toul Tom Poung, The Russian Market.
This marvellous colourful market has everything from silk and carved wooden souvenirs to pirated CDs and DVDs, spare motorcycle parts, household wares, live fish, meat and fruit and vegetables. It is called the Russian market because between 1979 and 1989 when the Vietnamese Army controlled Cambodia it was popular with visiting Russian advisers. It is a wonderful experience to wander around the market and chat to the various friendly stall holders. Silk blouses can be bought for $5, but don’t believe the label, always ask the stall holder if the garment is likely to fit you.
Psar Thmei
Psar Thei or the new market was constructed by the French in 1935 as a cathedral of commerce. Walking into the high airy dome you can see the intention. Around the market are hundreds of stalls run by friendly and helpful traders. In the streets around there are more expensive shops selling jewellery, silks, cameras, electronic goods, generators and much more. Don’t miss the nearby Sorya Mall, five or six storeys of shops and stalls with a large top floor restaurant offering great views of the city.
Ethical Shopping
Tabitha on the corner of streets 51 and 360 and offers beautiful silks and other items produced by rescued street women.
Wat Than, at 180 Norodom Boulevard sells products made by disabled people, some of them landmine victims,
Sovanna Phum
The traditional Cambodian dance and theatre skills are being revived by the Sovanna Phum Association. Performances of Traditional Dance, mime and shadow puppets are presented every Friday and Saturday evening. Corner of Streets 360 and 105
Toul Sleng Genocide Museum
Under the disastrous rule of Pol Pot from 17 April 1975 until 7 January 1979 the Chinese inspired communists, the Khmer Rouge drove the population from the towns and cities of Cambodia and systematically murdered two million people. First leading members of the former regime and the army were put death and then civil servants, doctors, teachers, managers, lawyers and intellectuals were killed. The Toul Sleng High school was used as a torture and interrogation centre and it has been preserved as a museum. There are photographs of the victims, documented personal histories and cells with chains and shackles still in place.
Choeung Ek Genocide Memorial
Many of the victims of the Khmer Rouge genocide were taken to Killing Fields just outside Phnom Penh. At the site of one of the biggest mass graves found, a memorial has been erected. The Choeung Ek Memorial contains the skulls and bones of thousands of men, women and children in a glass sided tower.
The mass grave on this site contained 17,000 bodies and it is still a chilling and sobering place to visit. This period is still raw in the minds of the Cambodian people and almost every person who lived through it has a terrible story to tell.
Water Festival
The colourful Water Festival is an extravaganza of large boats each rowed by fifty colourful clad oarsmen from all over Cambodia. Hundreds of thousands of spectators come to watch as the boats race down the Tonle Sap River toward the finish line opposite the Royal Palace. The Festival occurs over three days in late November. It marks the time when the flood waters recede and the direction of flow of the Tonle Sap River changes. Waters from the Great lake start to flow south into the Mekong River and with them millions of fish start to migrate. It is a great time to be in Cambodia.
Kirrirom National Park
Half way between Phnom Penh and the coastal resort of Sihanoukville lies the Kirrirom National Park. The mountains provide clear cool air in the hot season with well organised places for picnics and good trekking terrain. There are also spectacular waterfalls in the rainy season. Visitors can stay overnight in high standard bungalows or rent a thatched roof shelter. Unfortunately it is difficult to reach by public transport.
Sihanoukville
Bamboo Island beach and the busy Serendipity Beach
The beaches, bars and restaurants are as popular with the locals as they are with tourists and backpackers. On high days and holidays the main beaches can be crowded with plenty of itinerant juice sellers, purveyors of cooked squid, jewellery hawkers, girls with baskets of fruit on their heads and travelling masseuses. However a walk along the golden beaches leaves the crowds behind. Green islands with deserted pristine beaches dot the blue sea and boats can be hired to visit these. A popular destination is Bamboo Island, with beautiful beaches and picturesque restaurant and bar. The island also boasts simple beach front cabins with sparse facilities, no water or toilet, where you can sleep the night.
Accommodation in Sihanoukville is plentiful from $3 per night beach shacks to $300 per night luxury hotels. There are also a plethora of restaurants, bars and night spots to suit all tastes. There are plenty of good buses between Phnom Penh and Sihanoukville
Kampong Cham
Kampong Cham is a quiet Market Town and a good place to chill out. Boats can be hired to take visitors on the River Mekong and up the tributaries to see the many fishing villages on the banks. Among the places of interest are Wat Ankor, an ancient ruined 11th century pagoda now surrounded by the buildings of a modern pagoda. Here the monks rescue and educate street children and welcome visitors.
There are pagodas on the top of man hill and the adjacent woman hill with a legend about the battle of the sexes. The cunning women won the bet as to which group could build the tallest pagoda by sunrise. By lighting a huge fire on their hill the women convinced the men that sunrise had come. So the men fell into an exhausted sleep. Meanwhile the women worked on through the night and built their pagoda higher. The pagodas are still there along with extravagant colourful modern images of Buddha and figures from the Buddhist pantheon.
Every dry season, around February, the people of an island in the river build the famous Bamboo Bridge. This temporary but tough structure can support fully laden pickup trucks as well as a busy traffic of cars, motorbikes and pedestrians. The annual rains wash the entire bridge away. The bridge has been featured on the cover of an environmental book on how people cope with extreme climates.
Lazy Mekong Daze is a popular river front restaurant run by Simon an Englishman and his Cambodian wife Dani.
Kampot
The main attraction around Kampot is Bokor Hill an eerie former French resort. The hill station was built to take advantage of the cool mountain air. However it was abandoned when the Japanese invaded in 1940 and was the site of fierce fighting during the Khmer Rouge period. Now the gutted casino and hotel, the derelict buildings and the shell of the old church present a ghost town feel to the place. The badly potholed road to the summit produced a bone jarring ride but it is still a popular attraction. There are also caves and waterfalls to explore in the area.
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Only a few kilometres from Kampot, Kep was once a thriving French resort. New hotels are reviving the small town and it is becoming a popular base for exploring the area. Kep is famous for its boiled crab picnics by the sea front, although the beach is small and not particularly attractive.
Battambang
Nestling in a glorious panorama of rich farmland and bright green rice fields, dotted by sugar palms, Cambodia’s second largest city, Battambang, is a pleasant contrast to the frenetic activity of Phnom Penh. It offers interest and relaxation amid venerable pagodas, old Chinese merchant’s houses and French administrative buildings, villas and two storey shop houses complete with balconies. The centre of Battambang is relatively compact, small enough to walk across in half an hour, although there is sprawling development on the east of the Sangker River. It offers plenty of opportunities to stroll through the town, promenade along by the river where locals meet and greet each other on the grass lined walks. This charming town is surrounded by Wats on dramatic mountains, ancient Angkorian ruins, wonderful examples of countryside crafts, crocodile farms, vineyards, Humanitarian Organisations you can visit, places of historical interest and monuments to the killing fields.
The entrance to Battambang is dominated by a huge, black painted, statue of King Ta Dambong who overthrew the previous king using a magic stick. Legend foretold he would be deposed by a holy man and sure enough a prince, dressed as a holy man and riding a flying horse turned up. In defending his throne Ta Dambong threw his stick at the prince but the stick disappeared and the prince took over. The Khmer word for disappear is “bat” and to this day the town is named after this incident “Bat Dambong”. The statue of the prince and his horse is at the north end of street 3.
The centre of the town is dominated by the Phsar Nath covered market, whose friendly traders are happy to chat to you, without pressing you to buy. Near the market two interesting Wats attract the eye. Wat Pippitharam, on street 3 north of the market, built in 1848, has gates guarded by two mythical giants. Wat Damrey Sar (White elephant), on the southern end of street 2, has an interesting vihear which was built in 1904.
Nestling between mobile phone shops and photocopying places on the west bank of the river is an interesting 16th or 17th century Chinese Temple. The friendly custodian will switch on the lights to give you a better view of the religious statues and decoration in the candlelit incense filled interior. On the east bank there are several Wats worthy of attention.
Don’t miss the famous Battambang Bamboo railway (Norey). You can clatter exhilaratingly for kilometres through the beautiful rice field countryside on this triumph of ingenuity. A simple bamboo platform positioned over a set of wheels allows people, goods, and animals to be propelled down the single track, driven by a small motor bike engine.
The essence of the bamboo train is that the whole assembly can be dismantled in a few seconds to allow the lumbering freight trains and other bamboo trains to pass.
Around Battambang there are a host of villages engaged in a wide range of cottage industries to explore. The pictures above show women making rice noodles and a man grinding rice to make a rice flour paste.
Further afield the Angkor temple ruins on top of Banan Hill are worth a visit. But take time for Phnom Sampeu.
Glorious golden pagodas perched on cliff announce the approach to Phnom Sampeu. Climbing the long staircase to the top gives access to infamous caves used by the Khmer Rouge to throw prisoners to their death through a hole in the top of the mountain.
The skulls of the victims found in the caves are displayed in a memorial inside the caves.
On the base of Phnom Sampeu a huge image of Buddha is being carved out of the living rock. In 2007 the head and shoulders were visible as the carvers started their ten year task. Nearby, millions of small bats stream out of a cave every evening. Staying in tight formation this natural phenomenon is a wonder to behold.
The boat ride from Battambang to Siem Reap winds through narrow rivers which open out into the Great Lake. Crossing the lake the boat route passes through a large floating village which is worth a look. Trips out to the village from Siem Reap can be expensive so seeing it from the relatively inexpensive boat from Battambang is a good option.
The rare Irrawaddi dolphin is a freshwater dolphin which lives in the Mekong River in Cambodia and Laos and the Irrawaddi River in Burma. At Kratie on Highway 7 there are deep pools in the River Mekong and several pods of dolphins live there. The dolphins can easily be seen from the bank and from boats. Even in the wet season when the river is in full flood visitors have reported good sightings.
Mondulkiri
The small town of Sen Monorom in this eastern province is accessed by a hilly red dust road through the jungle. In the rainy season this road is impassable for days. The journey however is worthwhile to enjoy all day elephant rides through the jungle. There are also famous waterfalls in the area. Here the pace of life is slow and tranquil, the scenery beautiful and the people friendly.
Where we were:
Places to visit in The Gambia
Posted by: | CommentsWe are often asked what sights we think are worth seeing, which places we found interesting and what would we recommend doing. These are our thoughts.
The details may change so we suggest you check with a good guide book. We prefer the “Rough Guide” series because they are well written and kept up to date. You can get more details on: www.roughguides.com
River Gambia long distance trips
Lamin Lodge. River boat anchored at Nature Camp, Janjanbureh
We have thoroughly enjoyed spending three days and two nights travelling up the river from Lamin Lodge to Janjanbureh. The boats are traditional wooden hulled pirogues with an open wooden superstructure.
It is incredibly relaxing to lounge on the deck spotting the many different species of brilliantly coloured birds along the river and looking out for crocodiles and hippos. If you are lucky you may have dolphins around the boat near the estuary.
At night you sleep peacefully under mosquito nets on the deck. The crew is boat’s captain, a deckhand and a cook. Whether it is being out on the river or having a really good cook we have always found the food on these boats to be great. It is better if a group of say six or eight friends hire the boat together. Alternatively you can travel with another group. The river trips start at Lamin Lodge. This is also the starting point for many half day and one day boat trips. Bird watching trips set out at dawn in canoes cruising along the mangrove swamps channels to spot the hundreds of water bird species in the area. Lamin Lodge itself is eccentric timber structure which houses a restaurant and some accommodation. The long distance river trips end at the Nature Camp at Janjanbureh and people then take a bushvan or taxi back to Barra and the ferry into Banjul.
Gambia’s Beaches
Fishing boats on Sanyang Beach. Sand Plover Beach bar near Bakau
Gambia has wonderful clean beaches which stretch for miles. With guaranteed sun and cloudless skies they are a great way to spend a few days. The beaches near the tourist hotels are patrolled by security staff to ward off the hawkers and beach fruit and juice sellers, otherwise these can be a nuisance. However the unspoilt beaches away from the tourist areas can be a delight.
Local Markets
Basse Market. An apprentice in Brikama Craft Market
It is worthwhile and very rewarding to get away from the tourist areas and visit one of the many local fruit, veg and household markets. These are busy crowded and energetic places where the locals buy their daily needs. Spend a bit of time chatting to the stall holders. Money spent here will go straight into the local economy. The craft markets are of course set up for tourists and bargining is expected. Still many of the wood carvings on sale are attractive and many Gambians derive a living from making and selling them.
Makasutu Cultural Forest
Makasutu is an attraction designed to give the visitor a taste of the Gambia. Here you can try paddling through the mangrove swamps in a dugout canoe. Really knowledgeable guides conduct forest walks for spotting birds, baboons, monkeys and discussing the trees and plants. During lunch entertaining traditional dance and music is performed. It is a good day out for all the family. Makasuto is near the town of Brikama. The best way to get there is through your hotel or guesthouse or you can travel independently by Tourist Taxi.
Banjul City Tours
A visit to the Capital, Banjul, should take in Arch 22, The National Museum and Albert Market. The road into Banjul is dominated by the big white Arch 22, built to commemorate the successful military coup of army lieutenant Yahya Jammeh on 22 July 1994. President Jammeh is still in power after a couple of successful elections. Visitors should also pause to see King Fahad Mosque, probably the most attractive building in Banjul. Muslim visitors may see inside whilst non-Muslim visitors need to request permission.
It is also possible to have a guided tour of the Royal Victoria Teaching Hospital. Most visitors take an organised tour from their hotel. However there is plenty public transport from the very cheap and cheerful bushvans, through local yellow and green taxis to the all green tourist taxis.
Bijilo Forest Park
Not far from the Senegambia Tourist area the Bijilo Forest Park offers a chance to wander through pristine tropical forest with towering palms and spreading broad leaf trees. There is absolutely no difficulty in spotting monkeys along the four well laid out and marked circular trails. The shy red colombus monkeys are however more elusive, but patience may bring its rewards. This is a good place to have a relaxing picnic under the trees. Guides are available and they are good at spotting the wildlife that you otherwise might miss.
Katchikali Sacred Crocodile Pool
The approach to Katchikali through the village of Bakau is an education in itself. The people are used to visitors and there are handicraft stalls on the main road and painting places in the village. However the village has not been cleaned up or improved to attract tourists. Katchikali, regarded as a scared pool, is a deep pool and home to fifty or so crocodiles. This is your chance to get up close and personal to big reptiles which are well fed and pretty docile. The friendly guides encourage people to have their photographs taken stroking the crocs. A walk in the surrounding woodland may be rewarded with the sighting of a two metre monitor lizard. There is also an interesting cultural museum at Katchikali. The best way to get there is through your hotel or guesthouse or you can travel independently by Tourist Taxi.
Abuko Nature Reserve
The Abuko Nature Reserve has nice well laid out walks through pleasant woodland. Visitors are almost guaranteed to see colourful birds, butterflies and at least two species of monkeys. Its main charm though is an opportunity to spend a quiet half day away from the tourist hotspots. There is a zoo of sorts but the cages are too small and the apes look traumatised by their captivity. It is probably best to give this a miss. There is also a big domestic animal market at Abuko which is worth a look. Abuko Nature Reserve is on the road between Serrekunda and Brikama. There are bush vans which pass the reserve, but the best way to get there is through your hotel or guesthouse or you can travelling independently in a Tourist Taxi.
James Island and Jufureh
James Island seen from the river. Barra Ferries passing
Visits to James Island are usually associated with organised trips to Albreda and Jufureh, made by famous by the “Roots” novel. There is a ruined castle on James Island which is in the estuary of the River Gambia, near the north bank. The north bank towns of Albreda and Jufureh have some displays addressing the slave trade, which was never very active on this part of the West African coast. The main interest in visiting James Island is the ferry crossing between Banjul and Barra. Barra itself is a port alive with the energy and hustle and bustle of travelling in West Africa. Most visitors take advantage of a hotel organised trip. An alternative is to visit James Island as part of a long distance river trip.
Wassu stone circles
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These enigmatic stone circles are thought to be 700 to 800 years old and the relics of a civilisation which once prospered here. There are similar stone circles elsewhere in Gambia and Senegal, but the site at Wassu is the best example. The stone circles are near the small town of Kuntaur, between the larger towns of Farafenni and Janjanbureh (Georgetown). This is a good place to stop if you are on a north bank road trip, the toilets are clean and well maintained. It is also a popular stopping place for long distance boat trips. Visitors travel on flat bed horse drawn carts to get from the river to the stone circles.
All of these sights can be arranged through your hotel or tour operator.
www.gambia.co.uk
www.gambiatours.gm
Where we were:
Places to visit in Benin
Posted by: | CommentsWe are often asked what sights we think are worth seeing, which places we found interesting and what would we recommend doing. These are our thoughts. There is much more detail in our Journal for Benin.
The details may change so we suggest you check with a good guide book. We prefer the “Rough Guide” series because they are well written and kept up to date. You can get more information on www.roughguides.com
Ganvié

Ganvié is a fascinating village of 20,000 people constructed on stilts in the middle of a huge shallow lake. There are schools, clinics, shops, restaurants and hotels. The locals have organised a co-operative which takes tourists in boats to visit the village and show people the sights. It is a magical place and well worth a visit. You can get there easily by taxi from Cotonou or Porto Novo.
Ouidah
The old slave trading town of Ouidah (pronounced Wee Dah) is fascinating and well worth a visit. At various times there were British, French, Portuguese, and Danish forts operating in Ouidah as the collection and embarkation points for large numbers of slaves being shipped to the Americas and other colonies. These slaves were usually prisoners of war taken by the Kings of the local Dan-Homey Empire in their wars with neighbouring African kingdoms. The Europeans bought these prisoners in exchange for iron, and guns. Apparently one muzzle loading cannon cost 15 able bodied men or 25 healthy women. The old Portuguese fort has been restored and is now a good museum showing the development of Benin and Ouidah and the slave trade.
This coast of Africa used to be called the Slave Coast and there are various modern and touching monuments to the wholesale trade in human beings from Africa, which is called the Diaspora. The Slave Road is a four kilometre long sandy road lined by palm trees and bushes from the forts to the beach, lined with emblems of the former African kings and commemorative plaques to the slaves. There is also the “tree of forgetfulness” which men had to walk around three times in shackles to emphasise that they had to forget about their former lives, their country and their family which they would never see again. For some reason women were made to walk around the tree five times.
On the beach there is a large evocative modern arch where the slaves were embarked on the slave ships.
Voodoo is still widely practiced in Benin. So there is a famous snake temple in Ouidah. One building houses many pythons which the faithful have draped around their necks to focus the spirits and cure ills or bring good fortune.
Abomey
Abomey is the home of the restored Royal Palaces of the ancient Kings of Benin. The site is now a World Heritage site and houses several large mud brick buildings holding artefacts from the time. There are spears and swords and old muskets and some of the old European cannons which the kings bought over the years. One striking exhibit is the throne mounted on human skulls to emphasise the power of the king over potential enemies.
Porto Novo
Porto Novo is the Capital of Benin. Despite being the seat of government it is quite a small town. The old buildings of the former French administration are arranged around a nice grass square and these now house the Benin government offices. The country used to be called Dahomey in the French colonial days. The French invested heavily in the countries they colonised and most people now speak French fluently as well as several local languages. Even before colonisation the French missionaries set up schools so the people of Dahomey were in demand throughout West Africa as administrators. Consequently Benin is now a predominantly Christian country.

Porto Novo has a large stone build Christian cathedral.
Cotonou
Cotonou is a large city with almost one million inhabitants. It is not a spectacular city with few monuments or historical buildings and few big buildings over seven or eight stories. However the roads were paved, there were pavements and street lighting. The locals we met were universally friendly and helpful.