Friday 21 February 2014

Siem Reap (3) Tonle Sap Lake: Part 9 of Following the Mekong through Vietnam, Cambodia and Laos

A Huge Lake of Variable Size and a Trio of 'Minor Temples'

Cambodia

21-Feb-2014

Tonle Sap Lake

To the Lake

It is 15km from Siem Reap to Tonle Sap Lake, the huge body of water that occupies much of central Cambodia. The road has tarmac most of the way and we reached the dock in about twenty minutes.

Village near the dock, Tonle Sap Lake

It is a busy place where dozens of boats pick up hundreds of tourists.

S quickly acquired a boat which, as usual on this trip was too big, though this time with a meagre half dozen surplus seats, and we joined the procession of tourist boats heading down the canal towards the lake proper. We passed the occasional fisherman and several fish traps.....

Fish traps awaiting deployment, Tonle Sap Lake

Chong Khneas Floating Village

....but there was little to see until we emerged into the lake by the village of Chong Khneas.

Chong Khneas, Tonle Sap Lake

Although it is called a village, the dwellings of 6000 people, many of them stateless ethnic Vietnamese, either float on the water or stand on stilts along the shore. Supported on bamboo rafts or oil drums, the floating houses are basic, lacking electricity, clean water and sanitation.

Chong Khneas, Tonle Sap Lake

French missionaries made little impression on Cambodia, but there are many Vietnamese catholics and their spiritual needs are catered for by a floating church.

Catholic Church, Chong Khneas (or Khnies)

We stopped at a larger house, further out than the village, bobbing above a crocodile farm. Lynne disapproves of keeping crocodile just for their skins - though she would have no problem if they were kept for meat – but in another sense she disapproves of the very existence of crocodiles. She found this a very morally ambivalent place to be.

Resident at a Crocodile Farm, Chong Khneas

South Down Tonle Sap Lake

Leaving the farm we pottered southward keeping a couple of hundred metres out from the shore. At its lowest, in May, the lake covers 2500 square kilometres, draining via the Tonle Sap River into the Mekong at Phnom Penh (we had disembarked at the confluence when we reached Phnom Penh from Vietnam). The arrival of the rains, in late May, coincides with the peak flow of Himalayan melt water down the Mekong, which then becomes higher than the lake and the Tonle Sap River changes direction. By October, when the flow re-reverses, Tonle Sap Lake has increased its area fourfold and its depth by five or six metres – hence the need for houses on stilts.

Once beyond village we left the tourist hordes behind and our captain put the boat in cruise control - i.e. he tied the piece of string he was pulling on to open the throttle to a stanchion. Meanwhile, at the stern, the crew was hard at work.

The crew hard at work, Tonle Sap Lake

We continued for an hour with jungle and mangrove swamps to our left and water as far as the horizon to our right. Crossing the smooth milky coffee coloured surface was relaxing and the breeze caused by our movement provided natural air conditioning.

Nothing much happened until we passed a substantial scaffolding by the water's edge, destined, according to S, to become a restaurant. The captain untied the cruise control and headed for the mouth of a creek. We passed a floating restaurant, full of lunchers though it was not yet eleven, and disemabrked at a boat house a little further along.

Into the Mangroves


Into the creek, Tonle Sap Lake

Taking a 'canoe through the mangrove swamp’ had sounded exotic when we had read about it at home, but we arrived to find thirty or so canoes waiting like taxies on a rank and tourists embarking and disembarking only a little slower than on a Disneyland ride.

A taxi rank of boats among the mangroves, Tonle Sap Lake

All the paddlers seemed to be women, and some had brought their daughters to work.

Among the mangroves, Tonle Sap Lake

We set off, paddled by a young woman sitting at the front of the canoe. She made just the right speed through the mangroves and, to be fair, most of the time we did not feel part of a convoy. We passed several fish traps and a couple of fishermen tending them, wading through the knee deep water.

Fishing among the mangroves, Tonle Sap Lake

Sitting at home the thought of wading in mangroves swamps is horrifying. What about the water snakes and the spiders, and are there leeches? Being there, seeing it done takes away the fear, the water is merely shallow and muddy, it is no longer mysterious or dangerous.

Into the mangroves, Tonle Sap Lake

It was sad, or perhaps worrying, to see how many plastic bags were nesting among the mangroves. The curse of the plastic bag - too cheap, largely indestructible and rarely disposed of properly - is evident all over the developing world, this was just a particularly stark example.

Among the mangroves, Tonle Sap Lake
(I seem to have missed the plastic bags - which makes a better picture, even if it fails to make my point)

Further up the Creek

Our trip over, we returned to our boat and continued up the creek passing through Kampong Phluk, a village of houses on stilts overlooking the river. We did not need to be told the houses have no proper sanitation to know it was a poor, scruffy and dirty place.


Kampong Phluk, near Tonle Sap Lake

The village went on long enough to start looking like a town and the canal became narrower and narrower. Eventually we emerged the other side and docked beside a dirt road where, almost miraculously it seemed, Gung was waiting with the car.

Kampong Phluk, Tonle Sap Lake

North to Rolous for Lunch

We drove for 15kms along a red dirt road. Despite its lack of tarmac it was well-made and we made good speed, throwing up a cloud of dust behind us.

The road to Roulos

We passed through paddy fields, flat and green as far as the eye could see. In places, desperately thin cattle grazed on the stunted grass at the field margins. ‘It’s the dry season,’ S explained, ‘they will fatten up when the rains come.’ [It was the dry season in Laos, too, but their cattle were in fine condition]. An outbreak of houses and shops suggested we were entering the small town of Roulos, known by the wonderful name of Hariharalya (pronounced Harry-harra-lier) when it was briefly the capital of the Khmer empire in the early Angkorian period.

Paddy fields beside the road to Roulos

We reached a tarmacked road, actually Highway 6 that had brought us all the way from Phnom Penh and by it a restaurant set in a garden among trees and further shaded by awnings.

It was a beautiful spot and had, inevitably, collected all the tourists in the region (except for those preferring to eat at 11 o’clock by the lakeside). We ordered spring rolls, steamed vegetables and a 'local fish' curry in a rich coconut sauce.

Lynne was less impressed by the fish curry than I was

I thought the fish was wonderful. Lynne, whose idea it had been to order it disagreed; it was 'fish messed about' in her view, which, I think, means 'too little fish and too much sauce'. She had read the menu, so she only had herself to blame.

The Rolous Group of Temples

The Roulos group of temples is 'one for the specialist' according to the Rough Guide, but as we were there we might as well take a look.

Lolei Temple


Lolei Temple, Roulos

We started at Lolei, originally on an artificial island in an equally artificial lake. It now sits on a mound among paddy fields, flanked by a pagoda on one side and the monks living quarters on the other. Dedicated to the parents and maternal grandparents of Yasovarman I (ruled 889 - 900) and consecrated to Shiva, there is not much of the temple left, though it boasts some well-preserved Sanskrit inscriptions detailing the work rotas of the temple servants.

Monk's dwellings beside the Lolei Temple, Roulos

Bakong Temple

Five minutes driving brought us to Bakong, the state temple of Indravarman I and consecrated to Shiva in 881, though the central sanctuary - which is in good repair - was added 250 years later and restored in 1940.

Bakong Temple, Roulos

It is a temple of trunkless elephants....

Lynne and a trunkless elephant, Bakong Temple, Roulos

..and cheeky-bottomed lions, some so cheeky they have split.....

Cheeky-bottomed lion split almost in half, Bakong Temple, Roulos

...but the view from the top is pleasing.

On the top level of Bakong Temple, Roulos

Preah Ko Temple

Nearby Preah Ko was built in 1179. Constructed on a platform, patches of the stucco that once covered the whole of the temple still remain.

Stucco (not original), Preah Ko Temple, Roulos

In front of the platform Nandi, the vehicle of Shiva, looked up hopefully. Somebody (not in this picture) did try to mount him. As they were not Shiva, and Nandi is frail now that he is in his ninth century, they were, quite rightly, shouted at.

Lynne and Nandi in front of the platform, Preah Ko Temple, Roulos

Back in Siem Reap: Pub Street at Beer O'Clock

We returned to Siem Reap and miraculously found ourselves in Pub Street at exactly beer o'clock, though Lynne decided that a restorative gin and tonic would do her more good. I paid the exorbitant US$2 price tag, which meant I could only afford a 50¢ draught beer for me.

You do not have to wait long for entertainment in Pub Street. A young man soon came along with some magic tricks, juggling and fire eating before diving through a hoop of knives and fire, sadly to the general apathy of the crowd. I thought he was worth a small donation. Lynne thought he was worth more and called me 'mean', ignoring the fact I was the first person to stand up and offer anything.

Entertainment, Pub Street, Siem Reap

Behind the acrobat, as the photograph shows, is a Tex-Mex restaurant and a sushi bar. Siem Reap is not your average Cambodian small town.

We walked back to the hotel arriving just in time to go out again to find some dinner. We chose one of the many restaurants near the old market. Earlier Lynne had been so convinced of her return to health that she had rather overdone it. Unable to face rice, she wanted something simple and went for some noodles with vegetables while I chose the ever palatable pork and ginger. Lynne complained, with some justice, that her noodles were far too sweet – a problem, we have found, with much Khmer food.

22-Feb-2014

A Walk Round Siem Reap

We spent the morning pottering about Siem Reap before our late afternoon flight to Luang Prabang.

The Royal Independence Gardens were a short walk along the shady riverside past the modest Royal residence.

Shady walk beside the Siem Reap River

A shrine to Ya Tep - a local spirit who gives protection and brings luck - sits on a traffic island. Ya Tep has a steady flow of visitors and collects an array of offerings.

Ya Tep shrine, Siem Reap

The shrine to two sister deities sits on the other side of the road where caged birds are sold so that people can gain merit by releasing them. One woman had a large cage packed with sparrow sized birds. With an intense look in her eyes she was thrusting her hands in and grabbing the birds three or four at a time and throwing them into the air. Clearly there was a matter of great importance that she was trying desperately to influence.

Gaining merit by releasing birds, Siem Reap

There is an obvious problem. Gaining merit by releasing caged creatures is fine but, as they have only been caged so they could be released, she was effectively causing the caging and thus, I would have thought, losing as much merit as she gained. Taking into account the birds that did not make it - several collapsed onto the pavement and expired at her feet – she was in negative merit for her morning’s efforts. I don't think this has been thought through.

He's got some birds, too

A flower stall on the corner does good business with those coming to the garden for their wedding photos - there were four or five such groups while we were there. S later confirmed that, as in China, wedding photographs are not actually taken on the wedding day. The clothes, like the photographer, are hired by the hour and an appropriate location chosen to commemorate an event that was weeks, or even months ago.

Three wedding groups, Royal Independence Gardens, Siem Reap

Wandering back towards the hotel we stopped at the Bon Café, ‘your one stop coffee solution’ (they can import our language if they wish, but do they have to import our gibberish as well?) Khmer coffee is respectable enough but a touch ordinary, lacking the power and chocolaty flavour of its Vietnamese cousin.

After a stop to send some emails we made our way to one of the restaurants near the old market. Lynne had perked up while we were at Lake Tonle Sap but had now relapsed and picked at a piece of fish, looking sorry for herself. I had pork and lotus roots. I like lotus roots they have a very similar taste and texture to water chestnuts, and we had seen many in the market but not, before this, on a menu. In China the roots are sliced across so you get something that looks like a showerhead. These however had been sliced lengthways way into 2cm strips, thus losing the crispness. In November 2012 by Lake Inle in Myanmar we were shown how it was possible to twist the filaments in lotus into a usable fibre. Cutting the root this way left those filaments a little longer than was comfortable for eating.

Later our Vietnam airlines flight to Luang Prabang left Siem Reap's small airport - small but still the busiest airport in Cambodia - ten minutes early and arrived at Luang Prabang's even smaller airport over an hour early.

Thursday 20 February 2014

Siem Reap (2) Angkor Thom and Other Temples: Part 8 of Following the Mekong through Vietnam, Cambodia and Laos

The Rectangular Walled City of Angkor Thom and Temples in the Jungle


Cambodia
Next morning I left Lynne to have a quiet, restful and sleepy day and set off on my own with S to see more temples.

Our main objective was Angkor Thom, but the itinerary wanted to send us to three outlying temples first, so we did what we were told.

East Mebon

Some 7km northeast of Angkor Wat, East Mebon was dedicated to Shiva. It was erected in 953 by King Rajindravarman as a temple for his parents; any king worth his salt first built a temple for his parents, then a state temple and only then one for himself.

Like West Mebon, which we had seen in the distance yesterday from Phnom Bakheng, it was intended to be an island temple set in an artificial lake. The East Mebon Lake, though, has long gone and the temple now becalmed in a sea of paddy fields.

Almost life size stone elephants guard the inner enclosure….

Stone elephant, East Mebon

… along with some cheeky bottomed lions like those we had seen at Sambor Prei Kuk.

Cheeky bottomed lion, East Mebon

The sanctuary towers are precursors of the huge corn cobs on Angkor Wat, and were once covered in stucco, though only vestiges remain.

Sanctuary towers, East Mebon

The carving round the sanctuary tower doors is high quality, though much restored, if not actually new.

Carved doorway, East Mebon

Neak Pean (Entwined Serpents)

A kilometer to the north is Neak Pean (literally 'entwined serpents'). This is another island temple, but in this case the surrounding lake still exists – just.

The lake round Neak Pean

Amputees Band

On the causeway across the lake was a bandstand of sorts where a group of amputees were playing traditional instruments - and we met similar bands at the entrance of other temples. Cambodia’s prolonged civil war led to large areas of the country being covered in unmapped minefields. There are believed to be between 4 and 6 million unexploded mines and although the Cambodian government, the UN and several very worthy NGOs are busily employed in mine clearance - all the well-trodden paths and places tourists might go are safe - there are still many areas where mine sweeping is left to the feet of local farmers. As a result there are some 40,000 amputees in Cambodia and these bands are a way of helping them fend for themselves. CDs are for sale - I did not buy one as I doubt I would ever listen to it - but I did drop in a small contribution whenever we passed a band

Amputee band, Neak Pean

At the centre of the island is a pond, and the small temple sits on an island in the pond, the central tower encircled by two stone snakes, their tails entwined (on the right hand side of the photograph). The pond is thought to represent Anavatapta, the mythical Himalayan lake which is the source of all the rivers of Northern India and whose waters cure all illness. Four more pools surround the central pool, set at the cardinal points of the compass and representing the four elements.

Entwined snakes, Neak Pean

Neak Pean was built in the second half of the 12th century by Jayavarman VII. Its purpose may been medical – bathing in the pools would be expected to cure most ills – and perhaps it was one of the many ‘hospitals’ Jayavarman built around his empire.

A horse with stone figures clinging to his mane faces the serpent’s heads. The statue represents the bodhisattva Lokesvara, who turned himself into a horse to rescue drowning merchants off Sri Lanka, which seems an eccentric way to rescue the shipwrecked – even for a god.

Loekesvara, with shipwrecked clinging to his mane, Neak Pean

Preah Khan

Preah Khan is a couple of kilometers further east and is just a little north of Angkor Thom. Also built by Jayarvarman VII, it occupies the site of his victory over the Cham in 1191. It is in the care of the World Monuments Fund which takes a conservative approach, maintaining the fabric as it is and resisting the temptation to over-restore or even rebuild.

Outer wall, Preah Khan

That said, as we approached the entrance we encountered a group of restoration workers. The foreman measured several stones before finding one the right size. The chosen stone was raised by means of a lever so that a sling could be passed underneath it.

The chosen stone is raised with a lever, Preah Khan

A metal tripod supporting a block and tackle was set over the stone and the sling hooked up to it. The stone was raised by one man with no great effort,.....

The stone is raised by one man with no great effort, Preah Khan

​..and when it was at the right height the cart was pushed underneath, ....

The cart is pushed under the stone, Preah Khan

....the sling removed and the stone pushed away. The job took less than 10 minutes, human muscles provided the necessary power, and all the equipment, except the rubber pneumatic tyres on the cart, would have been available to the original builders – though they would probably not have had the hard hats, steel toe-capped boots or protective gloves.

The stone is pushed away, Preah Khan

With a central Buddhist temple and outlying Hindu temples, Preah Khan has been a palace, a monastery and university. Its current state of semi-collapse may be due to frequent extensions with the new halls being built on top of inadequate foundations, but its cause has not been helped by the encroaching jungle, particularly the giant kapok trees.

Kapok tree, Preah Khan

Preah Khan has a pleasingly rough and raw feel, like it has just been hacked out of the jungle.

Unrestored carving, Preah Khan

Angkor Thom

The Elephant Terrace

Leaving Preah Khan we entered Angkor Thom by the north gate which is impressive but no match for the south gate (see yesterday) and parked on the grassy area facing Jayarvarman VII’s elephant terrace, along with dozens of buses, hundreds of taxis and thousands of tuk-tuks.

The elephant terrace is 300 metres long and covered with a bas-relief frieze of near life size elephants. Most have mahouts riding on them and they are engaged in hunting, though some of them seem to be struggling with tigers.

The Elephant Terrace, Angkor Thom

We climbed up the end of the terrace….

The end of the Elephant Terrace, Ankgor Thom

Baphuon

…. and walked towards Baphuon, with the causeway, the original approach over an artificial lake, to our left. The temple is surrounded by towering trees, and the jungle, with the chatter of tropical wildlife in the canopy, is as impressive as the building. I wish I could have put names to more of the birds, but no one could mistake the racket-tailed drongo that flew in front of us, like a blackbird trailing a couple of miniature badminton racquets.

Approaching Baphuon, Angkor Thom

Eleventh century Baphuon has recently reopened after a restoration which started in 1959. The later temples were built on a platform, but Baphuon was not and, according to the photos inside, had disintegrated into a pile of rubble giving the restorers a huge 3-D jigsaw puzzle.

‘You may climb up’, S told me, ‘but I will wait here. There are no views because the trees are higher than the temple.’ And he was right, but despite that I did not feel I had wasted my time slogging up three steep wooden staircases...

The steps up to the third level, Baphuon, Angkor Thom

...and working round the enclosures at each level.

On the second level, Baphuon, Angkor Thom

From the top there was an excellent view back down over the causeway towards the Elephant Terrace.

Looking back down the causeway to the Elephant Terrace, Baphuon, Angkor Thom

I missed the most interesting feature of the temple, a brickwork reclining Buddha, which I must have walked past without seeing. To be fair the outline is more easily seen from a distance, but as the photo shows it was none too clear even then.

There really is a reclining Buddha in the brickwork, honest, Baphuon, Angkor Thom

What little remains of Baphuon's outer wall is held up by tree roots....

Surrounding wall, Baphuon, Angkor Thom

Phimeankas

....and we walked through one of the many gaps and emerged in the royal palace of Suryavarman I. The king's palace, the queen's palace and the house of the nobles were wooden and no trace remains. All that is left is Phimeankas, Suryavarman's state temple. It is a simple three tier temple built of laterite with elephants guarding the corners and lions guarding the stairs.

Phimeankas, Angkor Thom

The Terrace of the Leper King

From Phimeankas we made our way to the last part of Jayarvarman VII's great surrounding wall, the Terrace of the Leper King.

Two walls run parallel. The carvings on the outer wall are heavily restored, but those on the inner wall are originals, though some are in poor repair.

Terrace of the Leper King, inner wall, Angkor Thom

On top of the terrace is a replica of the statute of Jayavarman VII, the original of which is in the national museum on Phnom Penh. He is known as the Leper King as tradition states he contracted the disease, though there is no hard evidence for this. Behind the statue is the site used for royal cremations.

Jayavarman VII, Angkor Thom

Ta Prohm, The 'Jungle Temple'

We left Angkor Thom by the Victory Gate, the more northerly of the two eastern gates, and drove a couple of kilometres to Ta Prohm.

Ta Prohm

Dating from 1186, Ta Prohm is another of Jayavarman VII's monuments. Once a Buddhist monastery, it is a vast rambling complex much of it reduced to ruins by encroaching vegetation, most notably the huge kapok trees whose roots embrace many walls and galleries.

Ta Prohm, the 'Jungle Temple'

This is the so-called 'jungle temple' which features in Lara Croft : Tomb Raider.

Ta Prohm, the 'Jungle Temple'

S was very keen to point out one particular small carving, which appears to be of a stegosaurus. Either there were dinosaurs in 12th century Cambodia, or this is a carving of something else, or it is a whimsical modern insert.

Stegosaurus? Ta Prohm

The Indian government funds much of the restoration and parts of it look suspiciously like reconstruction. Using local stonemasons to replicate the deteriorated carvings is fine provided it is always clear what is original and what is modern and whether the modern is replica, guesswork or whimsy.

Restorers hard at work, Ta Prohm

I now felt I had seen enough temples for the day, and this one never seemed to end, whenever we reached what appeared to be the final courtyard, there was always a doorway or gap in the wall leading to yet another section. I do have to admit, though that some of it was quite spectacular.

Ta Prohm, the 'Jungle Temple' - (That Lara Croft seems to have let her self go!)

S intended me to eat at one of the string of foreigner orientated restaurants that line the road to Ta Prohm. They look attractive but most are merely an opportunity to charge high prices for food calculated to offend no palate regardless of how fussy it is or on which continent it originated. When we found S's chosen restaurant was full, I interpreted it as a message from fate telling me I had been neglecting Lynne for too long and insisted we return to Siem Reap.

Back to Siem Reap, Local Whiskies, Fish Pedicure and Red Ants for Dinner

I found her somewhat perked and she accompanied me to the next-door restaurant to drink a lime juice and watch me eat fried rice with chicken - it is always good to watch a master at work.

Later she felt strong enough to make the short walk to the old market where we bought a few presents.

Outside the old market, Siem Reap

In 1935, traveller and anthropologist Geoffrey Gorer described Siem Reap as a charming little village, hardly touched by European influence, built along a winding river, the native houses are insignificant little structures in wood hidden behind the vegetation which grows so lushly along the river banks. Siem Reap has changed, the river no longer winds, the buildings are hardly insignificant, but the vegetation is still lush; it remains a small town and has retained some of that charm amid its party town atmosphere.

Crossing the Siem Reap River, Siem Reap

We walked back via the lively 'Pub Street' where draught beer cost US$0.50. Perhaps S was right about it being watered and/or adulterated. Mekong whisky and coke was also on offer at US$1.25, which sounded a good offer - if you ignore my long held opinion that people who put coke in whisky also strangle kittens and bite the heads off budgies. I later found Mekong Whisky - bottled in Cambodia but made God knows where - in a shop, priced at US$2 for the bottle. When offers look too good to be true they usually are, so I left it on the shelf and splashed out 5 dollars on a bottle of 'Crown 99' produced by the Red Bull Distillery in Thailand using 'finest imported malt from Scotland carefully blended with Thai pure alcohol.' It turned out to be all right, though I would not seek it out again.

I first heard of fish foot massage a few years ago from someone who had encountered it in Thailand. It has since spread across the world (though Lynne asserts it is bad for your feet and bad for the fish.) Siem Reap is the sort of place with a fish foot massage on every corner - some of them actually on the street.

Fish pedicure, Siem Reap

Later Lynne felt like eating, but only comfort food so we searched the area around the hotel for a restaurant selling western and Khmer food. We found a rather strange place clearly aiming for the 'slightly odd' market - seats on old baths cut in half, rustic wooden tables and a cinema sized screen showing cartoons to a sound track of doom laden music.

Beef and red ants, Siem Reap

For a very reasonable price they provided a pitcher of Cambodia beer, a pulled pork sandwich with French fries for Lynne and a dish of beef with red ants for me. I had seen this on several menus and as no other insects or arachnids were on offer in restaurants aimed at foreigners (i.e. those with written menus) it promised a painless start to my insect eating career.

Get those ants down you, they'll do you good

It was disappointing, it could just have been stir fried beef. I could see few ants - there was subdued lighting and anyway they are small - and they had no discernible flavour. When I had finished Lynne captured this pleasing image of an ant clinging to a grain of rice like it was a life belt. For me it was the highlight of the meal, but Lynne got better value from her sandwich and chips.

It's all over for this ant

Following the Mekong through Vietnam, Cambodia and Laos