Worrall Travel R's

Worrall Travel R's
Roz and Russ

Worrall Travel R's - Kicking the Bucket List

Tuesday, February 19, 2013

Siem Reap - Temples, Monkeys, Ruins

 

Monday, February 18, 2013

Day 10: Siem Reap
Meals included: 1 breakfast
Activities:

We spend a full-day visiting the amazing temples of Angkor on a guided tour. Angkor Thom, the 'Great Royal City', is famous for its series of colossal human faces carved in stone. The impressive Bayon temple is the centrepiece of all this. Angkor Wat is the largest and most complete structure. It is the only one of Angkor's temples with its entrance facing to the west (the others face east), the reason being that it was constructed as a funerary temple for King Suryavarman II and a westerly countenance was seen to represent a sunset. Ta Prohm temple is an incredible sight, with large trees embedding themselves in the stone foundations of the structure, giving the impression of man's creation being reclaimed by the powerful forces of nature. We can end the day with a sunset view of Angkor Wat from Phnom Bakheng.
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Siem Reap means Death by Siam.  Cambodia's greatest kingdom of Angkor Thom built in the 12th century was over taken and destoryed before the building of the temple was completed.  Cambodians worked on the temple for 30 years under their king, but when he died the work stopped.  The temple was raided and looted many times over the years and today stands in ruins which the government tries to keep minimally preserved.

Angkor Wat is probably the biggest tourist attraction in Cambodia.  The place has been packed with tourists, many if whom are Chinese celebrating Chinese New Years.  It is quite the international city.  Here are some photos of Angkor Wat during the day and at Sunrise.




Families of monkeys greet us, and try to steal any food or water we carry






After our visit during the day, we revisit the following morning to catch the sunrise:




Next we visit the Temple Ta Prohm which was the movie set for Tomb Raiders.  Looks like something you wold see in a movie set.  It is quite lovely and has more colors than the monochromatic sandstone of Angkor Wat.




We finish our first day at sunset at Phnom Bakheng:




After a full day, we retire to the Mexican Restaurant for a mix of cuisines and Margaritas.

All is Well With the Worrall Travelers

Sunday, February 17, 2013

Into Cambodia

Getting Signed In to Siem Reap with Peregrine Tour Group
Sunday, February 17, 2013 -  Leaving Làos and flying to Siem Reap, Cambodia

Day 9: Siem Reap
Meals included: 1 breakfast
Activities:

You are transferred to the airport, where you say goodbye to your Lao tour leader and fly to Siem Reap, Cambodia. Please note that you are likely to be unescorted on this flight and will be met on arrival in Siem Reap by your Cambodian tour leader or a local representative. You will also meet other members of the group who will accompany you on the Cambodian sector of the tour.

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Early Morning Drama - When is a safe too safe?

The alarm beeped early, 4:00 a.m.  We had a taxi to catch at 5:00 and a plane out of Laos at 6:00 a.m.   The airport is small and only a few minutes drive from the hotel, but there isn't a lot of wait time built in to our exit strategy from Laos.  By 4:30, we were dressed and packed  with the exception of our valuables in the room safe.  I tried to unlock the safe.  It beeped back three times and refused to open.  We tried again keying in our six digit code.  Again, no go.  Then Russ tried again, no go.

We have a phone in  the room, but the hotel staff  at this early hour may not have the best English.  We do not have a number for our guide.  We are not even sure she is staying i  this hotel.

Russ went down to reception.  No one accept a man, presumably the night watch, was around and he was sound asleep on the lobby sofa. Russ tried to wake him, shook his shoulder,...nothing.  Russ came back upstairs.  We tried unlocking the safe again, still nothing.  It was now 4:45.  out taxi would soon be here.  Russ went down again and this time succeeded in waking the watchman up, only to be told that the manager takes the key home and wouldn't be back until 8:00 am. and the man went back to sleep!  Russ says he isn't sure how much the night watchman understands.  We are hoping our tour guide will soon be down, but not much can be done in time if i deed the manager has the key.

By 4:50, I am super charged an sweating bullets.  We obviously can't leave without our cash and passports. All sorts of ugly scenarios are running through my mind.   I whip out the Ipad translator app and speak into it.  "Please call the manager.  We need the key to open the room safe."  I have the request in writing and orally.  By the time I get to the lobby with the IPad, our tour guide and everyone else is ready to go.  Russ and the night watchman (prodded by our guide) miraculously found a key for the safe are headed upstairs.  Within the five minutes it took the taxi driver to load our bags into the van,  Russ returns with our passports and money!  Success at the11th hour!  And we all leave on time!

We arrive in Cambodia by 10:00 and have the rest of the day on our own.  We visit the old market, go to lunch and for a swim before heading up to our room for a nap.
Lunch Time in Downtown Siem Reap

Mexican Food?  We can hardly wait!


So Many Kinds of Rice

Colorful Dragon Fruit - Pretty Too Look At,  Very Bland to Eat


 Russ has been sniffing for three days and now I'm getting a sore throat.  I think tonight's dinner will be a cup of soup, a shot of whiskey, and a good night's rest.

Cheers from the Worrall Travel R's

Saturday, February 16, 2013

Exploring Vientiane, City of the Moon



February 16, 2013  - Vientiane

From our Daily Itinerary:

Day 8: Vientiane
Meals included: 1 breakfast
Activities:

A city tour acquaints us with the major sights of the capital. We visit the imposing Patuxai monument (also known as the Anousavari, which translates as 'Victory' in Lao - hence the name Victory monument), which is Vientiane's version of the Arc de Triomphe and dominates the city's main thoroughfare. It has also been nicknamed the 'Vertical Runway', which refers to the fact that it was built in the 1960s from funds the US Government had given to the Lao Government for the expressed purpose of extending the runway at the airport! Wat Si Saket is the oldest temple in the city, while the former royal temple of Wat Prakeo previously housed the famous Emerald Buddha image before it was taken by the Siamese in the late 18th Century. We visit both temples and the most famous structure in Laos, the That Luang stupa. A drink in a riverside bar watching the glorious sunset over the Mekong River is the perfect way to finish our day.

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This morning we started our explorations of Vientiane.  The Loa name is Viang Jan, pronounced  as Wiang Jan.  The French could not pronounce it correctly and changed it to a similar name that they could spell and say.  The Lao name means city of the moon.  It is the most developed and international city that we have been in Laos.

By means of walking and taxi, we explored temples, statues, and the Patuxai monument or the vertical runway.  Americans gave the governmamt dollars to extend the runway and the Lao government used the dollars instead to build this monumemt to their communist victory.  We found a geocache here.




At the Wat Prakeo, we learned about the various poses of the Buddah and the symbolism now associated with these poses.   


Dennis, Aaron, and Guide Tui


Photos from Wat Si Saket:


Stop Fighting






We also visited the That Luang Stupa.


Today is our last day with our guides Moh and Tui.  When we returned to the hotel at noon, we bade a fond farewell toTui as he will be returning to his home in Liang Probang later this adternoon.   We will say goodbye to  Moh later, as we will be seeing jer tonight, and she will see us off tomorrow morning to Cambodia where we will meet up with a Cambodian guide.

After our lunch, Russ and I, along with Marek and Eva, and Jan headed out to the Buddha park about 29 km out of Vientiane.  The park is filled with statuary that reflect both Hinduism and Buddhism.  It was interesting and we had a lot of fun taking photos there.



Could not find the geocache here.

Monklings

Interesting fact..Direct access to Facebook is blocked here.  We can only go through a backdoor using our personal app or a link from an email.

Tonight, we are going to the night market and dinner,then we are off to Cambodia in the morning.

Allos Well With the Worrall Travel Rs

Friday, February 15, 2013

American Shame in Phonsavan, Laos


Friday, February 15, 2013

Day 7: Phonsavan - Vientiane
Meals included: 1 breakfast
Activities:

In the morning we transfer out to visit the Plain of Jars, an archaeological site where hundreds of large stone jars are littered all over the plateau. It is said that these jars are over 2000 years old, but there is no reliable way of dating them and archaeologists are still mystified as to their original purpose (opinions vary from burial urns to rice whisky vats). We are then transferred to the airport to catch our flight to Vientiane - the capital of Laos.

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We arrived about 5:00 pm in the provincial capitol of Phonsavan,  As we were checking in some other travelers were coming through the doors.  Oh my gosh, our sailing friend Maggie Loaney from Sydney, Australia and her American sailing friend, Robert Van Pelt from San Juan Capistrano in California walked through the door.  I knew Maggie was in Southeast Asia traveling around and thought it would be fun to meet up, but we had not made any formal arrangements to do so.  So this was an unexpected surprise.  We were able to get together later in the evening for dinner.  Really fun to see them!




One of the reasons we are in Phonsavan is to learn about American involvement here during the Viet Nam war.  Before we met up with Maggie and Robert for dinner, we went to the MAG (mines Advisory Group) center,  a non-profit organization that is still cleaning up the unexploded ordinance UXO's dropped by Americans during the Vietnam war to disrupt movement of communists and supplies through Lao on the Ho Chi Min trail to Vietnam.  Unfortunately for the people of Laos, the Ho Chi Min Trail runs the length of their country and took the brunt of collateral damage.

The American military under the command of Presidents Johnson and Nixon, 1964-1973 secretly and breaking the terms of the Geneva Convention, conducted airstrikes in a neutral country.  For 9 years the USA dropped 2 MILLION TONS of cluster bombs on the Ho Chi Min Trail and in the countryside of Laos around the trail, destroying villages, people, and vegetation.  The American people and even our Congress were not aware of or to the extent of the devastation we were unleashing in Laos.  This is often why this was referred to as the secret war.  

Just driving through the jungly mountains of this area should have been a clue that this would have been a futile endeavor, and that this scatter bomb approach was a hit - miss destruction and the bombs and bombies would be an inhumane atrocity.

The 2 MILLION Tons of  cluster bombs look like a very large traditional bullet shaped bomb as it is dropped out of plane.  As it approaches the ground it is supposed to detonate and violently open spinning the contents of thousands of smaller bombies.  The spinning action on the wings of these bombies is supposed to set the fuse to detonate when they strike the ground and explode like grenades sending shrapnel in all directions.  

Only 70 percent of the large bombs and smaller bombies actually detonated leaving 30 percent of all that fell not yet detonated.  The little bombies look like a grapefruit sized yellow balls.  Children are particularly attracted to these objects that have been laying around, caught up in tree branches, buried in muddy fields, lakes, rivers, and rice paddies for some movement to activate them.  Peasants (almost everyone) who works. the land are in daily jeopardy.

As an analogy, imagine the Pacific Crest Trail  and surrounding cities running the length of California being bombed once every eight minutes for 9 years with 2 million tons of bombs with no defense and we are not at war with the enemy marching through or the country that is fighting them.  Fifty years later Californians are still being blown up by unexploded ordinance.  This is a very ugly scenario.

Since 1974 over 20,000 Lao men, women, and children have accidentally found these bombs and bombies and have been killed, many more have suffered terrible burn injuries and loss of limbs, eyes, and ears.  Farms lands were so damaged and dangerous, sustenance farms have failed and the people often hungry and in poverty.  The United States apparently has never fully apologized or helped to clear all of the UXOs from Laos.  Worse, knowing both the short and long term damage these cluster bombs cause, we continue to use them whenever we are engaged in air warfare. 

Given the injury and continued devastation the bombs and UXO's caused and continue to cause, one would think the Laotians would harbor ill will towards the Americans.  Outwardly they are friendly to everyone.  Our guide Tui told us that living the Buddhist way is to forgive and forget.  The Laotians use and recycle all of the metal they find to make machetes, shovels, hoes, eating utensils and hardware.  Craters left by the bombs are used as fishing ponds.  They are a kind sweet people that we took terrible advantage of.  I am ashamed and saddened here.




Carefully digging avoiding bombies

Foreground of Stupa Blown To Bits as Demolition Team  Finds Bombies

Family collecting berries outside the safe area
We visited some temples, one contained a Buddha built in 1442.  Since the time it was built, it had been pillaged by the Chinese, damaged when the French were fighting Laos and bombed by the Americans.  It still stands.

Russ and I explored a local market, not for tourists.  Merchandise here is primarily from China.



Juicing Sugar Cane

Our group went to the Plain of Jars.  These are large hollowed out carved jars presumed to be over 2000 years old, although the rock is much older of course.  There are some theories about these jars, but none have been conclusively proven.  Some of the jars had bone fragments, but before the bones could be carbon dated, they disappeared.  How did he jars get here and what did they hold.  This area is still dangerous to walk outside the MAG markers.  





Excavation might unearth some other evidence, but it is dangerous.  The UNESCO World Heritage Site is considering the Plain of Jars as a site, but the UXO have to be cleared.  My personal theory is that these stones were here naturally and carved out and used for cremated remains of the indigenous people. Perhaps this will always be  mystery.

We boarded a plane and left Phonsavan for Vientiane, the Capitol of Laos late in  the afternoon.  We will be here for two days before heading to Cambodia.

All is Well with The Worrall Travel R's