Thursday, 27 September 2012

Siem Reap Day 2

Got up at half 4 today to go and catch the sunrise at Angkor Wat. I left my room to find the hotel had locked all it's doors and all the staff were asleep on the beds by the pool... I felt bad having to wake them up but did so that I could get out and meet my guide for the next 2 days.
While researching Cambodia a few weeks ago I read a blog by a canadian man who had been to Cambodia a few times a long time ago and met a tuktuk driver who took an interest in his camera. He let him use his camera and found that he had an eye for good pictures so next time he went, he took him a camera as a present. From then on this tuktuk driver learnt as much as he could about photography and went on to take amazing photographs. This mans name is Kimleng Sang and I found his details on the Internet and booked him for 2 days.
I met Kimleng outside the hotel and we made our way down pitch back streets to Angkor Wat. I had no idea what to expect. The rain yesterday had caused trees to fall down and flooding so it was very wet on the potholed roads to Angkor Wat. We walked up to the temple using his phone as a torch. I could see a huge black building in front of me with some towers. So we stood in front of it and Kimleng had brought his tripod so that I could use it to photograph the sunrise, so we set up and waited... 10 mins later the sky got lighter and an amazing temple stood before me. I've never had the opportunity to try to take photographs of something so amazing. Even my iPhone would have produced amazing pictures. I am looking forward to looking at these when I get home!

We moved around, away from all the other tourists and took photos from different angles. I hope I get some good pictures!

After taking dozens of pictures we went to a local place to have coffee. I wanted to ask for a latte but thought they might just say "what?" so just ordered a coffee. Kimleng had an iced coffee which looked yummy, so I made up my mind to order that next time!

We spent the day driving in his tuktuk to the various temples and taking photographs. Kimleng is an amazing photographer and pretty much self taught. He is also very patient and when I was getting frustrated with not being able to work out the right settings he would help me and be spot on every time. He took me on side routes away from the tourists and if the tourists were going in one entrance we'd walk through a forest to get to another where we could take photographs without hundreds of tourists in the way. we went to a couple of small temple entrances where there were no tourists as normal guides don't tend to go there. We climbed up rocks for him to show me different angles for photographs and a different perspective to a scene that every other person was taking a photograph of. One thing I want to learn more about in photography is lighting and Kimleng manages to spot a good photograph with amazing lighting wherever he goes. he taught me a lot today about finding different perspectives and using lighting. I didn't realise I was going to learn so much from him!

I took a photograph of a trees roots over the temple... Looked pretty cool to me... Then Kimleng told me to climb up about 2 foot and stand on a rock, I did, and suddenly I had a totally different photo. Water appeared from nowhere and I now had an amazing reflection of the tree and the temple, making a totally different scene.

Enough about photography, for now... The temples are something else. It amazes me that these buildings were built with so much detail and so many of them. It took them 37 years to complete but even 37 years seems short if you look at the vastness of this place. a few of them are currently being restored and I liked hearing that other countries were restoring them. Japan and India being 2 of the ones I saw.
The facts and stories about Angkor Wat are very interesting whether you are religious or not. I imagine that if you are a Buddhist this place would be even more of a massive interest to you.
I'm glad I went to the museum yesterday as I learnt a bit about what certain things meant and the symbolism of some of the temples and it's features. Although Kimleng is very knowledgable and explained lots of things to me.
The detail on the walls of the temples are amazing. Some of them are so intricate you wonder how they did it. in fact I don't even know how they did it. That's something I want to find out

I would love to have seen Angkor Wat when it was built and be an invisible person wondering around and looking at the temples and their running back then. I always say that about London too. I'd love to walk around there too in about 1910/1920 and see how things were.

Cambodian children are beautiful. Fact.
Every single one I have seen has the most amazing eyes and smiles. I love taking portraits of people, mostly when they aren't looking, and it's so easy to get a good photo of these kids. You just have to press the shutter. In fact i prefer taking photos of these kids looking at me, for once, as they all have amazing eyes!

Someone told me I had to try the pineapple on a stick whilst in Cambodia. I found one of these today and was so happy! A whole (mini) pineapple cut and put on a stick. Yum yum! I stupidly got it just after a massive lunch so couldn't finish it, but at Angkor temple I was mesmerised by two poor children looking through bins for used water bottles to sell. They were sisters. The younger one couldn't have been more than about 2 years old, following her older sister around in her pretty little dirty dress. I kept turning around to take photos of them then remembered I still had pineapple left. I took it to the older sister who stood in front of me, staring at me with her hands together for minutes to say thank you. it was the sweetest thing. her younger sister then started crying as she wasn't sharing her pineapple so Kimleng told them to share and they both carried on walking munching on their bits of pineapple. They were the cutest kids ever. I have loads of photos of the younger sister who I was mesmerised by. I wish I could have taken them home!
Later on, I met another small boy who was trying to sell me bracelets. I wouldn't buy them as Kimleng told me if I buy from kids it just shows them they don't need to go to school as they can earn money instead so to buy from adults. Not that I can buy anything as my suitcase is fully jammed with work clothes! anyway this kid tried to give me a bracelet after I said no repeatedly and said I want to give it to you. I said no, but he hooked it on my camera and stepped away. I tried to give it back to him and said he should try to sell it to someone not give it to me, but he refused to take it and told me not to forget him. I'll wear that bracelet and think of him and hope he is doing well.

For lunch I tried a typical Cambodian dish, amok fish curry and rice. The food was yummy. We also ordered fried eggplant and i tried the chilli pork which was also good.
I found some amok curry spices yesterday with a recipe so that I can take it back and try cooking it with my lovely other half who raves about Cambodia and wanted the curry!

I am now back at my hotel in my bright orange hotel room, chilling. Wondering whether to go out and try and find food or just to go to sleep! We spent 12 hours exploring today and it was pretty tiring, especially in the heat. It rained for about 10 minutes at lunchtime and after the rain, the heat became quite overbearing.

So, this pol pot dictator... I need to learn more, but I was told about when he was around. Back when he was leading, apparently people from this regime would come to the houses and ask the children what their mummy's had been cooking. If they replied chicken or beef or anything other than mouse/snail etc, they would come into the house and the family would be shot for eating well. Educated people were killed, rows of girls and boys were taken into the street and told right you're marrying the boy over there and if they refused, they'd be killed. There's many more stories and they are despicable. I'm very interested in learning much more about Cambodia and I'll be coming back again with greater knowledge of the place.
Even now, some of the people from this regime still run in government and the stories I hear and the things that I can see here, I do not agree with at all. I wish the world could be a better place.

I am looking forward to getting my photos onto my laptop when I get back to the UK and seeing how they have come out. I hope I manage to capture the amazingness of this place somehow.










Siem Reap Day 1

I arrived in Siem Reap at 07:50 thinking, I have no US dollars, I have no idea how much a taxi is going to cost so I might get ripped off and I have no idea about anything about this country...
Stepped off the plane and straight into the Visa queue. Got a visa for $25 and off I went. Outside, you can get a motorbike taxi anywhere for $2. As I only had a rucksack I decided to do that as it sounded more fun than a car or a tuktuk! (there's a cash point in the airport... Phew!)
Got to my hotel and had arranged to meet a guide a few hours later so chilled out for a bit. It's so hot here'. You walk out of air con and you're sweating.

I met my guide at 11. He took me to Tonle Sap lake and sent me off on a boat ride. The guys told me it was $25 for about 2 hours. After paying it I realised I should have haggled. Oh well, you live and learn. The boat trip was awesome. Saw the locals living on their boats and stilt houses. The lake was like the sea. Huge. It's about 55km across in rainy season, which is now.
We passed a floating orphanage school where the kids parents had passed away due to illness from the water or they had left the kids behind and moved on. This was pretty sad to hear.
On the way back they stopped at a community food centre and told me I could buy food and take it to the orphanage. I wanted to do that... Until they tried to make me pay $85 for a sack of rice. I could send it from England cheaper than that! I asked about a bag of sweets instead which was about 10 packets of small crisps. $5 I was told. I'm not paying $5 for a few crisps to take to a load of kids where it's not even going to go around 10 of them... I felt really bad not buying anything but the prices were ridiculous. It's not like I'm a rich westerner who has money to burn. Even if i was, thats just absurd! After that the feeling I got from the guide was that they didn't like it that I hadn't bought anything and I couldn't wait to get off the boat. when getting off talk of tips started and because they went on at me when they'd already made me feel bad I didn't want to leave anything. I didn't know if leaving just a dollar was being offensive but after paying $25 for 2 hours I didn't see the justification anymore. Bearing in mind my tuktuk guide was $15 for most of the day!
I left them feeling guilty but I didn't like that they became rude because I didn't do what they wanted.
After meeting my guide again we drove back towards the city and I went to the Angkor Wat museum to find out what the meaning of all these temples was.
It was interesting but I was shattered from only having slept an hour the night before and working weird hours in Singapore, plus the heat didnt help!

Following this we drive to the killing fields and learnt about Pol Pot. A disgusting dictator. I need to read up more on the goings on of Cambodia. But this man was terrible. More on him later.

In the evening I went to a local restaurant which was a Cambodian buffet with Cambodian dancing. The food was good and I ate as I sat watching the tens of little lizards crawling across the ceiling! the dance show was good, if a little slow! But a good insight into the culture, clothing and dance.
By this point I wanted my bed and I had to be up at 4:45am to see the sunrise at Angkor Wat the next day so I went back and chilled at the hotel pool bar for a little while. It was then I heard thunder... 5 mins later and I thought the trees were going to come flying at me and the hotel staff were rushing around madly trying not to let the hotel flood. A rain storm had begun and it's the craziest rain I've ever seen! it was like someone had opened up the clouds and instantly all the water in the sky decided to drop down!
I sat watching it and listening to the thunder for a while, while skyping home to show them the rain! then decided I better go to bed before I got soaked! The 2 seconds I had to walk outside to get to my room got me drenched!

All in all I found my first day in Cambodia pretty hard. Being on my own and not strong willed enough to brush people off or be rude got to me a bit and I felt a bit worried about the rest of my stay. Hopefully tommorow will be a better day!

Tuesday, 25 September 2012

Travel list - 1st check!

I have made it to one of the countries on my travel list! I have just arrived in Cambodia-Siem Reap.
I flew from Singapore to Kuala Lumpur for the night then onto Siem Reap. Spent the day shopping in some oversized mall and ended up buying a bigger memory card, a filter and a camera bag. All because of my over excitedness about my trip to Cambodia! My main reason to come here is to explore and take photos. I'm only here for 3 days and have hired a photographer/tuktuk driver for 2 days! Hoping he can take me to some cool places, having a shared interest and learn off each other!
I found him on a photographers blog funnily enough. This guy had come out to Cambodia a few years back and hired a tuktuk and the driver seemed interested in the camera so long story short, he let him have a go and ended up buying him a camera and getting him proper training! Looking forward to meeting him!

I booked some cheap hotel in KL and forgot to really look at location.... As I was in the room for a total of 6 hours it wasn't a bother but the area was like a little India. That place definitely isn't making it to my travel list!
I got a cab at 3am to go to the airport and got quite a shock. Right, religion...
Actually I'm not going to go off on that right now... Im too tired and I want to go exploring. Basically the taxi driver was a Muslim man in full attire. Nothing wrong with that. I'm in a Muslim country. But playing chants... For the hour journey to the airport in your taxi? Not just chants... Shouting... about how Allah is the greatest. Telling me i belong to him, everything belongs to him... Not telling, shouting. I even tried paying attention but he was shouting at a hundred words per second.
Each to their own, and I'm interested in people's beliefs... But i wasn't impressed by what I heard. more on religion another time... !!

It's so HOT here. you walk outside and break out in a sweat. And I'm not sure how to dress. Im going to temples.... So I should dress respectfully but it's so hot!!!!! I think i need to leave my gold sequin bikini top and pink hot pants in my suitcase and bear the heat in trousers and t-shirts....
By the way... For those who don't know me... I am joking. but the thought of going out in this heat in trousers and long sleeve tops makes me hot just thinking about it. hmmmm I'll have to compromise somehow...

Time to go out and bear the heat!

Monday, 24 September 2012

Never any normality

Just finished what felt like the longest race ever. Doing Singapore is fun but tiring due to the time changes. We start the week in Singapore time then half way through switch to European time...so dealing with jet lag and working is not the most pleasant experience. Also means that when the week is over, like now, and I'm on holiday.... I can't SLEEP!!!!

I've stayed out in Singapore and am at sentosa island. I'm going exploring for a few days though. Off to Kuala Lumpur today then Cambodia tommorow. I'm so excited about going to take photos in Siem Reap. I've hired a tuktuk driver/photographer to take me to Angkor Wat and booked the most random hotel I can find :)

My life's changed so much in a year. A year ago I would have been too scared to go off travelling alone and exploring random places, my head was in a different place. I'm now excited about finding new things and can't wait to get to Cambodia!

Now i have a few countries to visit and a few weeks work to do!

Will update on Cambodia in a few days!
If anyone has been to Cambodia and can recommend anywhere to visit, please comment!! Thanks :)

Monday, 10 September 2012

Ciao

I'm in Italy! It's 1am and I have a flight home to catch in 4 hours and I cannot sleep. This is becoming a regular occurrence. Maybe it's all the pasta I've eaten this week!
I'm lying here in my 70's decor hotel room feeling like I'm lying on a plank of wood and frustrated that my eyes won't go to sleeeeeeep!!! My body is telling me I am absolutely shattered but my brain doesn't seem to want to listen.

I'm in a part of Italy I've never been to before... There's not much around... Lots of trees and a LOT of Mosquitos and funny green insects.
The food has been really good and I've enjoyed having lots of different pasta. It feel like ages ago that we were sat having a coffee after arriving... And that was only 4 days ago.

It's funny how life changes when you least expect or without you even realising. Things seem to have taken a 180degree turn in my life. I realised that what I thought I wanted wasn't actually what I wanted and turned out to be something i judged completely wrong. And something made me quickly realise that. And I'm so glad it did. I do believe that everything happens for a reason. It certainly has in my experience! If certain things hadn't happened, I'd never be where I'm at right now!
I'm smiling lots and can't wait to get back to the UK. I have a few days to make the most of before we start our Asian stint. It's going to be a long 4 weeks!

Anyway, last week, we found a derelict cinema which has been derelict for about 5 years. We went photographing and exploring. It was awesome to explore and find everything still in its place, although most things broken and falling apart. My photos didn't come out so well as I was slightly distracted by my thoughts but it was yet another experience to learn from in terms of photography.
I need to find another place to explore now. :)

I can't wait to be back home in my own bed again! I need to be in front of a good film and chilling out :)