mercredi 7 novembre 2007

Temples of Angkor

Now that I am in front of my computer I realise it is extremely difficult to write anything about Angkor. All the words that come to our mind are superlatives, and I am afraid that any post related this place would be an endless praise of Khmer architecture. Hence, for once, I have put more pictures than text - please note I have chosen the pictures 'randomly' (in 2 mn), which should give you an idea on how beautiful that place is...


Yes, we did woke up at 5.30 in the morning to see the sunrise on Angkor Wat - the biggest temple (there are dozens) but not our favourite one. Note that the sunrise is overrated, unless you want to enjoy it with jam-packed buses of Japanese tourists...

In some of the temples, you can expect serious Indiana Jones stuff. A few of them have been deliberately left to mother nature, which provides the whole site with an adventurous dimension. This also means fantastic photo opportunities!

Many temples have very different styles - which is why a minimum of 3 days is necessary to see the whole site (even if like me you're not a fan of temples). All the surroundings of temples (lakes and forests) makes Angkor an amazing site, which fully corresponds t the adventurous cliche that you may have...

So What can we say? Never been to a place which is such splendeur...this was clearly the highlight of our trip(s) so far, and despite tourists, beggers and sellers, going to that place is a unique moment in one's life!

Travellers' advice: 3 days are necessary - use the first two to discover and the third one to visit again some temples you liked. Like for Taj Mahal, prices are outrageous (40$ for 3 days). To visit the temples, we advise to hire a bicycle (1$), which is more rewarding and much cheaper than a motorbike (8-10$) or Tuk tuk (10-16$). The site is vast and is 8 km away from Siam Reap: hence expect to do 25-30km per day. After such effort Siam Reap is a fantastic place to relax, with plenty of bars and guesthouses. Unsurprisingly, yet sadly, you will be harassed during your whole trip, but this is the price to pay to go there!

8 commentaires:

Anonyme a dit…

Are you still going to Burma? I have a fascination with military dictatorships.

Rob

Anonyme a dit…

Magnifiques photos, Céline et Manu !
Angkor, un site splendide et mémorable en effet !

Bises,

Ananas a dit…

Vous avez l'air heureux, ça fait plaisir. :)

Manu a dit…

Sorry Rob,but I don't think I'll make it to Burma this year.However be reassured: cambodia is far from being democratic, laos has a Hanoi-friendly regime, and there was a military coup in Thailand recently:-)

Anonyme a dit…

Ca faisait un moment que j'étais pas passé... merci pour les analyses socio-politiques !

Baby

Anonyme a dit…

Salut Manu et Celine, manifiques vos photos d'Ankhor ça fait vraiment rêver...

Est ce que ya un pays démocratique ou tu envisage d'aller quand même ou tu te fait le supo des regimes communistes sud est asiats?

Je te soupçonne de compléter ta formation de dictateur auprès de tes camarades asiatiques pour ensuite tenter un poutch en France (au moins ça dégagerait Sarko!) ou bien alors une prise de pouvoir à Bruxelles (si ils sont capables de gober que la Flandre et la Wallonie sont séparés ils pourront bien croire tes balivernes).

Profitez bien de votre voyage

PS: Le t shrit bleu du barça (cf photo avec Celine) que tu m'a volé chez papa et que j'aime trop tu l'enmènera pas au paradis...

Tib

Tchika a dit…

Manu qui vole les T-shirt de son frère !! On aura tout vu... Sublimes photos en tout cas.
Biz à tous les deux.

Hasselblatt E. a dit…

Hello there,

looks like you're having a splendid vacation... I'm actually considering a last-minute group vacation to Cambodia/Laos/Vietnam myself, so I'm glad to have up-to-date first-hand information.
I hope you have been jogging between all those temples, Celine, because we're planning some races in the near future ;-)
Enjoy it and tell me more.

Dirk.