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Monday 21 April 2014

Reminiscing of trips past as I eagerly anticipate the next big one....


Count down of days, hours and minutes has begun.... well it began nearly eight weeks ago when I clicked accept on the 'book and pay' button on the Scoot Airlines site... for our journey to one of the most cosmopolitan and ancient countries in the world, described as a repository of all the great civilizations and the cradle of humanity,  I try hard to quell my dromomania for just 12more days.  To help, I've pulled out some old travel snaps to reminisce over and thought I'd share a 'trips past' blogpost. The following was an article I wrote for a local daily back in 2010.
 

Emerald Dragons and Peacock Brides...

Grimacing, I brace myself for the sickening crunch about to be bestowed as I feel the little scooter slide, swerving towards the jeep. There’s no traction on the dusty gravel and as the attached canopied trailer I’m hanging-onto-for-dear-life in ricochets off a pothole, it flicks towards a woman zipping past on her chicken-bouquet scooter. I skim through a mental checklist of Cambodia’s must-sees and there’s zilch about a trip to Siem Reap’s hospital being on the itinerary!
 
It’s a visual-packed schedule with a melding of time: days, hours, minutes, seconds melt into the cosmos under a sweltering humidity thick as honey, tasting of musk. Trips to ethereal temples litter the list: the brooding Bayon with its two hundred enigmatic faces staring down at you from towering pillars, willing you to question their knowing smiles, refusing to let you in on their secrets. Our footsteps muffle against baking grey rock that transcends above us, whilst drumming of cicadas reverberates and bounces against the stone, colliding and smashing the peace filled energy. Below, monks in robes the colour of mandarins with smiles just as sweet sit under a foliage umbrella, whilst around them, swirls of butterflies flitter and dance with emerald dragonflies.
 
Then there’s bride day at Angkor Wat – a pallet of colour splashed across the mocha sandstone edifice that is the symbol of Khmer. They stand there, beautiful doll-like brides with chiselled grooms, vibrant in bejewelled silk, embroidered in gold, lined with pearls, sapphire, zircon and dripping exquisite floral adornments. No pure white here, they wear the lace of peacocks: amethyst, chartreuse, and Prussian blue. With the finesse of professional models, knowing this is their moment to shine against this ancient testimonial of time, the couples stand in the liquefying heat, posing, smiling, and embracing their future.

 

The jungles 287 temples with thousands of secretive faces gives way to a visit of the inland sea, Tonle Sap, and exploration of its floating villages. It’s a fast boat ride up an almost black oil-slicked river, past fisherman submerged to their waists, throwing nets into the boat’s wake in the hope of skimming shrimp. Past small floating classrooms filled with children in crisp white shirts, and past boat builders in ragged trousers, hammering, sawing and planning great planks of wood by hand; not a skerret of electricity. The open inland sea welcomes and the longboat zips across its glassy waters, then splashes into a village. A flotilla of boats line against a bobbing church, ‘What day is it? Sunday? The blending of days has become a blur in this vibrant country. Further along, a child’s delight: a carrousel bobbles behind a floating cafĂ© along with its drifting garden.
 
A group children, each in their own silver bowl bobbing merrily upon the water row up to our boat, their joyful laughing in steep contrast to the hideous reality that afflicts this idyllic land. Landmines. And even out here, there is no escaping the truth. The ongoing legacies of wars past scream from the bodies of these beautiful children. Some are missing an arm or a leg but their audacious spirit shines through as they splash and bob and shriek playfully with wide eyes and cheeky grins.
 

No, there’s definitely no hospital visit on the list and as if reading my mind, the universe intervenes and brings to a halt the skidding madness. We stop inches away from the metal on metal, body on metal impact, and a sigh of relief is released. My driver turns around, a smile crosses his face, his eyes lit with exhilaration, ‘Lucky miss… now, we go to temple?’
 
 
 
 
 
 

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