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| Our minibus to the border - with happy butterfly decorations and smiling flowers! |
We caught a mini bus from Bangkok to the border town of Aranyaprathet (Aran for short), where we stayed the night, intending to cross the border the next day. This particular border crossing is apparently the worst for scams, so we wanted to cross early, as it gets sketchier at night. We checked in to a pretty comfy hotel, for a whopping $5/person per night, and then went to check out the local street food.
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| Street food! |
Eating street food in Cambodia and Thailand is quite safe, so long as you follow a few simple rules: 1) Check the kitchen - if it's pretty clean, and if the ingredients stay covered, and no sign of meat sitting around. 2) The food must be served piping hot, so you can be sure any initial bacteria was wiped out by the heat. 3) Food buffets are fine, just go early so you can ensure the food is fresh.
We stopped at a small roadside stand, a truly mobile kitchen, that made a glass-noodle soup. It was some of the most fantastic food I've ever had - and so spicy! We started bulking up on our capsaicin content in our bloodstream as another way to combat the mosquitoes. So far, so good! We have had very few bites.
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| Our stylish tuk-tuk |
Our lady tuk-tuk driver (it was unusual to see a woman driving a tuk-tuk, Lynnea told us) took us the 5km (3 miles) down the main highway towards the border checkpoint, while we bumped along, hanging onto the handles and hoping our bags wouldn't fall out into the road. The traffic increased until we could see streams of cars and loaded vehicles, and the speed slowed to a trickle. Our driver took a right at a sleek looking building, taking us around the back to a deserted gravel parking lot. A man, in a western-like long-sleeved shirt (despite the heat), immediately came out of the back of. the building.
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| The entrance gate to Cambodia! |
We exchanged glances. There weren't any other people around, and this guy seemed rather too eager.
"Yes, but we're going to go take a look around, we'll be back," we said, hoisting our bags. We paid the driver - 80 baht/person, or roughly $2.70 - although we felt nervous we weren't where we were supposed to be, and off we walked. A local sitting by the road helped by pointing us towards the checkpoint, and we soon began to join up with other tourist backpackers trudging in the same direction.
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| The traffic at the border |
Finally, our paperwork was done, and we caught a bus to the taxi depot. We shared a taxi with a guy from Denmark, and we drove into the Cambodian countryside, towards Siem Reap three hours away. Our destination - mystical Angkor Wat, the largest Hindu temple complex, and the largest religious monument in the world.





Wow that was a wonderful writeup of this episode in your travel. I can't wait for the pictures from Cambodia!!
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