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SIEM
REAP
Siem reap is the small gateway town to ruins of Angkor,
located 7 km away from Angkor Wat, 250 northwest of
Phnom Penh and 15 km north of Tonle Sap.
The name literally means place of the defeat of Siam
referring to the victory of the Khmer Empire over the
army of the Thai kingdom of Ayutthaya in the 17th
Century. Today it is most widely known for being the
closest city to the ruins of the temples of Angkor.
There is a "killing fields" memorial to victims of Khmer
Rouge to the northwest of the town. In 1979the province
was the scene of heavy fighting between the Khmer Rouge
and the Vietnamese Army. Since 1990 the Khmer Rouge have
staged sporadic attacks on the civilian population and
Cambodian troops around Seam Reap. In 1993 they
massacred Vietnamese fishing families at Lake Tonle Sap,
precipitating an exodus of the Vietnamese to the Mekong
Delta. To safeguard Angkor, the government has stationed
troops, ringing the entire zone of ruins.
Peace has been come to Seam Reap, there is normal life
around Angkor: farmers transporting goods in oxcarts,
village women clad in sarongs cycling to market,
Buddhist monks in the flowing orange robe out morning
strolls, kids lolling about on the backs of water
buffalo in green fields. For tourists this is a chance
to see rural life. For local, tourist itself, however
small in scale, is seen as return to normalcy after
years of savage war and upheaval. A number of new
hotels, guesthouses and restaurants have appeared in
Siem Reap in the 1990s, catering first to visiting UNTAC
troops and later to the Angkor bound tourists who
arrived in the wake.
The area has been receiving foreign visitors to the
temples for over 100 years. The town is actually a
cluster of old villages, which originally developed
around individual pagodas, and later overlaid with an
French colonial-era center. Note the colonial and
Chinese style architecture in the town center and around
the Old Market. Nowadays, Siem Reap offers a wide range
of hotels, restaurants, pubs and shops including several
upscale hotels and dozens of budget guesthouses.
Anything moveable at Angkor has disappeared. Even the
heads of the larger stone statues have been hacked off
by treasure hunters. To guard against art theft,
virtually all smaller Angkor statuary, wood items,and
artifacts have been removed to museums, particularly to
the National Museum in Phnom Penh. Thousands of pieces
rest at the Angkor Conservancy, located several km to
the north of Seam Reap, and you will need special
permission from the Ministry of Culture in Phnom Penh to
visit. The Angkor Wat Conservancy was established by
French in 1907 when Seam Reap province was restored to
Cambodia by the Thais. From 1953 to 1970 the Angkor
Conservancy was jointly operated by the French and
Cambodian governments. With the exception of period
during WW II, the French at Angkor worked steadily, at
times directing more than a thousand employees. In 1972
the civil war forced the French to leave.
ANGKOR CONSERVANCY
Angkor Conservancy is a warehouse for some 7,000
sculpture fragments and artifacts from the Angkor
region. Fresh concrete heads are stocked here, destined
to replace ones removed from the Angkor area by bandits
or Khmer Rouge. Museum staffs also removed heads before
bandits can get to them. There are two floors of
statuary at Angkor Conservancy. On the ground floor are
the larger Buddhas, Vishnus, and lintels; the upper
floor houses smaller Buddhas, hand fragments, stone
animals and large wooden Buddhas.
Siem Reap presents a great opportunity to get out into
the Cambodian countryside, around the villages and how
palm sugar and palm wine are brewed. Can witness facets
of rural life unchanged from those depicted on the
temple walls at the Angkor Wat 800 years ago. Roads are
rough in these area, some time just dirt tracks.
ROLOUS GROUP
The ruins of Rolous are 13 km east of Siem Reap along
Route 6. The ruins are of mild interest compared with
the splendors of central Angkor, but the trip to Rolous
gives you a chance to experience village life. Stop at
the central market, a short distance east of Siem Reap,
on the way out or back. The market is always engrossing,
a great place for watching people. Cambodian women are
partial to sarongs with blinding colors and patterns,
which makes the place quite right. This is the most
likely a reaction to the Pol Pot years, when everyone
was forced to wear black. Upcountry a common form of
transportation is the cycle-hauled wooden chariot. This
workhorse can carry several passengers, a few hand of
bananas, a score of chickens, or a mountain of
vegetables-sometime all at once.
The Rolous ruins are among the oldest Khmer monuments in
the Angkor area, dating to 9th century reign of
Indravarman I. Two key temple sites remain, Bakong and
Preah Ko. The latter consists of six bricks towers or
prasats, arranged in two rows; the site is bounded by
walls, with sandstone lintel decoration. Bakong is a
five-step brick pyramid with a sandstone doorways. At
the corners of the first three levels stand elephants
hewn from single blocks of stone. Next to the ruin is an
active Buddhist monastery. From here, you can continue
south to the village of Rolous, which lent its name to
the ruins.
THE WEST BARAY
To reach the West Baray, head northwest from Siem Reap
along Route 6. Pass the airport road and take the next
turnoff to the right; this leads to a parking area at a
dam at the south side of the West Barray. The West
Barray reservoir was part of the elaborate Angkorian
irrigation system, although researchers are not sure of
its exact function. Originally, the West Barray and East
Barray were two gargantuan artificial lakes. The West Barray is a two by eight km rectangle enclosed by an
earth dike. Though it may have been used for irrigation,
recent evidence indicates it was more likely a mooring
place for royal barges, a fish-breeding site, or simply
a place for bathing.
The East Barray is now dry. The West Barray, first
constructed in the 11th century, was partially restored
in the 1950s with foreign-aid funds. Today is about
two-thirds full. The West Barray is fed by the Tonle Sap
River; a small dam has enlarge the rice-growing
potential of the area with water carried through a
network of irrigation canal. The West Barray is also
used for fish breeding. You can go for a swim along
southern section. Situated in the West Barray is a small
island you can hire a boat and row out to a sanctuary
called the West Mebon. Much of the stonework has
collapsed, though several towers on the east entrance to
the temple have survived. It was here that a large
bronze statue of Vishnu was discovered in 1936. It now
sits in the National Museum in Phnom Penh.
TONLE SAP LAKE
Head south, about 12km from Siem Reap is Phrom Krom, a
hill with an 11th century temple. From the ruins are
expensive views over Lake Tonle Sap, the Great Lake. A
glance with the map will show how it came by this name -
it’s an enormous fresh water sea.
Lake Tonle Sap fills with water during the monsoon
season, but by February it shrinks to a fraction of its
former size, becoming one of the richest fishing grounds
in the world, yielding as much as 10 tons of fish per
square km. The main fishing season is February to May.
When the water recede, fish are preventing from escaping
with nets and bamboo traps. Some are caught in the
branches of trees, or in the mud, and simply picked up.
Fishing families live in temporary huts that can be
dismantled and moved forward as the water recedes. The fishing season is over
then fishing families return to
their villages.
The flooding of the Tonle Sap covers the area with a
rich mud ideal for growing rice. Farmers have developed
unique deepwater rice strains the grow with the rising
lake to keep the grain above the water. Under Pol Pot,
large part of the flooded forest around Tonle Sap were
sacrificed to expand the area for rice fields. During
the war much of the rice seed stock was lost, and
deepwater rice cultivation declined.
Coming from Siem Reap you reach a boat deck on the
shores of Lake Tonle Sap. It’s a scummy area, with boats
loading and unloading goods, fish drying in the sun, and
assorted video cafes. The lake itself is peaceful and
uneventful, but hidden dramas abound, if you hire a boat
for an hour, or row out yourself, you can reach a
floating house suspended overhung bamboo-fishing holding
pens. Families have fatten up the fish in the pens; some
house are rigged with trapdoors that open so feed can be
dropped. A fish pens may be three meters deep and hold
thousands of fish. You don’t realise how many fish there
are until feeding time when you see them thrashing
around in the water. This kind of “fish farming” is also
practiced in Vietnam’s Mekong delta.
Because the lake keeps shrinking and expanding, a
species of fish has evolved here that can survive
several hours out of water, flopping overland in search
of deeper pools. This species , known as hock yue, or
elephant fish, is considered a delicacy in Asia. Another
highly prized delicacy is the sand goby, or soon hock, a
greenish-gray trout-like specimen. One company ships the
fish live to Phnom Penh, where they held in tanks. For
transportation to restaurants in Singapore and Kuala
Lumpur, the first are placed in tanks filled with ice
and mild sedative. In a semi-inert state they’re air
freighted in plastic bas pumped with oxygen. They must
reach their destination within 16 hours. |