January 20, 2019 Bangkok to Phnom Penh

HAPPY BIRTHDAY RICK!!!  🎉🎂🍾❤️🥳

Today was also a travel day.  At breakfast we met the rest of our group.  There are eight of us on the pre-trip to Cambodia.  Everyone seems very nice.  We were picked up by a different OAT representative and taken to the airport.  All very easy!

The flight was uneventful and we were met in Phnom Penh by our new guide Alex.  While we drove into the city Alex told us a little about himself and his family.  His parents were married by soldiers during the Khmer Rouge period.  They didn’t know each other but the soldier asked if they wanted to get married.  You always say yes to soldiers in that day, so they got married.  Most folks lost at least one family member during the reign of the Khamer Rouge.  Alex’s family lost four, three uncles and an aunt. His parents currently owns a bike shop that doubles as an apartment for him.  Here’s a picture of Alex.

We arrived at our first stop, Wat Phnom, a Buddhist temple that was originally built in 1372 by Lady Penh, a wealthy woman who helped establish the capital.  It’s Buddhist temple with a lot of ancestor worship mixed in.  The temple itself was very chaotic.  There were people offering fake money to be burned for their ancestors.  People also offered meat to their ancestors by placing it in the mouth of a stone tiger statue.

Here’s a video of the music at the temple.

There was a large lawn clock that ran on water at the same site.

After touring the temple Alex bought a local delicacy, a cooked duck embryo, and offer to let us try it. The street vendor had a pot of hot water with about half a dozen eggs in it.  Alex cracked the top of the shell and used a tiny spoon (which the vendor cleaned by swishing it in the hot water) to scoop out chunks of duck embryo.  Only one person in our group tried it.  No it wasn’t me 🤪.  She said it tasted like chicken livers.

Here are some of the other offerings available at the temple.

From there we went on to the hotel and checked in.  That evening we went to the Foreign Correspondent Club for dinner.    We took a remork-moto, a cart on the back of a motorcycle, to the restaurant.

We had a very nice dinner along the edge of the Mekong River.  We toasted Rick’s birthday.

January 19, 2019 Hong Kong to Bangkok

Today was a travel day.  We were flying from Hong Kong to Bangkok.  Our flight didn’t leave until 2:25 so we had the morning free.  Rick and I walked to the park and watched them clean the cages and feed the animals, specifically birds, turtles, and orangutans.  It was a nice relaxing morning.  

We left for the airport around 10:30. I think we had the worst taxi driver in all of Hong Kong.  He kept punching the accelerator and then let off of it.  We think he thought it was a gas saving maneuver.  Whatever it was, it was annoying. 

We had noticed that the first name on Rick’s ticket was Rick, not Richard which is on his passport.  It hadn’t been a problem flying from Boston to Hong Kong but it was a problem going from Hong Kong to Bangkok.  They talked to the manager who said it was ok to cross out Rick and write in Richard for this flight but they told us that we should get it fixed since it could be a problem in the future.  It was urgent that we get it taken care of because we were scheduled to fly the next day from Bangkok to Phnom Penh. We wanted to make sure that Rick was going to be able to get to Cambodia!  So we went to the lounge and called OAT.  Even though it was the middle of the night in Boston, we got someone who said they would fix it.  

The flight was uneventful.  We got through immigration and customs easily.  We were met by an OAT representative and explained the ticket situation to him.  Rick and this gentleman went to the check in counter to try to get it straightened out.  OAT Boston had already fixed it for the flight to Cambodia.  The airline was going to charge us to change the rest of the ticket so the OAT representative suggested that we let OAT Boston take care of it.  We slept better because we knew it was fixed for the next flight.

We were driven to the hotel.  We got checked in and settled and then went to the lounge for a drink.  In the lounge there was a women who was by herself so we talked to her and it turned out she, Kristina, was on our tour.  So we had a glass of wine and dinner with her.  She was born and raise in Sweden but has lived in the US for many years.

After dinner we all went to bed.  Not the most exciting day but I guess that’s what you want on a travel day.