Saturday, January 19, 2013

Siem Reap

Siem Reap is the capital city of Siem Reap Province in north western Cambodia, the gateway to Angkor region.
From Phnom Penh: 
Speed boat up the river from Phnom Penh to Siem Reap, costs $35.  Bus for $6 or a luxury bus for $12.  We took the luxury bus option which was the better choice. Part of the highway taking you to Siem Reap is just dirt road so there is a lot of dust and it is bumpy... the luxury bus was comfortable and had air con, which meant we could have the windows shut to avoid the dust without dying from heat. 
Taking the bus gives you the opportunity to see the countryside of Cambodia, vast amounts of flat lands and rice paddies, occasionally water buffaloes swimming in some road side pond and locals bicycling along the rice paddies wearing the iconic pointy paddy hats.  
Accommodation: The only place to stay in Siem Reap is at the Villa Siem Reap near the old French Quarter.  The staff is amazing, the food is amazing, the rooms are super nice and well priced.  
Temples of Angkor: Angkor means Holy City in Khmer, this was the region that served as the seat of the Khmer Empire between 9th to 15th century.  Began in AD 802 until 1351 when Angkor fell under the Ayutthayan Kingdom (Siamese Kingdom).  
The temples are grandeur and truly amazing.... I don't know how else to describe it.  The feeling of seeing and being in the temples is exhilarating.  There is truly so much to see in each temple and each temple has something different to offer from a detailed sculpture along the walls of Angkor Wat depicting battles, to the many faces that gives Angkor Thom its fame and to the giant trees that have nestled their roots through the cracks becoming integral parts of the structure in Ta Prohm.  
Things to watch out for:  
You can hire a taxi or tuk-tuk for the day to take you around the temples with a pick up from your hotel.  It should only cost $15 but if you choose a sunrise and/or sunset option it might be $25.  Better to coordinate a tuk-tuk driver through your hotel, that way your chances of being ditched by your driver are less likely.  
Sunrise at Angkor Wat is not as unique as it seems.  At 5 am from your hotel, you are taken to Angkor Wat, (bring a flash light).  You follow a massive herd of people through the entrance of the temple and you are expected to wait with the heaps and heaps of people waiting to watch this sunrise.  The sunrise is over the three distinctive structures of Angkor Wat, with the best view in front of the huge pond.
OR....
Instead of stopping where the herds of people stop, you keep going into the temple with your light, make it through the temple, and watch the sunrise from the other side...completely deserted, quiet and peaceful.  It is  the only way to see the temple alone.   
Sunset is the same thing... you hike up to Phnom Bakheng temple, the view is nice.  But when you reach the temple, there will already be tons of people perched on the side waiting for the sun to set.  It is ridiculously packed.  We decided to ditch the temple after checking it out, and caught the sunset in front of Angkor Wat.  
Cool temples we saw:
Angkor Wat, Angkor Thom, Prasat Bayon, Ta Prohm Temple, Banteay Kdei, Preah Khan & Phnom Bakheng. 
Angkor Wat and Ta Prohm are the most famous.  Ta Prohm is kind of ridiculous; because iTomb Raider  was filmed there bus loads of tourists are packed into the tiny enclosed temple and winding passageways.  It would be fun otherwise, but it was very suffocating. There is a more peaceful area to the right side of the all the hustle and bustle but you would have to be willing to go through some 'non safe passageways' to find it.  Also if you expect to get a single photo of any part of that temple with no photobombs, make sure to hone your super ninja-speed photo skills, since it is common knowledge that Chinese tourists have perfected theirs. 
Favorite temple:  Angkor Thom. 





















Thursday, January 17, 2013

Phnom Penh

The capital and largest city in Cambodia.  Located on the banks of the Mekong River, the center for industrial  and economic activities.

Very lively and tourist friendly, almost everyone speaks English and will quote you a price in US dollars. 
I would have liked to learn more Khmer, but almost everyone including all the tuk-tuk drivers will communicate with you in English.  I guess it is good...but at the same time it did not push me out of my comfort zone knowing that I didn't have to try very hard.  

Visa:
Prior visa approval is not required to enter Cambodia for US citizens except 2 copies of your passport photo which can be easily waived for $2 US dollars.  The cost of a tourist visa at airport immigration is only $20, but more than one official told it us it was $50 total and they short changed, but in the end they gave us the correct amount. Make sure to check the price listed on your visa 

From the airport: 
We took a tuk tuk from the airport, it was a fixed cost advertised at $7 inside the airport so we didn't have to worry about haggling a decent price.  This also gave us an idea of what an average tuk-tuk ride should cost relative to where you are travelling. 

Stuff we did: 

Night Market: 
favorite things:  sugar cane juice, heaps of food stalls with different varieties of goodies and local cuisine, there is also an area covered with mats so that you can sit down and enjoy your food.  
not so favorite things: lots of souvenirs, tourist hot spot, priced waaay too high and forget about getting a decent price on a tuk-tuk ride home. You are better off riding on a back of a motodops for $1 (although you do have a higher risk of getting lost, genuinely nice Cambodian men helped us and our motodop driver find our way back to the hotel).

Royal Palace: 
couldn't actually get inside the royal palace due to the passing of the King in recent months.. we were really bummed out because it looks really awesome.  There are mini memorials set up all through out the city decked in black silk and flowers to remember the King.  It was very different to experience the reverence  for the King, it is not common in the US or Australia to see pictures of the President or Prime Minister on a billboard or the side of the road decked in  gold, black silk, flowers...the giant photos are definitely very regal. 

Silver Pagoda: 
it was pretty awesome, cool Buddhist temples, very tranquil and actually quiet, nice art work on the walls surrounding the whole premises.  

From the Silver Pagoda/Royal Palace, you can pretty much walk along the river where there are plenty of travel agents,  cafes, restaurants, hotels etc.... we decided to walk from the Royal Palace along the river because we were searching for the Dairy Queen due to the possibility of a heat stroke.  Lucky we did because there is so much going on even if you just look down one street in Phnom Penh.  We didn't find the Dairy Queen but we did have fresh young coconut juice straight out of the coconut.  As we were walking around, we encountered Wat Ounalom, Wat Phnom, Sisowath Quay, Wat Lanka, Independence Monument & we spent some time haggling for goodies like a tripod for $5 and delicious giant squid at the Central Market. 

Favorite foods:
fish amok served in a coconut
salty Fish over rice
street mangoes with salt and chilli powder
fresh young coconut juice 
rice porridge 
fresh barbecued giant squid 
giant prawn skewers
Sugar Cane Juice!!!
fresh cut pineapples for fifty cents. 


                                      
















Sunday, December 16, 2012

this burden I carry.

as of 10 pm Saturday the 15th night of December, something major happened.  One of my Facebook friends liked something that struck my interest, which then urged me to continue with a Google search.  After further reading and additional information, I decided to take it one step further.  At about 6 am when I went out for a run before I've had a chance to go to bed, I  realize that I am addicted.

My name is Rosario Penafrancia Jackson aka Penny and I am addicted to a Filipino soap opera.  I am ashamed to say that I cannot wait until tomorrow until the next episode posts online.

I stayed up all night catching up to the series and it's all I can think about.

fml.

Thursday, November 22, 2012

giving thanks....

Things for which I am grateful:

1.  Danny - enough said.

2.  my family, though crazy at times, my life is lonely without them.  I miss them sooo much... I miss my mom and her cooking; the mixture of traditional thanksgiving food and Filipino food and the endless amount of leche flan my mom and aunt would cook for me (well for 'everyone') to eat.

3.  my friends...old and new.  I miss my friends back home and friends in other parts of the world... I am thankful for the new friends I have met... they have made moving to a different part of the world much more fun and a lot less lonely.

4.  anti ageing solutions, creams & serums.

5.  my jobs... I have the best jobs in the world... I work for great people and with great people.  I truly enjoy what I am doing and I am happy to have had the chance to explore such a different profession and work with amazing teams...

6.  opportunities...this I never have and never will take for granted.  I was lucky enough to be given great opportunities.  A path that I don't deserve to have stumbled upon...opportunities for a better life, great education, the chance to help out my family, opportunities for seeing the world & meeting different people, and a most remarkable opportunity that I have long dreamed about... details to come later.

7.  descendents & bouncing souls... i thought seeing the descendents in Berlin was a once in a life time event... probably won't get a chance to seem them play again... ever... well I am thankful for the Australia tour that they have announced and that I have purchased tickets for in February 2013 with the Bouncing Souls.

8.  adventures...our lives are full of them and I am so thankful for not being fearful of the different adventures that come our way.

9.  COFFEE

10. pho




Tuesday, November 20, 2012

Oct - Nov

the past month has been a blur ... I know that certain things were involved:

movies
puzzles
French cuisine
movies
coffee
more coffee
coffee training
lasers
tapas
holiday party
shopping
blue hair
hair cut
work
park naps
pho at least 2x
rice making a come back in my life
birthdays
travel planning

Tuesday, October 16, 2012

words to live by

Take the path least travelled
It takes courage and confidence,
It has some risks but it often brings you great rewards:
the challenge of the new; the thrill of exploration; growth from the learning;
and self-confidence from success.



Patrick Lindsay

Wednesday, October 3, 2012

Brisbane Festival

was really coooool!

For some reason all I can think about is Santos GLNG.

Brisbane Festival was sponsored by Santos GLNG.  

Santos GLNG is cool not evil....

Sarcasm aside, I think it's pretty rad to live in a city that celebrates itself for 3 full weeks.  The South Bank was just action packed full of fun stuff with performances ranging from solo artists (Julia Stone, Ingrid Michaelson), bands (Nada Surf), Jazz on Sundays, Argentina in the evenings, DJ's that were actually pretty cool, live shows like a French Butler Named Smith at the Wunderbar, Santos GLNG light show and my most favourite of all, La Soiree.  It was nice meeting the festival workers and seeing them everyday and becoming part of a fun community for the three weeks.  It made working so much better knowing that we were going to get free pizzas, get to talk to Florence from St. Jean de Luz, see my favourite churro guy (also from St. Jean de Luz), provide the espressos served in the espresso martinis at the bar in the Spiegel Tent, and seeing my favourite acts from La Soiree and serving them coffee!!!

The TallShort van was such a trooper, getting used and abused day in and day out... but I truly believe it became somewhat of an icon in the festival and it was great to be a part of that.... 

The 3 week festival ended with the finale.... RIVERFIRE... it sounds more intense than it really is... it is pretty much the light show, extended in length with added fireworks from the river.  It was nice and pretty cool actually.  the fun part was the massive amounts of teenagers 13 to 16 dressed really slutty... that was probably the best part of the day.  

but for realzies, despite the massive amount of teenagers (an age group which I am not truly fond of in any country...except for my sisters) I had a great time during Riverfire and pretty much through out the whole festival.  My body is officially exhausted but it was probably one of the more fun times I have ever experienced as a worker... not just of in a cafe, but overall from managing, to finance, to government, to teaching English...it was truly such a fun time.  

for some reason when I think back, what I remember most vividly is the awesome-ness of Santos GLNG? 

Not sure why. 

 Light & laser show

                                      


The TallShort van in the prime spot


Laterns to support diversity and Asians.


La Soiree stage


Inside the Spiegel Tent


Behold.... RIVERFIRE!


more fireworks