Author Archives: Rickey Galloway

Angkor Silk Farm

We visited Angkor Silk farm today and took a tour.  As a side note, we have seen silk worms in the frozen section of grocery stores and also as a snack sold on the street. Our driver from Phnom Penh to Siem Reap stopped and bought some.  We tried them. They taste like boiled peanuts with a sour filling.

These are mulberry trees from all around the world. The silk worms eat the leaves.

 

The short life of the silk worm.

Silk Worms eating mulberry leaves.

The buildings where the silk worms lived were protected from ants by little moats around all points touching the ground.

To prevent most of the silk worms from completing its life cycle, they are put into the sun.

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Putting the cocoons in boiling water to extract the silk thread.

Very tedious process of tying the pattern into the silk. This could be done many times. Tie the plastics strings around the silk, die, and repeat process.

Lots of manual labor involved here

Simple designs go pretty fast, more complicated designs are pretty slow.

No Power, Surprise Rain, and Caesar

Electricity was off last Friday. ALL DAY.  We knew it was going to be off, apparently some maintenance being done in Thailand. It went off around 6:00 AM and within an hour it was already hot in the house.  It finally came back on around 5:00 PM.

So our goal for the day was to stay cool.  Started off at an air conditioned coffee shop.

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Then we finally went to a movie, which we have been planning to go to for a month. Really nice theater in Siem Reap and we watch Captain Marvel. Tickets were $3.50

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The other night we heard something that sounded like rain. Rain this time of year is pretty rare, and we have seen only a few clouds since we’ve been here. So rain was a big surprise. It really cooled things off. Instead of 100 degree days, it was around 80 all day.  Of course, Phaedra is always prepared with ponchos.  Here is Annika modeling the latest model.

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Walking around the other day, we saw a vet’s office that did dog grooming. So we took Caesar there and filled out form. I said trim him short! Even in the states, this gets misinterpreted, so I was wondering what he would look like when they were done.  He was fluffier than ever.  Not a great picture, because he was so excited when we got home, he would not be still.
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Elephants

We visited Elephant Jungle Sanctuary in Phuket. It didn’t really feel like a sanctuary, it was definitely more geared toward tourist than the elephants. But their  elephants have been removed from logging industries, riding tours, or other animal shows, so getting fed, bathed, showered, and not having to do physical work all day is a definite improvement.

 

Annika will always be the first one finding a dog.

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We did a jungle walk with one of the elephants, Lam Yai, an almost 60 year old elephant. She spent 40 years working in logging camps, and then 14 more in riding camps.  So she has spent most of her life around people.  She was very calm walking through the jungle. She was constantly stopping to eat some greenery. This was after being fed 2 large baskets of watermelon and a dozen plus stalks of sugar cane.

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Walking with Lam Yai

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Trip to Thailand

We got the wrong visa when we entered Cambodia back in January, so we had to leave Cambodia and re-enter to get the correct visa. So we made a week trip to Phuket, Thailand. Not a bad place to do a border run!

 

We’ve been use to riding 30 mph tops for the past 2 months, so getting in a Thai taxi going 80 mph was a little concerning.

 


We stayed at Surin Beach at Novotel Surin.

 

Four out of my first 5 meals were Pad Thai.

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Random Stuff

Domino’s is half price every Tuesday.  Pizza here has been a lot of hits and misses, so Domino Tuesdays are nice.

Street 60. We had noodles and rice from a food cart. Good, fresh, fast, and cheap.

We went to a friends birthday dinner and a lady we knew from the resort found it it was my birthday, and mistakenly put my name on the cake instead.

 

Hero Rats

Today we visited Apopo Vistor Center, a Tanzania based organization that trains rats to detect landmines.  Landmines in Cambodia is a big problem.  Cambodia has the highest rate of amputees from landmines than any country in the world.  Walking around Siem Reap you will see a many amputees that have stumbled upon landmines.

Apopo has been in Cambodia for about 5 years, and along with Cambodian Mine Action Centre, they have found almost 50,000 landmines.  When the rats were first used in Cambodia, they went through 3 months of performance tests to ensure they could do the work in Cambodia. They did not miss a single landmine during the 3 months of testing.

HERORAT DEMONSTRATION – Spoiler Alert: He finds an “explosive” at the 1:30 mark.

 

 

Scooter, More Language Classes, and Dinner with Landlords

I rented an electric scooter today.  It takes a little getting use to the flow of traffic and all of the unwritten rules, but it seems to work pretty well. It really helps that most of the time you are only driving less than 30 mph.

I took Annika across the street to a big open area to practice. It was a little more difficult that she thought, but she was excited.

Phaedra’s turn

I took a ride out to Angkor Wat and around town. I wanted to ride through some traffic to get use to it.  Left turns and intersections are interesting here.

 

Less than 2 weeks ago, Siem Reap got a Makro store. This is like a smaller version of a Costco in the US. Looks like the stores in Cambodia employee over 200 people.  Inside was a small pharmacy, a few other small stores, and some restaurants.  I believe this is the second one (the other in Phnom Penh) with plans for 9 total throughout Cambodia. Prices are similar to what you see in other markets, but it’s all in one place.

Shopping here can be challenging sometimes, so this was a bit of a relief.  We won’t shop here every time, but when we need an “at home” shopping experience, we know it’s there.  I bought a computer monitor the other day, visited 5 stores, talked to 5 different people with limited English and my 10 words of Khmer (left, right, stop, rice, dog, hello, thank you, etc. didn’t help buying a monitor).  Lots of pointing and just handing them more money than necessary and hoping you get change back. So far so good on that front.

Makro is a multi-billion dollar Thai based company. Lots of foreign investments are coming into Cambodia. Some are better for the country than others.  Just google sihanoukville chinese for other examples.

Our second language class. We can now order fried rice and water without pointing to a menu.

Our landlords took us out to dinner last night at his favorite Indian restaurant.  Sahai was amazed when I showed him the Grab app for getting a tuk tuk.  He spent several years in the US while at Cornell in the 70’s.  Sreypeou is currently getting her Phd in Thailand.  Very kind couple who are always eager to learn about us and help when they can.

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Angkor Wat and Angkor Thom

We visited Angkor Wat today, a World Heritage site, which is about 3 miles from our house. Angkor Wat can be translated to mean City of Temples, City Temple, or Capital Temple and was once the capital of the ruling Khmer Empire.

Thom can be translated to big, large, or great.  The moat around Angkor Thom is almost 8 miles in perimeter.

It was a good day. We saw a lot, walked for miles, climbed lots of really steep stairs, bumped heads a few times, almost fell a few times, saw a few monkey thefts, and had a really good tuk tuk driver that was taking us where we needed.

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Entrance into Angkor Thom – a narrow, one way road.

Somebody needs a selfie stick!

Stacked stones within Angkor Thom. I’ve seen this in Nepal as well, apparently a form of offering or prayer.

The monkeys mostly ignored people, but would occasionally steal something from someone.  Annika had 3 on her at one point.

Exhausting but good day.

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