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South East Asia holiday - Angkor Wat

New frontiers: Thailand and Cambodia


Route: Bangkok - Khao Yai National Park - Homestay in Thai countryside - Bangkok - Phnom Penh - Tuol Sleng - Killing Fields - Siem Reap - Angkor Wat - Battambang - Ko Chang - Bangkok

This South East Asia holiday will take you far from the well-trodden tourist trail. After spending a day acclimatising in Bangkok you’ll head east to Thailand’s largest national park Khao Yai. You’ll see the famous waterfall where Leo took a plunge in The Beach and spot wild elephants and monkeys on a jeep safari and guided hikes. Experience daily life in rural Thailand during a homestay with a friendly family in a tiny country village. Your English-speaking host will take you to meet the local villagers. They love meeting foreign visitors and will watch you in bemusement as they put a silk worm in your hand just to see your reaction.

You’ll then travel through lush green rice paddies to Phnom Penh, the capital of Cambodia where you’ll visit the infamous Killing Fields, a chilling reminder of the communist regime of Pol Pot in the 1970s. You’ll cross the Tonle Sap lake and river by boat to Cambodia’s star attraction, Angkor Wat. This ancient Khmer temple complex made up of over 100 stone temples is listed as one of the Wonders of the World. Your South East Asia holiday ends on the tropical island of Ko Chang where you can lie back in the soft white sand and let all the impressions just sink in.

Duration 17 days / 16 nights
Departs every day from Bangkok

Accommodation

14 nights in double room in authentic hotels, 2 nights homestay comfort 2 and 3 (see accommodation)

Price

£1110 per person - based on 2 people sharing

Includes

Transport, accommodation with breakfast, excursions and other meals as described

Transport

Bus, minibus, boat, domestic flight

Excludes

International flight, Cambodia visa, other meals, entrance fees (Khao Yai - £8 and Angkor Wat - £20 per person approx), return flight/bus back to Bangkok on day 17, other excursions

Day 1 Bangkok - arrival

On the first day of your South East Asia holiday, you'll arrive in Thailand at the end of a long flight feeling somewhat bedraggled, so it’s good to know you’ll be met at the airport by our local agent and transferred directly to your hotel. Your hotel is located in the heart of Bangkok and a short walk from the popular traveller haunt Khao San Road.

The hotel has a pool so you can spend the rest of the day acclimatising to the tropical climate. If you're itching to head into the city, take a boat tour along the khlongs or hop into a tuk-tuk to find a little street cafe where you can soak up the lively Bangkok street scene.
South East Asia holiday - welcome to Bangkok!
South East Asia holiday - Long tail boat in Bangkok

Day 2 Bangkok - Tuk Tuk and Long tail tour

This morning you'll be met by your guide in the lobby of your hotel, and together you'll embark on an exciting drive through Bangkok by tuk-tuk. You'll travel to Thewet river pier where you will first visit the local 'fresh market and then board a classic longtail boat!

Your boat journey will give you a great insight into how much the city life still revolves around the river and its network of 'klongs' (canals). In some ways it is a trip through the past where you'll see wooden houses on stilts, local folks doing their laundry in the klongs, monitor lizards suddenly swimming by, and lots of other fascinating sights. Back at the pier again your guide will return you to your hotel by tuktuk! You should be back before noon, and the rest of your day is free to explore the city.

Day 3 Khao Yai National Park - bat exodus

Early in the morning on the third day of your South East Asia holiday, you’ll be picked up at the hotel by a local representative and transferred to the bus station. He’ll help you buy a ticket for the bus to Pak Chong. The trip takes three hours and in Pak Chong you’ll be met by someone from the lodge. The lodge is located just outside the perimeter of the National park and is an interesting jumble of buildings with spacious rooms. The furniture’s a bit dated but that kind of adds to the typical Thai charm. There’s an outdoor restaurant, a herbal sauna and a pool with a lovely waterfall. Around 3.30pm you’ll hop into a minibus with several other travellers and head to the bat cave. The bats leave the cave around dusk which is when you’ll be witness the exodus of huge swarms of bats against the setting sun, chased by birds of prey trying to catch a light supper of fresh bat.

South East Asia holiday - beware crossing elephants
South East Asia holiday - Take me to The Beach...

Day 4 Khao Yai - day trip and night safari

At the crack of dawn you’ll set off in a small open minibus (songthaew) with your guide and fellow travellers to continue your South East Asia holiday as you seek out some wildlife on a Khao Yai National Park tour. Make sure you have a good breakfast because it’s going to be a long day. Once you’ve paid the entrance fee to this protected National Park (approx £5 per person) you’ll follow the winding road straight through the jungle. Don’t be surprised when the driver suddenly slams the breaks and the guide quickly ushers you out of the bus. Whip out your binoculars and cameras for the huge toucan perched on a branch by the side of the road. They can sit there motionless and all you can hear is their funny twittering. Further up the road a noisy bunch of macaque monkeys are running riot in the trees and if you peer up high in the branches you might spot a couple of gibbons and sloths. They prefer to stay up at the top of the trees.  You’ll stop off for lunch at a somewhat familiar looking waterfall. This is where Leonardo di Caprio took a leap in The Beach. Though most of the film was actually shot on Ko Phi Phi, this where the waterfall scenes were filmed. It’s a lovely place to take a cooling dip. The waterfall is at its fullest (and most beautiful) in rainy season.

After lunch your guide will take you on a 2 hour hike through the jungle. The path is level but mind you don’t trip over the thick roots growing across the path or bump your head on the low-hanging branches. At the end of the hike you’ll drive up to a viewpoint on a steep rocky outcrop at 1300m overlooking the dense green rainforest. We spotted a giant black squirrel here. At the end of the day just as the sun is setting, you’ll get ready for your jungle drive. With a bit of luck you’ll spot elephants or at the very least deer, monkeys, wild cats and porcupines.

Day 5 Khao Yai - homestay

After breakfast take another dip in the pool before you set off for Sida. You will travel by bus to Bua Yai. It’s about 3 hours to Bua Yai where you’ll be met by your host Jimmy and driven to the small village of Kopet 20 minutes away. Kopet is a tiny village with just 800 inhabitants. You’ll be spending the next couple of days in a small house at the edge of the village overlooking a small lake. Once you’ve settled in your Thai host Lamai will take you on a walk around the village. The local villagers here make their living growing rice, corn and other crops and they have a small herd of cows. There are orchards filled with silk worms. You’ll pass the small village temple, the school and take a look inside a silk weaver’s workplace. Everywhere you go you’re greeted by friendly locals and invited inside. Lamai speaks excellent English so she can help you translate any questions you have for her fellow villagers.

After the walk, you can end the fifth day of your South East Asia holiday by relaxing on the veranda of your homestay as you watch the sun set across the lake. In the evening you’ll be treated to a traditional Isaan meal. If you’d like to see how the meal is prepared you’re welcome to help Lamai in the kitchen.

South East Asia holiday - Rural life
South East Asia holiday - school in Kopet

Day 6 School visit and ruins of Phimai

In the morning you’ll pay a visit to the local school in Kopet. Whenever a government official comes by to inspect the school, children from the neighbouring schools are rallied up to fill the classrooms so the school gets more funds. The school considers it an honour to welcome foreign guests and will let you write your name in the school guest book. This book is also presented to the school inspector; visits by foreign guests means the school is kept clean and tidy. You can take a look inside one of the classrooms. Ask the children to sing the Elephant song (Chang chang chang non kehin chang lupao...), it’s very funny and they all know it.

Once you’ve waved goodbye to the children, you'll continue your South East Asia holiday as Jim takes you to the ruins of Phimai, an hour’s drive away. If you like he’ll show you around the ruins. He knows a lot about the history and the sculptures of this mysterious temple city. During the Khmer rule there was a direct road from Phimai to Angkor (Cambodia) and the Khmer certainly had an eye for taste when it came to building their religious sites. The temples are devoted to the Hindu gods and date back to the 9th Century, long before Buddhism was introduced in Thailand. You could spend hours wandering among the ruins here.

Day 7 Return to Bangkok

Enjoy a leisurely breakfast out on your veranda before packing your bags and saying goodbye to your new friends in the village. It can take a while because half the village has come out to bid farewell and following Isaan tradition they’ll tie ribbons round your wrist to wish you good luck. With your arm adorned with colourful strings and ribbons it’s time to continue on your way.

Jim will take you back to the bus station and help you buy your bus ticket back to Bangkok. The trip across the peaceful countryside takes about 4 hours. Landing right back in the middle of the chaotic metropolis it’s worlds away from your little rural paradise in Kopet. You’ll be spending another night in the same hotel in Bangkok so you won’t have any problem finding your way around.

South East Asia holiday - in the village
South East Asia holiday - Visit the sights

Day 8 Phnom Penh

Today is day eight of your South East Asia holiday and in the morning, you'll take a taxi from your hotel to the airport, where you’ll board the short flight to Phnom Penh. You’ll be met at Phnom Penh airport by our Cambodian representative and transferred to your hotel. Once you’ve settled in to your hotel spend the rest of the day as you wish. We’ve saved the guided city tour until tomorrow. Phnom Penh is a beautiful historic city with lots of old colonial buildings. By Cambodian standards it’s very modern, telling by the well-maintained roads, modern shops, elegant boulevard and plenty of cash machines. Today you can visit the National Museum, which was built in 1917 and houses an impressive collection of Khmer art. Then head to the Silver Pagoda, famous for its solid silver floor. In the afternoon you could climb the hill to see the War Phnom temple, the temple where the city got its name from. Tonight you’ll be staying in a comfortable cosy hotel in the centre of Phnom Penh.
 

Day 9 Phnom Penh - excursion Tuol Sleng museum and Killing Fields

Today you will be able to visit the more remote sites of Phnom Penh with your guide, such as the Tuol Sleng museum and the Killing Fields. In 1975 the Khmer Rouge marched into the capital city Phnom Penh; Pol Pot became prime minister of Cambodia and made a very bloody attempt to turn Cambodia into a communist agricultural state. Money, education, religion and private ownership were abolished. Marriages were pre-arranged and children were separated from their parents. People who refused to cooperate were killed. Intellectuals and scholars were considered a danger and were murdered and even wearing glasses or speaking a second language were enough to make you a suspect.

Tuol Sleng is an incredibly moving museum where you are confronted with the harrowing events through a series of photographs. As you learn about this sad history, a trip here during your South East Asia holiday is one that you are unlikely to forget. The museum is located in a former primary school which was used as a torture prison for political enemies by the Khmer Rouge. For many it was their last stop before ending up in the mass graves of the Killing Fields, in an orchard just outside Phnom Penh. As many as 17.000 people were killed here. Towards the end of the afternoon you'll visit the Apsara Foundation where underprivileged Cambodian children can learn to dance and sing.

South East Asia holiday - Visit the killing fields
South East Asia holiday - Tonle Sap sunset

Day 10 Phnom Penh - Siem Reap

It's day ten of your South East Asia holiday and in the morning you'll cross Tonle Sap lake and river by catamaran boat to Siem Reap. You'll be transferred by car to the jetty. The trip takes about 5 hours and on the way you can enjoy watching the daily life of the locals on the river banks. In some places the river is a mile wide, in others as narrow as 50m, which makes the boat trip a wonderful spectacle of wide open views and up close observings of people living along the river. Sailing along you will pass stilted villages, floating islands, boats, rafts, water birds, children playing on the river banks and pigs in floating cages. On arrival in Siem Reap just ignore the pushy crowd of hotel hawkers and look out for our local agent holding your name sign. He'll take you directly to your hotel, located in the city centre, with spacious air-conditioned rooms and friendly staff.

Day 11 Angkor Wat with guide

Today you will visit part of the Angkor temple complex with your guide. You'd need a couple of days to cover the whole Angkor complex which consists of dozens of temples scattered across an area over 25 km2. You could wander through the temples, statues and ruins forever but make sure to stay on the marked paths, there are lots of mines in this area. The temples date from different periods as each ruler built his own temple which gives each temple a unique character. The most famous temple Angkor Wat is strongly Hindu influenced, whereas Angkor Thom is more Buddhist. After a day of temples and culture you’ll be spending another night at your hotel in Siem Reap.

Angkor Wat
South East Asia holiday - Stone statues

Day 12 Angkor - free time

On day twelve of your South East Asia holiday, you can spend some more time exploring Angkor on your own. Angkor is the name of the ancient capital of the Khmer empire which was founded in the 8th century AD. The empire stretched all the way to southern Vietnam and China. Later it was the Thai that ruled this area during the Siamese empire, bringing in the Buddhist influences. Siem Reap literally means "victory by Siam", so quite magnanimous of the Khmer that the city still carries this name. For centuries the city was overgrown by jungle until the ruins were discovered by French explorers in 1900. Several temples have been restored but others are still overgrown. At the Ta Prohm temple for example you can see how the jungle still has a hold on the buildings. Giant trees tower over them and the roots have wrapped themselves around the temple walls. You’ll be spending another night in Siem Reap.

Day 13 Siem Reap - Battambang

In the morning you'll be picked up at your hotel and driven to the pier just outside of Siem Reap. This is where you'll continue your South East Asia holiday and board a boat to Battambang, your next destination. Along the way you'll pass floating villages, children waving at you from the river banks. You'll sail along narrow waterways onto the mighty Tonle Sap Lake, arriving in Battambang late afternoon.

In Battambang you can take a ride on the little bamboo train. It's little more than a bamboo raft and a carriage that has been placed on a train track; it is however the traditional mode of transport in this area. The train trip will take you through rice fields and will give you a glimpse of traditional country life and houses on wooden stilts. Battambang is a provincial city with a lively market that draws people from across the region who come here for their daily groceries. You'll spend the night in a hotel across from the local market; the hotel is basic but comfortable.

South East Asia holiday - Lush green scenery
South East Asia holiday - Ko Chang Thailand

Day 14 Battambang - Ko Chang

You’ll be leaving Battambang early in the morning to make your way to the Thai border. The roads in this area are quite bad which is why you’ll be travelling this stretch by private car. It’s a bumpy 3 hour ride to the border. Once you’ve collected your exit stamp in Cambodia it’s time to bid farewell to Cambodia and cross the border on foot into Thailand. It’s quite funny to see the border is little more than a barrier with two little checkpoints on either side. Once you’ve walked into Thailand you’ll find another driver waiting to take you to Trat. The difference with Cambodia is immediately visible. The roads are in much better condition and the sandy track soon turns into a smooth, tarmacked road all the way to Trat. From Trat take the ferry across to Ko Chang where you’ll check in to your comfortable resort directly on the beach. The hotel has several facilities and a beautiful pool overlooking the bay.

Day 15 - 16 Ko Chang - sun, sea and sand 

The island of Ko Chang has exotic scenery with densely wooded hills. The highest point is the 744m Jom Prasat. There are several challenging trails across the island, leading up to a couple of spectacular waterfalls. If that all sounds way too strenuous you could just spend the day lazing around on one of the sparkling white sandy beaches. The Ko Chang archipelago is made up of 73 islands, most of them deserted. Take a day trip to the islands of Ko Wai and Ko Mak where you can snorkel among the pristine coral and chill out on the picture postcard beaches. At low tide you can walk from Ko Mak to the neighbouring island, quite unusual. In the evening head to one of the many beach front restaurants on Ko Chang for a fantastic dinner.

South East Asia holiday - Chilling on Ko Chang
South East Asia holiday - Sawadee Thailand

Day 17 Return to Bangkok - departure

Your South East Asia holiday is drawing to a close. At the resorts reception simply arrange a transfer back to the mainland and via Trat back to Bangkok. That way you can decide what time you want to leave, depending on your flight departure time back to the UK. The trip back to Bangkok takes about 6 hours in total (in normal traffic conditions). You could also fly back from Trat to Bangkok. Just let us know in your Quote Request Form if you’d like us to book a flight for you.

If you like, you could spend a couple more days chilling on the beach in Ko Chang. Or perhaps you’d like to spend an extra night in Bangkok so you can do some last-minute shopping at Chatuchak weekend market or at the shopping malls in Siam square and Mahbunkrong (MBK) or to pick up your tailor-made suit that you had fitted at a tailor in Banglamphu on your first day in Bangkok. If you'd like to extend your South East Asia holiday, feel free to discuss the options with us.

Later on in the day, make your way to the airport where it's time to say 'sawadee' to Thailand and board the plane back home.

South East Asia Holiday Idea - Thailand Accommodation (click to enlarge)

South East Asia Holiday Idea - Cambodia Accommodation (click to enlarge)

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