Objavljeno: 07.04.2019
Our last two weeks of the trip have begun! Since our return flight is again from Bangkok, we are heading north and have decided to travel to Cambodia again to reach Bangkok by land. So we check in at the tiny airport of Lombok and feel like we're on a deserted planet because there are hardly any other people here! Our flight finally starts with almost three hours delay because our plane has a broken radio - this is nerve-racking because we drive to the runway in between, then there is another problem, then we drive back to the airport where everything is repaired. Despite everything, we send a prayer to heaven during takeoff, asking please, please don't crash. We arrive in Kuala Lumpur at night, where we have to change planes, and search for a place to doze off on the floor among many, many other people. In the process, we are unpleasantly surprised by bed bugs, so we quickly flee to the gate and wait until we can finally continue. Eventually we arrive in Siem Reap in Cambodia. And it's so pleasant to come to a place that is familiar - after all, we have been experiencing new things for months. Since we have already extensively explored the ruins and temples of Angkor Wat during our first visit, we now explore smaller things in the area. We actually wanted to go to Tonlé Sap Lake, but after the long dry season, the lake at the place where you can visit "floating villages" has almost no water, and in addition, the nice lady at the reception advises us not to go on the trip. Since we have also read a lot of negative things on the internet (keyword "tourist trap"), we decide not to go. Instead, we visit a silk farm on the same day and are amazed by the incredibly elaborate production of silk, from the silk caterpillars to stretching the individual silk threads, weaving the fabric, batik dyeing and weaving and embroidering patterns. When you see all the work steps, you understand why this product is so expensive and valuable.
The next day we visit the APOPO Visitor Center. The APOPO organization trains African giant rats in Tanzania to detect landmines and then dispatches the so-called "hero rats" to regions still affected by landmines. There are still many landmines and unexploded ordnance from the Vietnam War in Cambodia's soil, making it impossible or very dangerous for many people to work in the fields. The rats can smell the explosive and are light enough not to cause detonation of the mines (the landmines explode at a load of just 3 kilos).
In addition, the rats are very reliable and fast, so they can check the area of a tennis court in less than 30 minutes. A person with a metal detector would need about four days for the same area. We are amazed by these intelligent and truly beautiful animals and the valuable work of the APOPO organization (information at www.apopo.org).