Rajabori Resort Kratie province
Discover beautiful Rajabori Resort on Koh Trong Island, Kratie, Cambodia.
Flood in Cambodia 2018 | 7NG LAND, Kandal Province
On the way to Prey Veng Province across 7NG Land which located in Kandal Province. There is flood flows over the street.
#7NG #7NG_LAND #KANDAL_PROVINCE #7NG_PROJECT_LAND
Krolan Khmer Cuisine in Bamboo at Siem Reap Province
Krolan is a name we called for a rice in bamboo food in Cambodia. They cooked the rice in bamboo in a hot fireplace. At some place, people set a fire in a hole and put the Krolan inside until it's done cooked. it tastes really good and i can taste the coconut milk and some salt and sugar. It's good to eat as a snack or instead of the main meal. Some people make Kralan with sticky rice but some cook with normal rice depends on what they like.
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Part 2: Mondulkiri Protected Forest (English)
In 2003, WWF initiated a feasibility study for applying the highly successful Southern African approach to protected area management in the Mondulkiri Protected Forest (MPF) in Cambodia's Eastern Plains.
This documentary details what WWF and its government partners-the Forestry Administration and the General Department of Administration for Nature Conservation and Protection (the Ministry of Environment)-has achieved in MPF by laying the foundations for effective protected forest management, and shows how this approach has been used to begin supporting local livelihoods and increase community ownership of this unique and globally irreplaceable Dry Forests Landscape.
A special thanks to the Darwin Initiative and Habitat Hotels who supported the making of this documentary.
Cambodia || Stung Treng Market
Stung Treng Market is located in Stung Treng District, Stung Treng Province, Cambodia.
The market sells many agricultural products, river fish from the locals. The traders are fun, friendly to visitors.
I would like to invite you to visit Stung Treng Market to see the market price and shopping.
Cambodia village market, Cambodia rural market, Cambodia market price.
Cambodia Discovery Travel.
This video was made through my perspective as a tourist, only intended to record the beauty of the countryside, the daily life of the people where I have come across.
Thank you for watching and subscriptions!
Video made by Thuan Van Nguyen.
This video copyright belongs to Thuan Van Nguyen.
Background music from youtube.com/audiolibrary/music
Kratie, Cambodia
This video was uploaded from an Android phone.
Chhlong District, Kratie province
It is my scence at Kratie province.
Protecting Cambodia's endangered dolphins
(1 Mar 2018) LEAD IN:
Before years of conflict and over-fishing killed them off, the Mekong River was teaming with thousands of freshwater dolphins.
Now, according to the WWF, there are only about 80 left, living in a short stretch of river from northern Cambodia to southern Laos.
STORY-LINE:
This small boat chugging up the Mekong River near Kratie, Cambodia, represents one of the last hopes for the critically-endangered Mekong Irrawaddy Dolphin.
The tourists on-board are here to catch a glimpse of the shy creatures in their natural habitat.
The money they spend on transport, guides, accommodation and food gives locals an alternative income from fishing, which experts say is one of the keys to the dolphin's survival.
Over-fishing, particularly with illegal gill-nets, is held mainly responsible for decimating the dolphin population.
Gill-nets are laid across the river and indiscriminately trap everything that swims into them, including dolphins and their calves.
Pollution from mining interests in the area, as well as growing concerns about the impact of hydroelectric dams on the river, are other causes of great concern for the future survival of the species.
According to the WWF, there are just 80 Irrawaddy Dolphins left, living in a short stretch of river from northern Cambodia to southern Laos.
Former fisherman Su Sochea says he's packed away his nets and instead earns a better living bringing tourists to see the dolphins living near his village.
When they first started the dolphin tours I already had a boat so I was hired to take tourists to see the dolphins, he says.
My family's life has since become much better. Yes it's ok now, it's not so hard. And I don't have to go to work in the neighbouring countries anymore. And we are protecting the dolphins so tourists will continue to come here to see them.
The engine is cut and oars are used when the boats are near the dolphins, so they are not scared away by the noise.
The tourists are deposited onto the riverbank next to the dolphin pools for better viewing.
Chum Sita has come dolphin-spotting with a tour group from his village in far away Prey Veng province.
We used to see them on TV but this is the first time we've seen them in real life, he says.
I think it's great that we have a native species of dolphin in this part of Cambodia. It's interesting for tourists like us to come and have a look, there are people coming here everyday to see the dolphins.
Dark-blue to grey in colour and growing up to 2.5 metres in length, they are recognisable by their small dorsal fins and bulging foreheads.
Spotting the elusive creatures is by no means guaranteed.
Unlike their saltwater cousins, Irrawaddy Dolphins rarely show curiosity towards people and they never approach the tourist boats.
There is no optimum time of day to see them, as their activity patterns don't change much throughout the day.
Although, there is a better chance of seeing them up close during the dry season when the river level drops.
Tola is the manager of the Cambodia Rural Development Team (CRDT) which works closely with the WWF to protect the dolphins.
There used to be hundreds of dolphins along the Mekong River, he says.
During the Pol Pot regime some of them were killed. Based on the local people told me that the Pol Pot killed them to collect the oil for the generators. And after the Pol Pot regime, some of the dolphins were killed as well because of the illegal fishing because at that time Cambodia is still in the chaos, there is…there was no law which is really working very well.
Dolphin tourism is now one of the biggest industries in this part of Cambodia, employing many people both directly and indirectly.
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Life in Cambodia
Pictures of Cambodia: Phnom Penh, the Killing Fields, the Mekong Discovery Trail, Kratie...
Animist Totems of Ka Choan Hill Tribe Village, Cambodia Part 2
A relative of the Village chief showed us around Ka Choan, and then led into the forest to see the Pnong/Phnong people's unusual cemetery. Approximately 20,000 people live in Ka Choan and average five persons per house with usually two related families sharing.
A few of their unique burial customs are: people can be buried in one grave site or several persons in one grave; carved totems guard each burial site; one carries a sword, gun or machete while the other plays music; a decorated boat stands on the roof to carry the person's spirit away; and a banana tree is planted on the grave. If the banana tree doesn't grow, it is bad luck for the family and means the deceased's spirit is still hovering around the grave and village. If the banana plant thrives, villagers take it as a sign that the deceased spirit has been reborn.
Many other funeral customs resembled those of Toraja people in Sulawesi, Indonesia and isn't it a wonderment how people separated by long distances happen to have the same animist beliefs?
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Highway robbery in rural Cambodia (jk! not really!)
Journey to visit Kachoch Hilltribe and their cemetery in Ratanakiri
We enjoy drive on a dirt road out of Banlung through rural villages, farms and ome pristine stretches of forest along the way to the small town of Voen Sai on the banks of the San River. We stop at Kachon village then take a local boat up the river to the Koh Peak village of Kachon, passing some beautiful sections of river along the way. Kachon is home to a traditional Tompuon burial ground complete with carved effigies of the deceased. Family groups are buried side by side and elaborate ceremonies held after a period of mourning. We return to Banlung by road.
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CAMBODIA
PART 5 Local Community Ride and Homestay Cambodia
PART 5: ARRIVAL IN THE HOMESTAY
This is part 5 of the 9 videos I made during the Local Community Ride and Homestay tour organized by Butterfly tours Siem Reap Cambodia.
Everything is filmed with my smartphone without wind filter and video stabilization and all parts are simple cut and paste with windows movie maker. Video quality has been reduced to upload to youtube. Sometimes shaking videos by single-handed steering and filming during cycling which was sometimes very difficult due to the rough roads. Sometimes because of the rain, darkness, rough roads or other activities it was not always possible to film everything but it gives you a good idea about the tour.
For all info about the tour visit the website of Butterfly Tours
Links to all video's.
Part 1 Introduction
Part 2 Visit a rural school
Part 3 Visit a rice wine farm
Part 4 Stop in the village
Part 5 Arrival in the homestay
Part 6 Eating, sleeping, Wake up
Part 7 Leaving the homestay
Part 8 Visit a local busines of money boxes
Part 9 Visit a local market
This is my review about the tour.
I booked the Local Community Ride and Home Stay with butterfly tours and it was fantastic.
Five minutes after the start we were already in the countryside. No tourists have seen during the whole tour. During the first day of the tour we visited a temple, a rural school, and a rice wine farm. Each time we drove from one location to another through small villages, farms and meet farmers with their cows and buffalos and in the villages we made contact with the local people. In the evening we stopped at the host family for the homestay. I made contact with the very friendly and hospitable family and their tradition. After we showered, we eat together with the family. Cambodian KOKO soup with rice. We enjoyed a well-deserved night's rest after eating. In the morning after breakfast we start our ride for day two. After a drive through the countryside and villages we visited a local family business where they make money boxes in different figures from clay. And we visited a small business where they make baskets out of straw. Then we drove to a local market where I had the time to visit it and make contact with the locals and their products. After the visit to the market we said goodbye to the locals and drove back to the office of Butterfly Tours which was the end of the tour.
About the guide: The guide Song is very friendly, patient and has a good knowledge. He has a very good explanation of everything and has the time to let me take pictures and videos.
About the homestay: I had what I was looking for. I wanted and real local experience without Western luxury.
We take a shower outside with water and a bucket. A hole in the ground was the toilet. And I slept in a half-open wooden house above the ground without a mattress on the wooden floor.
About the countyside and the population: The countryside of Cambodia is very beautiful and the people very friendly. Everywhere you see smiling faces and the people make contact and everywhere you hear HALLO HALLO HALLO.
About the tour: Fantastic. The tour is well organized and has a good general impression of Cambodia and daily life.
Conclusion: If you want to discover the real Cambodian life this is a very good tour. Only by discovering the countryside and making a homestay do you learn how real life is in Cambodia and how people live. I recommend it to everyone, come to Cambodia and make the Local Community Ride and Home Stay with butterfly tours.
I was very happy and I only have positive comments.
I generally give this tour a score of 10/10.
Phnom Penh Cambodia Mekong Delta Ho Chi Minh Vietnam Travel Full Documentary
Phnom Penh Cambodia Mekong Delta Ho Chi Minh Vietnam Travel Full Documentary
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The Mekong River is one of Asia's great waterways -a powerful, mesmerising and life-giving force that careers from the icy mountains of Tibet to the humid rice fields of southern Vietnam. Along its journey the river blesses Tibet, China, Burma, Thailand, Laos, Cambodia and Vietnam with its bounty of food and transportation opportunities and is the lifeblood of thousands of people who live along its banks and survive from its fish and the irrigation opportunities it presents to otherwise remote rural areas.
I have explored and journeyed along the river at various points of its path through south east Asia. On my first trip to the region as a young backpacker in the late 1990s I took a slow boat from Huay Xai (the border town in the north of Thailand and Laos) to Luang Prabang, and from this time onward I have been fascinated by exploring the Mekong and its tributaries. I have been fortunate to travel down and stay alongside the river in Thailand, Laos and Cambodia. However, the so-called 'Mekong Delta' region of Vietnam had eluded me on my travels until recently, and what a treat I had been missing!
The Mekong Delta refers to a large area of Vietnam from its border with Cambodia to the coastal shores of the south of the country where the Mekong finally ends its enormous journey. The area is often referred to locally as the 'Rice Bowl', such is the fertility and irrigation possibilities that water's flow provides.
Most visitors to Vietnam will remark about the frenetic nature with which the Vietnamese people seem to go about pretty much everything they do. Crossing overland into Vietnam from Laos or Cambodia, you will notice a marked difference in the levels of human activity. I recall travelling into northern Vietnam from Laos once; on the Laos side of the border were remote villages scattered every twenty kilometres or so, with dry paddy fields and the occasional glimpse of tribal ethnic minority villagers sleeping in the mid-day heat. Yet, just across the border it is a completely different story, with ingenious irrigation and farming systems in place and a hive of activity with people planting, chopping, building, transporting. I recall that on the Vietnamese side of the border they get an extra rice harvest every year. The reasons for these differences are probably worthy of a separate article altogether so we won't go into them here. Nevertheless, the Mekong Delta mirrors these earlier observations -- never before I had I seen such intense and incredible use of the river's unquestionable gifts.
ដំណើរកំសាន្តទៅខេត្តលើ || Emma Combo
Wine production in Cambodia
(11 Aug 2010)
AP Television
Chan Thay Chhoueng winery, 15kms west of Battambang City, April 14th - 15th 2010
1. Mid shot of woman pouring wine
2. Wide shot of tourists tasting wine
3. Mid shot of tourists tasting wine
4. SOUNDBITE (Khmer) Leng Chan Thol, Winemaker:
First of all they said that we cannot grow grapes here because it's too hot. Then they said we could not produce a tasty wine like in the foreign countries, but it didn't turn out that way and now it's made our area famous and we get a lot of support from the locals.
5. Tracking shot of Leng Chan Thol pruning vines
6. Tilt up of Leng Chan Thol pruning vines
7. Wide shot of Leng Chan Thol pruning vines
8. Mid shot of woman pruning vines
9. Wide shot of tractor driving through grape vines
10. Mid shot of farm worker driving tractor
11. Close shot over shoulder of farm worker driving tractor
12. Set up shot Chan Thai Chhoeung
13. SOUNDBITE (Khmer) Chan Thai Chhoeung, Winemaker:
I studied wine production very closely and I soon realized that local grapes would never make good wine. That's when I had the idea of using importing vine cuttings. I asked my brother who lives in Toulouse, France and he sent me vine cuttings for Cabernet and Shiraz.
14. Mid shot of grape juice stored in big water bottles
15. Mid shot of stainless steel wine vats
16. Close shot of dog sleeping under wine vats
17. Wide shot of shot of Chan Thai Chhoeung looking at oak chips
18. Close shot of oak chips
19. Mid shot of Chan Thai Chhoeung putting label on bottle
20. Close shot of Chan Thai Chhoeung putting label on bottle
21. Pan of man paying for wine
22. Pan of people at wine tasting
23. Close shot of woman putting wine bottles into bag
24. Mid shot of photo of Leng Chan Thol greeting King of Cambodia (right)
25. Close shot of photo of Leng Chan Thol greeting King of Cambodia (right)
26. SOUNDBITE (Khmer) Leng Chan Thol, Winemaker:
I'm a bit of a local celebrity around here. Also many people from around the world now know that we produce wine in Cambodia. As you can see we get people from many countries such as America, Australia, Germany�many, many countries.
27. Mid shot of woman at wine tasting with hostess.
28. SOUNDBITE (Dutch) Petra Warmer, Tourist from Utrecht:
In the Netherlands I like to drink French wine, mostly the Cotes Du Rhone which I love and as for this Cambodian wine, it's not bad, it tastes quite nice. I'm pleasantly surprised.
29. Wide shot of restaurant.
30. Set up shot of Frank Sampere
31. SOUNBITE (French) Frank Sampere, Wine expert, Manager of The Wine Restaurant, Phnom Penh:
This is an interesting wine, light and fruity, quite well made. I think it would go well with Cambodian cuisine. It's a very light wine, not full bodied, so you have to drink it at a cool temperature. For a first try this is really good. I think it's really interesting to drink.
32. Mid to close moving shot from people to wine on display
LEAD IN:
Tourists from around the world flock to France, Australia and California for wine tastings, but have you ever thought of going wine tasting in Cambodia?
Five years ago an impoverished orange grower in the northern province of Battambang decided to give wine making a go, and today he and his family earn a handsome living selling his wine to visitors.
STORYLINE:
On a hot day in Cambodia, winemaker Leng Chan Thol serves her light-bodied red wine to customers.
The locally grown wine is a curiosity.
With its heavy monsoon rains and intense heat, Cambodia is not a country normally associated with red wine production, so initially any people thought they were mad to start a local wine business.
Leng Chan Thol remembers the difficulties she encountered at the start.
Each label is applied individually by hand.
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