>Sisowath Quay, Phnom Penh
This is how the riverside looks like early Sunday morning. It was very quiet – a far cry from the usual hustle-bustle at the riverside during regular hours of the day. There were few people walking about and less vehicles plying the whole stretch of Sisowath Quay. I shot this from the FCC (Foreign Correspondent’s Club) restaurant while my husband and I were having breakfast there (food was a disappointment, price too expensive!). If not for the messy wires, the view would have been perfect.
Read More>Wordless Wednesday 001: Bridge to nowhere

A bridge over Toeuk Chou Waterfall area
Kampot, Cambodia
>Flying high…
Cheyor, Kampuchea!
2008 Bon Ekareich (Independence Day Celebration)
Phnom Penh, Cambodia
>Yellow-capped civil servants
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Seen during the celebration of Cambodia’s Independence Day
9 November 2008
>Sunday Scenery #002: Sunset in Kep
Today’s Sunday Scenery entry is also the first photo to start my project 365 – one photo a day.
More than two years ago, I left the comforts of Phnom Penh for a work assignment down south of Cambodia – to the coastal town of Kep. Our organization had no office there yet so I had to use the same guesthouse room (where I live) as my office. There was no electricity yet – generator operates only at night – and so I travel to our project areas by day and do the paperworks at night. Each working day I was absolutely knackered from the bone-crunching moto-ride visiting remote villages. But when I go home, all the exhaustion simply vanished because of this:
View from my room at the guesthouse. The larger island in the background is known as Phu Quoc, which is already part of Vietnam. The tiny island, on the other hand, belongs to Cambodia and we fondly call it the population one island. How did it get its name? It’s because there is only one person inhabiting the island and it’s a policeman guarding the territory.
Further down the hill from the guest-house, is Psah Khdam (crab market) where we usually get our meals in one of the restaurants there. It’s got the perfect location where we were also treated to a fantastic view of the sunset over the Gulf of Thailand.
Don’t you just love the soft pink tone in the photographs? I have to say that Kep has, arguably, the most beautiful sunset in all of Cambodia!
Check out other Sunday Scenery posts at Tarheel Ramblings.
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