Thursday, October 30, 2008

Bokor National Park

DESTINATIONS AND NOW FOR SOMETHING DIFFERENT BOKOR NATIONAL PARK
There are times when you want to get away from the madding crowds of Phnom Penh. If you’re looking for something a little unusual, somewhere less ‘discovered’ than Sihanoukville, try the charmingly unspoiled French colonial town of Kampot, gateway to nearby Bokor National Park. Bokor, originally settled by the French in the early 1920s as a cool hill station for the summer months, is now all but uninhabited. And although the park is home to a variety of seldom-seen wildlife, it’s to see Bokor’s abandoned hill station and the beautiful Popokvil Waterfalls that you should make the journey.

Bokor National Park
Make sure you get an early start. The summit of Bokor (1,080 meters high) is reached at the end of one of the worst roads in Cambodia and the journey (about 30km) takes a lot longer than you would think. Heavily potholed and scattered with reefs of the original asphalt surface, it is best traveled by 4WD or motorbike.

Spectacular views of the Gulf of Thailand glimpsed through the lush jungle and the abandoned buildings that dot the roadside grab your interest, and the journey is forgotten the moment you experience the summit’s extraordinary atmosphere.

At once beautiful and sinister, the hill station buildings include a Catholic church and an old hotel the aptly named and monumentally proportioned Bokor Palace, as a number of other crumbling dwellings. The view out to a sapphire sea across a vertiginous dense emerald green jungle from what was the terrace of the Palace is remarkable.

It’s easy to see the strategic significance of Bokor Hill Station, and even easier to see the scars of the many battles that have been sinister aspect, redolent with mystery, as mented lichen, are steeped in the blood of their violent past.

Possibly the best known of these battles had the Khmer Rouge holed up in the Catholic church shooting it out with the Vietnamese in the Bokor Palace. It is only too possible to imagine this scene as you gaze across the windswept plains from the upstairs windows of the Palace, or wander through its echoing and cavernous ruins. But this only increases the fascination of the place.

The 15-minute drive from the hill station to the crystal clear waters of the popular Popokvil (‘Swirling Clouds’) Waterfall takes you past the abandoned and decaying grass huts of the Khmer Rouge families who once lived here. A 20-minute walk down a dirt track from the car park brings you to the first and more accessible of the waterfall’s two spectacular tiers. But it’s worth making the effort to get to the second tier. It’s here that you find out why the falls are so named. Clouds of the finest mist hover over the falls to magical effect. And so, back to Kampot and an evening at one of the guesthouses lining the riverbank; drink in hand you watch yet another spectacular tropical sunset over the brooding hills of Bokor. It is as richly exotic and intensely satisfying a way to conclude a traveler’s day as any I’ve experienced. You should try it.

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