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| "Christmas dinner" |
28 December
Well that was interesting. We went to Vietnam yesterday -
for 5 minutes. Normally at this time of year we renew our 30-day visas at the
agent in Kep. This time they said it would take 3 weeks and that our passports
would (probably) be back on the 11th. Seeing as we’re leaving Kep on the 12th
there was no way we could risk this schedule so we decided to try a “visa run”
to the Vietnam border instead. It’s a 60 minute tuk-tuk ride from here to the
border at Prek Chak, along some bone-rattling dirt tracks, but we were told it
would be OK to get visas - “probably” - so we gave it a go!
Our driver assured us he would wait at the border while we crossed
over by foot. On the Cambodian side there’s a smart new building with “Arrivals”
and “Departures” desks. Getting stamped out was straightforward once someone
had woken the border guard at the departures desk. Then we wandered over no-main’s
land to the Vietnamese side. As Brits, in theory we have a 15-day free visa to
enter Vietnam. Fortunately, an English-speaking help helper was on hand to ease communication
between border officials and tourists. We explained to her that we wanted to go
straight back to Cambodia. “Ah - check in check out!” she said, “In that case
you need to stay one hour … or perhaps one day …. Or you could pay $10 each”. She
grinned. Needless to say we coughed up our $20 to a now smiling official at the
desk - the happiest Asian policeman I’ve ever met.
Passports stamped, we headed back over no-man’s land to the
posh Cambodian post, filled out visa forms, paid the regular $35 each for
30-day visas, got passports stamped again. Nearly there! Then into the “Quarantine”
office. New regulations mean you have to have proof of vaccination to enter
Cambodia from Vietnam. Have we got this? No, of course not. “No worries,” says
the official, “for a dollar I can issue a card”. . .
We were through - and legal - and our tuk-tuk driver was waiting
for us.
| The countryside on the way to the border is unimpressive - flat with occasional wooded hills. This is the salt field area. |
| This village appeared to have been razed to the ground by fire. |
| A pretty lily pond - where our driver stopped to have a pee! |


Hi Harriet, I will try again to post something! Happy new Year to you and Trevann. I am enjoying your blog and photos as ever.
ReplyDeleteDeirdre x
Sorry, Harriet, this combination of lower, leaf and spiny/hairy receptacle (?) defeats me. All the best for 2019 - Mark
ReplyDeleteHarriet, I will ask Mike.Hope all well? Complicated Results meeting-VNR!!
ReplyDeleteHey - comments! Hooray! All is good. Thanks. I think the whole "development" thing is complicated these days Deirdre. What to do for the best?
ReplyDelete