![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
|
A big adventure often start small from near irrelevant beginnings. This adventure started with the suggestion of a cheap holiday in
Thailand, in March 1998. It all got out of control, I started doing research on places other than Bangkok to visit, the north and
south seemed the places that Australian tourists go, so I started looking east and came upon a photograph of Phimai, it reminded me
of Angkor which I was familiar with by name and image, the dye was set and the odyssey began. Before I knew what I was doing the
adventure turned into an expensive twenty eight day four country start on a project which has been going for over sixx years and shows
no sign of finishing soon. I remember very well the day we started our trip, late December 1998, five of us in a minibus, off in
search of temples. There where only a few books published at the time, the Michael Freeman’s being the most note worthy.
The tourism authority and the web provided maps that were sketchy the guide books gave the majors, but I was interested in seeing
the whole empire. Now you can find the resources easily for Thailand but each trip we would gather a new book and some more temples,
on the first two trips I think it was around thirty sites each. The first trip was December 1998 to Thailand’s Issan for three
nights, the west to Maung Sing then a flight to Siem Reap for Angkor. Tourism was just getting back on its feet after the coup of
1997 at that stage and everything was in quite quaint and nice. Local guides, local guesthouses and locals generally were making
the money, now its more companies. My memories of that trip are wonderful. |
The second trip was two years later, December 2000 to January 2001, which I concentrated on Thailand, based sites, as well as revisiting Preah Vihear. The third trip in late 2002/early 2003 saw a return to Angkor as well as a start on the Cambodian based sites. On this trip I covered four of the five sites I know about in Laos (where there is something to photograph) as well as a high loop drive in Issan in Thailand up to Udon Thani. The third trip happened quite quickly as income was ok and the apartment purchase was settled, in late 2003/early 2004. This was the great adventure, 10 days on the back of a dirt bike getting within 10m of the Thai boarder, up the Mekong to the last Cambodian town before Laos, on slow boat, finding the southern cave (well we tried for three had time to find one) and came close to the Vietnam boarder by very cautious 4x4. There were the last minute negotiations to use the 4x5 inch Sinar in the park (so many professionals with ‘blads and high end 35mm far easier the authorities don’t bother with). After this trip there were about one hundred and eighty sites photographed out of a possible two to five thousand. As this book is put together the fifth and 6th trips are organized, again in December Jan as its the coolest time of year in Cambodia and fits in with the Australian summer holiday. The 6th trip is going to be in April its a sixth day trip to Angkor to do more park photos and have enough photos for a book on Angkor Wat and another on Bayon. I would still like to go back to Koh Ker and do another major adventure around Cambodia, before the roads get even more dangerous. We often get asked “isn’t it dangerous?” to which my standard reply is “not as dangerous as going to the wrong part of any major USA city. Though I have to admit the roads and driving is scary! On a project as big as this it is collaboration. I would like to thank, Martin my partner of eight years and an enthusiastic backer of this project. Tom who has been my cultural adviser, translator and guide. Phu our first guide in Angkor, Andy Brouwer Naoki Hatano for their net reports of finding the sites as well as company over meals when we’ve both been in the same town. Thanks to Paul Sheila and Mr. Slim from Cambodian adventure dirt bike tours, for making an exception for me and taking me as pillion passenger for one of the highlights of my life. My thanks to Kee and the staff of the golden banana Siem Reap my home in Angkor, and the rose hotel Bangkok by base camp. My thanks to the boy on Bakong you are the hope for Cambodia. To all the drivers, hotel staff, locals, amused restaurants owners and others who made this project possible, in Thailand Cambodia and Laos, my heart felt thanks. This book is in your memory, even though you often did not understand my fascination, nor could you ever probably afford to buy the book if it gets published. (pic: Andy Brouwer and me at FCC) Prints from this series may be purchased here. News: Images from this body of work are being used to promote Heritage Freindly Business in Cambodia. More images have been put up. 35mm panarama, medium format and large format.
|
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
|
| Li River a Conversation |
...I hope this does not offend you... | I'm not a Tourist but... |
Oliver Was Here | 3 Khmer Empires | A Grave Show |