We took the "Mekong Express" bus to Phnom Penh then on to Siam Reap. It was an all-day affair but one made more comfortable in that this bus had air-con and a bathroom. We were told the touts at Siem Reap were laid back due to their more 'provincial upbringing.' Ha! As soon as we stopped, it was the closest thing to being a rock star without having a stalker and death threats. Well, a couple were like stalkers as they followed us almost the whole way to the hotel. We broke through the impenatrable wall of shouting and people holding signs reading, "I no hassle you. I promise" and walked towards our hotel. 

Siem Reap is the main place people go to when they go to Cambodia as it's all about Angkor Wat and the ruins. Built in the 11-13th centuries, the ruins are less impressive for their age than they are for their craftsmanship and scale -- some believe Angkor Wat temple is the largest religious structure on earth and the rest of the colossal ruins stretch over a swath of land that covers nearly half the country. It would be an unfathomable achievement if it hadn't been done. And, at the time, it taxed the empire's finances and labor so greatly, it arguably contributed to its demise.
The first two days we visited most of the major sites by bicycle, and were pretty exhausted by even the end of the first day. The next day we wanted to tour some of the less visited sites and so took a magnificent little 'jaunt' through the dirt backroads to the Rolous Group of Temples and the Bakong. From there, it was an exhausting 16km ride on dirt roads through middle-of-the-day heat to Phnom Bok (PHNOM-BOW) which climbed (as did we) 200 meters high. At the top, the temple was complete with rusting artillery cannons left over from the Khmer Rouge sitting on the north and south corners. (The Khmers were also involved with the Bauphon, which had meticulously been taken apart by the French for restoration, but the plans were destroyed during the regime, leaving only a giant jigsaw puzzle of sandstone).
And we did the old standbys, Ta Prohm - the temple swallowed by the jungle and left 'in tact' with 100 year old trees still alive and well, having dislodged giant stones and now towering 100 feet above; The Bayon -- which in addition to boring reliefs of war and conquest, had amazing scenes offering glimpses into everyday life, including women picking lice from each others' hair and circuses, complete with tightrope walkers and a strong man lifting three dwarfs (or little people as they might have been called back then). And of course there was Angkor Wat, with its 'ungodly' size and epic bas reliefs of its own, including our favorite, "The Churning of the Ocean of Milk" -- which sounds disgusting but was really an important legend of good versus evil as demons battled in a tug of war, pulling a giant serpent back and forth inside the ocean in order to extract its elixir of immortality. The gods won because the demons couldn't resist the heavenly female nymphs floating above. Ahhhhh....
Ta Som, Preah Neak Pean, The Bakong, Banteay Samre are just a few of the others, which we think, in the end, totalled like 30 temples we were able to see in 3 days. Sounds boring right? To be honest, even we didn't know what to think after seeing everything (and we had still only scratched the surface). But we did know we left Siam Reap with feelings of deep respect and privilidge for something that was as close to greatness as it gets.
Siem Reap is the main place people go to when they go to Cambodia as it's all about Angkor Wat and the ruins. Built in the 11-13th centuries, the ruins are less impressive for their age than they are for their craftsmanship and scale -- some believe Angkor Wat temple is the largest religious structure on earth and the rest of the colossal ruins stretch over a swath of land that covers nearly half the country. It would be an unfathomable achievement if it hadn't been done. And, at the time, it taxed the empire's finances and labor so greatly, it arguably contributed to its demise.
The first two days we visited most of the major sites by bicycle, and were pretty exhausted by even the end of the first day. The next day we wanted to tour some of the less visited sites and so took a magnificent little 'jaunt' through the dirt backroads to the Rolous Group of Temples and the Bakong. From there, it was an exhausting 16km ride on dirt roads through middle-of-the-day heat to Phnom Bok (PHNOM-BOW) which climbed (as did we) 200 meters high. At the top, the temple was complete with rusting artillery cannons left over from the Khmer Rouge sitting on the north and south corners. (The Khmers were also involved with the Bauphon, which had meticulously been taken apart by the French for restoration, but the plans were destroyed during the regime, leaving only a giant jigsaw puzzle of sandstone).
And we did the old standbys, Ta Prohm - the temple swallowed by the jungle and left 'in tact' with 100 year old trees still alive and well, having dislodged giant stones and now towering 100 feet above; The Bayon -- which in addition to boring reliefs of war and conquest, had amazing scenes offering glimpses into everyday life, including women picking lice from each others' hair and circuses, complete with tightrope walkers and a strong man lifting three dwarfs (or little people as they might have been called back then). And of course there was Angkor Wat, with its 'ungodly' size and epic bas reliefs of its own, including our favorite, "The Churning of the Ocean of Milk" -- which sounds disgusting but was really an important legend of good versus evil as demons battled in a tug of war, pulling a giant serpent back and forth inside the ocean in order to extract its elixir of immortality. The gods won because the demons couldn't resist the heavenly female nymphs floating above. Ahhhhh....
Ta Som, Preah Neak Pean, The Bakong, Banteay Samre are just a few of the others, which we think, in the end, totalled like 30 temples we were able to see in 3 days. Sounds boring right? To be honest, even we didn't know what to think after seeing everything (and we had still only scratched the surface). But we did know we left Siam Reap with feelings of deep respect and privilidge for something that was as close to greatness as it gets.
We decided to not tour Eastern Cambodia and go straight to Laos -- which meant taking a flight (which doesn't count on our "Teak Fellowship" mile total). Sarah was getting sick and we'd also save three valuable days. Plus, we didn't exactly relish taking a tough overland route again, especially through Phnom Penh! So we landed in Pakse, in the southwest of Laos (pronounced in the singular 'LAO' we were told). While Sarah was getting over some crazy bronchial infection and taking anti-biotics we've have yet to use ever since we left 8 months ago, (CIPRO), we decided a perfect remedy would be a 4-day, dusty, backroad route through remote parts of south and eastern Laos via moto-bike! It wasn't all what you'd think. The first two days, we stayed in a bungalow overlooking (and overhearing!) a big, soothing waterfall right below us at Tad Lo. Sarah had the best sleep of her life.
The next day, we rode the 67 year-old female elephant, "Moon." (life span we were told was about 150 years for an Asian Elephant). Laos' original name was Lang Xang, Land of a "Million Elephants" which are these days down to a couple of thousand -- some working elephants still on the farms and some wild. Moon ate about 200 kilos of leaves a day and took a bath in the river. After this wonderful experience, Sarah was seriously considering giving up art and design to be an elephant trainer.
Then it was off to Sekong, where we tried to get gas from the station but the power was out in the whole city and the pumps wouldn't work, so we had to settle for roadside assistance -- Fanta or Mirinda bottles full of red liquid gasoline sitting on little shelves. Andy almost mistakenly bought one to drink!
Somehow we made the 32km detour on dirt road to see the angelic waterfall "Nam Toc Katamtoc" in the Bolaven Plateau, turned around, and screamed toward Attapeu, trying to make it before dark. There's not much to see in Attapeu, it's pretty desolate. As was Pa-am, save for a giant, aging Russian Surface-to-Air Missle sitting on the old Ho Chi Minh trail we had to wade across a river to see. And, plus, the people in the village really didn't really like us or want us there. No love. . . no love. Although two guys nearby sympathized with Sarah when she fell right through a bridge of poor construction and banged her knee and ripped the knee out of her one pair of jeans. They tried to help Andy help her up and talked and waved their arms as if to say, "Ah, this bridge... they can't ever make anything right," and started to readjust the planks of wood over the gaping holes.
At that point, we left screaming on a backtrack all the way north and west, this time to the coffee-growing town on top of the Bolaven Plateau (with drastically dropping temperatures to match) named Paksong, and the little waterfall town of Tad Fane, with a not-so-little waterfall. Again, we arrived just in time before dark. The waterfall was spectacular and much easier to get to than "Nam Toc Katamtoc," which we never would have found anyway were it not for a kind family in the hills.
The next day, after eating an entire Papaya that the girl cut up for us on the spot, we made it back to Pakse, and decided we'd come this far, why not just go ahead and go up to Vientiane tonight? There was an overnight bus, they call "VIP: The Big Bus" and it didn't disappoint. At 8:30 pm, an absolute monstrosity pulled around the corner straight out of "Tron." An entire double-decker warmly bathed in the soothing aura of neon and black-light --- even the engine was lit up when they opened the flap.
Luckily the Karaoke on the flat screens inside (and inside the driver's cabin) ended at a reasonable hour, but it was as cold as the dickens and the seat space was about 20 per cent vertical and 80 per cent horizontal. Just plain strange! We were on the lower level. You had to duck your head all the way to the restroom on board and there were about 30 people above us.
But we made it to Vientiane in a hurry at 6am, sunrise. After a couple of days of Sarah recovering as best she can (she may even be perfecting how to spit!), we plan to go up to Vang Vien, then Luang Prabang, and then across the Thai border. Should we go to the 'Plain of Jars?' Thanks for all the replies. It's good to hear from everyone in these strange, strange times of continual upheaval combined with exhilirating delight, which seem to be our only constants.