Borneo has spectacular untouched forests, enormous (largest in the world) caves, and blue ocean. It was my first time travelling alone, and I thoroughly enjoyed it, but I was happy when my pal Karlijn came to join me midway through. The eight day trip mainly consisted of winding boardwalks through the jungle which lead to ominous cave entrances. The caves themselves were homes to bats, swiftlets, spiders, and a lot of guano (bat droppings). Borneo has so much beautiful nature to offer, with wildlife you can only see on that island, I was sad when the trip came to an end. The final day Karlijn and I were able to relax by the ocean and watch the sun set, it was a great ending to a perfect trip (well it felt a bit short).
Cambodia was a field trip for my geography class about natural resources. We had the opportunity to stay with families in a fishing village on the Tonle Sap lake. There was an extreme language barrier between me and the family I stayed with. The only words exchanged between me and my host father were ar kun (thank-you), and tuk (boat). We got along really well, and he let us borrow the tuk whenever we liked, which was essential to see the village since it was literally floating on the water. The meals were fishy, literally, for supper we ate fish soup, with fried fish and rice, but it was quite tasty. At night many families from the village came to our house to watch Khmer soap operas on the small TV which was hooked up to a car battery (or maybe they came to see the white kid). My trip to the Kingdom of Cambodia was really great to see first hand another lifestyle completely alien to my own.
haha hi gerrit, which geog module was that?
ReplyDeleteGlad to see that you are enjoying Khmer fish!!
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