Brian and my first experience on Cambodian soil (or headed to it) was not pleasant. We took a slow train to a border town in Thailand from Bangkok (I’m talking six hours on a standing room only train, with no conditioner, to travel about 150 miles—the distance from San Diego to Disneyland. Granted, the ride only cost us each $3, but still, it was bloody uncomfortable). A man on the train was so hospitable and kind as to offer his seat to a couple of travelers on the train. So many times, I witnessed Thai people being gracious and friendly to travelers.
Unfortunately for Brian and I, we look like locals, so we didn't benefit from this hospitality. On the flipside, we were treated fairly as locals as a local would be, rather than as a tourist might be ripped off… again, probably due to our dark, ambiguously Southeast Asian features.
As long and cramped and uncomfortable as the train ride was, the views of rice fields and railway towns were beautiful.
When we finally arrived in Aranyaprathet, we had to board a
tuktuk and go to the immigration office of Cambodia. It was a bit stressful
having so many people herd, hustle, and steer us toward certain taxis and
tuktuks, wanting our business. We gave up on trying to share a taxi with a
group and rode a tuktuk as a pair.
The driver took us to what I immediately recognized to be a
scam visa office. He pulled up to the office and a man in business attire
cheerfully greeted me and gave me some BS about us having arrived at the place
where we should get our visa. I refused to get out of the tuktuk and told the
driver to take us to the border. They argued with me for a while, but I was
stubborn. A couple of other tuktuks arrived with foreigners onboard—I waved
them away and called to them that this was not the immigration office. When the
businessman realized that I was scaring off his customers, he waved our tuktuk
driver away, and that was that. Our driver then took us to the real immigration
office, we paid him, and he left.
Next, Brian and I walked a few hundred meters to the
immigration office. Many men lounging about in the streets helpfully tried to
point us in the right direction, but after the experience with the fake visa
place, we didn’t know who to trust anymore. We eventually found what seemed to
be the right place—a very plain, rundown building run by men in police officer-like
uniforms. The price for the visa was posted as $20 + 3,000baht. The last part
was handwritten. It was obvious that these police officers were scamming off of
tourists for an extra fee, equivalent of 3USD. I was disgusted, but I overheard
many other tourists in front of me try to argue away this unlawful fee and
fail, so I just forked over the money.
Applying for and attaining our visa took about 5 minutes;
waiting in line at the border took another 15 or so. If we had applied for our
visa online ahead of time, we could have saved ourselves $3 each and the stress
of getting scammed, but the wait time was no difference for those with an
online visa and those with an upon-arrival visa.
After we cleared
immigration, we waited for a charter bus to take us from the border to Siem
Reap. These bus companies wait at immigration until the bus fills up, at which
time, it departs for yet another bus depot. At this bus depot, Brian and I met
a few tavelers, and were roped into converting some of our USD to Cambodian
dollars. We were again scammed and ripped off—we were told Cambodian
shopkeepers accept both USD and Cambodian dollars but that we would save money
in the long run by having our money converted. Total BS—every shop and
restaurant accepted both USD and Cambodian at equal prices. We lost another $20
or so.
After we got off that second charter bus, Brian and I were
again bombarded with tuktuks looking for our business. We already had a hotel
reserved and we knew that these tuktuk drivers wanted to take us to certain
guesthouses with whom they had deals for directing customers their way. We
wondered how we could find an honest tuktuk driver who would just take us where
we wanted to go.
Luckily, a Filipino family who was sitting with us on the
bus stepped in and helped us out. We chatted a bit on the bus about being from
the Philippines; it turned out that one of the family members now lived in
Cambodia as a teacher. He has a personal tuktuk driver who he calls up whenever
he needs a ride; after one phone call, we all squished onto the back of his
tuktuk and we were taken directly to our hotel.
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