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Old Mar 19th, 2005 | 01:47 AM
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Angkor Wat Questions

Does the Bangkok Air discover pass cover flights to Sien Riep? What's a good hotel in SR? Who is a good guide and how do we contact him/her?
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Old Mar 19th, 2005 | 02:46 AM
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Andy,

I have researched this a bit for our trip next year. The discover pass covers flights to SR. We are looking at the Sofitel which, although expensive by Cambodian standards, has had good reviews. If you are looking for a more "boutiquey" kind of experience the Shinta Mani is the one. I have not researched a guide but will look forward to seeing others' recommendations as well as hearing about your experiences if you go before we do.

Are you good for Sturbridge on 4/17?
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Old Mar 19th, 2005 | 03:26 AM
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I have stayed at both the SHinta mani and the Pansea and enjoyed both tho preferred the Shinta Mani. I think I was the first person to post re the Shinta Mani in Feb 2004 when it had just opened. Subsequently people have posted favourably re the FCC which was not open when I went first in AUg 03 then in Feb 04. I used the same guide both times - [email protected] - called Ta. Highly recoed.
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Old Mar 19th, 2005 | 06:47 AM
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I stayed at the Sofitel in SR this past November and could recommend it highly. The pool area was really nice to sit by during our afternoon break from sightseeing at the temples and after we returned in the evening. We had a wonderful guide, Pech Kunthea, who was very knowledgeable and friendly. His e-mail is [email protected]. I don't know if he sends other guides in his place if he is overbooked, as seems to happen sometimes, but we had a very good experience with him.
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Old Mar 19th, 2005 | 12:56 PM
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hi gpanda...
the bangkok airpass works for siem reap...the flights are always sold out
well in advance...and the each way price is $80 international rate but still much cheaper than booking it directly.

we stayed at the boutique hotel passagio
...it was smaller, nice big cool clean rooms...no pool, included breakfast for $80 per nite for 3 of us. it was just across the bridge from the market and we could walk into town or catch a tuk tuk just about anywhere cost us $1.
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Old Mar 19th, 2005 | 01:43 PM
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call the 800# for the reservations for SR using bkk air (i got a clerk in india by the way)...they tell you the price, make the res and then you have to send them a check, non-personal, for the fees (send ck to nyc)....you have to book at least 3 legs per person however....so you would need to book SR, r.t., and at least one other leg to use the pass....do they fly to krabi??? probably....they do go to koh samui and phuket...
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Old Mar 19th, 2005 | 03:59 PM
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Thanks Bob. Yes they have one flight per day to Krabi, but it leaves before the one from SR arrives. So it looks like we'll have to take Thai airways down to Krabi and the third leg on Bangkok Air as Krabi-BKK. Please E-mail me their 800#.

Any thoughts on the Pansea?
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Old Mar 19th, 2005 | 05:40 PM
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i considered the pansea on my trip but was taken by angkor village....sorry i picked as i did...beds were bad!!!

i'll dig out the 800#
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Old Mar 19th, 2005 | 06:58 PM
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I considered Angkor Village until I read where Bob said the beds were uncomfortable. So, I chose the Sofitel, ... where the bed was rock hard. Beautiful room, buildings, and grounds, though. And the pool is nice. The staff is friendly and attentive. The food was good but I did get sick. May have been from a gulp of water (my fault) in the shower, but might have been from their dinner buffet (my fault).

After making the reservations, I got an e-mail from someone who worked at the reservations desk at the hotel offering guide services. Good service at a good price, but no particular reason to recommend it except that it was convenient to arrange. I think that your chances of getting a good guide there are very high. My impression was that they were very well trained (saw other guides speaking other lanuages to other tourists).
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Old Mar 19th, 2005 | 07:13 PM
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The traditional beds in Cambodia are very hard, so you may have had the same beds at the Sofitel as at Angkor Village... I don't know about the beds at the Pansea.
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Old Mar 19th, 2005 | 07:25 PM
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Beds at the Pansea are comfy, rooms are large and the layout of the hotel is lovely. They also have a great first floor bar.
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Old Mar 19th, 2005 | 09:47 PM
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We thoroughly recommend, Saron Soeun. He was recommended by someone else on this site last year and he's fantastic. If you do a search you'll find reviews for him.

His website: www.sarontours.com
His email: [email protected]

Can't recommend him enough. He will pick you up at the airport and deliver you back there as part of his job. He is very knowledgable and will not pack toooo much into your day (unlike his replacement who thought that's what we would want).
If not available, Saron will arrange someone else.

We also asked Saron for his recommendation for a Khmer run hotel, not a multinational, and can recommend the Auberge Mont Royal. Deluxe room is USD50.00. Central, clean, very friendly staff, blind massuer inhouse, bar and restaurant. No pool though - we didn't need one anyway. When a driver failed to turn up one morning, one of their staff took over and drove for us.

We were there in Dec last year.
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Old Mar 20th, 2005 | 11:43 AM
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based on rec's found here, we have booked Saron Soeun as our REP guide. We've emailed aback and forth a few times and most recently, I told hm what we did and did not want to do with only 2 days; very accomodating. will post in mid-April (booked him in Dec.) GPANDA: based on a ex-pat's rec, am using a BKK-based travel agent for our DIsocvery Pass tix. Found that talking to "Gavin" in India for Bangkok Airways was a bit stressful and some of the legs we wanted were "full". However, when I contacted BKK tavel agent, Toom, with the same itinerary, she was able to book as we wanted (and seperately, got us a lower price from BKK to SIN than ANY web site ---and I searched zillions). her email is [email protected] I asked her if I could post her email as I thought she was very helpful and responsive, so tell her that Jan from NY forwarded her name via fodors. hope she can help you. (btw: will pay for Discovery Pass after our BKK arrival--no checks needed as for Delhi-based Gavin.) minimum 3 legs. (we booked BKK-Chiang Mai-BKK-REP-BKK-LP-BKK) hope this helps as you've helped me a lot. (also booked at FCC Cambodia. Jan
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Old Mar 20th, 2005 | 12:19 PM
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To take this thread one step beyond: does anyone have any recommendations for travel to Sien Riep, either by land or air from Vietnam?
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Old Mar 20th, 2005 | 12:45 PM
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There are flights on Vietnam Air from Saigon (HCMC) to Siem Reap.
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Old Mar 20th, 2005 | 01:33 PM
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Thanks to everyone. I know there a definitive book oin Angkor Wat, but have forgotten the name and author.
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Old Mar 20th, 2005 | 02:35 PM
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GPANDA: one of them is "Ancient ANgkor" by Michael Freeman. got it from Amazon; read it all last night and found it to be very accessible and easy to comprehend. even rates the wats with1*, 2** & 3***. won't take it tho, very heavy.
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Old Mar 20th, 2005 | 03:10 PM
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I prefer Dawn Rooney's book, Angkor, as a guide to take along. I do have Michael Freeman's book as well, but it's larger to carry.
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Old Mar 22nd, 2005 | 04:08 PM
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For what it's worth I have Dawn Rooney's book, the fifth edition which has no set release date, on order from Amazon. Hopefully it will come out this summer as projected.
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Old Mar 23rd, 2005 | 02:02 AM
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I checked and DR's book is due in July. I'll see if I can wait. A travel agent (to whom I was sent by Bob) recommended the Victoria Hotel. Any thoughts?
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