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Commonly
known as the valley of a 1000 Lingas, Kbal Spean:
is set deep in the jungle to the north east of
Angkor. A 45 minute steep walk takes you to the
river and waterfalls where hundreds of phalluses
are carved on the riverbed

Kbal
Spean Waterfalls
The
waterfall here is best seen at the end of the
rainy season. At the top of the falls are numerous
carved figures and animals This site has only
been opened up to tourism since 1998 and is less
crowded than the nearby Phnom Koulen. This Hindu
Pilgrimage site predates Angkor Wat by some 200
years; making it one the most ancient sites in
the region.
Kbal
Spean is looked after very well; the waymarked
trail is a very attractive route through atmospheric
jungle. The path is steep; with some well maintained
steps. Sounds of birds and wildlife with hundreds
of butterflies enhance the visit which is at its
best in the rainy season or early in the Dry season
May through to December.
From
February the river dries up and the falls become
just a trickle; so we stop running tours until
May or June when the river flows.
The
lure of remote ancient temples seen by just a
few serious Angkor enthusiasts and the remarkable
carvings at Kbal Spean are worth a day of anyone's
time in my opinion. I had visited the reclining
Buddha, waterfalls and riverbed carvings on Phnom
Kulen a year earlier but the isolated 9th century
brick temples, built by Jayavarman II, on a separate
part of the Kulen mountain range and the 'River
of a Thousand Lingas', proved to be a double adventure
worthy of the time and discomfort I had to endure.
It
was 5am and pitch-black outside when Phalla and
two motodubs, Sothea and Lom, arrived at my hotel
to begin a day which would see us spend nearly
fourteen hours on motos over some of the roughest
terrain in the region. We drove through the Angkor
Park, stopping at a food stall in Pradak village,
just past Srah Srang lake, for some breakfast
of soup, coffee and sticky cakes. Our route took
us past a military camp at the foot of Phnom Bok
and villagers along the rough track waved and
shouted 'hello!' as we passed by. Twice we took
wrong turns before reaching the wide, red-dirt
logging road that surrounds the mountain range
and finally the admission hut. It had taken us
four hours just to get to this point. The guards
were already deeply engrossed in a card game, paying us scant attention but still alert
enough to pocket my $20 entry fee with a wide
grin. The thirty minute trip to the top was a
bumpy ride and notable for the proliferation of
black butterflies fluttering in and out of the
shafts of sunlight that broke through the forest
canopy.
The food stalls at the bottom of the path leading to the reclining Buddha
of Preah Ang Thom was our first port of call,
where Phalla explained that we needed to change
our motos and use two drivers from a group of
men sat under an awning playing cards. The temples
we were seeking were up to twenty kilometres across
the plateau and through difficult terrain, so
employing the services of locals, who later turned
out to be former Khmer Rouge soldiers, was absolutely
necessary. A brief discussion ensued as Phalla
negotiated a price and one of the men disappeared
inside a hut, re-appearing after a couple of minutes,
wearing a green police uniform with his automatic
gun slung over his shoulder. His name was Noun Moy and Phalla climbed aboard
his moto, alongwith Sothea, who as well as being
a moto-driver in Siem Reap, is also a guide, speaks
good English and this was his first visit to the
temples on Kulen. My driver was Chea Savun, who
proved to be an expert driver in very arduous
conditions. Lom, our other driver from Siem Reap,
remained with the motos and joined the others
playing cards.
The
gruelling trek began immediately we left the clearing,
as a combination of rocks and tree roots made
the track a bone-jarring experience from the outset. Often, it was flooded, necessitating
a walk through water or the trail was too sandy
to be able to drive on. At other times, our path
was barely penetrable, with thorny bushes whipping
against my legs and arms and twice we got lost
and had to retrace our steps. After an hour and
a stop to complete running repairs on one of the
bikes, we reached the first of the temples, some
18 kms from our starting point, according to Moy.
On a small rise, surrounded by forest and scrub
and barely noticeable until we were up close,
stood Prasat O'Thma Dap, a sturdy brick-built
temple with white stucco still covering much of
the structure, including its carvings. Battling
my way through the waist-high undergrowth, I circled
the temple and saw that three stucco-covered lintels were still in place
above the doorways and another lay on the floor
nearby. Savun and Sothea were in deep discussion
and told me that it was the most decorated temple
on Kulen and they believed it was erected in the
latter part of the ninth century. Back on the
motos and fifteen minutes later, we reached Prasat
Chrei, where we paused before exploring the temple,
so we could eat our lunch of chicken and rice,
with fresh bread. This temple, another substantial
brick structure with traces of stucco, was even
more difficult to get close to. The vegetation
was particularly thick, the red ants pretty vicious
and a landslide made the approach a little more than tricky. Lacking the decoration
of Thma Dap, Prasat Chrei is dated a little earlier
and is more of a ruin, with the temple split in
half. In the doorways, I noticed unusually rounded
brick pillars and nearby, half-buried in the soil,
was a solitary lintel and carved pilaster.
Moy
and Savun knew this part of the mountain particularly
well and they needed to as the trail was barely
discernible from the thick brush and bushes. Another
hour of jolts, bumps and shocks reverberating
through my bottom and spine, brought us to a wooded
area which Moy told us was called Sam Phou Thlei.
On closer inspection, the floor was literally
carpeted with broken brown clay pots and carved
lids, allegedly booty from a shipwrecked Chinese
junk according to Savun, who recalled a centuries
old legend. Nearby, they pointed to footprints
in a rocky outcrop that the same legend asserts
belonged to the same Chinese sailors, while a
little further on, carvings of Vishnu in a rockface
were covered in moss and difficult to make out
clearly. Contact with the local inhabitants was
rare on this part of the trip although we did pass through one hamlet of a few houses
before we arrived at Prasat Neak Ta. The sky had
clouded over and a few drops of rain were falling
as we inspected the brick temple, which had lost
its roof and was devoid of carvings, but had retained
its four walls and was still quite an imposing
structure. Prasat O'Pong, located closeby, was
our next stop and as we walked to the temple we
heard voices in the distance. As the tall brick
structure came into view through the trees, so
did another visitor and his two drivers and guide.
It turned out to be no ordinary tourist as Jon
Ortner introduced himself and it was pretty clear
from his camera equipment that he was no amateur
snapper like myself. In fact he was taking photographs for his book 'Angkor - Kingdom of the Khmer', which is due
out in Spring 2002. After a chat about the Kulen
temples and other sites, I scrambled across the
undergrowth for a closer look at the impressive
Prasat O'Pong before we parted company and back
onto the trail for more punishment.
We
were now well on our way back to our starting
point but it was still forty minutes before we
reached the last stopping-off point of our trip.
Krus Preah Aram Rong Chen was our destination
and it was an unusual spot, allegedly the site
of the first pyramid temple and sacred Shiva linga, constructed by Jayavarman II in the ninth
century, that signalled the beginning of the great
Angkor period. A short walk up a hill, took us
to the site and it looked anything but the location
of a large pyramid temple. Instead, there was
a series of small caves where Vishnuite figures
were carved into the rockface and two broken sandstone
pedestals were in the center of what appeared
to be a natural cave-temple. The site is revered
by the Khmer people and a permanent military guard
is posted nearby to prevent any wrong-doing. We
eventually returned to the stalls at Preah Ang
Thom just before 2pm, thanked our Kulen moto-drivers
who'd looked after us expertly and left the mountain, seeing lots more butterflies
on our descent, this time they were yellow in
colour. Back on the logging road, we sped off
towards Kbal Spean and reached the parking lot
at the site in just under an hour, but by now
liberally covered in red dust.
Accompanied
by a guide from the Apsara Authority who came
along with Phalla, Sothea and myself to 'keep
us safe', a forty minute ascent along a hot and
humid forest trail brought us to the fast-running
'River of a Thousand Lingas'. The natural sandstone
bridge, from where Kbal Spean gets its name, spans
the river at a point where remarkable riverbed
rock carvings from the 11th century display a
gallery of gods and celestial beings including
Vishnu reclining on the serpent Anata, Lakshmi,
Rama and Hanuman. Some of the carvings are submerged
by the course of the river, others are open to
the elements and a few have been chipped away
by unscrupulous thieves. The riverbed and surrounding
rocks are covered in these engravings and a few
metres downstream, there are thousands of sculpted
lingas or phallic images, including a large underwater representation of
a yoni (womb). A group of workmen were cutting
down a tree as we made our way further downstream
to a slippery path which took us to the bottom
of a 15-metre waterfall and a pool of crystal-clear
water. This water, which has been blessed with
fertility as it passes over the sacred lingas,
then flows down the mountain to fertilize the
fields of Angkor. Well, that's the theory. The
whole area was serene and undisturbed, apart from
the woodcutter's saw and more by luck than judgement,
late afternoon seems a good time to visit this
ancient site to avoid other daytrippers.
Our return to Siem Reap took us past the entrance to Banteay Srei as the
sun began to set, reflecting off the red sandstone
walls of the temple. The road from Banteay Srei
to the village of Pradak, where we'd stopped for
breakfast at the beginning of the day, was under
major repair and proved to be as much of a challenge
for Sothea and Lom as any of our earlier adventures.
Whilst dodging from one side of the road to the
other to find the least uncomfortable driving-line,
as well as avoiding other traffic including 4WD's
returning their well-heeled visitors to town after
a visit to Banteay Srei, Sothea suffered a puncture.
We called in at a nearby house where the disabled
husband and his wife include moto repairs amongst
their village responsibilities. Word of our arrival
soon spread and in no time, a crowd of about thirty
neighbours of all ages had appeared and I took
photos, played shuttlecock and handed out sweets
to keep them amused. It seemed to work. It was
just before 7pm when we arrived back in town at
the end of a long and thoroughly enjoyable but
strenuous day. After a much-needed shower, I joined
Nick Ray, Kulikar and some friends at the techno
Liquid bar near the river for a relaxing dinner
before rounding off the day at the Angkor What?
pub.
 
Footnote:
I've subsequently learnt that the cave site I
visited and was led to believe was Krus Preah
Aram Rong Chen is more likely called Poeng Tbal.
The actual site of the first pyramid temple and
the birthplace of the Angkor empire is closeby
but access is much more difficult. A friend, Merrily
Hansen, recently made the trek and located an
immense three-tiered laterite platform, composed
of large laterite blocks with the top tier about
25 metres square. At the very top is a huge sandstone
platform for the original linga (which is missing)
and a deep well, some fifteen metres deep. The
top tier is five metres high, the second tier
is three metres tall and a dozen cruciform-shaped
sandstone blocks would suggest a massive column
existed in times gone by. Undoubtedly, a much
revered site seen by very few foreigners in recent
years and a well-kept secret until today.
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