Today is Election Day in Cambodia and that means it is a little tense. Many shops will be closed for all or part of the day, or running on reduced staff. Cambodians are allowed 3 days off work to vote due to the time required for many who work away from home to travel back for voting. International scrutiny is high, as the USA has said publicly that they will consider reducing or stopping the considerable sums in aid that they pay every year if the elections are not free and fair. Not that I want to get into politics here, but let us just say that ‘free and fair’ is not a description commonly applied to the political process here!
Having been in Siem Reap for a few weeks now, I have had the opportunity to spend some time visiting the temples of the Angkor complex. Expat Englishman Dave Perkes runs photo tours through his company Peace of Angkor and I can recommend his trips to anyone looking to get off the beaten track a bit and see some of the sights that other tours cannot reach. I went out a couple of times with Dave and had a great time bashing through unmade roads to reach all manner of things of photographic interest.
The temples are of course the big attraction here although photographing them whilst avoiding tourists or replicating every shot that has gone before you is getting increasingly hard as the visitor numbers increase and ease of access to Siem Reap improves. Even arriving at a temple at 4.30 in the morning guaranteed a solo experience for only 20 minutes! During the day, avoiding the busloads of Korean, Japanese and Chinese tourists in matching caps and/or polo shirts issued by their tour company, following guides holding aloft flags or monkeys on sticks is a mission in itself. Keeping them out of your images is nigh on impossible.
Sometimes the ancient gods of Angkor smile and give you a few tourist free moments, and the shots that follow are some of them from this trip.








