We uploaded the pictures of our visit
to Kampot and Kep a few weeks ago, but didn't get to the part of
telling what we did.
We had a wonderful long weekend and
started visiting Bokor National park by moped. A lot of Cambodians
use mopeds, so we thought it would be nice to follow the local custom
and explore the park on our own. We did not have enough time to walk
a lot in the park, but the long ride to the top of the mountain was
beautiful. Unfortunately, Chinese developers build a big hotel and
casino on the top of the hill, in the middle of the park. The
pictures of the remains of the concrete building was the old casino.
Apparently it has been popular for a long time to build casino's in
protected nature areas. Kampot is a lovely small city with a lot of
old French colonial houses. The atmosphere was much more relaxed
compared to the buzz in Sihanoukville.
Next day we drove with the mopeds to
Kep. A second project site of Marine Conservation Cambodia will start
here in March. The owner of the project has build an aquarium and
wants to see if he can increase the seahorse population by breeding
them. It gave us a nice opportunity to take some good pictures of the
different seahorses living in the aquarium. On a small island 1 hour
from the mainland, the new project site is build. The water is more
shallow here, which prevents trawlers to come in and the municipality
wants to be a green and sustainable municipality which makes
protecting the reef much easier than on our island. There is even a marine police who patrols the area for illegal fishing. The aquarium
offers a nice opportunity for environmental education, although it is
yet the early stage of the project.
Both Dolf and me are training at the
moment to become an assistant instructor and we are one of the few
people who are experienced enough to take other volunteers out for
diving. This results in 3-4 dives each day and a nice mix in doing a
survey, learn volunteers about the seahorses and the substrates they
live on, learning them the different fish species and invertebrates
(like sea stars, sea cucumbers and sea urchins), helping the dive
instructor with training volunteers in their open water dive
certification and doing course dives. This means we only focus on
diving and reading the course books for becoming assistant
instructor at the moment. Dolf has also taken an interest in repairing dive
equipment and by now he has learned himself to repair regulators and
dive tanks. We are enjoying ourselves, but still miss the
conservation part of the project a bit.
By now we have seen a lot of seahorses.
Annelies had her lucky day last week and spotted 10 seahorses in 3
dives on one day. Apparently we are in the right season at the
moment, because we see more seahorses than 2 months ago, including a lot of juveniles (or just have
been better in spotting them).
2 opmerkingen:
Nieuwe update, nieuwe avonturen!
Leuk om te lezen dat jullie zo lekker bezig worden gehouden met allemaal verschillende dingen.
En eindelijk zeepaardjes! Ik hoop dat jullie er nog veel gaan vinden tijdens jullie duiken.
Ik moest erg lachen om de opmerking dat Dolf iets heeft kunnen vinden om aan te sleutelen. ;) Laat je de boel wel heel, Dolf? :P (geintje natuurlijk)
Heb nog veel plezier jullie twee en ik kijk uit naar de volgende update. :D
Veel liefs en groetjes vanuit Utrecht,
Lot
Hey Dolf en Annelies! Kwam opeens weer op jullie blog terecht. Leuk om over jullie avonturen te lezen! Veel plezier daar! Groetjes, Bas
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