How to live in Cambodia

They live in Cambodia, to put it mildly, not richly. Houses look like huts on chicken legs. People sleep in hammocks under the houses, and the kitchens are taken out to the street under a canopy. All the "amenities" are in neighboring bushes. Children study in barns instead of schools. Some people live on the water, and they visit each other on boats. In Phnom Penh - the capital of Cambodia - hairdressing chairs are located directly on the sidewalks, as in India ...

During the rainy season, most of Cambodia is flooded with water, so houses are built on stilts:

Hammocks hang under the houses. They are used instead of beds:

There are small houses, but there are tiny ones. In the far left corner is a bedroom. In the far right corner - where the "armchair" stands - is the living room, in the near right corner is the kitchen, and the hallway is in the front left. These 2 by 2 meters are a full Cambodian house:

Once in the house I even saw a TV:

The kitchen and all the amenities in the house usually do not fit, so they are taken out to the adjacent territory:

In the kitchens they like to arrange gatherings with neighbors:


The ice is brought by truck, and each saws himself a piece:

Roadside Cafe:

Local hypermarket:

He is inside:

Almost no one has cars, but the whole country rides mopeds. Gasoline is sold in plastic bottles:

Village School:


The village on the water. Near the house there is a fishing device. They attach a network to it and lower it into water:

As well as on land, on water they sleep in hammocks:

Local boats move on canals:

And this is Phnom Penh. Capital. Remember the bearded joke about this city? What is the difference between the capital of Cambodia and a student? The capital is Phnom Penh, and the student is a stump.

There are almost no cars in the city:

Terrible plexus wires cover half the sky:

City cafe:

Barbershop:

Watch the video: Cost of Living in Cambodia - prices of rent, groceries & more (May 2024).

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