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Bringing to a close my handful of snapshots from this morning's moto-ride along the western bank of the Mekong River through Prek Leap and Bakkheng communes, are another Neak Ta figure, almost Romanesque in looks, that I found at
Wat Potipreak, where I stopped to eat my chicken and rice lunch on a wooden bench designed for the task. It was a foot away from the river itself and it was very pleasant to watch the larger boats chug along the river and fishing boats stop in mid-stream to haul in their catch. I had missed the annual Mekong Swim that had taken place a bit earlier that same morning, approximately 500 metres from my perch on the riverbank, at the Agricultural College.
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This wooden pagoda at
Wat Chambork Meas was the end of my journey, around twenty kilometres from the city. It no longer functions as a pagoda although it still has its Buddhist shrine and figures in place, as you can see below. Now the vihara is used as a classroom and a school in Prime Minister Hun Sen's name sits alongside it. Across the main highway is a brand new pagoda, which obviously replaced this wooden version, that is now slowly falling into disrepair. A sad end for one of the country's few remaining wooden pagodas.
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