See the locations on Kep Google Map
Picture by ethan.crowley
View from Kep National Park
"Kep is mental therapy. I am liberated in the act of looking down from liberally green and leafy mountain tops in the national park reserve, calmed by catching a wind coming in from the vast ocean on a morning run, mesmerized with imagining the activity that once filled the ruins of foothill villas now long abandoned, and rendered perfectly content with plopping myself down by the waterfront Crab Market with a fish and rice meal that cost me 75 cents". Kbach Untitled finds sweet words for the small seaside town nestled between the ocean and the hills of Kep National Park. Cambodian and Vietnamese islands are just offshore. Kep was originally built as a retreat for the French colonialists. For sixty years it thrived as the favorite coastal holiday resort of Cambodia's elite, with its heydays in the 50s and 60s. During the Khmer Rouge regime brutal fighting happened in and around Kep. And locals in need of money and food started to dismantle the abandoned villas. Many of them are no longer inhabited today, are just ruins. Kep has been a very laid-back town for years. Currently Kep is experiencing a touristic revival. But there's not a lot of activity in Kep. Especially there is no party, Kep is the contrary of Sihanoukville. Mostly a place for beeing lazy, enjoying fresh seafood, going for some walks, trekking through the hills, boating, bicycling and mountain biking or just sitting on the beach or in the shadow of the resort garden.
A must for gourmets: Kep crab market
Kep is famous for its crab market with a dozen restaurants, where you enjoy the delicious meat for example with green Kampot pepper, as Time Travel Turtle describes. And you watch the women heaving cages in and out of the water, harvesting the crabs that are cooked on the dock or sold. The Yummy Traveler shows, what elso you get to eat.
Picture by Franc Pallarès López
On the way to the seafood restaurants
Picture by Rnd!
Crab Market
Picture by mobyhill
Waiting for boiled crabs
Picture by mobyhill
Yummy: Crabs with pepper
Picture by HeyItsWilliam
Dried shrimps
Picture by mobyhill
Durian vendors in Kep
Relax or hike in the jungle of the National Park
Picture by shin--k
One of the beaches in Kep
The beach in Kep is different from the beach of Sihanoukville: it has black sand, is narrow and rocky during hightide and can get cramped on weekends. See video. The best beaches are offshore on Rabbit island (more down in this blog). The eastern end of the beach promenade is marked by Sela Cham P’dey, a statue that depicts a nude fisher’s wife.
Picture by shin--k
Sela Cham P'dey, the wife waiting for the return of the fisher
If you look for a hidden beach Angkoul beach could be worth a visit. It lies south-east from Kep, near the Vietnam border. Follow the road to Ha Tien border. Before the salt fields you turn right (there is a entrance gate for the temple) and just follow this road. It takes about 30 – 40 minutes from Kep (way description here).
Picture by Ku5hi
Temple gate on the way to Angkoul beach
Picture by Ku5hi
Kep National Park is located around the Kep Mountain. The main entrance is behind Veranda Natural Resort. You are expected to pay a dollar entry fee. There are more access points on the west side of Kep Lodge and on the east side of Jasmine Valley Eco-Resort. An 8km trek leads around the mountain with beautiful outlooks towards Kampot, the islands and to Vietnam, the trek takes between two and three hours. See Map of Kep National Park and a video. Inside the park there are squirrels, monkeys, horn bills, deer, wild pigs, snakes, lizards and more animals.
About 8km from the White Horse statue, you can find the so-called “Secret Lake”, locally known as “Tomnop Tek Krolar”. This irrigation dam was established through hard labour under the Khmer Rouge regime. Today it offers bamboo platforms for lazy afternoons and opportunities for tubing, swimming and even water peddle cycling (see panorama picture).
Picture by unsure shot
Pepper farm
Sleep in bungalows or modernist villas
Hotel le Flamboyant: From 60 USD. Eight large bungalows and a beautiful swimming pool in a lush, tropical garden. A bit out of the town. A 25 minutes walk from the crab market. Mostly good reviews on tripadvisor.com.
Picture by ilse ruppert
Le Flamboyant restaurant
Jasmine Valley Eco Resort: From 22 USD. Six mud-brick and thatch bungalows, two tree-houses and two mountain-lodges, surrounded by jungle and natural swimming pools, fed by a stream. Good informations on weather and climate in Kep and for birdwatching in Kep. "Jasmine Valley has been built into the jungle so well that you can barely tell it's there" is one comment on tripadvisor.com, another: "You can expect frogs, lizards and insects in your room but my mosquito net worked perfectly". One more; "If you want a hotel, don't go to Jasmine. If you love nature and you want to take in the whole jungle feeling then go...". The homepage is very informative, with video of every room, so when you study it, you get to know exactly, what is awaiting you, for example a quite long and bumpy way from Kep into the jungle (3 USD with tuk tuk).
Picture by aarongilson
Picture by m_uhlig
Picture by aarongilson
Kep Lodge: From 28 USD. 10 bungalows with pool. Very good reviews on tripadvisor.com. See video and see picture 1, picture 2 and picture 3.
Picture by jnana511
Picture by jnana511
Banana bungalow
Knai Bang Chatt Resort: From 168 USD. 18 rooms. "The resort is made up of 3 restored villas, one of them used to belong to the governor of region. There is no beach, but it's right on the sea. The grounds are covered in green grass with tented beach recliners and even full beds. The infinity pool is salt water and rather small but beautiful. The staff are all Cambodian and friendly as can be", writes travelblog.org. The three villas wer built between 1962 and 1965 by protégés of Vann Molyvann, a Khmer pupil of Le Corbusier. The Blue Villa belonged to the governor of Kep, the Grey Villa was owned by a relative of the King, and the Red Villa was owned by the Head of Customs. Excellent reviews on tripadvisor.com.
See video on youtube.com.
Picture by HeyItsWilliam
Picture by Christoph Rooms
The Blue Villa
Picture by HeyItsWilliam
Picture by HeyItsWilliam
The pool
Picture by Christoph Rooms
The beach
Picture by Christoph Rooms
The Sailing Club
Picture by Jason Tabarias
The jetty of the Sailing Club. See mor pictures of Knai Bang Chatt on flickr.com
Le Bout du Monde: From 40 USD. Bungalows and residences in traditional khmer architecture at the top of a hill, in landscaped gardens and with a lovely view over the gulf of Siam (see video). All houses have solar energy. And there ist an eco-friendly swimming pool. The Guesthouse was the setting for some scenes of the movie "Holy Lola" by French filmmaker Bertrand Tavernier with Isabelle Carré and Jacques Gamblin starring (listen to the soundtrack). The reviews on tripadvisor.com are quite good, but some critical posts got an astonishing aggressive feedback from the management.
Picture by shin--k
Restaurant Le Bout du Monde
The Beach House: From 40 USD. 16 simple rooms opposite the beach, with a pool (see picture). "Even though the hotel is located above the main road, the traffic is minimal and the sound of the surf is stronger than the sound of the cars", says one of the good reviews on tripadvisor.com. See video.
Tree Top Bungalows: From 4 USD. See picture. Basic accommodation, good location according to reviews on tripadvisor.com. Made entirely from wood and palm leaves, the huts are rustic and airy, some on the ground, some on top.
Vanna Hillresort: From 25 USD. Very good reviews on tripadvisor.com.
Picture by mrcharly
Veranda Natural Resort: From 78 USD. A great place for romance and relaxing close to nature. A vast range of rooms, from bungalow (tiny) to bigger rooms and also villas, with much character. "Organic wood, bamboo and rock shapes form quirky touches everywhere you turn, and shells are inlaid in walls and floors, nearly but-not-quite hidden from view", writes justtheplanet.com. They have bungalows with bedroom inside and outside, so you choose, where you sleep. Very good reviews on tripadvisor.com. See video.
Picture by unsure shot
Picture by unsure shot
View from the Villa
Picture by Un rosarino en Vietnam
Picture by Un rosarino en Vietnam
Picture by unsure shot
Papaya tree
Villa Romonea: From 200 USD. A villa for rent for up to 12 guests in six rooms. Built in 1968 by a cosmopolitan Khmer family and designed in stunning modernist style by Khmer Architect Lu Ban Hap. During the Khmer Rouge Regime the family disappeared and the villa was used as a fish storage warehouse, as The Wandering Sybarite reports. In 2007 new owners bought the house and restored it from then on during several years. The villa lies directly on the sea, with a tennis court, a 6 hole golf driving range and a saltwater infinity Pool. "It feels like visiting your wealthy friend's private house" says one of some very good reviews on tripadvisor.com. Read also Cambodia’s Sweet Spot and Bauhaus on the Beach: A Corbusian Retreat in Cambodia.
Picture by Villa Romanea
See more pictures on flickr.com
Botanica Guesthouse: With aircon from 25 USD. 2 km out of the town. You can rent bikes. The winner clear at the lower budget end in Kep according to good reviews on tripadvisor.com. Also the phnom pen loved the family stay at the renovated guesthouse.
Hungry again? Well there are a few recommendations for eating and drinking.
Escape to Koh Ton Sai
Koh Ton Sai (Rabbit Island): Rabbit Island lies 5 km off the coast and is popular destination, either for a day on the beach or overnight stays in basic huts (from 5 USD). Boats leave from the Pier which is 3 km east from Kep Beach. The trip takes 25 minutes.
Picture by fabulousfabs
Bungalows
Picture by fabulousfabs
Picture by Johan Douma
Picture by Johan Douma
Picture by Johan Douma
How you get to Kep
It's a half hour drive from Kampot, Cambodia and the Vietnam border; and 2 hours from Sihanoukville and Phnom Phenh.
Read and see more:
Video Luke Nguyens greater mekong (Kep & Kampot)
This guide helps you to discover the treasures of Cambodia, especially Angkor Thom and Angkor Wat. It collects tipps by insiders and offers links to Google Maps as well as reviews of hotels, guesthouses and restaurants by other guests.
Must read and see: Angkor Archaeological Park: The incredible remains of the Khmer Kingdom
Restaurants and reviews: Mouthwatering Food in Siem Reap
Saturday, April 27, 2013
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