Cambodia cycling vacations

Price
AU $2590 excluding flights
Duration
11 Days
Type
Small group
Reviews
More info
Single supplement AU$395
Make enquiry

Description of Cambodia cycling vacations

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Price information

AU $2590 excluding flights
Single supplement AU$395
Make enquiry

Check dates, prices & availability

Travel guides

Cambodia cycling
Picture yourself pedalling serenely through rice paddy fields, aromatic orchards and rubber plantations, dotted with bamboo shacks and colourful pagod...
Cambodia small group
For the time pressed but travel hungry; for the amateur photographer or passionate foodie; for solo travelers, sociable travelers, seriously curious...

Reviews

2 Reviews of Cambodia cycling vacations

5 out of 5 stars
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Reviewed on 04 Dec 2023 by

1. What was the most memorable or exciting part of your vacation?


Seeing many aspects of life in Cambodia while pedaling nearly 400 km across the country. There's a level of contact and awareness on a bicycle that is impossible to achieve in a vehicle.

2. What tips would you give other travelers booking this vacation?


Bring some lightweight footwear for when you get off the bicycle. Understand the seasonal climate - November was perfect for me, quite warm but mostly dry and everything was still green. It gets cooler in the next few months but the landscape is increasingly brown and dusty, or so I'm told. The Cambodian people showed nothing but friendly respect to me and my group. They deserve the same in return.
This is a very poor country struggling with a post-COVID slump in tourism - expect small imperfections and roll with them. Don't be that person, complaining to the manager about something that you'd fix at home but isn't a safety risk.

3. Did you feel that your vacation benefited local people, reduced environmental impacts or supported conservation?


It's hard for me to see the larger picture. The people we met appreciated our business and were happy that we wanted to learn about their country and culture.
I don't know what our environmental impact was and I don't know its meaning in a country where people throw their household trash in ditches and rely very
heavily on internal combustion engines and cooking fires. I asked about this and the answer was basically, when you're living on a few hundred dollars a
month, you can't buy an electric vehicle, install an induction range, hire a trash collection service and shun single-use plastic containers.

4. Finally, how would you rate your vacation overall?


Outstanding journey, outstanding life experience.

Read the operator's response here:

Hi John,
Thank you so much for your feedback and kind words.
I'm so pleased you were able to see Cambodia from the perspective of the local people. It's really important to us that we're able to offer that experience. I
believe that introducing local experts from local NGOs really gives an insight into the true life of the people and the challenges, and solutions, that are being
worked towards.
Thanks again
Brett Seychell
Social Cycles Founder

Reviewed on 08 Feb 2017 by

1. What was the most memorable or exciting part of your vacation?


Riding the crazy streets of Phnom Penh on the first day, like you're in a computer game. Eating a power bar on a river bed after a two-hour push through mud. Seeing a small girl rowing a bath tub in a floating village on the Tonlé Sap. Beef loc lac. Fish amok. A chorus of hellos from children in every village. Hoem, the support van driver's laugh. Angkor Thom with no one there. Twin massage in Siem Reap. Water buffalo. Macaques. Iced coffee with condensed milk. The ice-cream man who came out of nowhere on his bike. Standing up on the pedals to ride the bumps. Houses on stilts. The gentle voice of the audio guide at S-21 and the Killing Fields. Meeting passionate NGOs who work with Cambodia's most vulnerable people. A photograph a minute. Brett (who runs the tour)'s passion and spirit of adventure.

2. What tips would you give other travelers booking this vacation?


Do a bit of training before you go. I didn't, and managed it, but I'd have loved to have been a bit more fit to start with. My thighs were like rocks by the end. Padded cycling shorts, padded saddle, gloves. Take dollars, it's basically the currency. You'll get your change in riels. Power bars in your satchel bag. Sun block. Drink the young sweet coconuts. Learn your Khmer greetings. Crickets taste like crisps. Tarantulas are surprisingly tasty. Slow worms taste like s**t.

3. Did you feel that your vacation benefited local people, reduced environmental impacts or supported conservation?


I can't think of a better way to be a tourist. We learned about how to be a responsible visitor. We ate locally. We supported a couple of NGO-run restaurants. We slept locally. We cycled. We visited four NGOs across the country and learned about their work with children, desperately poor villagers, young people in prisons. And everyone makes a donation at the end - there's a big
discussion at the last meal as to which NGO the money should go to.

4. Finally, how would you rate your vacation overall?


I've never had a vacation like it. I went by myself and wasn't lonely for a minute. I loved Cambodia and seeing it like that was a privilege I'll never forget.

Responsible Travel

As the pioneers of responsible tourism, we've screened this (and every) vacation so that you can travel knowing it will help support the places and people that you visit, and the planet. Read how below.

Planet

As we supply water for the riders from the support van during transit days, we provide the riders with their own water bottle and purchase water in the form of a 50L drum in an effort to reduce the vast amount of plastic from the many 330ml bottles.

WASH (Water, Sanitation & Hygiene)
We partner with NGOs who are actively involved in the WASH program, manufacturing and distributing various water filters and tanks to people in need. From these NGOs, we engage with, learn from and at times, sponsor WASH program based projects. To date, we have supported the infrastructure and manufacturing of bio-sand water filters in Pursat and Siem Reap, water tanks and home garden initiatives in Battambang and financially aided NGOs in Kampong Chhnang and Bant Mancheay.

Local Impact:
Being a cycle based operation, we are conscious of our carbon footprint and aspire to have a low impact on the environment. Our internal environmental policy ensures we only ever leave footprints (and cycle tracks) and only ever take photos.

Agricultural Wildlife:
We support, engage with and introduce you to NGO partners that are actively involved in many agricultural pass-on programs to enable positive animal welfare with people empowerment and resources. We also avoid all tourist orientated animal experiences where wildlife is taken out of it's natural surrounding for tourist interactions ie- Angkor elephant rides etc. Previous projects the groups on our tours have undertaken is the purchase of cows and buffalo's for families to assist with local farming. These assets have a pay it forward program where offspring of the animal is then donated to similar socio-economic status families within the village, in consultation with the village chief and local NGOs.

Fast Fashion:
The garment industry is one of the largest in Cambodia and provides employment to thousands of people. However, with international brands taking advantage of cheap labour, the end result is inexpensive fashion items for the international consumer. The questions we explore are the controversy around the wages and how it has evolved, the conditions of the factories and the roles and responsibilities of the international brands involved. We are actively engaged in activities that encourage the riders to be aware of the ‘fast fashion’ industry.

People

We have recently become an official supporter of Child Safe, where we have pledged to support the practices to keep children safe. From this, we take all our riders to Friends International (or an official partner of) for the riders to witness a presentation as to what responsible tourism is all about. We engage in a healthy debate as to the current ‘orphanage crisis’ in Cambodia and other developing countries and the influence of tourists that have created this market. This incredibly powerful eye opening is a great introduction for the riders experience.

As part of our child protection policy, we do NOT interact or engage with any children at schools or nurseries. We do NOT offer or promote any short term unskilled volunteer opportunities, nor do we allow any photography of, or interaction with, children during any NGO visits.
We actively promote and support the ‘Children are not tourists attractions’ campaign from Child Safe.

Donations to charities:
For every tour, all riders are requested to contribute a nominal sum for the purpose of donation. Usually A$200 per rider. During the course of the tours, the riders are given the chance to engage with, and learn from, local NGOs. We visit no less than four NGOs during every tour and spend some time learning about their projects, strategies and challenges. At the end of the tour, the riders are then empowered with new found knowledge and have the opportunity to combine the allotted donation money and make an impact towards a project of their choosing. Of the four tours completed so far, we have already donated over A$5000 to various NGOs within Cambodia.

Some of these projects include going towards the salaries of local teachers, we have funded the construction of breakfast gardens (to feed the children from the local NGO supported pre-school), invested in vocational training for imprisoned youths in order to enhance the chance of rehabilitation, funded gender based violence awareness campaigns in rural areas and funded youth centers in order to reduce dependency on institutions for children.

Contributions to charities as partners:
In addition to promoting and marketing our partnered NGOs, we also pay each NGO for their time and resources of the tours interactions. This time usually lasts no longer than 1-2 hours and all NGOs are renumerated regardless as to whether or not there is a follow up donation from the group.

Local institutions and employment
We hire locally for transport assistance and support van. We also support local businesses as opposed to international franchises in all restaurant and hotel choices. In addition, we actively seek out social enterprise based restaurants to include in tour packages. These restaurants are often connected to local NGOs and use the restaurants as training facilities for empowering disadvantaged youth.

Places we visit:
In this particular tour, we visit five NGO supported social enterprise based training restaurants. These places not only offer exceptional food, but also work with the local community in providing vocational skills to disadvantaged youth. These thorough training programs form a fantastic grounding for a career in the hospitality industry upon completion of the program.

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