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<title>Travel Blog | Skinner89</title>
<link>http://www.travelblog.org/Bloggers/Skinner89/</link>
<description>Travel adventures in journals and photos from Skinner89</description>
<language>en-us</language>
<pubDate>Tue, 21 May 2013 02:37:47 +0000</pubDate>
<lastBuildDate>Tue, 21 May 2013 02:37:47 +0000</lastBuildDate><item>
                    <title>Kep</title>
                    <description>Being a food lover i pride myself on the fact that i will travel an incredibly ridiculous distance to get a good meal. I had no interest in viewing Kep39s offshore islands or scenery I had one thing on my mind.....The crab market. This place is heaven for anyone who loves seafood and isnt afraid to be bored shitless all day to eat it. My 2 days in Kep revolved around reading in a hammock and </description>
                    <link>http://www.travelblog.org/Asia/Cambodia/South/Kep/blog-747424.html</link>
                </item><item>
                    <title>Sihanoukville</title>
                    <description>Immediately after arriving at Sihanoukville the bus i was travelling on was bombarded by the usual mix of taxi drivers and hotel touts. I took a motorbike taxi to the nearby monkey republic hostel the cost was low and the distance matched the price. The hostel was packed with travellers from around the world one thing that i immediately noticed in Sihanoukville which was different from many ot</description>
                    <link>http://www.travelblog.org/Asia/Cambodia/South/Sihanoukville/blog-747421.html</link>
                </item><item>
                    <title>Phnom Penh</title>
                    <description>As i arrived in Phnom Penh my eyes were immediately drawn to the frenzy of road traffic. Motorbikes tuk tuks and the occasional larger vehicle crowded the roads like children in a sweet shop. All hustling and bustling to try to gain an inch on every other vehicle. Every 2 or 3 seconds i could view a near crash from my small bus window. It was chaotic but as I jumped on a motorbike taxi with my 2</description>
                    <link>http://www.travelblog.org/Asia/Cambodia/South/Phnom-Penh/blog-737938.html</link>
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                    <title>Siem Reap</title>
                    <description>After a long spell of bad internet connections and a detox from alcohol and western food flying from Myanmar to Bangkok was in many ways a relief. I have explored Bangkok a few times on previous trips and so i was keen to move on quickly and head to Cambodia. The bus picked me up early in the morning and immediately i met an English guy on the bus. We chatted and halfway through the journey we me</description>
                    <link>http://www.travelblog.org/Asia/Cambodia/North/Siem-Reap/blog-731312.html</link>
                </item><item>
                    <title>The Golden Rock</title>
                    <description>Surprisingly the bus from Bagan to the golden rock was good the bus to Yangon took the express road which was no different from an English motorway and the bus from Yangon was a local bus but the roads were well made and the journey was comfortable. At this point I had run out of Myanmar kyat I changed up originally in Yangon and that money had lasted me up until now. The rate I had received in </description>
                    <link>http://www.travelblog.org/Asia/Burma/Southern-Burma/Kyaiktiyo-Pagoda/blog-731302.html</link>
                </item><item>
                    <title>Bagan</title>
                    <description></description>
                    <link>http://www.travelblog.org/Asia/Burma/Mandalay-Region/blog-731301.html</link>
                </item><item>
                    <title>Inle Lake</title>
                    <description></description>
                    <link>http://www.travelblog.org/Asia/Burma/Mandalay-Region/Inle-Lake/blog-731300.html</link>
                </item><item>
                    <title>Yangon</title>
                    <description>My only preconception of Myanmar was a mural of mental images gathered from the stories of other travellers. I had been told that the country was riddled with poverty and in my head I had created an image similar to that of New Delhi. However the expectation of poverty was largely exaggerated upon my arrival in Yangon I was greeted with a brand spanking new airport I filled out the necessary pa</description>
                    <link>http://www.travelblog.org/Asia/Burma/Yangon-Region/Yangon/blog-731299.html</link>
                </item><item>
                    <title>Taman Negara</title>
                    <description>After the Perhentian Islands I headed further south to Taman Negara national park. This has a reputation as the oldest untouched rainforest on earth and is home to animals such as the Asian elephant Tigers and Leopards. As well as a plethora of birds snakes monkeys and insects. I took the train from a nearby city which cost 5 pounds and landed me a short bus journey away from Taman Negara the </description>
                    <link>http://www.travelblog.org/Asia/Malaysia/Pahang/Taman-Negara-National-Park/blog-731298.html</link>
                </item><item>
                    <title>Perhentian Islands</title>
                    <description>After realising that I was within a two hour trip from the Perhentian islands I felt geographically obliged to stop there. The bus from Kota Bharu cost only 6 ringgit and dropped me right outside the port from there a return boat journey was just 60 ringgit bringing the total cost to around 13 pounds return. I climbed into a speed boat with no more than 10 other tourists I expected the usual c</description>
                    <link>http://www.travelblog.org/Asia/Malaysia/Terengganu/Perhentian-Kecil/blog-731297.html</link>
                </item><item>
                    <title>Lang Kawi</title>
                    <description>After leaving Penang I boarded a 3 hour bus filled mostly with Malaysian locals to the island of Lang Kawi.Before entering Lang Kawi LK I had spoken to a few friends about it who told me it was quiet and on the most part a place to relax and not do very much. Upon arriving I sought out a cheap room in the Oriental Village in the mountains far away from the main town. I thought that this would </description>
                    <link>http://www.travelblog.org/Asia/Malaysia/Langkawi/blog-722895.html</link>
                </item><item>
                    <title>Georgetown Penang</title>
                    <description>Coming from Koh Samui the bus is 14 hours roughly to Penang. When you first leave Koh Samui everything seems so organised the agent hands you a ticket and tells you a time. The surface of the operation is very much organised however after being on the bus for little over an hour i was dropped at the foot of another larger bus the driver asked me where i was going and i told him Penang. Without</description>
                    <link>http://www.travelblog.org/Asia/Malaysia/Penang/George-Town/blog-719994.html</link>
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