Logo of Phnom Penh Post newspaper Phnom Penh Post - Amleang: An idyllic rural getaway with a dark past in Kampong Speu

Amleang: An idyllic rural getaway with a dark past in Kampong Speu

Content image - Phnom Penh Post
The scenic views of the Chhreav mountain range in Kampong Speu province are attracting nature lovers to stay in rural homestays. Not far from the foot of Chhreav mountain, in Thpong district’s Amleang commune about 120km from Phnom Penh, is Chez Mme BO Homestay. Hong Menea

Amleang: An idyllic rural getaway with a dark past in Kampong Speu

Known for its seven cascading waterfalls situated nearby rice fields, orange plantations, palm trees and sugar cane forests as far as the eye can see, the scenic views of the Chhreav mountain range in Kampong Speu province are attracting nature lovers to stay in rural homestays.

Not far from the foot of Chhreav mountain, in Thpong district’s Amleang commune about 120km from Phnom Penh, is Chez Mme BO Homestay.

Set on 20ha of land, the homestay features five traditional Khmer wooden houses with gardens growing tropical fruits and vegetables and a beautiful backyard for camping overlooking the mountain range.

Bo Sopheary, the homestay’s founder, says the resort is an escape from modern city life.

“BO is my mother’s name. She needs to live in such a peaceful environment and I think tourists also need it. Phnom Penh residents live with less fresh air and they are stressed with their workloads, so they want to relax somewhere in nature,” said 33-year-old Sopheary, who is also a French-speaking tour guide.

Chez Mme BO offers trekking tours to seven nearby cascades, with visitors also able to watch the sunset in a nearby sugar cane farm.

Content image - Phnom Penh Post
The homestay features five traditional Khmer wooden houses with gardens growing tropical fruits and vegetables and a beautiful backyard for camping overlooking the mountain range. Hong Menea

“It’s mild adventure trekking as the round trip to the seven cascades takes only three hours. When we park our vehicles, we walk to the forest and enjoy swimming at the cascades. We also have a tour package to see the sunset in a sugar cane plantation not far away from our homestay,” Sopheary said.

With its tranquil environment – as people travel back and forth to waterfalls, riding tractors and bicycling through villages – it is surprising to learn of Amleang commune’s dark history, with it once a detention centre and killing field under the Khmer Rouge.

Sopheary has received information from the Executive Director of the Documentation Centre of Cambodia, Youk Chhang, showing that Amleang commune was the site of prison M-13, established in an area under Khmer Rouge control in 1972 by Comrade Duch, who would later oversee Phnom Penh’s infamous Tuol Sleng prison camp.

The scene of mass torture and murder, it is estimated that some 30,000 people would die at M-13 under Comrade Duch’s command.

“Cooperating with the Toul Sleng office, we arrange study tours for students to Amleang, where we know there used to be a war-zone and detention centre named M-13 only 10km from our homestay,” said Sopheary, who has been provided photographs and documents by the Documentation Centre of Cambodia to assist in her tours.

“If we do not tell the story of the Khmer Rouge era, our visitors will not know at all. Most of my tourists are French and German who have already visited Toul Sleng before coming here. Tourists can listen to my storytelling and we can travel to see where remains have been found near Chhreav mountain and Houng pagoda.”

Content image - Phnom Penh Post
For some travellers visiting the homestay, it’s all about escaping the real world for a few days, spending nights in traditional wooden houses or under the stars, using only solar power and having no WiFi. Hong Menea

But while the Khmer Rouge history tours are a draw for many visitors, for others visiting the homestay it’s more about escaping the real world for a few days, spending nights in traditional wooden houses or under the stars, using only solar power and having no WiFi.

Chez Mme BO has one big wooden house with two bedrooms at $6.00 per person per night, and two small houses priced between $20 to $35 per night, while tents for camping for two people are $12 per night.

“The small houses are for family or friends to stay in a quiet private place where they can go to the market and cook for themselves,” said Sopheary.

Chez Mme BO is located in Amleang commune’s Ouda village, Kampong Speu province. For more information and to book, you can contact the homestay by telephone (081 282 884) or Facebook
(@ChezMmeBO).

MOST VIEWED

  • Wing Bank opens new branch in front of Orkide The Royal along Street 2004

    Wing Bank celebrates first anniversary as commercial bank with launch of brand-new branch. One year since officially launching with a commercial banking licence, Wing Bank on March 14 launched a new branch in front of Orkide The Royal along Street 2004. The launch was presided over by

  • Girl from Stung Meanchey dump now college grad living in Australia

    After finishing her foundational studies at Trinity College and earning a Bachelor’s degree from the University of Melbourne in 2022, Ron Sophy, a girl who once lived at the Stung Meanchey garbage dump and scavenged for things to sell, is now working at a private

  • Ministry using ChatGPT AI to ‘ease workload’; Khmer version planned

    The Digital Government Committee is planning to make a Khmer language version of popular artificial intelligence (AI) technology ChatGPT available to the public in the near future, following extensive testing. On March 9, the Ministry of Post and Telecommunications revealed that it has been using the

  • Wat Phnom hornbills attract tourists, locals

    Thanks to the arrival of a friendly flock of great hornbills, Hour Rithy, a former aviculturist – or raiser of birds – in Kratie province turned Phnom Penh tuk tuk driver, has seen a partial return to his former profession. He has become something of a guide

  • PM urges end to ‘baseless’ international Ream base accusations

    Prime Minister Hun Sen urges an end to “baseless” foreign accusations surrounding the development of the Kingdom’s Ream Naval Base, as the US has consistently suggested that the base is being expanded to accommodate a Chinese military presence. Hun Sen renewed his calls while

  • EU’s Sokha resolution ‘a sovereign rights breach’

    The National Assembly (NA) said the European Parliament (EP) did not respect the Kingdom’s independence and sovereignty when it passed a resolution strongly critical of the recent conviction and sentencing of former opposition leader Kem Sokha for “treason”. On March 16, the EP issued a