Catching the Bamboo Train
Rural Cambodians cobbled old tank parts and scrap lumber into an ingenious way to get around
- By Russ Juskalian
- Photographs by Russ Juskalian
- Smithsonian magazine, January 2011, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 4)
I started just outside Battambang, on a 170-mile-long stretch of what was once the Northern Line. The “norry station” was little more than a few teak and bamboo homes at the dusty confluence of a dirt road and a set of old rails. When Rithea and I arrived, there were chickens, dogs and children scampering about and two cops lounging in the shade, chatting with the locals. Bamboo platforms, disembodied engines and old tank wheels welded in pairs to heavy axles were stacked near the tracks.
A man sitting on the rails had a prosthetic left leg, a few gold teeth and a disarming smile. He gave his name as Sean Seurm and his age as 66. He said he was a norry driver but complained that the local travelers used his services less often these days, having been replaced by foreign tourists looking for a 20-minute jaunt into the countryside. “We have less business, and now we have to pay the police,” said Seurm’s wife, Phek Teorng. Shaking down a norry driver ferrying locals at 50 cents a ride had probably not been worth the trouble, but tourists pay ten times that.
Over the next hour, at least five small groups of Western backpackers arrived to ride the norry. None of the locals was forthcoming when Rithea asked about our chances of catching one to Phnum Thippadei, about 18 miles away. A man with a tattoo of Angkor Wat on his chest intimated that we had no choice but to wait for the local vegetable norry, which wouldn’t leave until 4 a.m. When we came back to board it, the sky was dotted with glittering stars, the tiniest slice of crescent moon to the east, and the Milky Way’s surprisingly visible Great Rift.
The vegetable norry carried us a few miles down the track to meet up with one headed to Phnum Thippadei. It was less sturdy than I had imagined, with gaps in the bamboo wide enough to jam a finger through, and the platform vibrated at just the right frequency to make my legs itch. Our driver, standing near the back, used a headlamp as a signaling device for road crossings and upcoming stations, turning the rails to silver streaks darting into the undergrowth. I was mesmerized—until a shrub smacked me in the face. When another took a small chunk out of my right sleeve, I felt like a tyro for riding too close to the edge.
As I scrambled onto the norry to Phnum Thippadei, I inhaled an almost sickly sweet scent of overripe fruit; in addition to a few Cambodian women, we were carrying cargo that included a pile of spiky jackfruit the size of watermelons. “They sell vegetables along the way,” said Rithea as we rolled to a brief stop at a village. Most of the produce was dropped off, and before we pulled away, I saw nylon mats being unrolled and vegetables being set up by the rail—an impromptu market.
As the stars grew faint and the sky slowly faded to pink and yellow pastels ahead of a not-yet-risen sun, villagers lighted small gas lanterns at railside huts. At each stop, always where a dirt road intersected the rail, I heard voices droning in the distance. Rithea said they were monks chant-ing morning prayers or intoning the mournful words of a funeral or singing Buddhist poetry. It made me think of the Muslim call to prayer, or of Joseph Conrad’s Marlow awakening to a jungle incantation that “had a strange narcotic effect upon my half-awake senses.”
The sun was low in the sky when we pulled into Phnum Thippadei. A few dozen people squatted by the track or sat in plastic chairs eating a breakfast of ka tieu, a noodle soup. After some searching, we found a norry driver named Yan Baem and his sidekick, La Vanda, who dressed like a Miami bon vivant in a patterned white shirt with a wide collar, white pants and flip-flops. They said they’d take us to Moung Roessei, about 15 miles down the line, where Rithea thought we could get a norry to Pursat.
Now that the sun was up, I could see why the going was so rough: the tracks were woefully misaligned. Most of the rail was warped into a comical squiggle, as if it had been made of plastic and then deformed by a massive hair dryer. In some places, there were breaches in the rail more than four inches wide. With nothing to distract me, I focused meditatively on the click-CLANK-jolt, click-CLANK-jolt, click-CLANK-jolt of the ride, barely reacting when the norry hit a particularly bad gap in the track and the platform jumped the front axle and slid down the rail with all of us still seated. After a quick inspection, Baem and Vanda reassembled the norry and pressed on, a bit slower than before.
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Comments (6)
Last year we took a group of orphans on the norry, they loved it even when one car broke down and we overloaded the one still chugging away.
Posted by Terry kellogg on September 24,2011 | 09:36 PM
So great to see this getting a write up!
We had the pleasure of riding the Cambodian rails in November of 2010, and wrote about our experience here:
http://journal.goingslowly.com/2010/11/cambodias-bamboo-railway-part-one/
...if anyone is curious for more!
Tyler & Tara
www.goingslowly.com
Posted by Tyler & Tara on January 20,2011 | 01:15 PM
that is a cray way of life.
Posted by aubrey on January 11,2011 | 08:42 AM
I am amazed at the ingenuity of those people. I felt so very sorry for them during the terrible Pol Pot era and nearly wept when that Doctor,was murderd in this country, who had cleverly posed as a bicycle repairman to escape the torture and death he would have suffered if it was known that he was a highly educated man. After he arrived in the US, he returned every year to help the people.
I took a tour to Cambodia some years ago and developed a great interest and appreciation for them and their history. I said that I had some of the best food on that tour of any I have had on tours in many other countries.
I have always felt that it was terrible that the US and other Industrial nations did not condemn Pol Pot and his henchmen and push for his capture and trial in the International Court for all their horrible crimes.
Posted by Marion S. Kundiger on January 10,2011 | 03:41 AM
Very interesting... and sad in a way that a rail system has deteriorated to such a state. The hard copy of your magazine suggested sharing, so I posted a link to the article at: http://www.rypn.org/flimsies/. Hope that's OK.
Posted by ROSS PINYAN on December 23,2010 | 01:14 AM
Having worked in Cambodia for almost two years, I have come to believe that there are no people in the world more ingeneous about the use of motorized transportation than the Cambodians. They will strap a motor to anything or assemble anything that once had a motor and off they go. How about fifty people on that "queen sized bed" being pulled down the highway by something resembling a Rototiller? In Phnom Penh no Cambodian walks; they could not believe that we crazy Americans would like to walk from one place to another--and Phnom Penh is a great walking city. There must be three million motor scooters in a city of two million Cambodians and each scooter can be become a taxi for a couple of riels. And there is the limo of Cambodian transportation, the "tuk-tuk. We took "tuk-tuk" for our longer trips as we regarded the scooters a little too dangerous. Conventional taxis were generall used for the trip to the airport, although many used the tuk-tuk for that ride, as well.
Posted by Frank A. Tapparo on December 23,2010 | 06:40 PM