TREKKING with TRIBES in MONDULKIRI (travel guide)
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- Опубліковано 18 вер 2024
- Excited to share EP6 of the Cambodia Travel Series (Province #8): a cinematic Vlog of our first 3-days in Mondulkiri visiting elephant sanctuaries and trekking through the Cambodian jungle with the Bunong Tribe.
Dhaniella and I are visiting and creating short videos from all 25 Cambodian provinces. Through these videos, we hope to educate, entertain, and inspire you to place a trip of your own.
#Mondulkiri
#TravelCambodia
#BunongTribe
WHO AM I?
My name is Conrad Richardson - I am an urbanist and mobility activist currently living in Cambodia.
URBAN DIALECTIC 📸, is my multi-media platform where I document all things URBAN: planning, travel, photography.
Do you have any ideas for urbanism videos you would like to see me cover in the future? I would love to hear from you.
➡️ IG: conrad.richardson
➡️ FB: urbandialectic/
➡️ LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/in/conradrichardson/
I am punong indigenous and I like your videos. Welcome to Mondulkiri
"kahhh nan" is actually spell more like this "kah ngan". It means verbatim "delicious really" or translated into English as really delicious. I live in North Carolina in the United States. I am also Bunong/Montagnard. I still speak the language bc we also have a big community here.
Very interesting.. do you guys also speak Khmer or consider yourselves as Khmer?
@@carpy1252 the khmer consider us minority or natives. We are our own society. Their are many tribes like us with different names living in highlands of Vietnam and Cambodia collectively known as Montagnards. We have history with special forces in US and fought along side Americans in Vietnam war. We also fought in French indo china war and many wars before that to maintain autonomy in highlands. However too many people moved in and made us minority in that part of the world. We are different from main stream Vietnamese society or Cambodians.
@@TribalStudio2023 That is sad to hear that they are becoming a minority in their own communities. I'm Khmer American and have always been taught that you guys are 'Khmer Loeur', highlands Khmer people; I never knew that you guys didn't technically identify as Khmer. It is very neat to see these indigenous isolated cultures, it is sad that assimilation will alter things fast.
@@carpy1252
We’ve always considered them as Khmer Loer too, never a separate society.
@@TribalStudio2023
My elders have always referred to them as Khmer Loer, never as a separate society altogether. Not saying we are the same-same. Clearly we’re not but I’m just sharing that we’ve always referred to them as one of our tribes people, a part of us and our country.
Nice, I always found Mondulkiri interesting, since I heard about it a couple of years ago. I haven't been there yet, but I'll go one day!
howdy?,Conrad,enjoyed! useful content! talk you later~
Catch you later!
Hey 👋 👍🎉great video both of you all Trekking with tribes ( ethical indigenous )
Thanks for watching!
Some place in Mondulkiri, I haven't been because it takes time to go there. Thanks for your nice vidoe!
I did really enjoy this trip!
Awesome 👍🎉👋 guys great video both all of you and elephant sanctuary in Mondulkiri Senmonorom Cambodia
Thank you so much 😃
Very nice!
Still waiting for some videos of that magical moment in the waterfall with the elephants.. 😔
Thank you guys for your trip in Cambodia ❤️
Beautiful, haven’t been there yet. But definitely I know where to hook up if I do.
Thanks Jo, as always thanks for tuning in!
What time of year were you in Mondulkiri?
How can we find the guide?
👊 🅿🆁🅾🅼🅾🆂🅼
Stopped watching at 1:40 when you recommend PIZZA ...