Villager in Krang Yaw, Cambodia
An old woman lights incense to honor her anchestors during a festival in Siem Reap, Cambodia. Family members, relatives, and guests light incense and place them in a homemade shrine, during the two day festival.
Nestled in a Cambodian province is the rural village of Krang Yaw.
Floating candles mark the change in flow of the Sap River in Siem Reap, Cambodia. This phenominon is unique to Cambodia's Tonle Sap Lake and rivers that feed into it.
Time crawls as you slowly cruise down the the Mekong River. It forces you to slow down, breathe, and observe the beauty of daily life in Cambodia.
Often enveloped in a cloak of eerie fog, the Bokor Hill Station (Kampot, Cambodia) was a colonial retreat built by the French in the early 1920s. Later, it was used as a base for the Khmer Rouge, and today tourists come to visit a French colonial ghost town.
Amongst a smattering of ruins, a church emerges from the fog (the Bokor Hill Station–Kampot, Cambodia).
Behind the altar, sermons come in the form of grafitti (the Bokor Hill Station–Kampot, Cambodia).
The skeletal remains of the abandoned hotel looms ominously on the horizon (the Bokor Hill Station–Kampot, Cambodia).
Abandoned it may be, but life goes on inside Bokor's crumbling hotel as nature slowly reclaims the building as its own (the Bokor Hill Station–Kampot, Cambodia).