An incredible Bamboo Bridge in
Cambodia around 3,300 foot long is taken down and rebuilt every year. The amazing
bridge contains 50,000 sticks of bamboo, built during the dry season to link
the town of Kampong Cham with 1,000 families on Koh Paen Island across the
Mekong River. Due to fear of flood in rainy season starting May till November,
the locals dismantle the Bamboo Bridge and store all of bamboos. When the
bridge isn't up, a ferry then takes people across the river.
The constant building and
dismantling of the bamboo bridge has taken place annually from many decades and
was only missed several times during the civil war in Cambodia. The Bamboo
Bridge is strong enough to accommodate motorbikes, cars, bicycles and Trucks.
The bridge is also providing facility to pedestrians. So, for to crossing the
bridge locals charged 100 riel, which is only a few cents or one penny in
sterling. However higher fee charged from tourists up to 40 times more. Hence once
the dry season comes to an end, the bridge must be dismantled and stored as the
strong currents of the Mekong are too strong for the crossing to survive.
Though, it is unknown for how
much longer the tradition of building and dismantling the bridge will continue.
Last year, a permanent concrete bridge was built by the Cambodian government
further upstream, leading to fears the bamboo crossing would not return. But
one traveler who visited Kampong Cham in April confirmed that the bridge was
still there and still going strong - but is narrower than before. The bridge is
rather less substantial than before, now carrying foot traffic only (well, I
suspect they let motos across as well, but I didn't see that - maybe it's
banned. Another TripAdvisor user, explained that it currently costs $1 US to
cross and that it costs a further $1 to walk a bicycle across. Source: CP
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