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garygx

time of year to visit cambodia

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Posted

I received some advice recently that I might reconsider an April visit to Cambodia based on weather/temperature at that time.  Does anyone else have feedback/experience regarding this?

Posted

I was in phnom pehn in April last year.

Living in Western Australia, I'm used to the heat, but PP was on a different scale. The heart radiating up from the pavement and coming from the surrounding buildings was unbearable. At one stage I felt dizzy as I was walking and had to duck into a coffee shop to cool down.

I survived for about a week and then had to come home.

Posted
5 hours ago, a-447 said:

I was in phnom pehn in April last year.

Living in Western Australia, I'm used to the heat, but PP was on a different scale. The heart radiating up from the pavement and coming from the surrounding buildings was unbearable. At one stage I felt dizzy as I was walking and had to duck into a coffee shop to cool down.

I survived for about a week and then had to come home.

I was told to avoid April to June, by a local.

Posted

If you look at a map, you will see Bangkok, Phnom Penh and Saigon (Ho Chi Minh City) roughly at the same latitude (10 - 13 degrees north). Many of us are familiar with Bangkok in April which, aside from the madness that is Songkran, is also unbearably hot (35 degrees and higher). Phnom Penh and Saigon would be similar, in the same way that Port of Spain (10 degrees north) and Barbados (13 degrees north) would be similar.

In Southeast Asia, it's not just the temperature, it's also the humidity. Even in the dry months, humidity remains medium-high unless one is a considerable distance from the sea. Bangkok, Phnom Penh and Saigon are quite close to the coast. So 35 degrees is nothing at all like 35 degrees in Perth, Australia.

For better temperatures in April -- warmish but not too hot -- look for a place about 20 - 30 degrees north. That means somewhere between Hanoi and Hangzhou (or Shanghai). However, the economics of sex in these rich cities would be quite different from that of the poor cities in Southeast Asia -- which may be an important consideration for you.

 

Posted
1 hour ago, macaroni21 said:

In Southeast Asia, it's not just the temperature, it's also the humidity. Even in the dry months, humidity remains medium-high unless one is a considerable distance from the sea. Bangkok, Phnom Penh and Saigon are quite close to the coast. So 35 degrees is nothing at all like 35 degrees in Perth, Australia.

I'm not sure if I get your point.

Perth is on the coast - in fact, I live just across the road from a marina, situated on the beautiful Indian Ocean. The sunsets at the moment are spectacular!

However, Perth is not humid in summer; it's a very dry heat, and you can cool off a little if you stand in the shade. The wind blows in from the east, across the hot desert. We sometimes get a cooling sea breeze in the afternoon.

Phnom penh wasn't humid, either; just searingly hot. There were few trees where I could seek shelter - just concrete everywhere.

Humidity is the real killer for me, and it's why I never go back to Japan in June/July, which is the hot rainy season.

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