DooG | Staff

Kompong Luong

Kompong Luong is a town built on the waters of the Tonle Sap Lake, where every building floats, firmly founded on boats and rafts.
Tonlé Sap (Cambodia) | ©Sharon Ang

This post is also available in: Italiano

A self-sufficient town built on the waters of Tonle Sap Lake, the largest body of fresh water in the country. This is Kompong Luong: where the symbiosis between water and humans is palpable.

It can be accessed by rowing or motor boat, long and narrow, as the ones here are. And always with this, one goes around the network of canals that unravel between the houses. Many dwellings have their wooden exterior walls painted either a deep, bright blue or a lighter, almost sea-green. If you don’t look at the foundations, tightly welded onto boats and rafts, the houses look like ordinary local dwellings, with flowers in the windows and sometimes a hammock on the veranda.

Everything floats here: the shops crammed with goods, the school, the petrol station, the church, the restaurants. Every activity – commercial and otherwise – present is on the water. The children meet as if they were in the garden park, but riding small boats. Shopkeepers go door to door selling their products: vegetables, meat, fish, and noodles. People, when they get together for a chat, are always on something that floats. The boats almost seem like an extension of the body, such is the naturalness with which those who were born here carry them.

Inhabited mainly by Vietnamese fishermen, the village is unfortunately progressively shrinking in size and number due to the increasing difficulties of living and working on the water. Not easy waters, capable of expanding and contracting even for several kilometres depending on the season.

The village and area of Kompong Luong are part of the Cambodia 2019 Masterclass programme

Original text in Italian - In house translation
Cambogia
Kompong Luong, Cambogia
DooG's Founder
DooG reporter | Valentino
Redazione & Staff
On-the-job training to learn a trade in the field by photojournalist Gabriele Orlini.

Stories to share

Curiosity is culture

Two years have passed, but nothing has changed. Joyce Donnarumma's reportage from Venezuela
Eight stories of workers in Johannesburg: all different but all similar, stories of hopes, dreams, needs and trust.
The struggle of a people for its survival
Neighbourhood boys in the Kanchai Chang-ngoen gymnasium in Chiang Mai learn Muay Thai from an early age to one day become warriors.

Help us for independent journalism

DooG Reporter | Stories to share

All rights reserved ©2023

DooG Reporter | Stories to share

All rights reserved ©2023