Koh Rong Story
The Dive Shop pier, to the left, can hold upwards of 20 overnight visitors in two rooms. Meals are cooked by local women employed by the Shop and local men are paid to fill air tanks and bring divers to the dive sites. Approaching the pier is the twice-daily ferry, which carries food and tourists the two hours from the mainland.
Paradise Bungalows, owned by Rudy Schmittlein, is one of three tourist resorts within walking distance from the Dive Shop pier and provides work for many of the locals. Rudy has begun paying rent to the Royal Group, who recently purchased a 99-year lease on the island, in hopes that Paradise will be allowed to continue among the coming developments.
The men of Koh Roung village spend the majority of each day drinking and gambling. With little work to go around, the card and bingo games provide entertainment and help pass the time. If the Royal Group allows the village to remain where it now stands, the villagers hope to work in the coming tourist establishments.
Village children capture and store crickets, after ripping their back legs off to prevent escape, in a plastic cup to eat later. Meals always include rice and generally a boiled vegetable, usually potato or morning glory. There are also a number of chickens in the village, and access to fresh fruit is determined by the ferry's schedule.
Piles of trash, a testament to the mostly unused incinerator shown, litter the woods behind the village and plastic glitters throughout the town's mud paths. The incinerator was provided by the Dive Shop in hopes of solving the village's trash problem, yet it has proven difficult to get the locals to treat waste disposal seriously.
Dennis Funke the Dive Shop manager(just out of frame to the left), speaks to Mr. Sroy (left) and Mr. Boon (center) through Davi the translator (right). With all the support the Dive Shop provides to the villagers, Dennis is frustrated with Mr. Boon's reluctance to offer government help as well. This particular conversation focused on the unused incinerator. Mr. Boon was also convinced to contribute wood to the nearby toilet project.
A member of Operation Groundswell, a Toronto-based volunteer and travel organization, stamps childrens' hands after an English lesson. It is crucial that they are prepared for the work, and foreign tourists, the coming resorts will bring. The Royal Group is currently building an island road and airport, with plans including a marina and golf course as well. The building is on a 25-year timeline.