It was Tuesday so the staff at the palace were wearing purple. Sundays are red, Mondays yellow, then purple, various greens and blues, until it's Tuesday again and so it goes.
Udom was our palace guide - charming and polite even when Geoff decided it was his job to be in the photos rather than take the photos.
A scarf does not provide sufficient covering to wander the palace grounds and inspect the buildings - sleeves are needed. I was so pleased with myself, on yet another close-to-40-degrees day, that I thought to wear plenty of black.
There are several buildings in the Royal compound, including the elephant house (relieved of its elephants by Pol Pot), the King's house (where he lives with his mum), the moonlight dancing pavilion, the throne room (lots of gold, etc, no photos please), and the silver pagoda - home of the most incredible emerald Buddha and pure silver tiled floor, engraved with fleur de lis. As you do.
The King is a great exponent of dancing and the ways of the monk - according to Udom - and it is his birthday on 14th May. If horoscopes are anything to go by this will make him a teensy bit like Dave. Thoughts, Mr Rudge?
Nearly 1000 people staff the palace and its grounds. Not a bad ratio for one King and his mum.
Seeing the Royal stupas in the grounds gave serious pause, following so recently on the heels of our visit to Cheuong Ek. Each stupa here houses the ashes of one monarch. At the killing fields one stupa houses the remains of more than 9000 of the Khmer Rouge's victims.
Eventually we were finished with the murals and palanquins and treasures and gardens, and wandered back through the heat for a spot of shopping. We found a lovely print that will cost heaps to frame and will, I think, look very nice in the hall.
Walking along the riverside gave minimal relief - just a tiny breeze - so before long we had jumped in a tuk tuk and headed back to the oasis that is our hotel. Contemplating my truckloads of privilege and reading Roxane Gay's Bad Feminist (fantastic, highly recommend) I lounged by the pool and had a lovely swim.
The afternoon brought a spot of geocaching and some more lolling around the pool - it is a holiday after all.
By six the rest of the group had jetted in from Siem Reap and it was all go at the Ward's home base. Early waking and warm weather seems to turn me into a cabbage by 9pm, so I finished yet another evening pretty much comatose on the couch. Time for another tuk tuk and home to bed.
Next stop: Kep