Tonle Bati (Mini Angkor)
Tonle Bati is the home to two twelfth century temples Taprohm and Prasat Yeay Pov built close to Bati Lake. Tonle Bati is a very beautiful lake, it is popular with the locals for its breezy and tranquil atmosphere. It is 42km south of Phnom Penh, takes about 1 hour by car. We will have lunch at Tonle Bati before continuing our tour to Phnom Chiso.
Chiso Mountain
Located at Sla Village, Rovieng Commune, Samroung District about 62 km from Phnom Penh. The mountain is accessible by National Road No 2. From Takeo provincial town, it is about 17 km. Chiso Mountain has an ancient temple ruins from where is a splendid view of the beautiful rice fields scenery of Takeo province.
Ratanakiri Province 
We follow the ethnic minority of Kreung at Cha Ong village closed to the waterfall. The source of
this waterfall is from the mountain named Ey sey Pak Ta Mak or called Phnom Svay closed to
the Ban Lung town. The situation from above is a small canal which continuously flows through
the broken rocks, then to the stream below in 25-kilometer height.
To view the waterfall, we should go down to the stream below where we have seen a big rocky
cave with plain roof. At the bottom of the stream, there are many big rocks used as the seats for
viewing the great and interesting water falling down from the mountaintop.
Preah Vihear
Preah Vihear Temple (Prasat Preah Vihear) is a Hindu temple situated atop 525-meter cliff in the Dangrek Mountains in the Preah Vihear Province. In 1962 the International Court of Justice in the Hague ruled that it belonged to Cambodia. The adjacent land to the north is under Thailand's control. Affording a view for many kilometers across a plain, Prasat Preah Vihear has the most spectacular setting of all the temples built during the six-hundred years-long Khmer Empire. As an edifice-complex of the Khmer empire's spiritual life, it was temples in being constructed along a long north-south axis, rather than having the conventional rectangular shape plan with orientation toward the east.
The temple gives its name to local province Preah Vihear, in which is located. On July 7, 2008, Preah Vihear was listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site.