每位乘客可以携带一件大行李(29" x 21" x 11" / 74 x 53 x 28 cm)和一件小行李(22" x 14" x 9" / 56 x 36 x 23 cm)。豪华轿车最多可容纳 2 件大行李。我们始终会为您安排最合适的车辆,以确保您的行李能够容纳。如有超大行李,或您不确定行李是否能放下,请 联系我们。
Sightseeing stops are built into how Daytrip works. When booking, you can add verified stops along your route, so the journey itself becomes part of the experience rather than time to endure. Near Sen Monorom, this might mean stopping at Bou Sra Waterfall, one of Cambodia's largest, or arranging your arrival to align with a visit to an elephant sanctuary. Your driver knows the area and can help you make the most of the time you have, without the pressure of a group tour's fixed itinerary.
A Daytrip driver meets you at your door, loads your luggage, and handles the full route without transfers, waiting rooms, or shared stops dictated by other passengers. The drive from Phnom Penh typically takes around 5 to 6 hours depending on road conditions and stops. Because the vehicle is private, you set the pace. If you want to pull over for a roadside coffee or photograph a stretch of highland scenery, your driver accommodates that. There are no schedules to catch and no strangers determining when the journey continues.
Public buses operate between Phnom Penh and Sen Monorom, but journey times can stretch considerably longer depending on the route, stops, and road conditions, and schedules offer limited flexibility. For travelers with luggage, families, or anyone arriving from or continuing to another destination, the logistics of bus travel add friction that private transfer removes. With Daytrip, your departure time is your own, your luggage stays with you, and the vehicle goes directly to your accommodation. For a destination as remote as Mondulkiri, that control over the journey tends to matter more than it would on a well-serviced urban route.
The province covers a significant stretch of eastern Cambodia and carries a character distinct from the rest of the country. Temperatures run cooler than the lowlands, the air is noticeably cleaner, and the forest coverage remains dense in many areas. The Bunong people have lived in this region for generations and their presence shapes the culture of Sen Monorom in ways that differ from the Khmer-dominated cities to the west. Travelers who spend time here often describe it as one of the few places in Cambodia that still feels unhurried and genuinely off the main tourist circuit.
Sen Monorom sits roughly 370 km (230 miles) from Phnom Penh, deep in the highlands of Mondulkiri Province. The distance is part of the appeal. As the road climbs into cooler, forested hills, the landscape shifts dramatically from the flat lowlands of central Cambodia into rolling terrain that feels nothing like the rest of the country. Most travelers come specifically for what cannot be found closer to the capital: ethical elephant sanctuaries where rescued animals roam freely, misty waterfalls hidden in jungle, Bunong indigenous villages, and coffee grown on smallholder plantations in the hills. It is a destination that rewards those willing to travel for something genuinely different.
Most travelers who make the journey find that one full day is not enough. Bou Sra Waterfall, the elephant sanctuaries, coffee plantation visits, and time in the Bunong villages each warrant their own dedicated time. A two to three night stay allows you to move between experiences without rushing, which matters in a place where the roads between sites can be slow and the attractions are spread across the highlands. Daytrip can support both your arrival and your departure, so your ground transportation works around your actual itinerary rather than forcing your plans around fixed transport schedules.