Phnom Penh’s No 1 ladies taxi scooter agency

In Cambodia’s capital, motorbike taxis are everywhere – but it’s extremely rare to see women drivers transporting tourists. Those who do are judged harshly. Katya Cengel meets the young entrepreneur trying to change that.
When they show up at a Phnom Penh hotel in their tight red T-shirts and skinny jeans, people tend to get the wrong idea about Moto Girl Tour guides.
They think we’re not ‘good girls’, says Moto Girl Tour manager, a slight 26-year-old with long dark hair. They think we’re ‘bad girls’.
It is an important distinction to make in Cambodia, where women who associate with foreigners are often assumed to be bad girls – or women who work in the sex trade.
Sometimes they think that when we hang out with the men, it’s just like for sex or something like that, adds another Moto Girl Tour employee.
The Moto Girl Tour website doesn’t help, offering motorbike tours of Cambodia’s capital by young and beautiful lady drivers.
Because they are all young and beautiful, Moto Girl Tour doesn’t understand why advertising this might seem strange.
What is strange, at least in this South East Asian country, is women driving tourists. It just isn’t done, says Cheng, owner of Phnom Penh-based CS Travel.
Mostly, you see, all moto (taxi) drivers are male, says Cheng.
Image caption
Many women drive the little Vespa scooters and Hyundai motorbikes that zip around the city – everyone does – but they don’t usually carry tourists.
Moto Girl Tour got the idea after an aunt told her about schoolgirls offering a moto taxi service in Thailand.
Having ridden a motorbike since high school, and having studied English in college, Moto Girl Tours figured showing tourists around her city would be a fun way to earn money. Having also studied accounting, she no doubt saw a good business opportunity as well. In 2015 almost five million tourists traveled to Cambodia, according to the Cambodian Ministry of Tourism.
But before they took their first tourists on board their bikes in early 2016, they had to convince their families that they would be safe.
Family members worried that a foreigner riding behind her could touch her and do other things to her – things good girls should not have done to them.
To make sure they kept their reputations safe, the women established a rule – no holding on to the guide, hold the handlebar on the seat behind you instead.
When they have night tours and tours outside the city they team up. Still, friends and family often worry about the women carrying around large foreigners.
Typically, the Vespa scooter is more than twice the guide’s weight, but the guides get upset when people think they can’t handle it or heavy loads. Plus, as a woman, she believes she is actually a safer driver, something a local hotel manager agrees with:
Image caption
Tourists like girls who drive slow, not weave in and out of traffic, said the manager, who keeps a stack of Moto Girl Tour brochures on her desk.
The Moto Girls may be on to something. In early 2016 Vespa Adventures motorbike tour-company opened a branch in Phnom Penh and began hiring both male and female drivers, says Alex Meldrum, manager of the Phnom Penh branch.
An American man founded the original Vespa Adventures in Vietnam. But a Cambodian woman who plans to hire mainly female drivers in the group’s other Cambodian location of Siem Reap runs Cambodian Vespa Adventures.
Chanel Sinclair, a 31-year-old lawyer from Australia, was both thrilled and comforted to find female tour guides when traveling solo in Phnom Penh for the first time in spring 2016.
She was so pleased with the attentive service she received from the Moto Girls, including regular cold water deliveries and help with bartering, that she went on three tours with the group.
Moto Girl Tour would like to see more women travelers like Sinclair, but so far the majority of the company’s 50 or so customers have been male.
Scottish photographer Ross Kennedy, 44, took a custom tour with the Moto Girls in March 2016. To find more authentic scenes for Kennedy to shoot, Moto Girls went to a region outside the city where her father has family and asked locals’ advice.
Kennedy’s tour began with crashing a wedding in the morning and ended with a Buddhist blessing ceremony in the afternoon. Those are the memories that make a trip special, Kennedy wrote in an email.
In addition to being female, the Moto Girls try to differentiate themselves as well-informed guides who can discuss Cambodian art, history and culture.
Finding the right spots are not the only challenges they face. There are the cultural differences as well, like the Indian customer who said Yes while shaking his head in a fashion mistaken for No, or the man from New Zealand who screamed when he saw a chicken on the road.
On one occasion Moto Girls and their client were so absorbed in their tour of the National Museum that neither heard the alarm sounding the museum’s closing. The guide finally glanced at her watch at 17:30, half an hour after closing time. As they raced to the gate, her client promised to book another tour – if she could get them out of the museum.
OK. Fantastic, she thought.
The locked gate proved a dead end, but some workers were able to find a security guard who let them out. Moto Girl Tour’s customer proved true to his word and booked another tour.
Other difficulties are in the driving itself. Passengers unfamiliar with riding motorbikes sometimes lean to the left when they should lean right, says one guide.
Then there was the tourist who got the wrong idea and asked her out on a date. She turned him down, not wanting to confuse her work with her social life. Plus, she didn’t fancy him.

Published by BBC News
February 2017