Back in 2009, my main camera was the Panasonic FX9, a point & shoot that shot only jpegs.
I had it with me when we visited Beng Mealea, a temple in Cambodia some 40km / 25mi away from its more famous "brother", Angkor Wat. While smaller in scale, the designs of the two temples were virtually identical. Because it is out of the way, it receives far fewer visitors and has not been "rescued" from the jungle. It is still very much overgrown.
As an area where the Khymer Rouge held out towards the end of the Cambodia civil war, the area was heavily mined and the de-mining effort was still going on in the areas around the temple.
Compositionally interesting and it stretched the poor little point & shoot to the limit, but I still like the image with its more recent (today) reworking in Photoshop.
That was the last trip for the FX-9. I picked up a Nikon D90 a few weeks after returning from this trip.
Okay - two reworks of the image based on the comments from John and Philip. I've really added a lot of blue back into the image to tone down the greens (perhaps a bit too much?) The moss and lichens were everywhere. I've added a slight Gaussian blur to take off some of the sharpening impact as well.
I've also done a basic B&W image too.