In the Chiphat ecotourism project, traditional culture being revived to some extent, particularly with the recent discovery of Boran or the"Mountain of Ancient Jars," a archeological dig. The dig houses a 600-year old burial site that contains a half dozen well-preserved funeral urns and wooden coffins, and is now a popular attraction for visiting ecotourists to the Chiphat CBET project. More contemporary Khmer culture is also taught to visitors in homestays, in short hikes to local farms where they can learn how to grow rice, bananas, jack fruit and various seasonal crops, and in visits to a village family who will readily demonstrate and explain the fermentation and production process of local rice wine. In addition, tourists are regularly invited to attend weddings, funerals, and seasonal celebrations. Finally, future CBET plans include providing visitors with oral histories of the village, popular tales, unique festivals and celebrations, folklore myths, and beliefs about spirits. Some of these stories are already included on the project's website, though most of the information gathered remains in raw form. It is also possible to travel by land and water to more distant cultural and natural attractions such as a bat cave and waterfalls, each with a local story of its mythical origins. Likewise, local people readily talk of spirits that inhabit the forest, and share with visitors personal experiences about the healing powers of kreu khmai(Khmer traditional healers).