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Wednesday, July 31, 2013

Email to Friends: Ancient Temples and Lazy Days

I love Bagan. Staying in Nyaung U, the town nearby. Very relaxing and enjoy watching life. Mix of old and new, as there are farmers with ox and carts carrying loads, old trucks, new cars and motorbikes, older women carrying market purchases on their heads, men in traditional longgyi, and a few teenagers in western jeans. The temples are fantastic and everywhere. They say there are 3000-4000 in this area alone. My horse and cart driver took me to some really great ones (one even with bats hanging from the large Buddha statue). Each temple has a key master to let you in, and you have to wander around looking for him at the smaller ones with no people. The bigger ones have guides, and there are young trainee guides who just graduated and have to practice before becoming a real guide. They showed me around and taught me a lot, an then you give them feedback at the end. One had his teacher with him, who filmed us so I might end up in some video for Burma tourism.

Had a lovely dinner of my favorite dish here, Shan noodles, for 50 cents with an ER nurse from Scotland who just finished volunteering in Kota Kinabalu, Borneo (my final destination). The food is pretty greasy here, but the fresh fruit and vegetables are delicious.

Morning was spent negotiating a ride to Mt. Popa, a temple with monkeys up in the mountains. Found a ride for me and 3 girls from Spain. Spending the day with them made me glad to be traveling alone, as they talked non-stop, didn't pay much attention to their surroundings, and were dressed in short shorts and skimpy tanks which would be like showing up to your friend's church in night club attire. The locals interaction (and cost of things) with us was very different than when I am alone. But the weather was cooler, the view was pretty, and the monkeys were entertaining when not being aggressive and trying to steal bags.

Nice to see the village life, with traffic stopping for the herds of cow, oxen and goats in the road. Children and adults all wave hello. Also saw peanuts being ground into peanut oil using an ox around a circle to grind (he even let me try).

Napped during the heat if the day, like everyone else and took a walk to the jetty in the evening to watch the sun set as the men and women bathed and washed clothes and the children all played in the Arewaddy River. Not much to do at night but watch American action movies with Burmese subtitles (and the power goes out in town frequently), so just enjoyed a Myanmar beer under the bagazillion stars.

This morning, I woke up super early. Decided to walk the couple of miles to watch the sun rise from the top of a temple. I found myself walking with a procession of monks, and one little monk boy hung back and walked with me. He pointed out things he thought I might like a smiled the sweetest smile. As we finally parted ways, he motioned for me to hold my hand out. As I did, he dropped two earrings in my hand (2 little plastic letters, P and D, with sparkles on them) and smiled a huge smile before running off to join the older monks.

The sunrise was rather overcast, but there was a cool breeze and it was beautiful to see the sun rays cast light over the different temples. Spent most of the day eating fruit ice cream to cool off and jamming out to local Burmese music, and talking to locals at the local tea shop. They taught me several Burmese phrases with lots of laughter at my horrible pronunciation. Saying my goodbyes as tomorrow I have an early departure (5am) on the local slow boat up the Arewaddy River to Mandalay that supposedly takes two days and stops in lots of little villages to pick people up and drop people off. Then trying to head north for trekking through villages outside of Hsipaw (I have been given advice, which I will follow, on where not to go due to safety issues). No Internet for at least a few days.

Okay, I better get this sent off in case the power goes out again. Chan na, chan da ba ze (good health and good wealth in Burmese, although that is probably spelled wrong, since they could only write it using Burmese letters).

Love,
Betsy

Sunday, July 28, 2013

Email to Friends: Minglabar...‏

Or hello from Burma!

My last evening in Yangon, I was suppose to meet up with a couchsurfer who lived there, but I was too tired from the day and it was still raining really hard. Hung out and chatted with other travelers at the hotel. Lots of business people here checking out opportunities in Burma. This place is going to be really big in just a few years, I suspect. Met some Indian and Malaysians business men, a woman from the Netherlands, an Australian teacher, a Chinese engineer who invited me to Beijing, and a Canadian who now lives in Saudia Arabia. Interesting conversations about politics and religion (both of which I do not generally talk about... Especially here in Burma), but interesting with such a diverse group.

Spent the next day exploring the city again on foot, visiting the morning food markets and stumbling into the construction/hardware stores area of town (I am not sure how I always end up at the hardware stores, no matter where I go... It is like I am channeling my dad!) It wasn't raining, but super humid and pretty warm. Everyone is so friendly, and after two days, I am running into familiar faces and stopping to chat every few blocks or so. There are the occasional touts selling bus tickets or offering money exchange, but they aren't at all pushy. Lots of children monks who are more persistent about asking for money, but I am getting better at saying no.

Just for fun, I heard there was a cheaper way to get to the bus terminal out of town. So I jumped in a truck "ferry" that brings all the boxes and packages from the stadium in the city to the bus terminal out of town with a few locals and saved a few bucks. The bus to Inle Lake was very full and I realized they sold me a local bus ticket. Many locals have said I look like I am from Myanmar, so I may be getting away with a little more than I should. But apparently, I don't look enough like a local because I was surrounded by boat, taxi, and tuktuk drivers as soon as I got off the bus at 5am.

Inle Lake was kind of a bust. Super touristy and expensive with people trying to sell you stuff everywhere. Didn't like the town so negotiated a boat deal for the day to look for cheap accommodations on the lake and then show me around. Places were $60-$100 a night, but one of the nice women at the pricy hotels helped me out and called a friend. Ended up staying in a room in a house/restaurant named Ngwe Zin Yaw for $35 right across from Phaung Daw Oo Pagoda in Thale Village. Beautiful spot except there was a loudspeaker for non-stop chanting (well, occasionally they would have to stop and cough). At least it stopped at 6pm, but they wake up even before the chickens and start back up at 4am. So ended up seeing the morning market (which was great to see early, as most locals left when boatloads of tourist showed up several hours later and I just walked a few meters back to my room). Saw the jumping cat monastery but the cats were just sleeping so just wanted to float on the lake and watch the fishermen (who can row the boat using their leg while reeling in the net) but continually got steered towards super touristy stuff like "go see the ring neck tribal women", I had enough. Headed back to town to book a bus anywhere but there.

I stumbled into a booking office with the nicest woman at a spot called Century Travel. She sold me a bus ticket to Bagan and let me hang out there until the bus came. Met her wonderful family when her husband came back after picking up the kids at school (men here seem to take a very active role around the house and with their children) and they treated me and a couple who also booked the bus to a homemade Shan noodle dinner which was the best food I have had so far.

Got to Bagan yesterday morning and got a guy with a horse cart to take me around and find a place. Expensive here as well, but finally found Eden Guesthouse that had a small room with fan, AC, and private bathroom for $15. There is a nice rooftop deck, sunsets are incredible, and I should do just fine for a few days until I can catch the local slow boat to Mandalay (heard it comes on Wednesday or Thursday). Later this morning, I am heading out with my horse cart guy to see the ruins and temples. Then maybe I will have to learn to ride a bike, since that is the good way to explore (all day I got stopped and asked why I am walking and not biking... One guy kept bugging me about renting a bike and I told him I really liked walking 'til a monk shooed him away for me and smiled).

Not a lot of Internet here (and what there is is spotty and slow) but will send another update when I can. Just know all is well, and Burma is a magical and beautiful place. Perhaps the safest place I have ever traveled.

Love,
Betsy

Wednesday, July 24, 2013

Email to Friends: One Night in Bangkok and Now Burma‏

The trip over was actually pretty painless. Empty flight from Seattle to Tokyo, so I got all three seats to myself and got some much needed sleep. Short layover in Tokyo (I should have gotten a picture of the airport bathroom choices of stalls... squatty potty, regular toilets, spray-your butt toilets, and some kind of family toilet where you can strap your baby in to face you while you pee). Then Tokyo to Bangkok. Spent the night in the Floral Shire "Resort" which was basic but close and clean and had a free shuttle to and from the airport with breakfast for $20 when booked over the Internet. Woke up and wandered the neighborhood in the morning. Slowly slipped into vacation mode by watching butterflies on tropical flowers, checking out the hotel neighbor's random caged animal menagerie (chipmunks and different kinds of birds), and eating street food with a bunch of taxi drivers on the curbside (chicken grilled between a split piece of lemongrass). Found a 7-11 and went to see what flavor of Slurpees they had, but alas, no Slurpees. Headed back to the big airport to catch the shuttle to the little airport across town for my flight to Yangon, Burma.

Burma is beautiful. The people are friendly, welcoming, and helpful. Yangon is an interesting mix of old and new architecture, with people of all different cultures. I have met local people from India, other areas of SE Asia, and Pakistan. It feels very safe. My hotel, Beautyland II, has great staff and it is clean and centrally located near lots of yummy street food stands, Sule Paya, and several markets. I spent the day wandering the city streets and markets and chatting with the money changers and vendors, taking in all the sights and sounds (and food) that I possibly can. My jet lag isn't too bad, but could just be travel excitement.

In the afternoon, I headed over to see the amazing Shwedagon Pagoda. I have always been in awe at pictures of this Pagoda and it is even more impressive in person. It actually took my breath away when I first walked in from the entrance. The Pagoda is huge and gilded in gold with Buddhas of all shapes and sizes. It made for a very relaxing afternoon, watching monks of all ages in prayer and listening to all of the chimes and bells. One man said to me "You must like it here because you are smiling so big!" He was right. And not shockingly, I get the "where are you from?" question here even more than at home. And I seem to confuse people with how I am Vietnamese and American.

Yangon has been fun, but after seeing Shwedagon, I am ready to move on. I am not a big fan of cities when traveling, Yangon is expensive, and it is pouring buckets (people are very concerned that I don't use an umbrella and some have even offered to walk with me so I can stay under theirs). Anyhoo, after talking with others, I have changed up my itinerary a bit. I am on an overnight bus tomorrow to Inle Lake. I will stay around there for a few days and then try to bus to Bagan to see the temples and then boat to Mandalay, if possible. Not sure how the Internet will be outside of the city, so don't worry if I don't check in for a little bit.

Hopefully, by the next time I talk with you, I will have learned how to take a shower in the typical SE Asia all-functioning in one space bathroom without getting the toilet paper wet. At least there IS toilet paper... so far.

Love,
Betsy