Sunday, November 30, 2014

Gauntlet - Episode 5: Bagan

Bagan province, Myanmar - July 10-12, 2014 - Bagan is perhaps what Siem Reap was like twenty years ago, but with horsecarts. I did not care much for the town itself, it was already a tourist area. It is bizarre walking in from the dust into a gourmet Italian restaurant. The place was thronging as it was a Buddhist event.

Burmese coconut curry. Nothing else like it.

The ingenuity of Burmese bottle openers.




Over 3000 ruins are clustered in the area of Bagan.











Wax sits on an altar before the image of Buddha.

Can you see the animal? And can you tell me what it is?

Betel nut spatter.

The Irrawaddy River.

I don't really recommend the Winner Duest House.



Mt. Popa

Food used to....

....protect you from these vicious bastards.








The town around Mt. Popa has many monasteries.



A temple glows on a hilltop at night.

See the rest of the our Cambodia/Thailand/Burma/Laos trip:
Episode 1: Pailin, Cambodia
Episode 2: Bangkok, Thailand
Episode 3: Mae Sot, Thailand
Episode 4: Yangon, Myanmar
Episode 6: Mandalay, Myanmar
Episode 7: Vientiane and Vang Vieng, Laos
Coda: Sihanoukville, Cambodia

Wednesday, August 13, 2014

Gauntlet - Episode 4: Yangon

Yangon city, Myanmar - July 8-10, 2014 - Yangon is an interesting city. In the short time I spent there, I was opened to the mystery of the wealth of unknown information that one gets in their first time in a country remotely different from there own. In Asia, at least the city has an unusual atmosphere because motorbikes are illegalised in the city centre. What we saw in Yangon was, unsurprisingly, the epitome of rapid economic development and exposure to globalisation. The city has the aura of the old and the bizarre, the picturesque poverty-stricken Asia that so many charmingly idealise, and modern technology can be seen puncturing layers through decades of isolation. I get the feeling this is one of the most singular cities in the world.


A woman sew longyis (traditional Burmese pants, similar to a long skirt or sarong, worn by almost all Burmese men) late into the night.

Myanmar Humanitarian League.


The Shwedagon pagoda, apparently a 3000-year-old site, looms in the background.

Monks pray inside Shwedagon.

(The praying man is wearing an example of the longyi mentioned earlier.)





Burmese street food: Egg fritters mixed with chickpeas. Rating: 8/10

Burmese street food: The Bandgladeshi offerings - okra, tea leaf soup, mutton curry, spiced fish, spiced mango condiment, chili paste mixed with river prawns. Rating: 7.5/10 - would be higher if the okra was covered in the stickest most salivatory, alien substance i've ever seen.

Burmese pavements are nice.

China town sprawls for miles. The markets open right up onto main streets, going fully halfway across, and sometimes severely congesting traffic. The are beautiful interesting places to explore.


See the rest of the our Cambodia/Thailand/Burma/Laos trip:
Episode 1: Pailin, Cambodia
Episode 2: Bangkok, Thailand
Episode 3: Mae Sot, Thailand
Episode 5: Bagan, Myanmar
Episode 6: Mandalay, Myanmar
Episode 7: Vientiane and Vang Vieng, Laos
Coda: Sihanoukville, Cambodia

Gauntlet - Episode 3: Mae Sot

Mae Sot township, Tak province, Thailand - July 3-5, 2014 - Having acquired a Burmese visa in Bangkok, we travelled up to the town of Mae Sot as a stop off on the way to doing a border crossing into Myanmar - one which we would prove to bungle for one reason or another, and would send us scarpering back to Bangkok to catch a flight in our uncertainty of whether Cambodians could get vis-exempt entry over land crossing or was it only at airports and it was the weekend so there was no one we could possibly call to find out, the Internet had no solid information whatsoever, and Neng's bank card wasn't working, blah blah blah you get the idea. Anyway Mae Sot was nice. All we did there was rent a motorcycle and drive through the hills and rice fields for a couple of days.






The legendary and mysterious Kickapoo. Only to be found in remote Thai villages.


The Mae Kasa hot springs. The are currently under renovation, channeling five steams of volcanic water into a kind of park. 





The springs are very hot. The only purpose for them at the moment is to soft-boil eggs.






Oops.



A snake had perished in the boiling, mineral-rich waters.

This is what happens when you accidentally smash an egg into their egg borling basin.

The final, less-than-culinarily-satisfactory result.

See the rest of the our Cambodia/Thailand/Burma/Laos trip:
Episode 1: Pailin, Cambodia
Episode 2: Bangkok, Thailand
Episode 4: Yangon, Myanmar
Episode 5: Bagan, Myanmar
Episode 6: Mandalay, Myanmar
Episode 7: Vientiane and Vang Vieng, Laos
Coda: Sihanoukville, Cambodia