Showing posts with label religion. Show all posts
Showing posts with label religion. Show all posts

Saturday, August 22, 2015

Yangon: Coolest City in the World? - Episode 1

Yangon city, Myanmar/Burma - August 9-20, 2015 - This is one of the most highly recommended cities I have ever been too.

A hounds sits afront the Immigration at the Mae Sot-Myawaddy border.

Myawaddy.


Some kind of ceremony with lots of percussion was occurring as we crossed the border.


Nuns.

The old circular train.

The main station.


Do not kiss on the train.





Kachin style fish. Less the $3 US. Food in Yangon is nothing short of phenomenal.






Wass dem hounds be doin dere?

"We chillin', yo. What about it?"

What are you looking at, master hound, sir?

Saturday, July 4, 2015

A Conference in Penang - Episode 3

Penang Island, Penang province, Malaysia - 16 November-23 November, 2014 - We just spent the rest of the time traipsing around Georgetown and getting lost on buses.

English colonial architecture is one of Georgetown's hallmarks.





Penang from above.


Street art smothers Georgetown. Whether that it looks nice or not...er, well, you decide. Here's a local artist at work anyhow.


The Indian quarter.

A Chinese temple.

Recommended place to stay in Penang: Hotel Island City.

The outside is a facade! Luxuries await you inside - I PROMISE.

Please don't be sorry for not cleaning the toilet ALL the time. That you clean it at all gives you my genuine gratitude.


Advertisement for spiritual healing at a bus stop.

Indian restaurant.

Squid eggs, mutton, fried chicken, fried fish, squid curry. Perhaps I ordered too much?

Ain't nuthin but a thang.

Pomfret, Chinese style. Amazing. I reiterate: Penang is one of the best places in Asia for seafood.

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