Hi everyone -
We're back in Bangkok (yes again) awaiting our flight tomorrow to Delhi, India. I'm definitely sad to be leaving SouthEast Asia...but at the same time very excited to go someplace completely new and different. And I suppose that given the SE Asia swing was supposed to only last 3 months and here we are at 5 1/2 - I can't complain at all.
SO...and don't hate Deanna and I for this, but after leaving Myanmar we decided that it was time for a little vacation (yes...from the trip...I know, I know...save the hate email). So we spent 4 days in Bangkok and then went down to the islands in the Gulf of Thailand - Ko Samui and Ko Pha-Ngan. And what a wonderful break it was.
First in Bangkok, we met up with our friend Ian (a.k.a the guy that capsized on our Halong Bay trip) as well as Tim from Luang Prabang and Inle Lake. We went out for a night on the town (okay several)resulting in some very funny pictures - and Mom I haven't taken up smoking...it's for effect in the pictures. Tim's the one with the real problem. And those are HIS sunglasses...really. We also paid a visit to the BED supper and dance club. For a small fee of 600B (about $15 but a fortune here to get inside a bar) we got to feel like celebrities and walk on a red carpet past a line of folks wanting to see who entered the club. Very atmospheric and fun until four "larger" western girls in tight jeans decide to dance at the railing in front of us and "drop it like it's hot". Not only was it unsightly (and how), but I'm not sure the club was structurally prepared for their dancing...we had to get out before the place fell down.
In Ko Samui, we stayed on Chaweng Beach...in the heart of all the nightlife and had a great time. It reminded me a lot of Patong in Phuket (all bars, CD sellers, travel agents, and seedy nightclubs and bars) with a better beachfront. Exactly what I was looking for. I decided that I hadn't gotten any sun for a long time so I decided to make it a beach day and "catch up" the day after we got there. Bad judgement, bad timing, bad application of suntan lotion. Three hours later I was closer to red than tan...but didn't hurt. That came later. I am still undergoing mass amounts of involuntary exfoliation.
From Ko Samui, we headed to Ko Pha-Ngan for the infamous Full Moon Party. Just me, Deanna, and 15,000 of our closest friends partying on a beach from 10pm until 8am. Actually, we stayed on a part of the island in the North (near Thong Sala) which was absolutely fantastic. A bungalow on stilts that faced the ocean and was about 20 feet from the water at high-tide. Even better, there were hammocks underneath the bungalow where I wiled away many hours thinking about such world issues and the crisis in Iraq and what I was going to eat for dinner. It's a fantastic place and probably my favorite beach on this trip so far - I'm promising myself I'll come back. And for 500 Baht per night...about $13.
The full-moon party itself was quite a trip. There really are thousands of people on a stretch of Had Rin (sunrise) beach and every single establishment has about 30 speakers larger than I am set-up and pumping their techno/trance as loud as they possibly can. People are dancing with their glowsticks or sitting around in small groups sharing buckets of alcoholic drinks or watching some professionals twirling burning batons and such. Everyone is SO friendly (which may just have something to do with the available mushrooms or alcohol). We were waiting in line to buy a drink and happened to meet a few British girls who were so kind as to apply glowing body paint. At first I think the intention was to give me whiskers (or something) but it quickly turned into a solid pink mask...unfortunate. Anyway, after spending some time drinking with my new best friends from Belgium - it turns out that it's already 6:30am. The trick is that they put Shark and Red Bull into the buckets...what more do you need to stay up? Definitely a good time. Nothing I ever have to do again though...
Well...onto India. As we've both started to read-up on the subcontinent, we've found there's just SO much to do and see. We'll do our best. Right now the plan is: Delhi - Varanasi (cremations on the Ganges) - Khurajo (sculpture) - Orccha - Agra (Taj Mahal) and then onto Rajastan. I think we'll make an assessment there as to head for theHimalayan north or go way south to Kerala and work out way back to Bombay.
Saturday, March 26, 2005
Wednesday, March 09, 2005
03/09/05: From Kalaw to Inle Lake
Hello Everyone!
So I've just spent 20 of the last 24 hours in bed recovering from some sort of flu or fever but I'm feeling much, much better now and thought I would spend a relaxing afternoon inside from the elements and send an update. It seems that the reports of "no internet access" are exaggerated for Myanmar...I think it goes to show that repressive government or not, it's very difficult to stop progress and the exchange of ideas.
When I last wrote, we were in Mandalay...one of the dustiest, hottest places I've ever been. From there we took a long bus-ride to Kalaw which is in the hills (and has a much nicer climate). It's really a beautiful place...the British used Kalaw as a vacation spot of sorts to escape the heat. There we met a high-60 year old gentlemen named "Sam"who ran a trekking/guide service. I have never been so impressed with someone's character as much as I am with Sam. He runs his guide service in the most responsible way (e.g. no gifts to turn village kids into beggars, no staying in monasteries (where food and accomodation are free but many people then do not contribute to even make up the cost)) - and then gives back to the villages as much as he can. Sam has hired a health-care professional to visit the 80-something villages that his treks run through to visit the different villages and provide basic services. He has also begun a program where village children live at his house and go to school...completely paid for by him. Sam was just an outstanding individual and Deanna and I were quickly sold that this was the right guide service for us for a three-day trek from Kalaw to Inle Lake.
Our specific trek guide was Sam's nephew, Tay-Zar...who was very well educated - pretty good English, majoring in French at University, and speaking three village dialects - and provided a lot of detailed information about what we were seeing. Beyond all of the "guide"information, I also spent a lot of time speaking to him about music - his great love - and he shared a lot about his opinions of the Myanmar government and controlling ideas. In the last month, the government has stopped all sales of English language music, movies, and books. Tay-Zar talked about how this hurt him as music and movies are how he learns English pronunciation, but also how the government is trying to control foreign/outside thought and ideas by restricting information even further. One difference in talking to Tay-Zar versus some of the other Myanmar people I've spoken to is that he was a bit more "textured" in his opinion of the government...he recognized that they were not the right answer but that the next regime might be even worse or the price that people would have to pay for independance might be too great.
The first night we stayed in a Pa-O village. The women dress in black outfits with colorful head-coverings...designed to resemble the look of a dragon. The Pa-O legends tell of their people being born from the egg of a dragon - what a great heritage! In the village, I was struck again by how young the Pa-O children take responsibility...seeing 8-year old girls pounding rice with what looked like a giant mortar and pestle. To get enough force to break the rice from the husks, these girls would literally have to lift the wooden pestle to the full extent of their reach. Much to the amusement of two little girls, I took my turn pounding rice and found it to be a little more difficult than I had thought - even being two feet taller and three times their weight. I couldn't tell if they were laughing because:
a. I was a foreigner with bad clothes.
b. I was a man doing women's work.
c. I was talking to them while pounding rice (which later I found is traditionally the time in this village when young men approach young women they're interested in marrying!)
d. All of the above.
After dinner, we were invited by a local family to visit in their house. We entered their home into a room with a fireplace in the center of the room and no apparent ventilation for the smoke. Much to my surprise, it was a very pleasant experience...apparently the smoke is absorbed by the bamboo or escapes somehow. A normal Pa-O family is four to five kids...but this family consisted of Mom, Dad (who was absent that night), and eight daughters! According to our hostess, they kept trying for a boy until they finally decided (after 8!) that it just wasn't going to happen. Our guide (who acted as a great translator as well) asked the 22-year old daughter why she wasn't married yet and she joked that if she was like her mom, she needed to wait until she was older before starting to have kids to keep the total number down. It was a really fun night.
The folks we went trekking with were also great - Dani and Anna...from California and Denmark, respectively. Dani and Anna had been traveling together for a few weeks and then were determined to learn all the countries, capitals, of the world and the 50 US States. It was a bit humbling that I had never heard of half the countries they mentioned...but even more humbling to realize that I didn't know the capital of Montana or Alabama or several others. We've hung out with them here in Inle Lake and had a great time...also meeting another American, Tim from Minnesota, who we had met previously in Luang Prabang. A hilarious guy (and walking medicine chest), we're hoping to meet up with him in Bangkok and then India where he's going next as well.
Inle lake has been very interesting but a bit of a let-down from what I was expecting...mostly because I thought we could stay closer to the lake itself as opposed to a few km's away. We did take an all-day tour around the lake and saw some very interesting things. One attraction here at Inle is all the floating gardens...the villagers saw out huge pieces of dirt and land and place them in the lake (with bamboo poles jammed through to hold the pieces together) and use this "new land" to grow tomatoes, other vegetables, and flowers. Another attraction is the distinctive way they paddle - standing balanced on one leg and using the other leg to paddle - you really have to see it to understand how it works. The balance and grace the fisherman show is pretty amazing - in one fishing method used here, the fisherman paddles very slowly looking for oxygen bubbles, and then when they see a fish drop a basket with a net inside on top of (around) the fish. The fisherman then stands precariously with one foot on the basket and one foot on the boat while he inserts a spear through the top of the basket, thrashes around to make the fish move, and draws the net closed with a string tied around his toe! It's like a ballet really.
The other highlight of Inle...although it's more of a novelty...is a monastery they call "Jumping Cat Monastery". The monks in this monastery have actually trained their cats (about of them) to jump through hoops. While it's funny just to see cats jumping through hoops, much of the hilarity comes from the thought of what would possess someone (much less monks) to undergo trying to train cats -perhaps it teaches the monks discipline or how to conquer the impossible. If I don't find what I'm looking for when I come back to the US, I may just shave my head (even more) and don the robe to traincats.
Hope everyone is well. I'll upload all the Myanmar pictures when I return to Bangkok on the 13th of March!
So I've just spent 20 of the last 24 hours in bed recovering from some sort of flu or fever but I'm feeling much, much better now and thought I would spend a relaxing afternoon inside from the elements and send an update. It seems that the reports of "no internet access" are exaggerated for Myanmar...I think it goes to show that repressive government or not, it's very difficult to stop progress and the exchange of ideas.
When I last wrote, we were in Mandalay...one of the dustiest, hottest places I've ever been. From there we took a long bus-ride to Kalaw which is in the hills (and has a much nicer climate). It's really a beautiful place...the British used Kalaw as a vacation spot of sorts to escape the heat. There we met a high-60 year old gentlemen named "Sam"who ran a trekking/guide service. I have never been so impressed with someone's character as much as I am with Sam. He runs his guide service in the most responsible way (e.g. no gifts to turn village kids into beggars, no staying in monasteries (where food and accomodation are free but many people then do not contribute to even make up the cost)) - and then gives back to the villages as much as he can. Sam has hired a health-care professional to visit the 80-something villages that his treks run through to visit the different villages and provide basic services. He has also begun a program where village children live at his house and go to school...completely paid for by him. Sam was just an outstanding individual and Deanna and I were quickly sold that this was the right guide service for us for a three-day trek from Kalaw to Inle Lake.
Our specific trek guide was Sam's nephew, Tay-Zar...who was very well educated - pretty good English, majoring in French at University, and speaking three village dialects - and provided a lot of detailed information about what we were seeing. Beyond all of the "guide"information, I also spent a lot of time speaking to him about music - his great love - and he shared a lot about his opinions of the Myanmar government and controlling ideas. In the last month, the government has stopped all sales of English language music, movies, and books. Tay-Zar talked about how this hurt him as music and movies are how he learns English pronunciation, but also how the government is trying to control foreign/outside thought and ideas by restricting information even further. One difference in talking to Tay-Zar versus some of the other Myanmar people I've spoken to is that he was a bit more "textured" in his opinion of the government...he recognized that they were not the right answer but that the next regime might be even worse or the price that people would have to pay for independance might be too great.
The first night we stayed in a Pa-O village. The women dress in black outfits with colorful head-coverings...designed to resemble the look of a dragon. The Pa-O legends tell of their people being born from the egg of a dragon - what a great heritage! In the village, I was struck again by how young the Pa-O children take responsibility...seeing 8-year old girls pounding rice with what looked like a giant mortar and pestle. To get enough force to break the rice from the husks, these girls would literally have to lift the wooden pestle to the full extent of their reach. Much to the amusement of two little girls, I took my turn pounding rice and found it to be a little more difficult than I had thought - even being two feet taller and three times their weight. I couldn't tell if they were laughing because:
a. I was a foreigner with bad clothes.
b. I was a man doing women's work.
c. I was talking to them while pounding rice (which later I found is traditionally the time in this village when young men approach young women they're interested in marrying!)
d. All of the above.
After dinner, we were invited by a local family to visit in their house. We entered their home into a room with a fireplace in the center of the room and no apparent ventilation for the smoke. Much to my surprise, it was a very pleasant experience...apparently the smoke is absorbed by the bamboo or escapes somehow. A normal Pa-O family is four to five kids...but this family consisted of Mom, Dad (who was absent that night), and eight daughters! According to our hostess, they kept trying for a boy until they finally decided (after 8!) that it just wasn't going to happen. Our guide (who acted as a great translator as well) asked the 22-year old daughter why she wasn't married yet and she joked that if she was like her mom, she needed to wait until she was older before starting to have kids to keep the total number down. It was a really fun night.
The folks we went trekking with were also great - Dani and Anna...from California and Denmark, respectively. Dani and Anna had been traveling together for a few weeks and then were determined to learn all the countries, capitals, of the world and the 50 US States. It was a bit humbling that I had never heard of half the countries they mentioned...but even more humbling to realize that I didn't know the capital of Montana or Alabama or several others. We've hung out with them here in Inle Lake and had a great time...also meeting another American, Tim from Minnesota, who we had met previously in Luang Prabang. A hilarious guy (and walking medicine chest), we're hoping to meet up with him in Bangkok and then India where he's going next as well.
Inle lake has been very interesting but a bit of a let-down from what I was expecting...mostly because I thought we could stay closer to the lake itself as opposed to a few km's away. We did take an all-day tour around the lake and saw some very interesting things. One attraction here at Inle is all the floating gardens...the villagers saw out huge pieces of dirt and land and place them in the lake (with bamboo poles jammed through to hold the pieces together) and use this "new land" to grow tomatoes, other vegetables, and flowers. Another attraction is the distinctive way they paddle - standing balanced on one leg and using the other leg to paddle - you really have to see it to understand how it works. The balance and grace the fisherman show is pretty amazing - in one fishing method used here, the fisherman paddles very slowly looking for oxygen bubbles, and then when they see a fish drop a basket with a net inside on top of (around) the fish. The fisherman then stands precariously with one foot on the basket and one foot on the boat while he inserts a spear through the top of the basket, thrashes around to make the fish move, and draws the net closed with a string tied around his toe! It's like a ballet really.
The other highlight of Inle...although it's more of a novelty...is a monastery they call "Jumping Cat Monastery". The monks in this monastery have actually trained their cats (about of them) to jump through hoops. While it's funny just to see cats jumping through hoops, much of the hilarity comes from the thought of what would possess someone (much less monks) to undergo trying to train cats -perhaps it teaches the monks discipline or how to conquer the impossible. If I don't find what I'm looking for when I come back to the US, I may just shave my head (even more) and don the robe to traincats.
Hope everyone is well. I'll upload all the Myanmar pictures when I return to Bangkok on the 13th of March!
Sunday, February 27, 2005
02/27/05: The Marvels of Myanmar
Hello all! So we're safely in Mandalay, Myanmar and happened to find the one internet location in the whole of the city (or so it seems)...so I thought I would take the opportunity to write before I forgot everything that happened in the last week or so.
Myanmar (formerly Burma) is incredible. I think both Deanna and I felt that it might be too similar to the rest of SE Asia (and hence not that interesting at this point in the trip) but we were taken completely by surprise. Perhaps because of the oppressive government here, the country has really kept it's uniqueness and beauty. For those of you planning a trip and wanting to go someplace different, Myanmar is certainly worthy of consideration.
The first thing I noticed when we arrived in Yangon/Rangoon was just how different the people were here. There are many Indians, Pakistanis, Chinese, as well as the native (Bamar) people and indigenous ethnic minorities. It makes for quite a mix. The men here traditionally wear longyi (skirts) like the rest of SE Asia did at one time before the tradition died out. Here they still do. Deanna has been relentlessly working on me to buy and wear my longyi...that and the incredibly hot temperatures should have me converting at some point. I can assure you that no pictures are forthcoming. Another immediately noticeable cosmetic difference here is that the women wear a "makeup" that protects their skin from the sun which is from a ground-up tree. It's very noticeable (yellow on the skin) and I had not seen anything like it outside of Myanmar. The people here are also (for the most-part) unspoiled, extremely friendly, and very open to meeting foreigners. The english spoken (by who we've interacted with) has been very good.
The government plays a huge role here. We've talked to several people who quietly discuss the lack of education, opportunity, and freedom in Myanmar and how there's little hope of change anytime soon. Contrary to my normal bitching about the US government (and election results)it's been humbling to hear how lucky these people think we are. The government presence still plays a large part in everyday life. First, you can change dollars into kyat (local currency) at the airport for the "official" rate of 450 kyat to the dollar...or change money on the blackmarket for 900 kyat to the dollar. The downside is that since it's illegal, the moneychangers all ask you surreptitiously "change money?" and when you say yes...they invite you into a teahouse where the money is handed to you under the table to be counted and then passing the US dollars back. It really feels like a drug deal...but since it's illegal for most Myanmar people to hold US dollars, that's how it works.
There is also far fewer motorized vehicles here compared with the other countries that we visited. The standard mode of transport for shorter trips seems to be trishaw (a bicycle with a side-car...one seat facing forward and one facing back). Deanna and I took trishaws in the littletown of Pyay to see some old ruins...it's really difficult to sit next to a man peddling for all he's worth up hills when I weigh two times as much as he does. I felt quite guilty and also felt like transport doesn't get anymore elemental than human power...until he dropped us off and we rode the OX-cart. Possibly the only less comfortable mode of transport than the trishaw. And did I mention dusty? I don't think that I've ever been more uncomfortable in my life in the 100 degree heat, not being able to breathe, and not being covered from the sun. Who needs the beach?
From Pyay, we visited Bagan. Bagan is an ancient capital where thousands of pagodas/temples were built. It is absolutely PHENOMENAL. When you climb one of the temples at sunset, there are 360 degrees of temple structures surrounding you. Absolutely stunning and I think the government is possibly the only reason this does not get the billing of an Angkor Wat or the pyramids (I'll let you know when I've been through Egypt). It's one of the most atmopheric places you can ever visit...like out of a movie. One overriding theme in Myanmar seems to be "built it bigger than anyone else"...more temples, bigger buddhas, more gold...it's pretty incredible.
Now we are currently in Mandalay in the north/central portion of Myanmar. We've had several great experiences here...we visited a monastery in Amarapura where all the monks come in from their "alms" round of collecting food to eat their meal at 10:30 in the morning. There are over 1000 monks all silently filing into the monastery...into the dining room, and silently eating their meal. There are also over 200 tourists...not so silent, not so respectful, many off of tour buses (hate them!) and willing to step through the monk's lines to take pictures. We made friends with one of the teacher monks and after the tourists left (got their picture I guess) he actually invited us to eat at the monastery and gave a personal tour to Deanna and I of the grounds, his living quarters (mat on the floor), and a lot of insight into education and the government oppression in Myanmar. It was a once-in-a-lifetime experience and one I will always remember.
Well enough for now. We are on a bus tomorrow to Kalaw, and then visiting Inle Lake before slowly making our way back to Yangon. I'm a little sad to be on the homestretch of SE Asia, but starting to get excited about India!
I hope everyone is well.
Myanmar (formerly Burma) is incredible. I think both Deanna and I felt that it might be too similar to the rest of SE Asia (and hence not that interesting at this point in the trip) but we were taken completely by surprise. Perhaps because of the oppressive government here, the country has really kept it's uniqueness and beauty. For those of you planning a trip and wanting to go someplace different, Myanmar is certainly worthy of consideration.
The first thing I noticed when we arrived in Yangon/Rangoon was just how different the people were here. There are many Indians, Pakistanis, Chinese, as well as the native (Bamar) people and indigenous ethnic minorities. It makes for quite a mix. The men here traditionally wear longyi (skirts) like the rest of SE Asia did at one time before the tradition died out. Here they still do. Deanna has been relentlessly working on me to buy and wear my longyi...that and the incredibly hot temperatures should have me converting at some point. I can assure you that no pictures are forthcoming. Another immediately noticeable cosmetic difference here is that the women wear a "makeup" that protects their skin from the sun which is from a ground-up tree. It's very noticeable (yellow on the skin) and I had not seen anything like it outside of Myanmar. The people here are also (for the most-part) unspoiled, extremely friendly, and very open to meeting foreigners. The english spoken (by who we've interacted with) has been very good.
The government plays a huge role here. We've talked to several people who quietly discuss the lack of education, opportunity, and freedom in Myanmar and how there's little hope of change anytime soon. Contrary to my normal bitching about the US government (and election results)it's been humbling to hear how lucky these people think we are. The government presence still plays a large part in everyday life. First, you can change dollars into kyat (local currency) at the airport for the "official" rate of 450 kyat to the dollar...or change money on the blackmarket for 900 kyat to the dollar. The downside is that since it's illegal, the moneychangers all ask you surreptitiously "change money?" and when you say yes...they invite you into a teahouse where the money is handed to you under the table to be counted and then passing the US dollars back. It really feels like a drug deal...but since it's illegal for most Myanmar people to hold US dollars, that's how it works.
There is also far fewer motorized vehicles here compared with the other countries that we visited. The standard mode of transport for shorter trips seems to be trishaw (a bicycle with a side-car...one seat facing forward and one facing back). Deanna and I took trishaws in the littletown of Pyay to see some old ruins...it's really difficult to sit next to a man peddling for all he's worth up hills when I weigh two times as much as he does. I felt quite guilty and also felt like transport doesn't get anymore elemental than human power...until he dropped us off and we rode the OX-cart. Possibly the only less comfortable mode of transport than the trishaw. And did I mention dusty? I don't think that I've ever been more uncomfortable in my life in the 100 degree heat, not being able to breathe, and not being covered from the sun. Who needs the beach?
From Pyay, we visited Bagan. Bagan is an ancient capital where thousands of pagodas/temples were built. It is absolutely PHENOMENAL. When you climb one of the temples at sunset, there are 360 degrees of temple structures surrounding you. Absolutely stunning and I think the government is possibly the only reason this does not get the billing of an Angkor Wat or the pyramids (I'll let you know when I've been through Egypt). It's one of the most atmopheric places you can ever visit...like out of a movie. One overriding theme in Myanmar seems to be "built it bigger than anyone else"...more temples, bigger buddhas, more gold...it's pretty incredible.
Now we are currently in Mandalay in the north/central portion of Myanmar. We've had several great experiences here...we visited a monastery in Amarapura where all the monks come in from their "alms" round of collecting food to eat their meal at 10:30 in the morning. There are over 1000 monks all silently filing into the monastery...into the dining room, and silently eating their meal. There are also over 200 tourists...not so silent, not so respectful, many off of tour buses (hate them!) and willing to step through the monk's lines to take pictures. We made friends with one of the teacher monks and after the tourists left (got their picture I guess) he actually invited us to eat at the monastery and gave a personal tour to Deanna and I of the grounds, his living quarters (mat on the floor), and a lot of insight into education and the government oppression in Myanmar. It was a once-in-a-lifetime experience and one I will always remember.
Well enough for now. We are on a bus tomorrow to Kalaw, and then visiting Inle Lake before slowly making our way back to Yangon. I'm a little sad to be on the homestretch of SE Asia, but starting to get excited about India!
I hope everyone is well.
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