Myanmar: the land of thousands of ATMs and
WIFI hotspots
Following the completion of our placements
in Vietnam my friend Emily and I flew to Bangkok where we stayed at a nice
hotel and went shopping and stuffed ourselves silly with icecream. We caught up
with my friend Vorapong, a mate of mine from law school and Ormond College,
which was lovely. I also had my hair dyed even blonder than it was in December,
just because I really feel like being a bottle blonde is the right thing for me
at this stage of my life.
Other than the above-mentioned activities,
we spent a substantial part of our weekend trying to prepare for our 12-day
trip to Myanmar. The information that we had been given about Myanmar – from
friends, guidebooks (no we did NOT buy the USD 40 2-year out of date Lonely
Planet), web forums etc – led us to believe that several things such as ATMs
and internet would be largely unavailable to us whilst travelling around the
country. As such, we were trying to prepare by collecting large amounts of cash
and exchanging it all into large denomination, post-2006 greenbacks without any
visible markings, creases or other damage. This was quite a pain in the arse,
but we managed to figure this out in between ice cream sundae binges.
Shortly before heading to the airport I
mentioned on facebook that I was about to head to Myanmar. Kyi, a friend of
mine from medical school, saw this and contacted me saying that her family is
in Yangon and would love to help us with some things, such as sending somebody
to pick us up from the airport. This turned out to be particularly helpful, as
there was not only somebody to drive us to our hotel (which is nice when you
are tired and in a completely new country without any local currency available
to pay for a taxi), but also Kyi’s father met us at the airport, which he
really didn’t have to do, but was very kind of him. I’d told Kyi that we still
needed to book our internal flights (it is impossible to do this over the
internet) and her father called a travel agent as soon as we were in the car
and he helped us book all of our internal transport (all up: one overnight bus,
one ferry down the Irrawaddy river, 2 flights, one local bus, and one special
tourist bus (it turns out we were the only foreign tourists as this was
essentially a religious pilgrimage bus)).
We spent our first night in Myanmar in
Yangon. We arrived quite late in the evening, but had all day the next day to
look around. We managed to visit two places of interest: Sule Pagoda, and
Shwedagon Pagoda. Sule Pagoda is quite impressive in its own right and,
refreshingly, is not full of tourists. It was the central landmark around which
massive protests were held in 1988, which adds to its interest (even though
there is no information about the protests on display at the Pagoda itself).
Shwedagon Pagoda is the main tourist site in Yangon, and is impressive in its
scale, grandeur and preservation. Here are some photos:
Shwedagon Pagoda
That evening we caught the overnight bus up
to Bagan (actually up to Nyaung U, the main town for midrange hotels in the
Bagan region, as Old Bagan contains only upmarket hotels). Catching the bus was
quite an experience in itself. First off, the bus station was not really in
Yangon. It was a 90 minute grid-locked taxi ride from our hotel to the edge of
town. Other than the fact that we were a bit concerned about missing our bus
this was quite an enjoyable journey, as our taxi driver was an eccentric man
who loved kitschy love songs from the 80s and 90s, and also loved a bit of an
off key sing along. After boarding the bus an attendant walked around with a
jar that had “raincoat” written on it and was full of small bits of folded
paper. She indicated that we should each select one. Emily and I both pulled
out pieces of paper saying “calendar”, as did everybody else seated around us.
A few minutes later the attendant came around the bus again, this time handing
extremely bulky calendars (complete with pictures of the various buses owned by
the bus company) to all of the passengers who pulled out calendar, and then one
raincoat to the lucky passenger who had apparently won the lucky dip.
I took a phenergan tablet as I get terribly
motion sick. I actually don’t really like taking these and think that I
probably need to take the paediatric dose (I have trouble metabolising many
pharmaceuticals and often have to take a lower than regular dose). As such the
phenergan made me quite stoned and completely incapable of doing anything other
than sleeping and making a fool out of myself at midnight toilet stops. This
was a problem because at about 11.55pm the bus pulled over at this desolate
area of highway and we were all herded out onto the side of the road. Our bus
journey was on New Year’s Eve, and we had expected the moment to pass by
without ceremony, so what followed came as a great surprise. The bus attendant
produced a large number of hand-held fireworks and handed one to almost
everybody from the bus (she skipped me, which is probably a good thing because
I clearly could not be trusted to hold explosives in my condition). She then
waited until about 30 seconds before midnight and started lighting all of these
fireworks. Wanting to get a good picture (an unrealistic aim seeing as my
camera options were iPhone 3 (circa 2008) and iPhone 4 (circa 2010)) I walked
into the middle of the circle, pretty much to the place where everybody was
pointing their fireworks (luckily up into the sky, not directly at me). When
they started erupting I was showered with hot embers and rapidly reconsidered
my viewpoint. Later in the night, at a toilet stop somewhere in rural Myanmar
at around 3am, Emily and I discovered that one of the embers had fallen onto
her prescription glasses and burned a fault into the lens. We are probably
quite lucky that we both got off with minor little burns, and also that the
unexploded fireworks that were loaded into the luggage compartment for the
remainder of the (bumpy) journey did not explode.
This girl had evidently just been burnt in the face
As an American, Emily is clearly a fan of gunpowder
We spent the following two days exploring
Bagan. Bagan is situated in a bend of the Irrawaddy River and consists of 3
towns (Old Bagan, New Bagan, and Nyaung U) and thousands of historical sites.
Several years ago the residents of Old Bagan were forcibly moved to the newly
established New Bagan to make way for expensive tourist developments in Old
Bagan. Nyaung U also seemed to be a fairly new development, created primarily
for the purpose of tourism (most of the mid-range hotels including our hotel
were located there). We spent our two days in Bagan exploring the ruins, which
were sometimes stunningly beautiful, sometimes horribly restored, and often a
little bit repetitive. On the first evening we visited Shwe San Daw pagoda for
sunset at the suggestion of our driver. In theory, this was a great idea, as
this pagoda is central, has multiple viewing platforms, and is ugly. So, you
can get a centrally located sunset, from a high vantage point, with the relatively
aesthetically unpleasing pagoda cropped out. The problem with this idea was
that about 1000 other tourists had the same idea. The viewing platform at the
top of the pagoda (where we had prime sunset photographing positions) became
hazardously crowded. One woman was almost pushed off by some horrible man who
arrived just before sunset and pushed roughly through the crowds trying to get
a more favourable position for himself. The next evening we went somewhere much
less crowded (I can’t remember the name) and had a much more pleasurable
experience, even though the view was slightly less spectacular.
I risked my life for this photo
I didn't risk my life for this photo
On our second day in Bagan we went to all
of the non-central ruins and visited the towns New Bagan and Old Bagan (both of
which I found charming in their own light: New Bagan for the fact that it had a
genuinely Burmese vibe and wasn’t overrun by tourists, and Old Bagan because of
its physical beauty and great desserts and WIFI that we found in the restaurant
of a fancy hotel). I had insisted on visiting these more remote areas as I had
seen footage of a site near Bagan in a film (Samsara) and wished to visit that
specific place even though I did not know its name. Alas, we could not find
this amazing place so I settled for amazing desserts instead. That evening
after much searching on extremely slow internet we figured out the name of the
place (Mount Popa) and the fact that it was 50km from Bagan. I was devastated
to have missed it, so came up with the idea that we could do it as a day trip
from Mandalay (our next destination). It was quite a long drive there from
Mandalay (just under 200km) but the roads in Myanmar, at least in the central
plains region, are now excellent, so we had a lovely day trip there. Mount Popa
is not actually a Buddhist site but rather a Nat (spiritual) site of more
ancient tradition than Buddhism.
Emily in Bagan
Mount Popa
When planning our trip we had decided to
spend a day catching a ferry down the Irrawaddy River. I’ve always wanted to
visit the Irrawaddy River and thought that catching a ferry would be an
interesting experience and also a welcome break from structured sightseeing.
The ferry departed at 5am and to my disappointment was entirely set up for
tourists. I thoroughly enjoyed this day however, apart from some time that I
spent locked in the ferry toilet (getting locked in public toilets is a
recurrent problem of mine that I just don’t understand the aetiology of) and
when the stoner who was in charge of our lunch orders got my order wrong (out
of the two options). It was freezing cold when we boarded the ferry, until
about lunchtime, so Emily and I sat wrapped up in my sleeping bag except for a
brief moment when I decided to get sunrise photos. I spent the day reading most
of the new Bridget Jones novel and just watching the passing banks.
We had two days in Mandalay, the first of
which we spent on our day trip to Mount Popa and also visiting U-Bein Bridge
for a stunning sunset. This is an old teak bridge, part of which collapsed a
few years ago and was replaced by an ugly concrete replica that bears no
resemblance to the rest of the bridge. I have seen photos of this bridge from
around 8 years ago that showed a bridge with a smattering of robed monks
walking across it. Unfortunately there are now so many tourists (probably part
of the reason why the bridge collapsed, that and the rotted out posts) that
it’s hard to get a good “monk on bridge” shot. Here’s the best I managed:
We hired a small boat for about half an hour
for sunset. The price that we agreed on with the guy who was paddling the boat
was 6000 kyat (about USD 6), however then he found another tourist who was also
looking for a boat and what resulted was a big argument about the price (he
still wanted to charge the two of us 6000 and then charge the third guy an
initial 3000 kyat, despite the original price being 6000 for the two of us
privately in the boat) with him ultimately prevailing as he was the last
remaining boat and we really wanted to see the sunset from the boat (it turns
out that persistent time wasting bargaining until you’re the only option for
the other person is a great strategy, that I have now adopted myself with
taxis). The sunset was spectacular, but the extra passenger kind of detracted
from the whole experience by virtue of the fact that he clearly did not
understand boats and the simple fact that you cannot just stand up and attempt
to walk around in a 3-person boat without seriously destabilising the whole
thing.
Sunset at U-Bein Bridge
On the second day in Mandalay I was
bedridden with pretty bad food poisoning. I won’t go into this in any more
detail because nobody wants to read that.
After Mandalay we flew to Heho and from
there drove to Inle Lake. Inle Lake was my favourite place in Myanmar. We had 2
½ days at Inle Lake, the first half day we spent sleeping (Emily was exhausted
and I was still quite unwell). On our second day we did a lake tour on a
speedboat. When we booked this tour we were quite specific about wanting to see
the southern part of the lake including In Dein, and not wanting to be taken to
a bunch of shops. We’d done our research (Emily had done our research) and
people were writing that lake tours had become a tourist trap with the main
itineraries being “factories” where you are given a cursory tour of the working
area and then paraded through a showroom where you are subjected to the hard
sell. Despite the clear itinerary that we were told when we booked the tour, we
were nonetheless subjected to this northern lake shopping tour. When we raised
this with our guide he wanted to double the price of the tour in order to take
us to the southern lake (an offer that we refused). Nevertheless, we had a
great day and saw some beautiful scenery.
On our second day in the Inle Lake area we
spent the morning chilling out, receiving the worst imaginable head massages
(it was so bad I almost started laughing) and then that afternoon hiring bikes
and riding to a local winery called the Red Mountain Winery. I actually hadn’t
ridden a bike (other than an exercise bike at the gym) in almost 10 years, so I
was extremely rusty and kept getting off to push my bike whenever any traffic
approached. The winery was lovely. Here’s a picture. That evening we flew back
to Yangon.
Completely natural and unposed sunset photo that I didn't have to pay money for
In Dien
Village on Inle Lake
From Yangon we then did an overnight trip
to the Golden Rock at Kyaiktiyo. Despite the fact that this is listed as a tourist
attraction in Yangon on TripAdvisor, it is actually a lot of hard work to get
there, and, in my view, not possible as a day trip unless you hire a private
car and have a really long day. We caught a 4-hour public bus to the bottom of
the mountain range where the rock is located. This was quite pleasant apart
from the absolute lack of toilet stops and the fact that the girl sitting
across the aisle from us vomited all over the aisle 2 hours into the journey.
From the town at the bottom of the mountains (Kyaiktiyo) the transport
situation became really interesting. The only, and I mean only, transport
option up the mountain were these refurbished dump trucks. The big trays on the
back, originally designed to carry loads of rubble and then mechanically tip
those loads out, had been converted to hold lots of very small people. Seven
“benches” (planks of wood) had been erected, and the man managing passengers
insisted that we sit 6 people across. The problem was that Emily and I were
significantly too large for this and the 6th person in our row (an
extremely malnourished man) was forced to squeeze into the 10cm between my
greater trochanter and the edge of the truck. Effectively, he was sitting on my
lap, which was not a problem in terms of weight (there was no way he weighed
more than about 35kg, I think he was cachexic) but it was nonetheless extremely
awkward and uncomfortable. We had initially tried to purchase tickets in the
front with the driver but were told definitively that we had to ride in the
back (ticket price was $2.50 for the back and $3.00 for up the front. The price
sign stated that these prices included life insurance, which confused us until
we started the journey and began to realise that many people had probably
collected this insurance pay out).
Red Mountain winery near Inle Lake
The Golden Rock
It turned out the lack of personal space in
the truck was the least of our worries. The road was absolutely treacherous; by
far the most dangerous road that I have ever seen, and I’ve been on lots of
dodgy Cliffside roads in India and Nepal. Luckily, due to the over-crowdedness
of the truck, I couldn’t see the road too well, but I could sense how dangerous
the whole situation was. Up the top of the mountain we asked around for
alternative transport options for the trip back down the next morning. It turned
out that only these broken down 1970s trucks were licensed to do the trip and
we had no option but to get on another one to head back down the mountain. This
time I insisted on riding in the front carriage with the driver due to motion
sickness and because I had this theory that at least up the front we had a roll
cage that would protect us in the event of the truck rolling over, which I
thought was quite likely as it had frequently tipped onto two wheels on the way
up the mountain. Riding up front I realised just how crazy the whole situation
was. The truck’s brakes kept failing, activating the emergency brakes, the road
was in much worse condition (sometimes with an incline in excess of 45 degrees)
than originally estimated and the driver was chewing khat, a mild hallucinogen
and driving like an absolute mad man. We made it down alive and then caught the
“tourist” bus back to Yangon (we were the only foreigners on the bus, it should
have been called the “upper class” bus instead). I had to take another
phenergan on the bus back to Yangon, so the rest of the day is a bit of a blur
to me, but apparently I went to bed at 7.30pm, which is classic phenergan
behaviour.
The death trap tip trucks
Some interesting observations about
Myanmar:
- - They drive on the right hand side of the road yet drive cars designed for driving on the left hand side of the road, which makes overtaking (a common practice) extremely dangerous
- - People are extremely friendly and welcoming
- - Prices are extremely expensive. This would rate as the equal most expensive country that I’ve travelled to alongside Cuba in 2010 when there was still no private enterprise and there was a strictly segregated currency for foreigners
- - One of the reasons for the high prices was the high number of tourists. Everywhere we went (except for the golden rock) was overrun with tourists. It’s clearly a new hot destination, but the problem is that tourism seems to be changing the place in a negative way (eg endless souvenir shops around tourist sites and aggressive touts). It’s also a very difficult place to travel in a flexible way. When we booked our hotels back in September (I’m a microorganiser) some places were already fully booked for January. We met several tourists who’d wanted to book as they travelled but had ended up having to choose between paying $300 a night for a luxury resort and sleeping rough
- - There is a certain amount of excitement and anticipation about the 2015 national elections. I wish them all the best and hope that they elect some strong leaders that help the country achieve a lasting peace and prosperity.
This post is long overdue (I actually
didn’t have time to write it when I was in Indonesia) but expect another one
documenting my time in Indonesia shortly J













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