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 Myanmar travel tales

Our customers share their travelling experiences in Myanmar. Read about first hand stories on travel tips and guides, events, entertainment,shopping, food, business and transportation. Also, you might want to read our Bagan city guide, Inle Lake city guide, Mandalay city guide, and Yangon(Rangoon) city guide.


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G Subramaniam 09 February 2004
Stayed at  Thazin Garden Hotel, Bagan - Bagan, Myanmar.
In Bagan do not miss out on sunset from the top of one of the temple. A scene to remember for life.

V Mcbride 29 January 2004
Stayed at  Bagan Hotel River View - Bagan, Myanmar.
We have now visited the three great spiritual and archeological sites of Southeast Asia - Luang Prabang, Angkor Wat, and Bagan. We found Bagan to be the most interesting and the most alive. We drove from Bagan to Inle Lake and spent two full days at Inle Lake and found that area to be very interesting. We came back from our trip to Myanmar very opposed to sanctions and believing that sanctions are counterproductive.

E Perlo (2nd call) 28 January 2004
Stayed at  Dusit Inya Lake Resort - Yangon, Myanmar.
Yangoon is a small and interesting city. We loved the Shwedagon Pagoda. Not so easy to find good local food, but some good Chinese food available. took the ferry over the river and did some exploring which had its moments, riding in some very rickety and ancient tuk-tuks, but good fun exploring the local markets.

E Perlo 27 January 2004
Stayed at  Sandoway Resort - Ngapali, Myanmar.
Possible to eat at small street restaurants along the road, lots of fresh fish and rice basically. Not a lot of variety, but pleasant enough. The beach is great and the fishermans's villages interesting. Watching the fishermen's boats come in every morning with the catch was just great.

E Norton 26 January 2004
Stayed at  Grand Plaza Parkroyal Yangon - Yangon, Myanmar.
Yangon is a very interesting city, fascinating markets, good buys. Augustines' Antiques has good buys. Green Elephant and Ashoka are good restaurants. Be prepared for very poor communications (telephone and FAX) within Myanmar and very expensive international communications. We were ripped off at the "official" exchange rate booth at the airport just after leaving customs. Try to change most of your money at the hotels or in the markets. Otherwise, officials are for the most part friendly and helpful. Bagan is a must place to visit. We have visited Luang Prabang, Angkor Wat, and Bagan, and found Bagan the most fascinating.

E Perlo 22 January 2004
Stayed at  Popa Mountain Resort - Mandalay, Myanmar.
We reached Mt Popa by taxi (about 40 minutes), through interesting countryside, stopping only at a palm plantation to smoke some cheroots and drink the local brews. The kids rode on buffaloes. You can trek in the hills, or horseride, feed the monkeys at the temple or go to the deer reservation.

C Yang 21 January 2004
Stayed at  Emerald Land Inn - Mandalay, Myanmar.
We hired a car to get around at the cost of USD17 per day. The English speaking driver was very helpful and he served as a tourist guide to us as well. He recommended us to see the sunset at Ubengdada (old bridge) which was one of the most wonderful experiences I ever had.

J Loh 21 January 2004
Stayed at  Grand Plaza Parkroyal Yangon - Yangon, Myanmar.
The first must-see is Shwe Dagon Pagoda - huge awesome gilded pagoda built on highland. You need tough soles - you have to walk barefoot (even socks are not allowed!) in the scorching sun on the floor and tiles and when you pause to compose a photo - you will wish you had even thicker skin!

I have learnt to get the locals - whether from the pagoda, or from the market, or from the restaurants, to help me hail taxis and to tell them exactly where I wanted to go and to ask the price (to ensure I don't get fleeced or sent to the wrong destinations).

So with an elderly lady's help at the pagoda, I headed for “must-see” number two - the Bogyoke/ Aung San Market, where I bought a tiny pendant from two very sweet sisters. J's Irrawady Dream - a craft/ souvenir shop cum bistro in a garden setting. It's supposed to be pretty famous, having been featured in home décor publications; even their ads look alluring.

I decided to have a snack at the enchanting garden and was pleasantly surprised they served “French country food and French bread baked in Yangon”. I ordered pumpkin soup and a tomato pie but the soup came with five huge pieces of bread and the pie came with a large salad. Ah, French food, American portion!

If the Burmese have been labelled ‘laid-back’, they should not be equated with tardiness, which is so common among other Asians I have encountered - like Singaporeans, Thais, Indonesians and Malaysians.

The Burmese are very punctual too, if not early. From car pick up, to hotel transport to airport on my departure, to my guide to Bago, 80 km from Yangon. In fact, the guide was 35 minutes early for my tour and I had to rush through my shower to meet him! It turned out that he had wanted me to arrive at the Kyetkhawai Monastery in good time to see the daily procession of monks going for their 10.30 am lunch.

It was a good two-hour bumpy drive and when we arrived, I had to walk barefoot from the road where I alighted to the monastery - dirt, heat, and all... It did not help that I needed the toilet and was led to one wet and slimy squat style one... still barefoot.... While waiting for the procession to start my guide decided to take me to the backyard to “see a lovely river and take a picture. Don't worry - we can wash our feet when we return to the monastery,” he said.

The gong sounded and scores of monks in orderly lines shuffled past in their maroon robe and bowl slung across their shoulder. They filed past two huge metal receptacles from which a monk on duty at each receptacle dished out rice into each monk's bowl.

Then they entered into the dining hall. Lunch was a Spartan affair of rice, boiled cauliflower and vegetable soup. Their first meal of the day had been 6 am and this was their second, and last. At a separate table the principal of the monastery - the chief monk - had a lavish lunch - meat, an uncountable assortment of dishes to go with the rice and even sweets to go after that. At other tables, where the teacher-monks ate, it was still lavish but perhaps less elaborate with more “countable” dishes.

I suppose it is also the same in any country where you have a melange of the poor, the rich and the super rich. The rich locals get to saunter into Feel Myanmar Restaurant to savour local cuisine - even for breakfast.

The hotel concierge recommended Feel when I asked about a place for local cuisine for dinner. Ever so considerate and not wanting me to venture out too far, he suggested either Feel or Sandy, rather than the more famous Green Elephant.

I could understand his concern. Even though I have been reading about how safe the country is, no one wants to be in the middle of a lonely road when there is a blackout, which, according to my tour guide, happens frequently. In fact he was out with a friend the previous night without a torch and the total blackout caused his friend to fall into a hole or ditch.

It was a bit of a surprise when I arrived at the restaurant. It resembled more like a dining hall with a nasi padang stall! I was greeted warmly and led to the stall to select the many pre-cooked dishes. They didn't look terribly Burmese and very much similar to what you can find at foodcourts back home.

Nevertheless, it surely must mean something - for both local and tourists alike to frequent the place! My meal of rice, three vegetable dishes, complimentary condiments, appetisers, desserts and tea totalled less than USD 2.

E Perlo 20 January 2004
Stayed at  Thazin Garden Hotel, Bagan - Bagan, Myanmar.
Bagan has to be one of the best places to visit in all of Asia - totally fabulous. We liked to get around by horse drawn cart as it gave you freedom and the opportunity to enjoy the silence and be away from the more crowded sites.

A Lee 12 January 2004
Stayed at  Traders Hotel Yangon - Yangon, Myanmar.
The hotel was centrally located, so we could walk to most places. Used the internet facility across the street from Traders Hotel. The outdoor market was also within walking distance. Without being able to use credit cards, or officially change money, a daily concern was making sure we had enough small denominations to pay for meals, taxis and entrance fees. People are very handsome and wonderfully unselfconscious -- both men and women walk around the city streets in traditional dress with yellow cream from tree bark on their cheeks to protect against the sun. Shoes are removed before entering shops or homes and tea is served to customers. I agree with other reviewers that sunset at the Schwedegon pagoda is magical.


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