Sun-Ling and John have been traveling the earth since 2008 while blogging, eating vegetarian and vegan, and riding public transportation. We love uphill day hikes, 20th-century architecture, Roman ruins, all bodies of water, local markets, shopping for groceries, aqueducts, miradors, trip planning, blablacar, and more.
Search This Blog
Tuesday, January 29, 2008
photo from Burma
http://www.flickr.com/photos/meckleychina/2227588739/
Impressions from Burma
is the encounters along the way that fascinate us, take us by
surprise, touch our hearts, and put us in awe.
In the 11th century King Anawrahta set out to make Burma the center of
Theravada Buddhism. This is still very much evident today. We have
seen more buddhas and stupas in than our whole lifetimes' combined,
not even counting those we pass by en route.
The Burmese are a gentle people. They work hard, and unlike the
Chinese, they know when to stop. This makes it pleasant and easy to
travel here. Relative to the level of development, there are
comparatively few thefts, scams, begging, and peddling, except for the
painting and postcard peddlers in Bagan.
For the level of development, or the lack of, we consider Burma clean,
though it has a fair amount of trash. Toilets do not smell (this is
huge for Sun-Ling); trash is gathered and burned, largely at the
individual level; horse carts wear diapers in town. The Burmese are
clean. Men, women, and children, can be seen at every body of water,
at all times of the day, bathing, doing laundry, and scrubbing
sandals.
We would be lying if we said Burma has no roads and no electricity,
but it would not be that far from the truth. Without a doubt that
responsibility lies with the government. Nevertheless it makes us
wonder why the UN has to build foot bridges in villages where people
are goldfoiling buddhas beyond recognition in fantastic temples.
By the 3rd week we have lost most of the weight we have gained in
Shanghai over the past two years. If it were not for antibiotics, we
could have died too.
We are now trying to work Burma in for our trans- Eurasia trip next year.
Sunday, January 06, 2008
Saturday, January 05, 2008
Going to Burma
Good weather in Kunming
stayed up until after 6.
We had a wonderful overnight (2-night) visit to the Stone Forest and the nearby town.
KM has been fun too, fantastic food.
Tuesday, January 01, 2008
Most Recent Post
Sardinia: Capo Caccia
From Alghero, we managed to use the not so frequent off-season buses to make an outing to Capo Caccia. We first took the bus to its final st...
Most Popular Posts of Last 30 Days
-
When Indigo airlines canceled our Colombo-Hyderabad flight, we took India and Pakistan off our itinerary. Considering we are in the 10th yea...
-
We liked walking around Tunis looking at the many interesting buildings both in the medina and new city, this time as much as the last time....
-
Kerkouane is not a photogenic site, but was inscribed by UNESCO in 1985. Since it was abandoned after the First Punic War, it is the only Ph...
-
From Yining, China, we began a somewhat difficult two-day journey to Karakol, Kyrgyzstan via Zharkent, Kazakhstan. The easy route would hav...
-
From Ajaccio we took the once daily, weekday only, overpriced bus to the village of Piana. I had wondered whether this special visit was wor...
-
From Tunisia, we headed to Corsica and Sardinia. Normally we would have started from the south. However, since we wanted to be in Sardinia f...
-
A friend who had recently been to Tikal and Copan commented to us that he liked Copan better. Which of the two Mayan ruins would I like the...