Friday, January 24, 2014

Pattaya, Thailand

Welcome to Pattaya, a beach resort town a couple of hours south of Bangkok. This is not only the prostitution capital of Thailand, but also a get-away place for Bangkok residents.



 Narrow beachfront, covered with chairs and umbrellas. Where's the sand?

 Boat hotel anyone?


There is a visible police presence here, live officers on foot, car and bicycle.

 Nice sculpture on the promenade.
 Your own peanut butter toast, if you so desire.
 Para-sailing in the early morning, before the wind comes up.
This looked tacky in the daytime, parked on the street. Who knew how fun it would look at night?
 I never saw what the special gift for darling might be. Take a guess????
 Yesterday afternoon there was a commotion across the street from the hotel. Within an hour there was a big tent, a podium complete with speakers, and many groups milling about. These are the Shutdown Bangkok, Restart Thailand protesters. As of today, the Thailand government has declared a state of emergency.
 After about an hour of speeches, the group moved into the street for a big parade, complete with banners and bands. No whistles for this group.

This was my last destination on the trip. Now back to one Bangkok overnight, fly to Narita/Toyko, then to LAX. It's been a wonderful trip with lots and lots of exciting experiences.

Tuesday, January 21, 2014

Inle Lake, North Shan State, Myanmar Part 2

Blogger is not cooperating at the moment, so Inle Lake will be in two parts.
Peat cut from the shoreline to make floating garden beds.
Miles and miles of floating gardens held in place by bamboo poles.
Heading down one row of crops.
All around the perimeter of the lake are these floating gardens, first encouraged in the 60's. Now, 50 years later, environmental people have found that the lake is 1/3 the size it was in 1940. They speculate that these gardens have contributed to the shrinking of the lake.
 Sunset from the hotel. The hotel built on stilts looks fancy at first, but the room next to mine had a resident rat. Each cottage had a nice front porch with comfortable chairs.
 This could be in Burmese, if you click the right button.
 It was nice to see clouds in the blue sky, a welcome change from Asia-city gray.
 Heading upriver from the lake through a bamboo water-slow-down feature.
 Local cattle crossing. Note the low water level.
 More fees. Take off the final zero and you get USDollar conversion amount. This is fifty cents.
 Small lakeside villages cooperate to make a few products to sell at the marketplace. This woman is making rice paper "tortillas," the first step in making crispy rice snack food. She's using a thin slurry of rice and water.
Second step is to let these dry on bamboo racks.


Another woman is cooking the dried rice rounds in very hot sand over an open fire. This puffs up the rounds and cooks them within 20 seconds or so. Absolutely no sand sticks to them. Amazing!
 Beautiful coloring on these cattle.
 There are about 1,000 weather-beaten zedi at Shwe Inn Thein Paya. Some are being reconstructed.
 Dusty monk puppets at Inthein.
Ethnnic minority woman with her baby. Note the white substance on her face. It is called thanaka and is made from the ground up bark of trees. Here's a link. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thanaka
Many people in Myanmar use this, women, children, men and boys. Any marketplace has the bark and the stone to grind it on, whether in the city or in a rural location. It is applied daily in the morning as makeup and sunscreen.
 Woven Burmese backpacks, worn with straps over the shoulders or one longer strap on the forehead.
 Freshwater eels.
 If you like puppets, you'd love these colorful ones.
Ethnic women heading home from the marketplace.
 Ring-necked woman from ethnic tribe.
 Boat drivers hanging out.
 Time honored scales.
Phaung Daw Oo Paya floating image on a barge that is moved around the lake at festival time.
 This is a country where modest dress is worn and special rules apply at religious sites. At the larger sites, appropriate clothing is provided. Footwear is always removed.
Most of the labor in this country is still done by hand.

Monday, January 20, 2014

Inle Lake, Shan State, Myanmar

 We flew from Bagan to Heho, the closest airport to Inle Lake. I found this area the most interesting of all the areas we visited. The ethnic peoples live close to the land and the water, not a lot of Westernization has taken place in the lifestyles of these communities.



























Amazing handwork on these umbrellas.
Very old teak wood monastery


Ethnic minority women




Intha leg rower

On the hotel main deck, Inle Lake behind me.

Our hotel on the Lake
Our group leader, Su.
Learning how early in life.
Local school.

Inle Lake school bus.