Tuesday, May 26, 2020

Myanmar 2001 - Festivals and celebrations


In the course of travelling around Myanmar, we encountered scenes of the culture and history of its people
On auspicious days, women queue with offerings for the temple

Amazing how they do this.....brisk walking with these elaborate gifts on their heads!
Children making a beeline for the temple, but with lesser gifts... 
This is where donations, of all shapes and colours, end up
 
Religious festivals often involve parading trucks 
filled with colourful offerings 
sometimes, with a performer in the back
Procession to celebrate an auspicious day, perhaps a pagoda festival
with an entourage of men only, clad in traditional longyi
and backed by musicians

One interesting event which we witnessed was the Elephant Dance Festival. Elephants are part of Myanmar's history and culture and played a key role in the teak industry. The Elephant Dance Festival is a religious and cultural event held every October to pay homage to the elephant. 

Life-size elephant effigy made of bamboo and cloth, colourfully decorated
Two men inside the cloth elephant perform to the accompaniment of classical music
Villages compete for the honour of being the team to perform at the local temple
Junior versions of the Elephant Dance are less grand productions of plain plastic
with teams of boys performing for fun and to collect donations
Two kids taking a break after a hectic performance 

The Festival of Lights, held in November, is the second most important event in the Burmese calendar after the Thingyan Festival or Buddhist New Year.  Sky lanterns are released to celebrate the full moon day as an offering to the heavens or to ward off evil spirits. The most famous one is held in Taungyi, central Myanmar.

                              
Preparing the huge frame for the hot air sky lantern
Lighting the candles that will generate the hot air to lift the sky lantern
Intricately designed sky lanterns slowly rising into the night sky
It's holiday time, with fun things like ferris wheel 
  and merry-go-round, both operated by man-power!
stalls with hot food
game of chance
Even a giant puppet



























Saturday, May 23, 2020

Myanmar 2001 - Golden Rock, Mon state

Golden Rock, on the summit of a 1100 m mountain, is located about 200 km east of Yangon. The Kyaiktiyo pagoda which sits on top of Golden Rock is the third most important Buddhist pilgrimage site in Myanmar, after the Shwedagon and Mahamuni pagodas. From the base of the mountain, a bus takes visitors up to the entrance from where it is another 1.2 km walk to the pagoda. The granite boulder itself sits precariously overhanging the edge of a rock ledge, and appears about to tumble down at any time into the valley below. The golden colour of the rock is due to the gold leaves pasted on it by pilgrims. Legend has it that the strand of hair enshrined in the pagoda balances the boulder and prevents it from falling over.  

Our destination seen through the spotting scope
The "bus" taking visitors up the mountain to Golden Rock
 
For the last leg of the journey, sedan chairs can take one up in comfort
No customers, so why not have a snooze!
We opted to walk up, like these two pilgrims
Young porters with man-sized loads 
Monks having their first views through a spotting scope
Stalls line the entrance selling flutes and, of all things, wooden guns!
Other stalls had traditional medicine and the familiar Tanaka wood  
Sadly, a few also offered more sinister items such as the head of a Serow 
Incredibly, there was even a bear paw!
After the depressing stalls, the welcome sight of Golden Rock 
Kyaiktiyo Pagoda on the finely-balanced Golden Rock 
Affixing gold leaves on Golden Rock as veneration for the Buddha
and doing the tourist thing
before the bumpy but happy ride down the mountain




Monday, May 18, 2020

Myanmar 2001 - Inle Lake, Shan state, western Myanmar

Inle Lake was delegated as the first Man & Biosphere Reserve in Myanmar in 2015. The lake sits at an elevation of c. 880 m asl and is 22 km long.  

Serene Inle Lake backed by mountains
The local Intha people live in houses on stilts 
Long boats waiting for tourists

Gulls following tourist boat for handouts 
No escape! Surrounded by boats with souvenirs for sale
Fishing is a way of life on the lake........
....as well as tending the famous Floating Gardens


Another unique Inle feature - leg rowing

Market near Phaung Paw Oo Pagoda

Fried coot, anyone? Didn't dare try!


Handcrafting silverware
Baskets made from reeds in the lake