Archive for the ‘Travel’ Category

The first flight with propeller


2007
09.04

Chicken (sort of)

It is such a thrill to read the travelogues on the Yangonow site. The following gives you a good idea what will happen when you do a word-for-word translation from Japanese to English:

At Yangon airport, checking was rigid. But it was manual. It was ridiculous. The first flight with propeller left from the airport earlier than the time in the schedule. That time was 6:45. But we had already been in the air to 6:30. Most of the seats were occupied by the westerners. Wee! Wee! Wee! The propellers started to wind slowly. When the plane reached the end of the runway, it ran making the sound ‘Gyi, Gyi,’ I had laughed with thrill of pleasure. But the face of my friend looked like a dead one.

http://www.yangonow.com/eng/magazine/essay/kawasaki_m/essay01.html

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Bangkok mashup


2006
08.27

The indomitable Bangkok Recorder webzine has mashed up Google map with Bangkok’s finest attractions. Now this is what I call service!

http://bangkokrecorder.com/google-map/bangkok-map.html

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Light and shadow in the Golden Land


2006
08.25

Sule Pagoda Road in Yangon, Myanmar
Photograph © Ralf-André Lettau

The following contains selected links to free articles about Myanmar (Burma) in the New York Times. Free registration is required.

A comprehensive list  of free and premium stories is also available.

News

1981-08-09: Burmese Leader to Quit After 19 Years in Power

Gen. Ne Win, who has led this Southeast Asian nation for 19 years, announced today that he would resign from the presidency in November.

1987-06-26: 45 Are Found Dead in Burma In an Airliner That Vanished

All 45 people aboard a Burma Airways plane missing since Sunday died when the aircraft crashed into an 8,200-foot mountain in eastern Burma, the Government reported Wednesday.

1988-08-12: Burma on the Brink

The defiant protests exploding across Burma testify to more than a quarter century of repression and misrule. Despite an overwhelming advantage in firepower, the military Government is on the ropes.

Martial law no longer intimidates people. Unarmed protesters march fearlessly against soldiers and police. Following a pattern seen decades ago in South Vietnam and more recently in Tibet, Buddhist monks are turning from spiritual contemplation to more active defiance.

1988-08-16: Rangoon Is Reported Quiet As Burmese Look for Victims

Rangoon was quiet today as Burmese crowded in front of a hospital to search for names of friends and relatives on a list of the casualties in last week’s anti-Government protests, a Western tourist reported.

1988-08-21: The Students Behind Burma’s Revolt

“We have no leader, we have no arms,” said a Burmese student, lifting the bandanna that masked his face as he marched through Rangoon on a recent day of anti-Government protests. “But one day we will remove this Government,” he went on. “They are shooting at us and we will die. But we will not die in vain.”

1988-09-11: New Era in Burma

“There is wall-to-wall support for the establishment of genuine multiparty democracy in Burma. The Government there has completely unraveled. We are at the dawn of a new era, and it is very much in the interest of the United States to make it as clear as possible, as quickly as possible, that we are strongly on the side of democracy rather than dictatorship in Burma.” – Representative Stephen J. Solarz, Democrat of Brooklyn, after a visit to Burma last weekend.

1989-01-03: 100,000 Burmese at Funeral of an Independence Figure

More than 100,000 Burmese poured into the streets of Rangoon today to join a funeral procession for the widow of Aung San, who led the country to independence from Britain.

1989-06-20: Burma Takes Another Name: Now, the Union of Myanmar

Burma changed its name in English today to the Union of Myanmar, and it renamed the capital Yangon, the Working People’s Daily said. The nationality was also changed to Myanmar.

1989-06-22: Troops Kill a Protester In a Rally in Rangoon

Troops fired on a demonstration by about 500 people in the Burmese capital today, killing one protester, the Rangoon radio said.

It was the first reported fatal shooting by security forces in Rangoon since the army took power in a brutal crackdown on pro-democracy demonstrations last September, when diplomats said at least 1,000 were killed.

1991-01-20: Travel Advisory: Alert Cites Burmese Unrest

Americans considering visiting Myanmar (formerly Burma) are advised by the United States Department of State to exercise caution because of political unrest and are warned about air and train travel dangers there. A travel advisory from the department says while security conditions have improved slightly since last summer, political dissatisfaction continues and armed security forces are often on the streets of all major cities.

Travel

1983-09-11: In Burma, Ordinary Is Brilliant

Maung Kown beckons a pair of visitors back into his simple pony cab at the end of a hot Burmese day of touring. Sunset nears, signaling the start of a daily pilgrimage. Settling into the bouncy rhythm and clatter of the pony’s unhurried gait, the foreigners are conveyed along Pagan’s dusty plain to a tall pagoda. The driver collects all footwear and sends his passengers up its warm stone steps. Once they are at the top, the light waning, the scorched brown earth begins to grow coppery. Whitewashed columns and walls take on burning hues and even plain brick is fired brilliant oranges and reds. After the sun disappears, fluorescent bars blink on at the pagoda’s stupas, or towers, and the sky glows 30 minutes more in a charged but serene display. Suddenly, the seemingly tired, ancient landscape is suffused with a sense of renewed inner life.

1983-09-11: Perfection Endures Amid Decay

Crowded ferries on the Rangoon River practically vanish behind squalls of rain. The palms go wild. Umbrellas come out – black brollies for the laity and paper- and-bamboo hti for monks. Everybody runs for cover. It’s time for tea or sleep, and after a while the sun appears, turning the pavements into mirrors for swirls of pigeons. This is Rangoon in the wet season, from May to October. Veterans call midwinter better – it is dry then and almost brisk at night. But the Burmese capital has its charms in the rain, which lets up often enough. They say the pagodas of Pagan in Upper Burma are even more unearthly than Rangoon’s 368-foot-high Shwe Dagon. But you have to travel to Rangoon to get up north, and Rangoon isn’t quite like going to Chicago. It’s a crumbling city – nothing physical has changed much since the 1930’s – and it brings out the mock-romantic in some visitors. One day in the barrel-vaulted dining room of the old Strand Hotel, a group of youngish Western tourists gathered around a spotted tablecloth to plot their next move. Tibet? The Amazon? Two men wore Panama hats. You got the feeling that they had just seen “Raiders of the Lost Ark.”

1986-06-08: Burma’s Splendid Isolation

Burma has long subscribed to the dictum that good fences make good neighbors. By limiting contact with the outside world since 1962, Burma’s xenophobic socialist-military government has largely insulated the country from its neighbors in Southeast Asia, and from the last half of the 20th century. Things eccentric and magnificent are captured in this isolation.

1986-06-08: Burma’s Splendid Isolation: In Summer, Its Own Pace

“You could come back in November,” Sheila M. K. Thwin said philosophically as we waited in a small pagoda in Pegu to escape a summer cloudburst.

If you go to Burma in June, July or August, it will probably rain, and the Burmese will certainly tell you again and again how much better the weather is in other seasons.

1986-06-08: Spritual Land of Prayers And Pagodas

As we now believe pop stars and sports heroes are superhuman, the Burmese believe in nats. Their 37 nats are half human, half spirit, angels and demons asking offerings not to make our lives difficult. In ancient Burma before Buddhism came, every village had its special nat in each tree and field. There were wind and water nats, rice and wild game nats. Then a reforming king, who founded the first Burmese Empire, decided that too many nats spoiled the brotherhood and decreed that there would be only 36, commanded by a king nat. Rather like the saints of the Roman Catholic Church, each nat had his or her duty of intercession between God and mankind. Most of them had been human beings who had died famously or tragically like the beatified Christian martyrs; stories about their lives and deaths are a bardic history of Burma. They have marvelous titles such as Lady Golden Sides, The Brown Lord of Due South, The Lord With the White Umbrella, The Younger Inferior Gold, and Lady Bandy Legs.

1994-04-24: On the Road to Myanmar

For travelers, much has changed in Myanmar, the long-isolated nation still better known to the outside world as Burma: Tourist visas, once good only for a week, are now good for up to a month; foreign visitors are no longer being coerced into changing money at a ludicrous, larcenous official exchange rate that at one time had made Mandalay as expensive as Manhattan; there are several international-standard hotels and many more on the way; with a new international airline, Myanmar Airways International, flying to Myanmar need no longer be a death-defying act.

1995-11-12: Yangon, A City Of Light And Shadow

For a time earlier this year, the best show in Yangon began shortly after 3 in the afternoon, when the rapturous crowds along a leafy stretch of University Avenue broke into cheers at the first sight of their heroine, her hair usually tied up in a bun that had been laced with fragrant blooms from her overgrown garden.

1998-12-13: Mirages

Like Ms. Lear in Venice, I could not believe I was seeing this “for real,” that this was not a photo, but actually thousands of temple ruins, lost and lonely, as though waiting for their builders to return and claim them once more.

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Wannabe explorers, take note


2006
07.09

Tahir Shah’s “Expert’s Picks: Travel & Adventure” in this Sunday’s Washington Post book reviews:

Thesiger’s lesson for me, a young wannabe explorer in search of a mentor, was to search for people rather than places. Find great people, he would say, and you will find great places.

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What’s so lonely about this planet?


2006
05.10

“Lonely Planet is the bible in places like India,” Mark Ellingham, the founder of Rough Guides, the cheeky British series, says. “If they recommend the Resthouse Bangalore, then half the guesthouses there rename themselves Resthouse Bangalore.” The series’ authority is such that the team accompanying Jay Garner, the first American administrator of occupied Iraq, used “Lonely Planet Iraq” to draw up a list of historical sites that should not be bombed or looted. The writers Marianne Wiggins, Jilly Cooper, and Pico Iyer have used Lonely Planet guides to immerse themselves in the feel of a far-off locale for novels set in, respectively, Cameroon, Colombia, and Iran. And, in perhaps the greatest tribute, the Vietnamese have begun to manufacture ersatz Lonely Planet guides to complement their line of fake Rolexes.

More about the Lonely Planet guidebook empire and its founders, Tony and Maureen Wheeler, in the New Yorker piece, “The Parachute Artist: Have Tony Wheeler’s Guidebooks Travelled Too Far?”.

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