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Showing posts with label Buddha. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Buddha. Show all posts

Tuesday, 3 August 2010

Mandalay in Myanmar

Mandalay in Myanmar, some of hundreds of pictures taken:

At a monastry in Mandalay, 1,500 monks queue for their main meal in silence
monk meal portrait

monk meal high contast

monk meal orderly queue

At a ceremony where novice monks enter the monastery for a short period

novice monk ceremony close up

novice parade retreating

Novice parade parents

Novice groupings

Mandalay is one of the centres of Buddha image creation, both bronze and marble

Bronze casting emerging Buddha

cracked casting

Marble Buddha factory

Buddha to go


Lots of colonial buildings but I'll leave you with the Post Office which is typically British and was also typically closed when we wanted to use it.

mandalay general post office
Thre are more, many, many, many more on Flickr, feel free to click through to them. I'll post pictures from Inlay, Bagan and Yangon very soon.

Tuesday, 5 August 2008

Laos, Plain of Jars

This summer we stayed (relatively) local and did a round trip from HCMC, to Thailand and Laos then back through the North of Vietnam stopping at Hanoi, Hoi An and Hue before heading back down here. We have a side trip to Singapore sorted for the weekend but that doesn't count as holidays because it's mainly opticians and knicker multi packs.

This time we visited Xieng Khuang province, home of the giant and mysterious stone jars and one of the most bombed areas in the most bombed country in the world. MAG, the Mines Advisory Group gives good information on unexploded bomb clearance projects in Laos.

Meanwhile: Pictures

Plain of Jars, Phonsovan, Laos

Jars, purpose unknown.

Lip, Plain of Jars, Laos

Plain of Jars, Laos

There are thousands to see, and almost as many will make it to the Flickr account, click on any picture to take you there where you can spend hours looking at someone elses holiday pictures. Irresistible.

The Mines Advisory Group are doing a good job but it's a vast undertaking.
Mines Advisory Group Warning

Below is a marker identifying the end of the safe zone. There's no way I was crossing it.
Path marker, Mines Advisory Group, Laos

The results of further bombing are all too visible in the old capital city of Xieng Khuang, Muang Khoung, flattened with only a few exceptions.

Here, the ruins of a hospital built by the French during their tenure.

Ruined French Hospital, Muang Khoun, Laos

In the same area is a ruined temple, the Buddha still nearly intact but showing terrible ravages.

Bomb damage to temple in Laos

Ravaged Buddha, Laos

More on Laos later, I'm still organising the pictures I took.

Sunday, 13 January 2008

Holiday pictures, Laos

I finally got around to uploading the remaining pictures of Laos to Flickr. There are still several hundred on the hard drive waiting to be sorted out but I thought I'd share a few here before I get back to the business of everyday life in Vietnam.

Food and Food related stuff
Woven baskets
Woven baskets for holding sticky rice, eaten with your fingers and served at most meals. It's the most substantial rice I've eaten.

River Weed collection
Collecting and processing water weed, it looks like the same bright green, fibrous stuff you see growing in rivers all over the place, I didn't know it was edible but it's sold in hanks in markets in Laos. It's deep fried before eating and the younger stuff is considered better because it's less tough.

Lunch provided
Noodle soup, part of the package on the VIP bus from Luang Prabang to Vientiane. Beer Laos not included in price.

oranges
It was orange season and the air by the river smelled wonderful, even at night when the oranges were all away.

Transport
Tuk Tuk
Tuk Tuk cheap cheap
Tuk tuks and similar vehicles are the main form of in town transport, there's a good bus network for going further afield. Tuk tuks are cool during the day, chilly at night and dusty whenever you get out of town but they're much more interesting to ride than taxis. This was taken on New Years Day in Luang Prabang, called International New Year, Laos has it's own, Tet is celebrated by many and the ethnic minorities have their own New Year too, good place to go if you like fresh starts.

King of Bus
Sorry about the lamp post in the foreground but I coudn't get a better angle. This is King Of Bus, the VIP bus from Luang Prabang to Vientiane. There are two a day and for $6 you get air conditioning, pretty good suspension, endless Lao Pop videos, water, a wet wipe, a cake and lunch. You also see some of the world's most stunning mountain scenery. I couldn't get any pictures of it because we didn't stop going through the mountains and my camera's anti shake just wasn't up to coping with it.

We were dreading a nine hour bus journey and wishing we'd got better organised to fly back down to Vientiane but it turned out to be one of the highlights of the trip.

Vespa with sidecar, Vientiane
Lots of Vespas and Piaggios around Laos, most in excellent condition. The country is landlocked so there's very little salt in the air hence little rust. I loved this one with a sidecar but couldn't imagine sitting in it in HCMC.

The Head of the Herd
Stephen takes the lead while taking elephants down for a bath in the river. I'm at the back right stepping out of line on the biggest elephant of them all. They were incredible creatures and while we didn't get anywhere near controlling them they and the mahouts were very indulgent and let us believe we were in charge.

We spent the night in a little hut on stilts and at dawn took ourselves and the elephants for a morning bath, then we got to take off the silly mahout suits.

Vientiane domestic departures
We flew Air Loas to Luang Prabang in a plane I've never heard of with the most garish upholstery and seats that flipped forward to let people in and out. This picture makes domestic departures look quite swish, it's not but it's efficient and got us where we were going.

Scenery

Finally some random images of things I saw and liked.

Sunsets
Light up time Vientiane

Orange candles

Votives

Young monks

Young Monks

Reflections

Reflections

Tad Sae Waterfall

Tad Sae Waterfall


Images of Buddha

Buddah low light

Golden hand

If you get a chance, go.

Tuesday, 8 January 2008

Laos

We had an amazing trip to Loas flying into Vientiane from Saigon via Cambodia. We liked it so much that we left a lot unseen as it's fairly obvious we're going to go back.

Gilded Buddha

The architecture and statues are stunning, I filled two memory cards on the camera. If you want to see them all (and frankly I can't think of a better way of spending four hours than looking at someone elses holiday pictures) click on any of the pictures to go to Flickr.

Food is fresh and tasty, there are a lot of higher end restaurants in Vientiane and Luang Prabang but we honestly didn't have one bad meal no matter where we ate. Well, there was the weird sweet curry in Vientiane but that was par for the course because it was Stephens birthday and he always gets a dodgy curry on that day.


There were men in santa hats.
Men in santa hats 1

Around every corner was a classic image.
Study

Honest Tourist Attraction notices
Patuxai Monument, the vertical runway

Honest, Patuxai
and we even found a bar dimly lit enough to feel seedy

Samlo Bar



The lasting memory though has to be spending two days with elephants. More on that in a later post. Meanwhile here's my elephant having a snack.

Snack

Thursday, 3 January 2008

Holiday Snaps

We've been in Laos over Christmas and New Year. Lots more pictures to follow but here's one from Buddha Park near Vientiane to start.

Reclining