Janet and Stuart Wilson have traveled the globe together for more than 40 years. Collecting images, stories and memorable experiences on six continents, they have explored northern Italy in an RV, camped with lions and elephants on safari on Botswana, cruised the Burgundy Canal in a self-drive boat, and recently walked across England. They’ve cruised in the Atlantic, Pacific, Caribbean and Mediterranean. Beginning their second careers as professional freelance travel journalists in 1997, their work has featured RV travel, historic travel, food & wine, family history travel, and travel off-the-beaten-path in their column titled, The Road Less Traveled. Both were born and still reside in Northern California, when not pursuing their dream to “see the world.”
ABOARD KINDAT PANDAW-Early on a cool, rainy morning, the first such weather of our trip, we downed a cold buffet breakfast and bade last minute “good-byes” before our guide arrived to transport us to Mandalay Airport. An hour’s drive from the “jetty” we boarded a plane for Heho, the airport that serves Inle Lake and other destinations in southern Shan State. We mentioned in our first post having arranged for pre-and post-cruise visits, beginning in Yangon before …
ABOARD KINDAT PANDAW-Myanmar (formerly Burma) may not be at the top of the list for the occasional or less adventurous traveler. But for those seeking a traditional society and culture not yet overwhelmed by modernization, it’s got to be on a pretty short list of destinations. We think it noteworthy that all passengers aboard our Kindat Pandaw cruise were well-traveled. Most, if not all our fellow passengers have traveled to more places than we have, though we …
ABOARD KINDAT PANDAW-Somewhere north of Mandalay along the banks of the Ayeyarwady, we cast-off our moorings by 6:00 AM for the three-hour up-river cruise to Nwe Nyein, a village known for its pottery—in this case very large glazed pots. As we arrive we pass under a modern highway bridge and realize that this village is not as isolated as Yandabo. Once ashore we notice electric power lines, even a paved street. And the pottery making–while still family …
ABOARD KINDAT PANDAW-Sagaing Hill rises above the Ayeyarwady downstream of Mandalay on the opposite bank. We are moored at the base of the hill. Our usual breakfast includes a buffet of fruit, juice, yogurt, pastry and dry cereal. Today it also included a popular local noodle soup dish with egg. As always, a cooked breakfast of eggs plus accompaniments can be ordered. Needless to say we were more than fortified for our 8:30 AM excursion. We climb …
ABOARD RV KINDAT PANDAW – Inwa, like Bagan and Mandalay, and now Yangon, is a former capital city. It seems that country’s kings had a habit of building new ones, so the decision of the country’s former military government to build a new capital city at Naypyitaw, continues a long tradition. When we disembarked in Inwa (called Ava during colonial times) around 8:30 a.m. we promptly boarded horse carts — our fifth mode of transportation so far …
ABOARD RV KINDAT PANDAW – Yesterday evening we enjoyed watching the crew moor our vessel to the riverbank. As we slowly edged toward the bank, depth was sounded employing a long, marked stick. A couple of crew members jumped ashore and drove a stake into the damp soil securing the mooring line to the stake. Then they secured that stake with additional stakes and lines so that any tension on the main mooring line would pull the …
ABOARD RV KINDAT PANDAW – Perfectly timed to coincide with the hot-air balloon launch, we cast-off from Bagan just at sunrise. It made for a memorable vision, but caused a small pang of regret that we hadn’t managed to go up in one ourselves. The unfolding day promised a more relaxing schedule with a single 2.5 hour excursion to the bustling town of Pakokku, this time by tuk tuk. Kindat Pandaw nosed into the bank at Pakokku …
ABOARD RV KINDAT PANDAW – From the 11th to the 13th centuries, when Europe was building Gothic cathedrals, Bagan, capital of the first Burmese Empire was frenetically constructing thousands of temples and pagodas. These Buddhist monuments also were beautiful architectural masterpieces. Eventually the empire fell, and a city that may have reached a population of 200,000 or more, faded away. But over 2,000 of those monuments remain as testimony to the power, wealth, and piety of earlier …
ABOARD KINDAT PANDAW – Our one-hour flight from Yangon with Yadanarpon Airlines even included breakfast, something we appreciated in view of our early departure. That makes it a cut above most U.S. domestic carriers in terms of service. Given our 7 A.M. arrival in Bagan, it wasn’t surprising that our cabin aboard Kindat Pandaw wasn’t yet ready. Consequently, our driver and guide gave us a tour of the local market, located in Nyaungu, the town adjacent to …
We were scheduled to arrive in Yangon, Myanmar’s (Burma’s) former capital, largest city and commercial hub around 00:10 AM. Needless to say, connections from Hong Kong airport to our destination leave something to be desired. If that weren’t enough, a delayed fight involving a double flip of gate assignments at our jumping-off point pushed our arrival back to a 1:00 AM. Our guide, Ye greeted us at Yangon airport after we navigated immigration, and whisked us through …
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