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River Rafting Middle Fork Salmon River Idaho

August 2023

We did a six-day river rafting trip on the Middle Fork of the Salmon River in Idaho organized by Mountain Travel Sobek. We flew into Boise, then took a small plane to Stanley, Idaho where we spent the night. Because the water was low, we took another small plane ride the next morning to the place we put ito the water. We then paddled or oared down river through lots of fun rapids to Salmon, Idaho. Along the way, we relaxed in hot springs, took some beautiful hikes, and cooled off in fresh streams. We had fun with long-time friends and made a lot of new friends. We were lucky that the weather was not too hot — or too cold — though we did get rain three nights in camp. One night, we had rain and hail.

I did not get a lot of photos from the boats since we were too wet going down the rapids to have my phone out.

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Brazil

We had eight days to visit Brazil and went to Iguazu Falls, Rio, and Sao Paulo. Despite being winter, the weather was fine — except morning at Iguazu. We loved the food and the music.

Iguazu Falls

First stop Iguazu Falls — we went one day to the Argentinian side where we walked along the paths, seeing the falls, flora, and quite a few pretty critters. The next day we did the Brazilian side and were glad to see both as the views were so different.

Iguazu Falls are the widest in the world. Niagara Falls has the most water and Victoria Falls is the steepest. Our guide told us that there are really about 250 separate falls.

We saw lots of pretty butterflies and birds around the falls. The coati are a nuisance, stealing food from people who are picnicking.

And a highlight — a cachaca tasting at the hotel.

Rio de Janeiro

Second stop: Rio. Unfortunately, Rio was gray and foggy while we were there. Still we saw Christ the Redeemer and took the gondola up Sugarloaf Mountain. We did a fun Carnaval Experience — complete with trying on costumes and getting a brief samba lesson. We walked around downtown. We went for a lovely hike in the Tijuca Forest. No photos of food but we enjoyed the street food as much as the fine restaurants. We did private cooking class one day and sampled lots of traditional and more modern Brazilian food.

Sailing race from above.
View from Gondola on the way to Sugerloaf.
Monkeys in Tijuca Forest
From Tijuca Forest
From Tijuca Forest
Tortoise from Tijuca Forest

Below are photos from our Carnaval Experience

Sao Paulo

We only had a day in Sao Paulo to tour but enjoyed parks, street markets, and fairs as well as the view from the Museum of Contemporary Art. And as usual, we tried lots of great food including an Amazonian restaurant where we sampled ants that were fed exclusively on lemon grass and a street cart that sold traditional Afro-Brazilian food.

Food From Great Amazonian Restaurant in Sao Paulo

We had dinner with colleagues at a wonderful Amazonian restaurant in Sao Paulo called Banzeiro. The food was great. And yes we did eat ants. They are farm raised, fed only lemon grass, and then freeze dried. They taste like crunchy lemon grass. The fish was fresh water — Brazilians says “sweet water.” Note the photos were taken by Will.

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Amazing Octopus

Watch these videos — this is the same Octopus. I am on the Big Island. I have never seen one be exposed so much and so long. I could have watched more but my dive partners had moved on.

Watch this one first.
Watch this one second.
Watch this last.
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Diving on the Big Island

We are having a great time on the Big Island. Lots of walks on the beach, beautiful sunsets, kayaking, biking, and diving. Plus this time of year, there are whales everywhere — we can see them from our Lanai and from the dive boat and we can hear the whale song while diving and even snorkeling.

I have shared some photos and videos from diving and other adventures.

Frog Fish Moving — I have never seen them move before. This is so cool!
Eagle Ray — listen to whale songs in the background
Octopus Swimming

Octopus

Beautiful sunsets almost every night

Free swimming eel
Fish with whale song
Flame fish — these fish are rare, fairly small, and shy
Eel with whale song in the background — you usually see eels like this — with just their heads sticking out
Shark

Turtle cleaning — the tangs clean algae off the turtles
Helmet Conch eating a sea urchin
Unicorn Fish
Trigger Fish
Spanish Dancer egg sack
Whales
More whales — spouting
And even more whales!
The Mauna Kea Hotel up the road from us attracts Manta Rays. You can usually see them from shore, though we have also gone diving to see them. These are from shore.
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Chiapas Mexico

Just spent five wonderful days in Chiapas Mexico. We toured the city of San Cristobal de las Casas, a colonial town founded in 1528. It is at 7200 feet elevation so chilly. I especially liked the markets where the fruit was arranged artistically. We climbed up a hill to see a local church — apparently the Spanish did not mix with the locals even at church. From there we had a beautiful view of the city including a colorful community next to a quarry. We also watched the sunset from the roof of our hotel. 

 
The next day was long! Five+ hour drive to Palenque and Agua Azul. Palenque is a 1000-year old Mayan city. Our guide said it was the third largest. It had been covered by jungle and is now partially restored.

Agua Azul is a waterfall. Then we had the long drive back.

 
We visited two indigenous villages. Zinacantan is known for artisan textiles elaborately embroidered by the local women. It is also known for growing flowers and there are many greenhouses.

The people in the other village, Chamula, practice a unique combination of Mayan and Catholic religion. They also wear distinctive wool clothing — especially the women. The skirts look like shaggy rugs.

 
Our last day, we took a boat ride through Sumidero Canyon which is about 1 km deep. We saw a crocodile, a monkey, and lots of birds. We then drove up to the viewpoints and looked down.
 

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Alaska Cruise

I went to Alaska with my 89-year-old Dad, my 83-year-old step mom, my 79-year-old mother-in-law and a friend. We left from Seattle and went to Ketchikan, Juneau, and Skagway. We stopped for a few hours in Victoria BC but we did not get off the ship. It was a great way for my parents to travel. The scenery was beautiful, though not that different from what I have seen in the San Juans, Desolation Sound and other places in British Columbia.

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India

One thing I love about India is how it confronts every sense — it can be both a delight and an assault. This trip I visited Delhi and Varanasi. What I remember and loved most were the sites, the smells, the sounds: The spectacle of people everywhere, women in the bright colors they embrace and we Americans (Westerners?) seem to scorn. The wonderful smells of curries juxtaposed against car exhaust and human sweat. And always, everywhere, the cacophony of cars and horns and people.

The monuments and temples in Delhi are beautiful and inspirational. The memorial to Ghandi is quiet and moving. Still I most enjoyed the energy of Old Delhi. Entrepreneurship is alive: here you see a man on the street with his sewing machine – a pop-up tailor. There one man seated making tea in his stall – and just overhead without even enough room for the tea-maker to stand — is another shopkeeper selling soda and incidentals.

Varanasi was unique for me. I learned about Hindu funeral rituals. And we watched solemnly as families carried their loved ones wrapped in cloth and covered with flowers to the pyre for cremation. Sunset along the Ganges was nice but a bit of a show. In contrast, morning sunrise as we watched pilgrims immerse themselves, fulfilling for many a lifelong dream, was emotional. Their faces were calm and spiritual and happy.

And then we were back to the chaos with a visit to a spice market and shops that manufactured silk – using old jacquard machines with perforated cards that showed the pattern.

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Cuba

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Typical Havana scene

I spent nine days in Cuba on a photography tour. We were in Havana, Vinales, Cienfuegos, and Trinidad.

Reflections: Cuba is a country in transition. It is not a third-world country, rather more a first-world country which has been neglected for 30 or 40 years. Once elegant buildings and first-world infrastructure are decaying. The infamous old automobiles are ubiquitous.

But newer buses – especially for tourists abound. Wherever we went, people had electricity and running water. They have a good education system. Everyone goes to school. They have a strong health care system. There is a safety net, though the guaranteed food everyone gets is not sufficient to last for a month. People with families in the US or elsewhere and those who work in the growing tourist industry are doing better. More private businesses are allowed including restaurants, the Casa Particulares where we stayed (think Bed and Breakfast), and stores for tourists. Undoubtedly more that I don’t know about. Many people have multiple jobs. The owner of our first Casa Particulare was also a medical doctor. There are shortages. Sometimes we saw lines. It was also clear that a family that makes $35 CUC (the transferrable currency which is about equivalent to a US dollar) per month, cannot afford goods that are intended for tourists. So sometimes, the problem is affordability, not shortage. Finally, I learned that people can sell their homes now – but only to Cubans. Before, you could only swap homes.

Cuba is still not a free country. There are police officers everywhere. One of our buses was stopped for blocking the road when picking us up. We saw cars being pulled over on the road often. To get Internet, you have to buy a card for an hour and then go into a city square to log on.

There is also wifi at hotels but none of the private homes has it. My observation is that this is a good way to know who is using the Internet – everyone has to be outside in public when they log on.

Where we stayed: We stayed in Casas everywhere.

The one in Havana was larger so almost all of us could be in one place, but it was not walking distance to anything. In other towns, we had to split into groups of two or three per house. Breakfast was included, all of ours had private baths, some had lovely courtyards, one had a rooftop terrace. But rooms are small and sparsely furnished. Breakfasts were fine. Apparently, you can also ask your hosts to cook dinner. We did have lunch on the last day at our casa and it was a lovely. I enjoyed meeting the families and learning about their lives, though many could not speak English.  The casas were definitely a family affair. In Trinidad, my casa had a husband and wife, a grandmother, two grown children with their spouses and three grandchildren – plus two rooms to rent out to tourists.

Food, Music, and Art: We were a large group and most of our lunches and dinners were pre-ordered. Meals were very similar. From looking at menus, we would have had a bit more variety but not a lot if we had ordered a la carte. Lunch and dinner began with various appetizers including fried plaintains, “Taro tots” – like tater tots but made out of taro, sometimes canapes with salsa-like toppings, salads with cabbage, tomato, and cucumber. At lunch, they always served soup. Sometimes they served several main courses family style. Other times, we chose our main course. They always included at least one kind of pork (pulled, roasted), chicken, fish, and shrimp. Side dishes included rice, rice and beans, tarot, sweet potato. Dessert was often flan. We did get lobster a couple times. Usually the meat and lobster were overcooked. It took us awhile, but we even found Cubanas – Cuban sandwiches that we can get in the states.

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Cienfuegos — many mojitos

Both lunch and dinner would start with a drink – Mojito, Cuban Libre, beer, caipirinha. We also had Canchancharas. You could get pretty good wine – mostly from Argentina and Chile – as well.

Many restaurants have music and the music was fun and lively. We also went out some nights to hear music. One of our guides was a great dancer. We were told that everyone knows how to dance – you learn as a child – it is just part of growing up.

I loved the art – bright, bold colorful! On El Prado in Havana, artists were selling paintings. We saw stores with art in Trinidad as well as in markets. Subjects included those old cars, musicians, people with cigars, and more.

Sites and People: We visited many sites. We went to a tobacco farm in Vinales as well as a cigar factory in Trinidad.

We also visited two crafts places that created hand-made pottery.

We drove around in the old convertibles one afternoon and climbed many towers to get a view.

Highlights included watching boxers and a dance company practice.

The Havana Campas Dance company combines Flamenco from the Spanish tradition with drumming and other African influences.

There was no one building or one place that was memorable. More it was the feeling of the place – old abandoned buildings next to ones being restored. Old cars and bicycles. Horse-drawn carts and wagons. Well-worn tractors.

The Cuban people were welcoming to us and I felt that a lot of optimism. I most enjoyed the people – looking out windows, sitting on the sidewalk, going to work, standing in the shade under overpasses hitchhiking. Ready with a smile. Musicians played on the streets with passersby joining in or dancing. The music is energetic. I think so are the people.

More photos:

 

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Thoughts About Africa

I had never been to sub Saharan Africa before. We went to a private game reserve in South Africa called MalaMala. Then we went with some friends to Zambia near Kafue National Park. We stayed a couple days in Livingstone to see Victoria Falls. And we spent one day in Johannesburg where we visited an Afrikaner Village near Pretoria and a new high school.

Keep reading — I mix up thoughts and photos…

The Animals at MalaMala

What can I say? The animals were amazing. MalaMala was teeming with them. We arrived at noon and that first afternoon we went on Safari and saw a cheetah. During the course of our four days, we saw lions and leopards, rhinos and warthogs, giraffes and zebras, cape buffalo and wild dogs, hyenas and vultures, baboons, antelope of all kinds – kudu and impala and more, and birds. I don’t even like birds but marveled at the many beautiful ones we saw. We saw four different kills at MalaMala – not as they were happening but shortly afterward. The best for me was a mother leopard who had caught a kudu, carried it up a tree and then brought her cub up. The cub played with the kudu on one branch while the mother watched from a higher branch.  We also watched (heard) a male lion who was only a few feet away roar. The ground truly shook. Watching the lions was like watching my cats at home – the way they licked their paws to clean their faces or rolled over after a good meal.

The Scene at MalaMala

MalaMala is a beautiful resort with a hundred or so rooms spread through three different areas owned by the Rattray family. It is all inclusive with good food, well-trained rangers, and a nice pool. But most of all lots of animals. It is contiguous to Kruger National Park and the animals roam freely between the two.

When you get there, you are assigned a ranger and a Landrover. No more than six people are in a Landrover. We go out early each morning around sunrise and return for breakfast. Then there is free time to swim or sleep or read. We go out again around 4 pm and stay until dark with the rangers using spot lights to see animals at night. We saw lots of beautiful sunrises, sunsets, and moon rises.

For most of our stay, we were with only two other guests in our Landrover — a wonderful older woman named Pam and her niece Victoria from Britain. Pam – and previously her husband – have been coming to MalaMala every year for 30 years and she has become friends with the owners. Victoria had accompanied her before. They knew the genealogy of many of the animals. And Victoria was the best at spotting animals and following animal tracks in the sand.

Because Pam knew the owners we were lucky to have Mike and Norma (and one day their daughter Alison) join us at dinner. I thought they were delightful and gracious and we learned a lot about the game reserve and South Africa from them. Will and I were reminded of his grandparents. Mike’s father bought the land originally but Mike himself was quite a visionary, changing from a hunting reserve to a photo only reserve in the 60s. Mike and Norma told us about problems with poaching as well as how the government is buying back their land (at a fair price) to give to Africans from which it was taken long ago. They were worried about this as many Africans don’t have the business experience to run a resort. However, they said that they would be leasing the land back and running the resort for a time.

The rangers are all twenty-something youth who are well trained about the plants and animals, animal tracks, shooting, and driving Landrovers off road. They have radios and share information about what they see. Hearing of a kill or a leopard sighting, they are off across country, over trees and river beds. It is very dramatic and quite fun.  MalaMala is strict about no more than three vehicles near any animal so the rangers take turns. Our ranger, Matt, was a nice young man, very knowledgeable. He told us that after doing this for a few years, he wanted to return to school and work in finance. Will asked him how he would transition from being outside in the wild all the time to a desk job. He said it would be hard but he thought it would be best for financial security.

Kafue River Camp

We flew from MalaMala to Livingstone Zambia where we spent the night and then met up with friends – Paul, Yaffa, Dan, and Caroline — for the second half of the trip. Our friend Paul, who grew up in Rhodesia and South Africa, owns some land along the Kafue River near Kafue National Park. Paul and Yaffa are friends from the Seattle area. Dan and Caroline are from LA. He is an expert on child development and neurobiology. Caroline was a litigation attorney but now works with Dan. Their kids are almost exactly the same age as ours and we soon realized we have much in common and much to talk about.

To get to KRC, you take a small chartered plan for about 75 minutes, land on an unpaved airstrip, get into a Land Cruiser, and drive another 90 minutes. As we drove, we were attacked by tsetse flies and I was worried that the stay would be terrible. But there are no flies at the camp – only beautiful solitude, a picturesque river, animals, good food, fine friends, and lazy days – completely off line.  No people except for us and the staff. No noise except the animals – especially the hippos and lions.

View from camp

View from camp

Our cabin

Our cabin

KRC has four rooms – concrete slabs with thick canvas walls and roof and thatch over all. At the back, enclosed by concrete but open to the sky is a toilet, sink, and shower – all with river water heated by a coal stove which the staff lights morning and evening. Food is cooked in a pizza oven and served in a separate eating and sitting area overlooking the river.

Our hot water heater

Our hot water heater

Dining Area

Dining Area

The staff consists of Austen – a former game hunter who has lots of great stories – and some men from the local village who lead us on game drives, cook and clean.

Depending on the day, we go for game drives in the Land Cruiser or on mountain bikes. We wade in the river to an island across the way, walking around the island and “swimming” in the 8 – 10 inches of water just nearby. One day, Yaffa, Caroline, Dan and I go for a little run to get some exercise. Another day Yaffa and I walk fast while the others mountain bike again. A staff member accompanies us. During one of our drives, we are watching the puku – a kind of antelope – prancing along when all of a sudden one seems to jump much higher. Only it’s not a puku but a lioness making a kill. It was thrilling to see. The lioness held on to the puku until it died and then she dragged it across the field to a thicket to eat.

Jifumpa Village

The nearest village to KRC is Jifumpa, about 90 minutes away and we go off one day. We cross the river on a pontoon.

Pontoon crossing

Pontoon crossing

Clinic maternity ward

Clinic maternity ward

The village is about 1000 people with 4000 in the nearby area. There is a school and a clinic. Paul and Yaffa have given money to build a house for a teacher and to build a bore hole for a new well.

The trip to the village was a highlight for me because it opened my eyes to the challenges of Africa. I had been reading a book called The Fate of Africa by Martin Meredith which follows African history since Independence. The book is depressing as it describes endemic corruption, wars, famine, indifferent cruelty. The book also explained that nearly a trillion dollars of western aid has been given to Africa, a huge amount pocketed by corrupt leaders, and very little to show for it. I hoped that a trip to a village would change my thinking.

The good news is that the children we met were eager to learn and full of life and happiness as all children are. Our friend Dan was like a pied piper. He gave a lesson on how the brain works to a classroom of children.

Dan gives a brain lesson

Dan gives a brain lesson

He also got kids to sing while he recorded them on his camera and then — to their delight — played it back.

The bad news is that we saw a culture of dependency where adults had a sense of entitlement. There were four or five teachers each with classrooms of 60-80 children – though not all children came to school every day. The school had no running water and no electricity.

School building

School building

They had been waiting for six months for books which had not come. Some of the children had notebooks, some wore uniforms, others did not. We asked one of the teachers – what would it take to get more teachers? We were told that the government would send them if they had accommodation for them. Why don’t you build some more houses we asked? Because the houses would be on government property. The government should build them. Our friends had built one house for a teacher.

School teacher's house -- note the solar panel

School teacher’s house — note the solar panel

Originally Paul had thought that the village would make the bricks (there is a large kiln just yards from the school)

Brick kiln

Brick kiln

and he would do the rest. But in the end, they would not even make the bricks without being paid. So, in this village, the adults did not seem to think it was their responsibility to educate their children.

We visited several of the teacher’s homes. By our standards, they were very modest – with two or three tiny rooms. But most had solar-powered generators, a DVD player and other amenities that you did not see at the school. One of the teachers asked me to give her my watch, saying I could just buy myself a new one. Another asked Will if Will would pay for him to go back to school. We’d never met them before. But we were white people and they seem to think that white people should give them things.

I was struck by how different this was from the US. Here, our teachers dig into their own pockets to buy things for their classrooms. And studying the history of our pioneers, I know that one of the first things every town did was join together to build a school and hire a teacher.

I was also struck by how different the village we visited was from the places we have been in Asia. We visited in the drought season so these subsistence farmers were not able to be in their fields. In Asia, we would have seen people making baskets or other crafts or goods to sell. Here, they were doing nothing.

I was told that part of the problem is the African tradition of not having individual ownership – that everything is owned by everyone so there is not the same incentive to be an entrepreneur. I suspect that western aid is as much to blame.

Another Village in South Africa

Jumping ahead, on our last day, we visited another village in South Africa called Onverwacht near Pretoria and the diamond mines. A lovely enterprising woman is trying to get the village on the tourist circuit. She is rebuilding her home so that people can join her for a meal, or even stay for the night and get the experience of living with Africans and eating traditional food. She showed us the house which was partially built. She called the people in her village Black Afrikaners. They are descendants of Africans who adopted the Afrikaner language and customs.

We went to a lovely church service – it was Sunday. Then she walked us through the village. She had great vision but little help from the rest of the villagers. This village was not as poor or isolated as the one in Zambia. But I did not get the sense that many people here took any initiative either.

Village boys

Village boys

Our guide in Onverwacht Village and the church we visited

Our guide in Onverwacht Village and the church we visited

African Leadership Academy

On our last day in Johannesburg, we visited the African Leadership Academy http://www.africanleadershipacademy.org/ This high school was started by an American and an African who met at Stanford Business School. The school offers two years of high school for kids from all around Africa with a focus on entrepreneurial leadership and ethics. They want to identify and connect the next generation of African leaders. And this school did offer a ray of hope – though with only 100 students per class (they had 4000 applicants for 100 places), it will take a long time to transform the continent.

Livingstone and Victoria Falls

We were in Livingstone and Victoria Falls twice – once on the way to Kafue River Camp and then on the way back. This time of year, the water flow is very low so you don’t get the full view of the rushing water. Still the falls are beautiful. On the first day, we walked across the Victoria Bridge to Zimbabwe and dodged very aggressive baboons and monkeys. On the way back from KRC, we were with the rest of our friends. We went on a sunset river boat cruise and then went to the top of the falls where Will went swimming – almost off the edge. I was too scared.

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Burma (Myanmar) 2013

Our trip to Burma was a photography tour led by a long-time friend Dave Cardinal. I had not taken photos before, so when we decided to go on this tour, I got my first camera — a Canon Rebel. I am happy to report my photos improved over the trip.

Burma was temples and monks, city markets and small villages, Buddha statues — old and new, large and small. We saw sunrises and sunsets—golden red, piercing gold, or the palest of pinks shining through foggy blue mists. I photographed women and children and would show them the pictures on my camera causing lots of giggles and finger pointing. The women and children would smile and wave when I greeted them. In one village, the women wanted to touch my skin to see if it felt softer than theirs. They were just as curious about us as we were about them.

For the first part of the trip, there were 14 people including Will, our two kids, and me. We went to Yangon, Bagan, and Mandalay. For the second part of the trip, we took a boat up the Irrawaddy River to Bhamo which is about 25 miles from China in the Kachin State.

The women and children put a creamy paste called Thanaka which is ground from the bark or wood of a tree. At first, it looks strange, maybe exotic. After a while, you don’t notice it. It is a natural sunscreen.

The port in Yangon. The men carried rice and other goods off the boats on their backs.

The Shwedegon is a huge Buddhist temple complex in Yangon with gilded domes, towers, and walls. It is breathtaking with an explosion of color and glitter. It literally glows in the sun. The original stupa is hundreds of years old. The current complex dates from the 1700s.

We went hot air ballooning at sunrise in Bagan which has more than 4000 temples, pagodas, and monasteries – large and small.

River Bathing. One reminds me of a painting by Gauguin.

Many children become monks or nuns to get an education. Becoming a monk at a young age does not mean you must remain one all your life. Most boys leave monkhood after they finish school. More girls remain nuns. Monks and nuns eat twice a day – at dawn and lunch.  The local people feed the monks, who go out along the street or door-to-door to get alms. Each household saves a bit of their own meals to share with the monks. The nuns are given food and cook for themselves.  We hired some novice monks in Bagan to pose for photos. My best photos were the snapshots I took informally, rather than the posed photos.

I was on a photo tour.

Village life. We went to small villages and larger towns (as well as big cities).  As we moved away from tourist areas, the village people saw few if any white people and they were as interested in us as we were of them. They would come to doors and windows to watch us pass. I took photos of children and women who would meet my eyes as I smiled and waved. We also saw many different types of transportation – oxen-drawn carts, old trucks, bicycles, in larger villages motorbikes and some cars. No paved roads outside of the larger towns. This was the dry season and the dust was thick, I cannot imagine the mud during the rainy season.

We visited a school near Bagan. All the children and the teachers wear green Longyi. They learn to read and write English but not to speak it. The children in the boat  are being taken home from the larger town Shwegu to their villages at the end of the school day.

No way to count all the temples, pagodas, and monasteries we visited. Burma is filled with them. Local patrons build and restore these amazing buildings. In Shwe Baw Kyune monastery, there are around 7000 temples, stupas, and pagoda old and new, big and small, crowded together like too many flowers in a vase. And yes all the gold is real. The Golden Palace Monastery in Mandalay — a massive teak building with beautiful carving — was originally in the royal palace complex but was moved outside the palace area, reassembled, and converted into a monastery in the 1800s. Moving the building turned out well – the rest of the palace area was destroyed in WWII. We even saw the world’s largest free-standing bell in Mingun.

We went to morning markets and night markets and all-day markets. So much to see and hear and smell. Beautiful fresh vegetables, piles of chilies, banana leaves used to wrap flowers in. Men and women carrying everything and anything on their heads or on carts. Eggplants and cauliflower were in season.

We saw many types of traditional crafts – stone carving, casting, making gold leaf, silk weaving, carving teak, throwing pots. One place cast huge Buddhas which were sold mostly to people in China or Thailand. In another area, they carved mostly Buddhas out of stone. No electric wheels here – the daughter uses her foot to turn her mother’s pottery wheel. After all what are daughters for?

The U Bein Bridge in Mandalay at Sunset. No more needs to be said.

We spent the six days on the Amara II traveling from Mandalay to Bhamo on the Irrawaddy River. Bhamo is in the Kachin state and is about 40 miles from the Chinese border. We were in an area with very few tourists – our schedule had to be registered ahead. We arrived near Bhamo early afternoon and “docked” on a sand bar a few miles away. When we asked if we could go into town that day instead of waiting for the next, we were told the arrangement was for the next day. The captain and the owner of the boat would lose their licenses if we changed the schedule. So we waited.

Our boat was teak with five cabins each maybe ten by fifteen feet. Teak walls and floor and furniture. Sparsely appointed with views out each side to the passing river. Above is a large deck with a bar and lounge chairs and tables. Here we eat, rush from one side to the other taking photos, then edit them on our computers. They feed us well. Too well. The bell rings for meals and we come like Pavlov’s dogs, hungry or not. I get agitated not moving and run up and down the main deck to the amusement of the others. When we dock, they have a huge teak board for a gang plank and one staff person at each end holding a railing to make it easy to walk.

We stopped every day at a town or city to sightsee. During the day, the air was warm – but mornings we woke to fog and chilling wind. The evenings also cooled off and we put on our fleeces, covered ourselves with blankets.

We saw boats of all kinds – bamboo rafts carrying bamboo downriver, barges filled with teak, ferry boats left from the Japanese occupation, and fishing boats of all types.

From the river, we saw dozens of villages bejeweled with temples, wooden bridges crossing streams flowing into the Irrawaddy, and the busy and cluttered lives of the people who lived there.

Every day on the boat we woke to a stunning though sometimes foggy sunrise. And our day ended with an equally exquisite sunset. The last night, we were also treated to a full moon.