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		<title>Luxury Travel To Myanmar</title>
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		<pubDate>Fri, 22 Sep 2017 04:58:15 +0000</pubDate>
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					<description><![CDATA[Luxury Travel To Myanmar – What To Do And Where To Stay? Rate this post Mystery fills the Myanmar air, and the tourists will surely experience the memorable journey to this golden and unspoiled country. There are hundreds of things to enjoy in Myanmar. So, what to do? The most luxurious activities to do are [&#8230;]]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h5>Luxury Travel To Myanmar – What To Do And Where To Stay?</h5>
<h6>Rate this post</h6>
<p>Mystery fills the Myanmar air, and the tourists will surely experience the memorable journey to this golden and unspoiled country. There are hundreds of things to enjoy in Myanmar. So, <strong>what to do</strong>? The most luxurious activities to do are <i>the hot air balloon rides, the visit to some exotic villages and monasteries, the high-budget cruise trips (Anawrahta Cruise for example)</i>, etc. <strong>Myanmar Luxury Tour</strong> also features the costly stay in the world-class resorts with the authentic bed of roses.</p>
<p>Each highlight in Myanmar such as <i>Yangon, Ngapali Beach, Mandalay, Bagan, and Inle Lake</i> is spotlighted with the luxurious accommodation options. So, <strong>where to stay</strong>? We list out five best choices for the superb rest.</p>
<h6>#1: Aureum Palace in Bagan</h6>
<p>This is the most luxurious resort in Bagan. It has 87 rooms and villas with the spectacular views of the Bagan’s pagoda-dotted scene and lotus-flecked lake. What could be more sumptuous than staying in a room that overlooks the golden temples and the magical sunset? Everybody loves the stay in Aureum Palace. This world-class resort offers the opulent services of the spa, fitness center, sauna, nightclub, swimming pool, etc. Aureum exhilarates your trip to Bagan, the city of thousands of pagodas.</p>
<h6>#2: Sandoway Resort in Ngapali Beach</h6>
<p>In the green zones of coconut palms in Ngapali Beach, the Sandoway Resort has 56 rooms, cottages, and villas. The presence of the tropical gardens, panoramic sea view, and specially designed rooms with hardwood, marble, and stone carvings promotes your luxurious stay indeed. Besides, the big swimming pool and spa, an array of seafood, the giant library and cinema make Sandoway Resort one of the most lavish beach resorts in the world.</p>
<h6>#3: Inle Lake View Resort</h6>
<p>This is the fashionable Burmese-French owned resort on the eastern shore of Inle Lake. The boutique resort has the impressive Burmese décor and French architecture bordered by the lush garden. As you may expect, all of the rooms here offer the lake views, the pleasant bathrooms, and the eye-catching furniture. Everything you need for the <strong>luxury travel to Myanmar</strong> is supported including the bar, spa, infinity swimming pool, restaurant, etc. The beautiful sights and sounds of the lake give you the wholesome relaxation.</p>
<h6>#4: Mandalay Hill Resort</h6>
<p>At the foot of Mandalay Hill, this resort offers the incomparable views of the holy ground of many pagodas, royal palace, and imposing moat. In the modern and international style, the hill resort makes sure your rest extremely private and comfortable with the enjoyable spa, calming pool, lush tropical garden, exciting bar, mouth-watering BBQ dinner, and more. Just expect for the real bed of roses!</p>
<h6>#5: The Governor’s Residence in Yangon</h6>
<p>It’s one of the world’s most luxurious city hotels, next to the reputable Shwedagon Pagoda. The delicate main building is the primeval teak mansion, constructed in 1920 as the residence of a governor and bordered by brightly colorful lotus garden. The 48 large guest rooms and suites are beautified with the tropical cotton, silk, and teak furniture. Just enjoy the kinglike experience at the prestigious spa rooms, Kipling Bar, open-air Mindon Lounge, etc.</p>
<p>Begin <strong>Myanmar Customized Tour</strong> with the preferable itinerary to play and rest luxuriously! You can visit the Shwedagon Pagoda in Yangon, enjoy balloon ride over thousands of temples in Bagan, cruise on Inle Lake, etc. Whatever your preference. <a href="https://www.toburma.com/contact/">Click here</a> and our experienced travel agent specialist can help you organize the time of your life!</p>
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		<title>8 Myanmar (Burma) travel tips</title>
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		<pubDate>Fri, 22 Sep 2017 03:35:25 +0000</pubDate>
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					<description><![CDATA[8 Myanmar (Burma) travel tips Travelling to Myanmar (previously Burma) is like stepping into a different world, filled with spirituality and adventure. Long isolated from the world, Myanmar is finally opening up. With heartwarming people, breath-taking landscapes, and some of the most impressive ancient temples in Asia, Myanmar is the perfect destination for those after [&#8230;]]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h5>8 Myanmar (Burma) travel tips</h5>
<p>Travelling to Myanmar (previously Burma) is like stepping into a different world, filled with spirituality and adventure. Long isolated from the world, Myanmar is finally opening up. With heartwarming people, breath-taking landscapes, and some of the most impressive ancient temples in Asia, Myanmar is the perfect destination for those after an authentic escapade, off the beaten path. Follow our top Myanmar travel tips to make the most of your travels…</p>
<h6>When to go</h6>
<p>Luckily you can travel to Myanmar all year round, although November to February are fairly busy months (especially with Chinese New Year) and accommodation availability can be tricky.</p>
<h6>Visa &amp; passport advice</h6>
<p>When planning your trip to Myanmar, it’s important to ensure your passport is up to date. You’ll need at least 6 months validity beyond your intended return date to get a Burmese visa. You’ll also need to have a visa before you arrive. Single-entry tourist visas last 28 days and cost US$25.</p>
<h6>Safety</h6>
<p>Myanmar is a very safe country to visit—in fact, I would say it’s probably the safest. The Buddhist culture discourages crime and so thefts or robberies are very rare. Since the 2015 elections, the country is gradually democratising, and the influence of the military has diminished.</p>
<p>If you’re consulting the FCO’s foreign travel advice you will see most of the country marked green, though with several specific areas marked yellow (‘advise against all but essential travel’).</p>
<p>We work with local partners who have operated in Myanmar for years, and our network of local guides know their areas like the back of their hands. Myanmar is considered a safe destination for tourists, including solo female travellers.</p>
<h6>Money</h6>
<p>The national currency of Myanmar is the Burmese Kyat (pronounced chat). It often appears as ‘K’ or ‘MMK’ and it only comes in notes.</p>
<p>ATMs are now plentiful in airports, cities, and major tourist destinations, though occasionally travellers find that their debit cards don’t work in Myanmar. Bringing cash is a good idea: do make sure to take clean unfolded notes (folded or tattered notes may not be accepted) and US dollars are more easily exchanged than Pound sterling.</p>
<p><em>Note that travellers cheques are not generally accepted anywhere.</em></p>
<h6>Food</h6>
<p>Myanmar is brimming with culinary delights, offering its own distinct cuisine though also influenced by Chinese, Indian and Thai cuisine.</p>
<p>Your first thing to try is a Burmese curry, which is not just a meal but an experience. After your main dish a seemingly never-ending succession of little side dishes will follow, making this a true foodie adventure.</p>
<p>Myanmar is also known from some specific dishes, such as the tea leaf salad known as lephet, Shan-style rice, and the Mohinga breakfast — fine, round rice noodles served in a hearty broth.</p>
<h6>What to see</h6>
<p>Myanmar is a very cultural destination and there’s plenty of interesting places to see. Of course, we highly recommend including key sights such as the cities of Yangon and Mandalay, Inle Lake, and the temples of Bagan.</p>
<p>Our tour of Inle Lake takes you off the usual tourist trail and lets you experience village life on the lake, while our cycling tour in Bagan gives you a local guide as well as ample free time to explore some of the hidden temples around the area. If you want to do something a bit different, you can also visit the fringed shores of Ngapali Beach (yup, Myanmar has also a beach!) located on the Bay of Bengal coast, in Rakhine State. Cocktail in hand simply kick back and relax.</p>
<p>Oh – and don’t miss the less famous (but no less interesting!) locations such as the hidden temples of Mrauk U, the emerald hills of Kalaw, or the charming colonial city of Pyin Oo Lwin. It’s especially the smaller places that give you a true taste of Burma.</p>
<h6>Etiquette</h6>
<p>The typical Myanmar character is friendly, helpful and polite, so please do smile, it’ll lighten up everyone’s day.</p>
<p><strong>Don’t touch anyone on the head</strong> as it’s considered an aggressive action, even for children.</p>
<p><strong>Cover your shoulders and knees</strong> when visiting pagodas and temples also take off your shoes and socks. If you need to sit, please ensure your feet are tucked away so they never face the Buddhas.</p>
<p><strong>Don’t disturb people praying or meditating</strong> and try to be as quiet as possible when in sacred areas.</p>
<p><strong>Learn a few words in Burmese,</strong> the locals love it!<br />
<i>mingala ba</i> – ‘hello’<br />
<i>thwa:bi</i> – ‘good night’ or ‘good bye’<br />
<i>kyei:zu:tin ba de</i> – ‘thank you’</p>
<p><strong>You might experience electricity outages.</strong> Please remember Myanmar is very much unspoilt by mass tourism and it can have its limitations.</p>
<h6>Inspiration</h6>
<p>Myanmar is a truly cultural, unspoiled destination and it offers plenty of opportunities for meaningful experiences. If you like a bit of moderate trekking Myanmar is the perfect destination for paths-less-travelled.</p>
<p>If you’ve got enough time you can also combine a trip to Myanmar with neighbouring Thailand. With easy flight connections between Bangkok and Yangon, you’ll be able to experience Myanmar’s tranquility with buzzing Thailand.</p>
<p>Click here and our experienced travel agent specialist can help you organize the time of your life!</p>
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		<title>A Culinary Odyssey, on a Path Blazed by Orwell- The New York Times by JANE PERLEZ</title>
		<link>https://www.toburma.com/a-culinary-odysseyon-a-path-blazed-by-orwell-the-new-york-times-by-jane-perlez-march-11-2007/</link>
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		<pubDate>Fri, 22 Sep 2017 03:20:07 +0000</pubDate>
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					<description><![CDATA[Ma Aye Shwe, known as the Fatty Lady, in the kitchen of her five-table restaurant in the Burmese village of Ohnoma. Credit Nelson Ching for The New York Times A Culinary Odyssey,on a Path Blazed by Orwell- The New York Times by JANE PERLEZ MARCH 11, 2007 GEORGE ORWELL, who memorably sketched the stark existence [&#8230;]]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Ma Aye Shwe, known as the Fatty Lady, in the kitchen of her five-table restaurant in the Burmese village of Ohnoma. Credit Nelson Ching for The New York Times</p>
<h5>A Culinary Odyssey,on a Path Blazed by Orwell- The New York Times by JANE PERLEZ MARCH 11, 2007</h5>
<p>GEORGE ORWELL, who memorably sketched the stark existence of living on bread and thin soup in Paris in the 1930s, hardly seems like an obvious guide to exotic food in the tropics. Yet, in his classic novel “Burmese Days,” Orwell creates a vibrant scene of his hero and heroine wandering through market stalls filled with ripe pomelos the size of green moons, red bananas, dried fish, crimson chilies, ducks cured like hams, larvae of the rhinoceros beetle, heart-shaped betel leaves, and “baskets of heliotrope-colored prawns the size of lobsters.”</p>
<p>The list, in full, is so extravagant and inviting that, for me, it served as a kind of mental eating map during a recent road trip through Burma, now called Myanmar by the authoritarian government. Much has changed in Myanmar since Orwell served there as a policeman in the 1920s, but because of the government-enforced isolation from the rest of the world (the country has little processed food and imported food is rare in the countryside) Burmese still live off the land and its abundance of vegetables, fruits, fish and spices.</p>
<p>Even before I crossed the border from China into Myanmar, I had a taste of the delicacies to come. At Ruili, the bustling trading center in Yunnan Province that serves as the entry point for cheap Chinese goods into Myanmar, a Burmese trader invited my guide and me to a lunch of multiple dishes — steamed whole black chicken that fell from the bone, tiny grilled fish that you eat from head to tail, bean leaves with garlic, and most unusual, opium poppy seeds with tofu. Chopped coriander sprinkled on top added a little spunk — and color — to the mild tasting seeds that had been churned with the tofu into the consistency of a soupy porridge.</p>
<p>Immigration officials don’t allow foreign travelers to dawdle at Mu Se, the first Burmese town over the border. So we drove down the old Burma Road — the artery that the Americans used in World War II to hold back the Japanese — to the village of Kutkai, then to Lashio and on to Hsipaw, a town with a good market and friendly guesthouse, a favorite stopping spot for tourists.</p>
<p>Our destination, though, was a sleepy dot off the map, the village of Ohnoma, about two hours south of Hsipaw. Ohnoma was a major destination of our 10-day trip. It is the home of a trucker’s restaurant known fondly as the Fatty Lady’s Place — the formal name of the five-table establishment is Napi — which I remembered with great fondness from a trip several years before. I had eaten lusciously then — the freshly caught fish, in particular, cooked several different ways, was memorable. So was the invitation into the kitchen to observe short-order cooking of the Burmese kind. I remembered, too, the lusty appetites of the drivers who had parked their huge trailers outside.</p>
<p>I was not disappointed this time, either. Tucked on the ground floor of a two-story house bearing large advertisements for London brand cigarettes, Ma Aye Shwe — owner, chief cook and a woman of large proportions — was still there, whipping up tangy fish, vegetables and sauces in less than 20 minutes over a wood stove. Burmese cuisine veers between the influences of India with its tradition of curries and Thailand and its flavors of basil, lemon grass and coriander with a few oddities left over from the British. At Fatty Lady’s you get straightforward Burmese cooking with a slight tilt to the Thai side of things.</p>
<p>As soon as we arrived, tired and dusty, for a late 4:30 lunch, Ma Aye Shwe asked one of her nieces — three of them work as her helpers — to catch a foot-long catfish from the pond just outside the kitchen window. This was done rapidly by grabbing one of the fish by hand, giving it a wallop to kill it and then gutting it and chopping it up into about one-inch pieces. The niece sprinkled some salt on top of the pieces, some pieces of ginger as well, and threw the pieces into a pan of super hot fat. That was to be our fried fish.</p>
<p>In a second wok, the chef stir-fried some garlic, ginger and sliced tomatoes, added some water, added pieces of the fish, a huge bunch of basil leaves, and then covered it all for some 15 minutes, fanning the flames with rapid flicks of a reed fan. A second niece prepared a quick chicken stir fry with bamboo shoots. For a vegetable dish, our hostess tossed tomatoes and garlic with cauliflower pieces and their leaves (a leftover from the British days) in a wok for five minutes. Accompanying everything were side portions of a spicy yellowy sauce: dry mustard, garlic, ginger, chilies, and onions boiled with the green stalks of the mustard plant. For the fried catfish, there was a sauce of tomato, garlic, green chili, vinegar and sugar cane.</p>
<p>The food was served on large white china plates placed in the center of our round wooden table, along with a large bowl of white rice. I hadn’t expected to find any of the wonders of Orwell’s market stalls here. I got what I came for: an invitation into the small kitchen (two benches, a couple of chopping boards and sharp cleavers, two small overhead fluorescent lights) and a mouthwatering straight out of the pan meal — for about 7 kyat, the equivalent of $1 a person.</p>
<p>During the rest of the trip, we ate at several roadside joints that offered unfamiliar combinations of tastes. Yellow papaya flowers sautéed in garlic seemed a variation on the classic papaya salad. Frogs cooked with an assortment of bitter leaves, and braised cashew leaves served with raw cucumber slices gave a sense of the pungent streak in Burmese cooking. I rarely spent more than 10 kyat each for a single meal. Most of the time my guide helped with the ordering, though with smiles and gestures I could have managed on my own.</p>
<p>At the beachside resort of Ngapali on the west coast, I found my way to Best Friends, a simple indoor-outdoor restaurant nestled among a row of small places catering mostly to tourists. I settled into a table on the deck where a few tables were taken by Germans and French. I savored the most delicious avocado salad on earth, and asked for the recipe. It turned out to be basic — chopped avocadoes, sliced onions and shallots and tomato cubes, mixed with a little sugar, vinegar, oil and a dash of fish sauce. Coriander on top. What made the difference was the lush avocado straight from the farm.</p>
<p>At Ngapali, where the Indian Ocean laps at the shore, I expected to revel in prawns the size of lobsters, as recalled from the pages of “Burmese Days.” After all, I had seen pomelos, red bananas, mounds of dried fish, green coconuts and strange-looking bugs in almost every market. Heart-shaped glossy betel nut leaves, just as Orwell described them, were abundant at the ubiquitous stands that serve up the betel leaf and a piece of hard chewy nut laced with lime.</p>
<p>But the prawns were not to be had in the markets or at Ngapali Beach. I glimpsed them only briefly — glistening in their translucent shells on the steel tables of a fish export factory — as they were weighed and packed for air freight to Japan.</p>
<p>For better or worse, this was a sign of modernity since the days of Orwell.</p>
<h6>Correction: March 25, 2007</h6>
<p>The Explorer column on March 11 about dining in Myanmar misstated the value of the kyat, the Myanmar currency, and the price in kyats of meals there. A meal at Napi, also known as Fatty Lady’s Place, in Ohnoma cost about 1,250 kyats, not 7 — the equivalent of $1 a person. Meals at several roadside joints in the countryside rarely cost more than 1,800 kyats, not 10. (Although the official exchange rate is seven kyats to the dollar, almost all private transactions use rates of 1,000 to 1,250 or more kyats to the dollar.)</p>
<p>A version of this article appears in print on , on Page TR8 of the New York edition with the headline: A Culinary Odyssey, on a Path Blazed by Orwell.</p>
<p>Click here and our experienced travel agent specialist would love to answer any questions and help you!</p>
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		<title>Myeik Archipelago diary</title>
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		<pubDate>Fri, 22 Sep 2017 02:37:26 +0000</pubDate>
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					<description><![CDATA[Myeik Archipelago diary We found the idea of a four-day cruise in the warm, sunny and isolated Myeik Archipelago – visited by so few tourists – immediately appealing, and put it at the top of our list of things to do on our four-week stay in Myanmar. Only a limited number of authorized cruises have [&#8230;]]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h5>Myeik Archipelago diary</h5>
<p>We found the idea of a four-day cruise in the warm, sunny and isolated Myeik Archipelago – visited by so few tourists – immediately appealing, and put it at the top of our list of things to do on our four-week stay in Myanmar.</p>
<p>Only a limited number of authorized cruises have access to the archipelago, and to get there you need to go via Kawthaung, right at the southern tip of Myanmar on the border with Thailand; make sure that you’re in Yangon in plenty of time to catch the plane to Kawthaung: the flight takes three hours, including two 20-minute stops in Dawei and Myeik. Going by road takes a tortuous five days by bus and may sometimes not even be possible at all.</p>
<p>In Kawthaung, we were met by a friendly and efficient link-man to our boat: he talked us through a deskful of police bureaucracy before taking us to our boat at Myoma Jetty – The Wanderlust, an elderly and leaky catamaran. We found to our surprise that we were the only passengers, but soon realised that there certainly was no room for more: we found it difficult to squeeze in tandem into our oddly-shaped cabin. But we were taken excellent care of for four days by the skipper, Mo; the guide, So-So; the engineer, Aung Min; and the trained cook, Mew-Ah.</p>
<p>The Wanderlust’s aging quirks, one of which was to occasionally drip on us as we slept, were compensated for by Mew-Ah’s excellent meals and our being generally pampered by the crew. We had a lot of interesting chats with So-So, who told us, among other things about his life, that he was going to send his five-year-old son to a monastery for a year when he became six, and that he himself had done so at the ages of eleven and seventeen.</p>
<p>We travelled in November, at the tail end of the rainy season – and it poured steadily for two days, which caused us to miss some planned snorkelling, fishing and jungle trekking; our first morning was spent on the scheduled stop at Nyaung Wee Island. We were interested to find that the large number of open-fronted shops/family dwellings were geared to only selling daily necessities to the crews of local fishing boats; we never saw as much as a shell necklace or any concession to the occasional tourist during the whole of our cruise.</p>
<p>It was interesting to talk (in translation) to these islanders about their way of life, particularly when we went by dinghy to a Moken (or ‘sea gypsy’) village, which was steadily getting larger. It was sad to hear that the government is now prohibiting practices central to Moken culture, including their tradition of fashioning boats from island trees. They told us that the government is keen for their children to have primary and secondary education, the latter being given on the mainland up to the age of 14, after which many of the children return to a life of fishing or shop-keeping.</p>
<p>On the way back to The Wanderlust, water got into the dinghy’s engine, which stopped; the skipper came in a kayak to explain that they couldn’t come to tow us, as the engine had seized up. Eventually we wheezed our way back…the crew’s mantra ‘It will be okay – no problem!’ did prove effective against all odds!</p>
<p>The next day, which was sunny, we kayaked up the exotic Lampi river, and later anchored at the idyllic Nga Mann Island, where we swam in picture-perfect turquoise seas and wandered on white sand on the edge of a jungle sporting wonderfully colourful fruits and flowers. Next we visited a village on Myauk Ni Island, again to have a most interesting conversation about the islanders’ daily lives – they see very few foreigners, only usually conversing with the fishermen who come for provisions.</p>
<p>The next day we awoke to cloudless sunshine, and again ambled along beautiful island beaches, always entirely to ourselves. For our last meal Mew-Ah excelled himself by producing a sumptuous lunch of soup-filled pumpkin and prawns in a delicious sauce. Then back in the sunshine to Kawthaung. This is an interesting town in itself, and people who come here to go on a cruise should allow time to wander through it: there are strong influences of India and Islam, which we hadn’t expected.</p>
<p>Despite the rain and the Wanderlust’s tricks, we found our cruise all we’d hoped for – fascinating, informative and above all, fun.</p>
<p>Sally Allender, 10th August 2014</p>
<p>We offer a number of <strong>cruise tours</strong> of the Myeik Archipelago &#8211; for more information Click here and our experienced travel specialist can help you organize the time of your life!</p>
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		<title>Magical Bagan &#8211; By traveller Gili</title>
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		<dc:creator><![CDATA[To Burma]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 21 Sep 2017 09:59:39 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Blog]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Magical Bagan - Gili]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Magical]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Myanmar travel tips]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Nature]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[wonderful]]></category>
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					<description><![CDATA[Magical Bagan &#8211; Gili Bagan is a dream and my hands down favorite place that I visited anywhere. You can keep your Ankor Wats, Great Walls of China and Borobadours, this place is pure magic and like nothing you will ever see again. I could have easily stayed another week on top of the 5 [&#8230;]]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h5>Magical Bagan &#8211; Gili</h5>
<p>Bagan is a dream and my hands down favorite place that I visited anywhere. You can keep your Ankor Wats, Great Walls of China and Borobadours, this place is pure magic and like nothing you will ever see again.</p>
<p>I could have easily stayed another week on top of the 5 days I spent exploring the Pagoda-dotted city.</p>
<ul>
<li>Finding a Pagoda or Temple with a view for yourself and just chilling and talking politics with other random strangers, or whomever else you have met on the way.</li>
<li>A random monastery we stumbled on with a secret staircase to climb for sunset which turns into darkness and stargazing whilst listening to the sound of monks somewhere in the distance.</li>
<li>Dancing at sunrise, surrounded by hot air balloons to upbeat burmese music blasting from a monastery/school/somewhere, on the sandy pathways, no-one else around, sometimes being passed by a truck full of people heading to work, or a monk on the back of a motorbike, just Burmese normality surrounding you.</li>
</ul>
<p>That’s what is still wonderful about Bagan, although it’s full of tourists, it feels big enough now for you to feel special and like it’s yours only. Even with the tourist hub of Nyaung U, normal life seems to just carry on around the temples and the tourists, locals are just getting on with it.</p>
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		<title>Myanmar travel tips</title>
		<link>https://www.toburma.com/how-to-travel-with-paper-map/</link>
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		<dc:creator><![CDATA[To Burma]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 12 Sep 2017 11:28:17 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Blog]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Myanmar travel tips]]></category>
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					<description><![CDATA[A wonderful serenity has taken possession of my entire soul, like these sweet mornings of spring which I enjoy with my whole heart. I am alone, and feel the charm of existence in this spot, which was created for the bliss of souls like mine. I am so happy, my dear friend, so absorbed in the exquisite sense of mere tranquil existence, that I neglect my talents. I should be incapable of drawing a single stroke at the present moment; and yet I feel that I never was a greater artist than now. When, while the lovely valley teems with vapour around me, and the meridian sun strikes the upper surface of the impenetrable foliage of my trees, and but a few stray gleams steal into the inner sanctuary, I throw myself down among the tall grass by the trickling stream; and, as I lie close to the earth, a thousand unknown plants are noticed by me: when I hear the buzz of the little world among the stalks, and grow familiar with the countless indescribable forms of the insects and flies, then I feel the presence of the Almighty, who formed us in his own image, and the breath of that universal love which bears and sustains us, as it floats around us in an eternity of blist.]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>Myanmar Travel Tips</strong><br />
Do I need a visa? How far in advance should I apply for my visa? Can I get them in advance or onsite?<br />
Yes, you will need a Myanmar visa and we highly recommend that you obtain your visa two month priors to departure. Recently, the Myanmar government has been issuing visas on arrival. We highly recommend that you get your visas prior to departure to ensure no delays at custom checkpoints.</p>
<p><strong>How do I get a Myanmar visa?</strong><br />
No matter what passport you have, we strongly suggest getting your visa in advance with a visa agency who will process your visa application on your behalf for a fixed fee beyond the cost of the visa itself. Paying this fee is almost always worth the hassle and time saved over arranging a visa yourself, and your visa application may be processed quicker and more efficiently.</p>
<p><strong>What is the currency in Myanmar?</strong><br />
The local currency in Myanmar is the kyat (pronounced “chat”). The official exchange rate fluctuates, so your best bet is to check online. (As of this writing, US$1.00=1340 kyats.) Currencies you may exchange are: US dollars, Hong Kong dollars, Pounds Sterling, Malaysian dollars, Euros and Australian dollars.</p>
<p><strong>At home my cash gets all wrinkled and folded. That’s ok, right?</strong><br />
Oddly, no. Myanmar banks and money exchangers will only take American bills in perfect condition. American money needs to be mint: crisp and clean with no rips, folds, water marks or pen marks.</p>
<p><strong>Can we use our credit cards at the hotels?</strong><br />
Many hotels in Myanmar accept credit cards.</p>
<p><strong>What’s the electrical voltage in Myanmar?</strong><br />
The voltage in Myanmar is 230 volts and the frequency is 50 Hz. The plugs that will work at the hotels are C,D,F and G. Many hotels have multi-purpose outlets that can take Australian 3-pin plugs. For laptops and phones, a simple plug adaptor should be sufficient.</p>
<p><strong>What airlines fly to Yangon?</strong><br />
Airlines that land in Yangon, please see the link below. Flights arrive in Yangon direct from Bangkok, Singapore, Kuala Lumpur and many other destinations.<br />
<a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yangon_International_Airport">https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yangon_International_Airport</a></p>
<p>Click here our experienced travel agent specialist love helping people to organize the time of your life!</p>
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