Re: Summer 2015 | Page 61

“Expect the unexpected” became our motto over the next three weeks. Along with our friends, Dave and Wendy, we’d been planning this trip for months, arranging it directly with a company in Myanmar (which we knew was something of a risk, so it was a huge relief to see someone waiting for us at the airport!). With any new experience, particularly when travelling, there is always a gap between the imagined and the reality, so it was going to be interesting to see just how wide that gap would be. Yangon is an assault on the senses. As with most hot countries, people live their lives mostly out in the streets and the pavements are choc-a-bloc with stalls selling everything from old paperbacks to fruit, piled like jewels on wide, flat baskets lined with fresh banana leaves; outdoor kitchens; craftsmen at work; sugar-cane presses; red-robed monks holding out alms bowls and so much more. Weaving your way through this kaleidoscope of colourful activity, while trying to avoid tripping over a sleeping dog (they’re everywhere), is bewildering. And then there are the smells – cooking, the fragrant perfume from flower garlands and the rather less fragrant pong of sewage – and the constant background hooting of Yangon’s endless stream of ancient, overloaded buses, cycle trishaws and taxis. It all hits you between the eyes and makes home seen bland and grey by comparison. We spent the day walking around downtown Yangon, then in the late afternoon went to Myanmar’s biggest and most revered temple, 59