the town hall |
13th DECEMBER 2019 ~ After checking in at the hotel and having a short rest, we immediately hit the road. It is very important to familiarize ourselves with the streets around the accommodation area as this would help us navigate the area later.
Firstly we walked to Sule Pagoda which we first saw when we walked down from the bus. For one thing, the hotel we were staying is strategically located near to Sule Pagoda, which is at the very centre of this part of Yangon city and that should be the landmark for us just in case we lost our way.
Sule Pagoda is also one of the attractions in Yangon. It is surrounded by majestic colonial buildings left by the British when it occupied Myanmar from 1824-1948.
Emmanuel Baptist Church, the oldest in Yangon |
The colonial buildings were really huge. While some were preserved and maintained, a few others looked really old and abandoned.
the classic fire station |
Here you could see people walking around, both men and women, in their national sarong attire named longyi. They even went to work in that - the men would wear their shirt tucked in their longyi. Visitors could easily observe people spitting almost everywhere in the city - which could be very awkward as the locals consumed betel nuts and betel leaves like people smoking cigarettes. Therefore you could always see the red spits on the pavements and perhaps it would be best not to step on them.
children playing on the street |
Crossing the streets in Yangon could be a big challenge. The concept of zebra crossing is different here, it was the other way around - vehicles did not stop for the pedestrians. People would have to cross the road once the road was clear. The funny thing was that we found the vehicles would be speeding towards people crossing the road instead of slowing down. The best way was to stick to the locals when crossing, and you ran when they ran. I hoped I had lost a lot of weight from running across the streets of Yangon.
street peddlers |
second hand books |
Another thing, the vehicles here are right hand drive like in Malaysia (except for the buses) but the vehicles are driven on the right hand side of the road, which could be very confusing.
from the pedestrian crossing and many people came here just to take photos |
Yangon is actually a big city but only managed to explore the small part of it during our 2-day stay before moving to other places. I am sure there are still many other attractions that Yangon have to offer to visitors and one might have to spend more time here to see them all.
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