Grinding peanuts for peanut oil - Big business in Burma! |
The nuts |
Where the nuts come from -- underground! |
Riding the ox grinder |
Where the peanut oil drips out, after the nuts are ground |
The wooden grinder, with the peanut remains |
Feeding the peanut remains to the ox, post-peanut grinding |
A natural cowgirl |
Parts of palm trees |
The palm fruit |
The palm sap collector |
Better to pray to have Buddha on your side, Just in case |
The royal tasting of the palm |
The palm sap |
One of the many forms palm takes -- this one, a highly distilled form |
The distillery |
The fermenting pot, buried into the ground |
The distillery chef |
Pure palm alcohol |
Ox food - the palm fruit remains |
The tree trunk used for cosmetic purposes on all Burmese women |
Wet then rub the wood to make the "Thanaka," the cosmetic Burmese women wear. The tree has to be 35 years old, at least, to be worthy of Thanaka-making |
Thanaka application - Burmese feel like it adds both beauty and protects their skin from the sun, so they put it on the kids to protect their faces from the sun too. |
Thanaka-covered |
Thanaka in the shape of a leaf. Some kids wear Thanaka in the shape of Mickey Mouse. |
A temple at the top of monkey mountain. The locals and temple-dwellers treat the monkeys there with spiritual reverence, thinking the monkeys are beloved by Buddha and the temple gods there |
Climbing up the many steps to the top, Ken and a local guy connect, in typically friendly Burmese fashion. The Burmese man wears a "Longyi" which is like a sarong tucked in with a knot up top. |
Awww, baby! Climbing up to mama |
Every temple, often called stupa, have gold-covered domes, and, really, gold-covered everything. |
The windy top |
Ring the bell three times for good luck |
He is a "nat", or a human who became a saint when he died. If you leave money on him, it's assumed you'll get money too. |
Top of the temple, after lots of climbing |
My brave warriors, ready to fight the monkeys with their umbrellas |
The monkeys had come close to us, looking ready to attack, or maybe just eager for food. | So | the boys fended them off. |
Another nat |
Turns out Abraham was shrieking because he saw a monkey steal Ken's shoe from outside the nat worshiping room. |
Ken thought the shoe stealing was funny |
We had no idea how you get a shoe back from a monkey. But, this Burmese saleswoman lured the monkey with a banana and stole Ken's shoe back from the monkey. |
Abraham was completely distraught over the monkey taking Ken's shoe. |
Boom took a while to recover, even after we recovered the shoe. |
The offending monkey, keeping an eye out for another unsuspecting pair of shoes. |
The Burmese military joined the Thai air force, giving the Thai military a "Best of Burma" tour. |
The Thai general of honor sat by himself for breakfast, with his wife, that is. And many would come by and bow to him. |
Alice's notes written on "Nyaungoo Market" in Bagan. The produce was out of this world - I've never seen ones like this before. |
Bamboo shoots |
They call these medicated eggs - some sort of fermenting process of eggs so they don't go rotten. They got the idea from China. That's some sort of lyme and chaff or sawdust, I think. |
The betelnut is wrapped in a leaf like a burrito with lime paste and tobacco wiped on the leaf. Betelnut-for-girls substitutes something sweet for the tobacco. |
Jasmine to perfume the women's hair. Unlike China, women in Burma take beautiful, cosmetic care of their bodies, skin, and clothing. |
The Jasmine petals. |
How they sew the jasmine onto a long thread. |
Bags of the other Burmese national addiction - RICE -- at the market |
The eskimos can identify 300 types of snowflakes, and the Burmese can identify equally many types of rice. It all looks like just plain old rice to us. |
Yes, deep in the heart of Burma is a Brooklyn t-shirt. I've never seen Brooklyn looking so cutesy-pie. |
Owner of an expansive clothing stall, housed with many women sewing and selling. |
Our guide with Alice is her matching Burmese women's wear. Shiny and pink, the way Alice likes it. |
Boom wearing Burmese men's wear |
Grif too |
Me too! I had them make me 4 shirts, and a skirt, and they tailored them right on the spot. |
We also visited the Burma Lacquerware Factory, where it turns out lacquerware (bowls, etc.) all start with a bamboo base, making them light as a feather. |
Lacquer, from a lacquer tree, which has sap so poisonous that even its vapours can cause a serious rash. |
Colors ground down from various natural elements. |
The men are bred to be the real craftsmen, making the design carved into the side of the laquerware. The women do painstaking digging, based on the men's design. |
The designs get pretty elaborate. |
Boom sat in awe, practically in prayer, watching the men use speedy, loud machines to whittle away the lacquerware. |
You can't see the Bagan temples at night, but you can see marionettes! |
The marionette musicians for the marionette theater dinner. |
We collected a huge number of marionettes in Southeast Asia and it was good to see them wielded with skill. |