This tidbit is too great to not share.
In an email from my uncle, asking when my cousin and I are arriving in the Philippines, this was in the email to tempt us to arrive earlier:
"We shall have a 40 kg lechon and two goats."
Awesome.
If you don't know what a lechon is, you obviously haven't lived life and you should google it.
Saturday, December 1, 2012
No More Pictures :(
I can't post any more pictures on my blog. I have apparently used up my quota allowed for photos, which completely defeats the purpose of my blog. Sad day.
I might still blog about my SE Asian Adventure, but without pictures, my blog is a million times more boring.
Stay tuned and hopefully I'll figure out a loophole through this mess...
Also, I lost my camera at the Full Moon Party with over 200 hundred pictures from Bagan, Mandalay, Chiang Mai, Bangkok, Koh Phangan, and of course the infamous Full Moon Party. If I could post a picture of a really sad face I would.
I might still blog about my SE Asian Adventure, but without pictures, my blog is a million times more boring.
Stay tuned and hopefully I'll figure out a loophole through this mess...
Also, I lost my camera at the Full Moon Party with over 200 hundred pictures from Bagan, Mandalay, Chiang Mai, Bangkok, Koh Phangan, and of course the infamous Full Moon Party. If I could post a picture of a really sad face I would.
Yangon --> Inle Lake
After a couple days in Yangon, I decided to head up north to
Inle Lake. I sat around the hostel while it rained for a bit, then got pick up in some sort of trailer, and was shoved in the back with some locals and a bunch
of packages. It was about an hour ride to the bus “station” and it was so
incredibly bumpy in the back of the trailer. I immediately regretted my
decision to go braless that day.
Lo and behold, lucky girl, I have become. When we stopped at
our first rest stop of our 12 hours bus ride I was unsure where we were or how
long we were to be there for. There was a man on the bus who spoke English, his
hometown was Inle Lake, he was stopping at the same stop as me, AND his uncle
owned the guesthouse I was staying at. He paid for my meal at the rest stop. It
was a delicious soup made form fish bones, with beans in it, that he said was a
traditional meal of the people in the northern part of the country.
When we got to the bus “station”, a man pointed at me,
helped me with my bags, then brought me to an area where a bus was waiting next
to an open concrete room full with flies and stink. I use the term “station”
loosely because it looked more like a market with buses occasionally coming in
and out. I roamed around and started watching a women make Paan (I can't remember what the Myanmar people called it, but this is what wikipedia calls it. Here's a link to a description). The boys who worked for the bus company were hanging around too
and helping her. As I watched, they offered me one, so of course I had to try
it. It was weird. I think I was supposed to chew the Betel green leaf and swallow it,
but the leaf tasted terrible. I was instructed to chew more. Whatever I was
chewing tasted terrible, then at last, my spit turned beet red, just like the
Myanmese men. A crowd gathered to watch the foreign girl try the local chew.
They gave me high fives and it was awesome.
It had now been a while since I saw any other foreigners. I
was getting worried, because I had no idea what to do. I was supposed to
instruct the bus driver where to drop me off, then take a taxi from there to
head to Nyuangshwe. I told the bus driver, but I might have mispronounced the
township.
We arrived in Nyaungshwe and his brother came to pick us up,
and they dropped me off at my guesthouse.
Lucky me!
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