Saturday 29 December 2012

Holidays

It is the hols at the moment and somehow I put in a lot of work for school but very little on writing anything on this blog. We also don't go to Ocean a lot since we can access email and even facebook with KK's phone. It doesn't work great but well enough to not bother with 'proper' access.

Anyways, a quick hello and more posts in the next year.

Have a fabulous holiday time and I wish everybody a wonderful 2013. 

Thursday 20 December 2012

Alamanda Inn

A few weeks ago I finally made it to this place. We were in the neighbourhood and had wanted to eat at a place not too far away but that place had closed due to lack of business. Then someone in our group mentioned going to the Alamanda Inn for a bite. And iI must say I was pleasantly surprised. Of course we were in good company but the food was great and the ambiance is excellent. We stayed much longer than we had planned and were eventually the last to leave.  

I really like this place and I'm sure we'll be back here sometime soon. The prices are not much more expensive then anywhere else when you have good western food (there are cheaper places but then the food is usually less good as well). 
They have their own website Alamanda Inn and even a facebook page but I found the facebook page remarkably empty and of no help at all. This might change over time though.




 
 As always, my pictures don't do the place justice. I think it might be time for a new camera.

Yeah, Teletubbies!!!

BBC takes Teletubbies, TV news and Doctor Who to Burma

Teletubbies 
The Teletubbies have proved to be hugely popular with pre-schoolers
The Teletubbies, 24-hour news and Doctor Who are being introduced to Burma as the BBC launches three pay-TV channels there next January

Finally some good tv-programmes here.Unfortunately for us, I don't think it is the provider that we have. There are basically 2 choices and they didn't differ much. Now, this might be a reason to switch. That, and the fact that we have paid for all channels that our provider offers (58, most of them rubbish) but we get less than half for real and usually not the channels that we want. 


Friday 14 December 2012

Great location, ok food

General Aung San's workplace

 Yesterday we had a  birthday party at this place. The food was good, the company better and the location really nice. After dinner, one of the party members suggested we'd have a look upstairs because General Aung San used to work here. So, upstairs we went. Me, I'm just a sucker for old buildings and history so I enjoyed our 10 minutes looking around.

I just like this room

From outside the building is fabulous. Unfortunately my camera doesn't do it justice by any means.

Beautiful colonial building that my camera can not capture

Downstairs
Upstairs
I did and still do find the menu uninspiring. I saw a lot of Thai dishes, some western food a bit of Indian. Almost as if they can't make up their minds. That said, we ordered a couple of Indian dishes and it was nice.



 Adress: 290, U Wisara Road
Kamayit Township
Yangon

Tel: 09501 534 242


Or follow them on Facebook House of Memories

Thursday 13 December 2012

Grade 4 sleepover

Tonight we had our holiday show and for the last 3 years I have had a class sleepover after. For most westerners that sounds like good fun, here we usually have to convince parents that it is ok for their child to sleep away from home that is not with family or with family in a hotel.

My kids are on average 10 years old and for the majority this is the first experience of this kind they have ever had. And again this year  the kids are hyper exited and the parents hoover around for ages. They find it really tough to let go. Which is difficult of course but most parents have this phase a little earlier.

I have had parents unpack their son's pajamas and every year we have one family where we have to stop the maid going along with the kid to change. though I didn't notice this this time now I think of it.

This year I had one of my kids ask me who was going to sleep with them. He meant an adult. Now my TA usually sleeps with the girls (more for her sake than the kids mind). The classrooms are very close together and I always sleep where I can hear everything (with the door open. The mosquitoes will have a field day.) The first year I had a TA and a shadow teacher staying the night as well and they were wondering where I was going to sleep if I did not sleep in the boys or in the girls room. I told them I'd be sleeping in the small room we used as video room. They got really worried whether I would be ok. It was their first sleepover as well. I thought it was endearing but it was kind of sad as well. I can't believe being around 24 years old and never have had a sleepover in my life.

Update: we had a parent call us the next morning at about half past 6. She hadn't been able to sleep all night and was waiting for us in the teashop. She and her husband were there when we arrived. Their daughter wasn't too interested in seeing mum and dad, she was too busy with her friends (as it should be). Apparently, it was the first time their daughter had slept somewhere without her parents.

Monday 10 December 2012

Sinterklaas

Every year Sinterklaas arrives in Yangon for a short visit and he did so again this year. Unlike previous years, he did not come across Inya lake but he did come with two Zwarte Pieten, several young Zwarte Pieten, and two small horses.

Sint wrote to the children in the dutch community that Magic Piet had cast all kinds of helpful spells though some turned out better than others. When Sinterklaas asked him not to do this anymore since it distracted the Pieten from the important task of wrapping and labeling all the presents, Magic Piet promised not to do magic until after December the 6th.

One Piet was disappointed though. He had wanted to ask Magic Piet to make Sinterklaas' horse bigger and stronger. When Magic Piet was not in his room, he got the big book of spells, made a potion and gave it to the horse.

We knew that something had gone wrong but not what. The kids loved the ponies though since they were allowed to ride them. I know Sint has asked them for help to make his horse complete again but I'm not so sure the kids don't like the status quo.

Since Saturday, every time Xenne does something less nice, he immediately says "mama, please don't tell Sinterklaas".  I haven't' even told him yet that Sinterklaas is supposed to take badly behaved children off to Spain yet....

Friday 7 December 2012

Myanmar lessons

For a few weeks now, one of our Myanmar teachers gives us lessons in the language. It is quite embarrassing to have to admit that I've been here almost 7 years now and still can't speak the language apart from some useful (and some less useful) words.

Twice before did I start but on both occasions I was pregnant shortly after and was too tired to continue. That won't happen this time I'm sure.

We learn not only to speak but also to read and write but the Myanmar alphabet is horrendous.

To give you a few letters of the Myanmar alphabet (all consonants except one letter, the vowels, tone-symbols, and what else are not included):


U and V both have the ‘ba’ sound

Cand Dboth have the  ‘za’ sound

Yand Xboth have the  ‘ya’ sound


One of these days I'll post the complete alphabet. Then you can see the difficulties us poor Myanmar-learners face.

Finally, cool weather

This morning was the first morning the morning air had that little nip of cold that I like and that means that winter has arrived here in Myanmar.  It is already early December and it seemed like winter would never arrive.

This is the one season most westerners who live here find nice since the temperatures hoover around the 20 degrees Celsius.

Thandar even ran back into the house to get a light jacket and I think I'll dress Eaindra and Xenne slightly warmer to tomorrow morning.

I'm very happy since it'll also mean we can leave the aircon off at night and have the windows open.. Yes!

Wednesday 5 December 2012

First motorbikes in Yangon

Actually, what I wrote in the title is not correct. Motorbikes have been here for a while but there were very very few of them and you only saw them every once in a blue moon.

Lately there are more and more of them and I see them regularly in my quarter. They are not allowed on the main roads and Yangon is in that respect very unlike other Asian cities. I think it is a good thing they are not allowed since traffic is already bad enough without the motorbikes weaving through traffic. The majority of the drivers in Yangon (and Myanmar for that matter) are awful chauffeurs and barely know the difference between the accelerator and the brakes. You don't really want to encourage an environment where the death toll is set to rise.

The banishment of the motorbikes on the main road is a good thing, like I said, but I think it is difficult to stop the tide. We were on a main junction waiting for the traffic light and there she was; the first mum to drive her daughter to school on a motor bike. It was bound to happen of course and she will be the first of many. Give it a year or two and even Yangon's streets will be swamped with those horrible machines defying all traffic rules and regulations. 

Friday 30 November 2012

ATM's

ATM's outside of Ocean Northpoint
These nice, sleek machines have been out there for a while now. I haven't tried it myself yet since you need a bank account with the bank that provided the machine. You can't use any ATM to use your bank account, not yet. Apparently, they are doing their best to get the systems connected and hopefully it will also soon be possible to have access to a foreign bank account since that would be great for tourism.

So far, I have never seen anybody use any ATM. Not these at Ocean, not anywhere else. I'm now thinking that it might be useful for us since it happens every once so often that we wonder whether we have brought enough cash along. Inflation is a nasty thing...

Wednesday 28 November 2012

Unbelievable.. there are now even more car sales centres!

In the past week I have travelled around Yangon a bit more than I usually do. What surprised me so much is that there are now even more car sales centers. And I do not mean one or two new ones, there are many. Even in areas where there are already a fair few. They all seem to be selling the exact same types of cars and I doubt prices will vary much since they all have to go through the same car import scheme that the government has.

All these places are build on prime locations almost like it is an impulse buy decision. A couple drives by a car sales center and says to each other "shall we buy a car honey?".

Maybe  just don't understand the Myanmar psyche but even with something as expensive to set up as a car sales center, they seem to copy what someone else is doing and what they see as being successful. No matter if the other makes money or not, the perception is what counts....

There are now car sales centers in the front yard of houses to enormous steel constructions. They are almost as abundant as phone shops. How is it possible that these places can be profitable?
 

Tuesday 27 November 2012

Weather troubles

At the moment we have a huge rainstorm dropping its water content all over the area here. It almost feels like being back home in wintertime. The sky is almost black and it is relatively cold at the moment.

This isn't the first downpour cum storm this week either. We had a similar one yesterday although I heard later that it was a very local one.

These past weeks every third day or so we have these storms. Sometimes accompanied with a massive release of electricity in the form of lightning. Sometimes just ear deafening booms. Like the one yesterday that made the glass window next to my computer rattle.

Usually around this time of year we have warm, dry weather. Now it sometimes seems like we are in the middle of the monsoon instead of cooing down to the Myanmar winter.

I always feel sorry for the people who are flying in or out of  Yangon when there is a storm like this. I hate flying on perfect flying days and anything less than perfect flying weather is worse. Flying in a storm like the one battering Yangon right now is something I do so not want to experience.

Monday 26 November 2012

Weddings

We had a wedding last week of one of our teachers. On Thursday afternoon form 4 to 6 pm we all went to the wedding hall. We left our presents on the gift 'counter', as someone called it, and congratulated the newly weds.

After that we sat down at large round tables and were shortly after served massive amounts of food. Mostly meat and fish since that is what people like and it is a way of showing that you are wealthy enough to provide this.

What I always find interesting is that people sit down, eat, and leave as soon as they had their fill. A table behind us came in about 10 minutes after we did and had left way before we even had finished eating. Maybe their table companions weren't greact conversationalists but it is a pattern.

We had the remainder of the wedding with a dinner on Friday. I thought it was going to be different since only a few of us were invited. It was almost the same. The dinner hall was enormous and there were so many tables full of wedding guests.

To the disappointment of one of my colleagues we didn't see any of the official ceremony. That said, the food was very good and we ate our fill.

Wednesday 21 November 2012

Book buffet

This is a word that starts me salivating the moment I think about it. Book buffet.. for a bookaholic like me there is nothing like it, especially since there are still very few bookstores here. Heavenly, that is what it is.

It is of course also:
  • hard work
  • sweaty work
  • dirty work
  • frustrating at times (when someone takes a book you had your eye on)
  • much more expensive than I budget for
  • addictive (terribly so)
  • dehydrating work (I often forget to drinkenough even though water is readily available. And lunch I always skip. The word doesn't even register...)
So what is the book buffet? The Myanamr Book Center (one of our few bookstores) organises it twice a year. It lasts for 5 days. One one side of their compound they have discount books. Stacks of books for set prices. One the other side, and, my personal favorite, there are 5 huge tables full of books. You buy a 10,000 or 20,000 ks, bag ($12, $23) and start filling the bag with whatever takes your fancy. Most books are children's books and you have to sift through them carefully since their usually donated. You have very good, almost brand new books but for example also colouring books that have been done already. Most of the books are for younger kids, but every so often you find gold. A while ago I found a fantastic book on Autism for kids there. That was worth the 10,000 ks. bag it went in and much more. This time, I found 7 good novels for me. For KK I  found a wonderful 8 in 1, extremely heavy cookbook (in a 10,000 ks. bag with space left for books for Eaindra. Luckily the bags aren't sold on weight...). Xenne got stacks and stacks of extra books. He helped both on Saturday and Sunday to fill his bags (Saturday from 9 to 5:30. I'm doing my best to turn him into a book addict). Thandar had some trouble at first finding books she liked but she went home with 2 bags. She even found 2 Artemis Fowl books.

On Monday I tool my Grade 4 there on a field trip. I do that every year. In the weekend I put books aside that I think they will like. On Monday morning, they fill up their bags. It is always a huge success. Especially when we get back to school and they have the time to see what they and everyone else found.

Xenne and my books. KK's cookbook and most of Eaindra's books are not on the picture
The book buffet was last weekend. My muscles have recovered. I'm ready for the next one. Unfortunately it won't be until the end of march or early April. *sigh*

Tuesday 20 November 2012

THE VISIT is over



Since we had an unexpected long weekend, we went to a favourite teashop of ours.  After all, we could take it easy and be out of the house for a little while as well.
When we arrived, the live coverage of President Obama’s visit was about to start. It was filmed at the airport and it was obvious that he hadn’t arrived yes. Even though there wasn’t much to see, all eyes in the teashop were glued to the TV set in one corner.
We saw him land (on TV) and how he greeted the reception committee. There was an intermezzo in which probably some formalities took place on the airport side. We saw a short recap of Barack Obama’s life.
We left while President Obama was driving along Pyay Road towards his meeting places. The streets were lined in students in their traditional school uniforms of white top and green trousers or longyis.
A friend who lives very close to Pyay Raod told me that her street was repaved this week and that all the owners had had orders to paint their gates. Heaven forbid that President Obama would look into a side street and find a street full of potholes and badly maintained fronts!
I do wonder what he has made of Myanmar. Just looking at some of the buildings that he would encounter like the international airport with its bumpy landing strip; some very modern and recently constructed business properties along Pyay Road, the houses along New University Road (since he would visit Daw Aung San Suu Kyi who lives along that road and the American Embassy is there as well), and the beautiful Shwedagon Pagoda which he managed to visit briefly.
It was odd seeing President Obama and Hillary Clinton decent from the plane. I’ve been here a few years now and it still surprises me how fast some things have changed. Myanmar has gone from a country you couldn’t talk about to a country everybody is discussing. From a pariah state to a country that has seen more dignitaries in the last year than in the previous 50 together.
Don’t get me wrong, I thing that this visit has been good for Myanmar. By the look on the faces of the people in the teashop what probably counted most for them was the fact that this visit was happening at all. It must have been something they thought would never ever come to pass. For the people here, the fact that he has been here must have been the biggest boost of confidence they have had in a very very long time.