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Bagan

Bagan… eat, sleep and move around

Where to sleep in Bagan:

To vist Bagan you have three option to stay: Old Bagan, where are located the most posh accommodation, New Bagan, a grid of organized quiet alleys, with a good choice of homestays and guesthouses… or Nyaung-U for budget option.

So Nyaung-U was the choice: an uninteresting village along the road, more and more focus in the tourism business. The local food market (mornings) still has the pulsation of the Burmese lifestyle but slowly is changing to tourist-oriented products, like souvenirs handicrafts and antiques (until 4 pm). Still deserve a visit.

To sleep they’re hundreds of options in Nyaung-U. The places listed in booking websites are usually more expensive, but still you can get a better rate if you go directly to the counter instead of booking on-line. No stress, you’ll find a place to sleep!!!

From my experience you can’t find a double room cheaper than 20 USD (around 27.000 Kyats). February 2016. However, the breakfast is included and the wi-fi is free.

The choice was for the Large Golden Pot. The rooms are ok, the place is quiet, slow wi-fi, reasonable breakfast (fruit, eggs, toast, tea, coffee, butter and jam)… but a push and unpleasant manager, always trying to push you to rent the e-bike there (you can find cheaper outside) and the bus tickets (all have the same price). When he realized that we didn’t get anything from him he become grumpy and gave us a bad rate when we pay in kyats. https://www.tripadvisor.com/ShowUserReviews-g303663-d554718-r463088080-Large_Golden_Pot-Nyaung_U_Mandalay_Region.html#CHECK_RATES_CONT

Bagan_Nyanung-U_Myanmar_DSC_2533
one of the local tea shops were food is also served. Nyaung-U
Bagan_Nyanung-U_Myanmar_DSC_2545
Nyaung-U food market… busy during early morning
Bagan_Nyanung-U_Myanmar_DSC_2569
Nyaung-U

Where to eat in Bagan:

Nyanung-U if the less charming option, but has all the facilities that you may need, like banks, ATM, motorbike and bicycle rent, reserve of bus tickets, and many food option, from the more touristic restaurant with a choice of Myanmar and Western food, as a lot of local restaurants and tea-shops.

Also in Nyanung-U you can find street-food, as mohinga. Mohinga even if you ask without pork or chicken is not guarantee that is totally vegetarian, as the soup is not always made from a vegetable stock, and can also be made from fish.

"mohinga" from a street food stall at Nyaung-U
“mohinga” from a street food stall at Nyaung-U

It´s also easy to find vegetarian options, in local restaurants, like fried rice and fried-noodles. But along the road from Nyanung-U to Old Bagan, you’ll find on the left side of the road a nice vegetarian restaurant with Myanmar food… and Myanmar prices: Moe Pyae San. When you pass by the sign indicated “art gallery” will probably pop up to your eyes, but this place is basically a family style restaurant.

The menu is dominated by salads (tea leaf salads, or laphet thoke) and rice (the coconut rice is very good). Despite the sign that advertise “vegetarian restaurant” at Moe Pyae San you can also find Myanmar food, a set of rice, curry, soup, steam lentil, tea leaf pickle and some raw vegetables. This meal cost around 1200 Kyats… around 0.80 euros.

Along the road from Nyanung-U to Old Bagan there are many stalls selling food, much of them close around 4 pm. But they are a good and cheap option for local food.

 

Burmese meal at ... Restaurant. Nyaung-U
Burmese meal at … Restaurant. Nyaung-U

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Bagan_Nyanung-U_Myanmar_Moe Pyae san restaurant_IMG_2259
Moe Pyae San restaurant at Nyanung-U

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Bagan_Nyanung-U_Myanmar_Moe Pyae san restaurant_IMG_2238
Moe Pyae San… a vegetarian restaurant but that also serve burmese food, at Nyanung-U, on the road between Nyanung-U and old Bagan

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Burmese meal at ... Restaurant. Nyaung-U
Burmese meal at Moe Pyae San Restaurant. Nyaung-U

Moving around Bagan:

Bagan is big, the temples are spread, the weather is hot and dry and many roads are sandy. So… e-bikes are the answer! A new fashion that quickly conquered Bagan and the tourists, compared with what I found in 2014, making bicycles a less option popular option.

I like to cycle and it’s a very smooth way to visit the Bagan Archaeological Area. But to be honest the e-bikes are a better option, not just saving you from some effort, but because allow you to go further, escaping from the most beaten track, and enjoy to get lost in the labyrinth of roads of Bagan.

An e-bike cost 7.000 kyats, a day, but if you rent it just for the “sunset” i.e. from 4 pm you pay 5.000 kyats.

Note: you can rent a e-bike, for two person!!!! Some places insist that is just one for each person, I got one for 7000 kyats a da day for two person, at Treasure Queen, nice and friendly family. The shop is open since 5.30 a.m. to 8 p.m., and you should drop the e-bike there to recharge during the evening.

Bagan_Nyanung-U_Myanmar_IMG_2303

Bagan Archaeological Area Ticket:

The ticket cost 25.000 Kyats. (February 2016)

No matter how you arrive to Bagan you cannot avoid paying the ticket; all the bus or taxi drivers will stop at the counter. But if you want to take your chance you can try to skip the ticket counter: you can walk from the Bus Terminal or from the Train Station on the way to Nyanung-U, along the main road. When you walk about 850 meters you’ll nee to turn to the first road on your right. Then keep walking more-or-less parallel to the main road for 2.5 km, crossing a residential area. At a T-junction, turn left to get back to main road. From here you have 2 km more until reach Nyanung-U.

Is a loooong walk but if you are really in a tight budget you can give a try. This will work better if you arrive early morning, before the sunrise or during the evening (choose the “on foot” option of maps.me).

The guesthouses never ask for your ticket, and there is not a gate or nothing where you have to show your ticket. In 3 days of visiting Bagan Archaeological Area, only once I need to show the ticket and was on a Sunday (the busiest day in Bagan) and at the Ananda Temple, one of the most popular places.

Bagan ticket
Bagan ticket

How long to stay in Bagan?

For me, 3 days was perfect to visit the area. You have several changes to see the sunrise and the sunset from different perspectives, and time enough to look for a quiet place to see the sunset.

In just one day you’ll be rushing, and end up full of Buddha images and stone carving, mixing all the names and places. With a longer stay you can visit Bagan in the morning, and at the end of the afternoon, when the temperatures and cooler and the light is better.

How to go from the bus terminal to Bagan:

The bus terminal that serves Bagan is located far from the Archaeological Area, as also the Train Station, located about 5.6 km from Nyanung-U.

The taxis are organized and there is a sign in the bus terminal with the price to the different places to stay: Old Bagan, New Bagan and Nyanung-U. The price is for person!!! Quite expensive for such a short ride. It’s a distance that can me made of foot if your destination is Nyanung-U, if you arrive early morning or evening, as the road doesn’t have much shade.

But the best is to leave the bus terminal on foot, and walk on the direction of the town. There you can try to hitchhike or take one of the shared-taxi that regularly pass by and that charge 1.000 kyats per person. The shared-taxis are a regular public transportation in Myanmar, usually a small truck that transports people on the back of the vehicle. 

Bagan_Nyanung-U_Myanmar_taxi prices_IMG_2187

How to go from Bagan to Shan State:

There are many options to leave Bagan by bus.

My next stop was Shan State, so I took a bus to Mandalay, and from there there’s another bus to Kyaukme. You can get the tickets at the guesthouses, travel agents or in one of the many shops the rent bikes. The prices are more or less the same.

Is also possible to take a direct bus to Hsipaw, which pass by Kyaukme.

Bus from Nyanung-U to Mandalay: 9.000 Kyats, departure at 5.30 am, and they pic you at your guesthouse. Maybe you can save some money if you go directly to the bus terminal. In Mandalay the bus can drop you at Chan Mya Shwe Pyi or at Pyi Gyi Myat Shin. It was a small bus, new and with a/c but more adjust to urban rides that to bumpy roads.

Bagan and the 2 thousand Buddhist temples

Yes… there presently around two thousand temples that survive from the ten thousand build between the 9th and the 13th centuries, during the Pagan Kingdom (later changed to Bagan), which territory is more or less what is now Myanmar.

Despite being located on the banks of Irrawaddy River, Bagan is located in a very dry and hot area, where the scarce vegetation leads us to a savanna landscape. The intense sun and the temperatures above 30 degrees intensify this feeling, pushing the visitors to move around during early morning or close to the sunset, leaving the hot hours of the day to chill at the room or take a nap.

With the sunset the landscape gets a special touch when the last sunrays light the ground, enhancing the rusty color of the soil. This is one of the most appreciated moments, attracting the visitors is the search of an accessible rooftop or an easy climbing temple to appreciate the show. It’s a stress moment, with the best places already taken by the tour groups and excursions, with crowds climbing the steep and narrow staircases, and people pushing to reach the best spots, handling selfie sticks.

It’s a challenge and a good excuse to explore the endless number of temples and find “your” place… that maybe need to be shared with other people 😉

With the sunrise comes the quietest moment of the day, and also the most inspiring, with the mist slowly coming out from the vegetation, creating a layer of unreal atmosphere that evolve the flat landscape, where the temples and pagodas stand out.

But despite the tourist cliché, the sunset and sunrise at Bagan offer beautiful moments, where is nice just to sit and enjoy the magic moment, surrounded by an almost unreal landscape where the red color of the walls of the temples, pops up from the green dry vegetation.

Stone carving with traditional "kanot" decoration. Bagan, Mayanmar
Stone carving with traditional “kanot” decoration that cover most of the temple walls. Bagan, Mayanmar
Bagan, Myanmar
… but Bagan doesn’t attract just foreigner tourist, being also a importante place for pilgrimage between burmese Buddhist, coming from different parts of the country
Sunrise at Bagan, Myanmar
Sunrise at Bagan with the mist comes out from the vegetation, giving a fairytale atmosphere to the landscape
fresco inside on of Bagan temples
Murals and “frescos” inside on of Bagan temples, always with representation of Buddha’s life, preserved by the darkness that envolve the corridors inside the temples. Sulamani Temple, Bagan
During the afternoon the landscape is wrapped in a layer of mist resulting from the heat. Bagan, Myanmar
During the afternoon the landscape is wrapped in a layer of mist resulting from the heat, dimming the contours of the pagodas

Bagan, Myanmar
Most of the temples follow the same arquitecture, with the core formed by a square surrounded by corridors of high ceilings, occupied by pigeons, at each side of the square there’s a Buddha statue facing a gate to the outside. Sulamani Temple
Stone carving decorating he entrance of a temple, Bagan
Stone carving decorating the entrance of a temple, Bagan
Bagan, Myanmar
Decoration inside on of the Bagan temples
Bagan, Myanmar
Almost all the Buddha statues are covered with gold, shinning with the faint light of the interior of the temples
Bagan, Myanmar
One of the four main Buddha’s statues at Ananda Temple, one of the most important of Bagan
Bagan, Myanmar
Bagan, Myanmar
Selling sweets at the entrance of one temple
Selling sweets at the entrance of one of Bagan temples
Bagan, Myanmar
Bagan, Myanmar
Bagan, Myanmar
Bagan, Myanmar
Donation box at temples entrance, Bagan, Myanmar
Donation box at temples entrance, Bagan, Myanmar
Sunset at Bagan, Myanmar
Sunset at Bagan, Myanmar

 

Sunset at Bagan, Myanmar
Sunset at Bagan, Myanmar

Bagan… eat, sleep and move around

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I’m Catarina, a wanderer from Lisbon, Portugal… or a backpack traveller with a camera!

Every word and photo here comes from my own journey — the places I’ve stayed, the meals I’ve enjoyed, and the routes I’ve taken. I travel independently and share it all without sponsors or ads, so what you read is real and unfiltered.

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