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Village Life on Inle Lake…Yes, it Includes Souvenir Shops

Jun 11, 2014 by Daniel McBane 2 Comments

This entry is part 2 of 3 in the series A Boat Tour of Inle Lake in Myanmar

A Boat Tour of Inle Lake in Myanmar

  • 1 - Real and Fake Leg Rowing Fishermen on Inle Lake
  • 2 - Village Life on Inle Lake…Yes, it Includes Souvenir Shops
  • 3 - Inle’s Floating Gardens and some Buddhist Hypocrisy

After puttering down the lake for a while, we eventually arrived at the village of Ywama to visit a local market. Our driver parked our boat and dropped us off at a long, covered walkway lined with makeshift stalls manned by local vendors. The vendors might have been local, but the market was not. It clearly existed almost solely for our benefit. Luckily, you could continue past the covered area and deeper into town, where touristy knickknacks gave way to fruits and vegetables.

Boats parked in Ywama village on Inle Lake in Myanmar

Boat parking in Ywama village

Female vegetable vendor in Ywama on Inle Lake, Myanmar

A woman selling vegetables at the Ywama market

This area was much smaller, but it was the only part of the market frequented by local shoppers and thus much more interesting. Nevertheless, after some of the incredible markets I’d seen elsewhere in Myanmar, this one was definitely disappointing. Luckily, we hadn’t come to the lake to see markets and we did end up seeing all the things we wanted to see, so the day was definitely not wasted.

Women carrying goods to market in Inle, Myanmar

Two women carrying their goods to market

Local woman buying spices in Ywama market, Myanmar

A woman haggling with a vendor at the Ywama market

Before seeing anything of interest, we had a jewelry shop to visit. It was the first shop on our tour. It specialized in silver and you could watch a craftsman make jewelry live, but I have to admit, this didn’t interest me at all. I left the two girls behind and walked around the village for a bit to take photos.

Canal in Ywama village on Inle Lake in Burma

Ywama village main street

When I got back to the shop, I learned from our driver that the girls had left shortly after I had. One of them returned soon after, but the other one had apparently gotten lost. We ended up waiting a long time for her and our driver started to get a bit agitated over the impact on his schedule.

Inle Lake locals loading a boat in Myanmar

Some locals loading a boat across the ‘street’ from us while we were waiting

When we did finally get going again, we headed to a floating village. This was the main reason I wanted to get out on the lake and we spent the next thirty minutes or so drifting down roads of water between rows of teak houses perched above the lake on stilts. Laundry hung out to dry on uneven decks, children peered out from small windows and boat traffic flowed around us as local residents left their homes to run errands. I snapped well over a hundred photos.

Teak houses on stilts on Inle Lake in Burma

Some of the teak houses found all over Inle Lake

Storage space on a stilt house in Myanmar

Every bit of space is used…many of the houses have ‘basements’ like this one.

Burmese woman climbing into stilt house on Inle Lake

A woman climbing the ladder into her house

Local woman paddling boat on Inle Lake

Oncoming traffic: a woman paddling past us

Local girl paddling boat on Inle Lake in Myanmar

A girl stopping to wave as she drifts by

We made a few stops in this town as well. Our first was a clothing factory, where we watched locals create thread from silk and then weave it into beautiful textiles. Naturally, we had the opportunity to buy some of these textiles, but we passed. Then our drivers took us to a cigar factory where we watched a couple of girls hand-roll tobacco inside some kind of leaf. We got a chance to buy some cigars, too, but none of us smoked so we passed on that as well.

local weaving silk on Inle Lake in Myanmar

A worker weaving silk at our second factory/shop stop

Woman hand rolling cigars on Inle Lake in Myanmar

Two women hand-rolling local cigars

After the two factory/shop stops, it was time for lunch. This was my other reason for hiring a boat: freshly caught lake fish with vegetables grown in the area’s floating gardens. I have no idea what I ordered exactly, but I remember it had a lot of ginger and garlic and it tasted great. I was never really one to take photos of my food, so I don’t even remember what it looked like. I did take other photos during lunch, though. This was the view from the restaurant.

Phaung Daw Oo temple on Inle Lake in Myanmar

The Phaung Daw Oo temple from the deck of our restaurant

That is the Phaung Daw Oo temple complex and naturally, we had to visit after lunch. Like anywhere in Myanmar, the entrance fee to the temple is dwarfed by the camera fee, so I stuck mine in my backpack and didn’t take any pictures from inside. There wasn’t really all that much to see anyway. I’ve mentioned it before, but after a while, all temples end up looking the same inside and it’s really just the outsides that differ. And those don’t generally differ all that much either.

Continued in part 3: Inle’s Floating Gardens and some Buddhist Hypocrisy

My travel guide for this area has some information on Inle Lake that might actually be useful.

Filed Under: Myanmar Tagged With: Inle Lake, Myanmar, transportation, culture, locals

Comments

  1. Chubby Chatterbox says

    Jun 11, 2014 at 23:10

    Very interesting. Many of these pictures look similar to the ones I recently took in Cambodia. It’s amazing how different lifestyles can be.

    Reply
    • Daniel McBane says

      Jun 12, 2014 at 10:17

      At Tonle Sap, right? I didn’t go out on the lake while I was in Siem Reap, but I’ve seen many photos (some of them yours) and the people there do seem to live in very similar conditions to the people at Inle Lake. The main difference is the weather. Since Inle Lake sits at a much higher altitude, it doesn’t get nearly as hot as Tonle Sap.

      Reply

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