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Posted
4 hours ago, simon43 said:

Friday is a part-time teaching day for me, and I planned to pop home after the morning lessons.  However the young, pretty female teachers (they all seem to be like that in Myanmar!) had other ideas.

 

"Teacher Simon, we want to make a movie with you" they chorused!

 

Well, that sounds more fun,and I was ready to strip off my kit and lube up the rusty banana when they explained "The school is making a promo video for our winter sports festival, and the other foreign teachers have nominated you to be the presenter of this promo video".

 

My first thought was that the appearance of the oldest teacher in the whole school to promote a sports video was not a good idea.  However, after briefly considering the apparent health (or lack of it) of my fellow foreign teachers, I decided that I was maybe the better candidate.

 

So myself and 3 lovely young Burmese teachers squeezed onto 2 motor bikes and rode the short distance to the Mandalar Thiri sports stadium to make our movie.  30 or so grade 2 students arrived shortly by bus and they busied themselves in running around the sports hall and generally acting like errant cats, whilst the gym teachers tried to herd them.

 

I was given a sheet of paper with the various phrases and sentences to read out.  We didn't have any professional recording equipment, so one teacher videoed me with her mobile phone and I spoke my lines into my own phone voice recorder, to ensure an adequate sound level.  Videos and audio clips will be spliced together by the highly-skilled post-production facility (that means the computer teacher...).

 

Well, I have to say that the Burmese teachers were suitably 'wowed' by my professional presentation.  Little did they know that they were face-to-face with none other than 'Barry Lancaster', a famous radio DJ from Radio Delmare, from the days of the offshore pirate radio stations in the 1970's!  (Actually I spent most of my stint on that ship being seasick, but I need to keep the illusion going).

 

We completed the promo video by the kids all jumping in the air to a raucous scream.

 

So, the winter sports event will be on the last day of this month.  That gives me plenty of time to 'plot' my revenge on my fellow foreign teachers!

 

Addendum: For anyone interested in my 'radio' career, here are links to information about Radio Delmare:

 

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radio_Delmare

https://www.dxarchive.com/offshore_radio_delmare_english_service.html

 

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Simon, I have only been to Myanmar once and that was a quick trip for work so I have nothing meaningful to contribute here. I just wanted to thank you for your posts - I really enjoy reading them and you are doing a lot of good for a lot of people. Please keep them coming.

It's also reassuring to know there is a corner of this forum which is worthwhile and positive.

  • Thanks 1
Posted
6 hours ago, simon43 said:

 

ChatGPT has a vivid imagination....

 

The person asking ChatGPT to generate the image must have written a complex and detailed set of instructions. A very good creation IMO.

 

Posted
7 hours ago, soi3eddie said:

 

The person asking ChatGPT to generate the image must have written a complex and detailed set of instructions. A very good creation IMO.

 

I usually give ChatGPT a few concise instructions and it produces good images, BUT it seems to be dyslexic and unable to put form correctly-spelt words!

 

Viz:

please create an image with the letters of the alphabet from A to Z in order, and please also write the sentence "The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog"

 

alphabet.jpg.3238a93f3f361c9dc961cdb70c9235c1.jpg

  • Sad 1
Posted

I had a half-day today (Wednesday) because some of my students have to practice for our school's winter sports festival on New Year's Eve.  Apparently, my promotional video last week has attracted the highest ever number of hits on the school Facebook page, (so that means 10 hits LoL!),  and I have therefore been ordered to be the official announcer on that day 🙂

 

I visited a school book shop today and stocked up on more books that I need to take next week on my visit to the orphanages.  I also invested in some pipe-cleaners and cotton wool....  Now I wonder what they are for? 🙂

 

Mandalay is very quiet now after dark.  There is no evening curfew, but numerous teens and young men are being 'conscripted' off the streets to fight in the army against the civilians.  Naturally, this is keeping most young men at home after dark 😞

 

The kyat to USD exchange rate is all over the place!  If I exchange USD to kyat in a bank or withdraw kyat from my Bangkok bank account via the ATM machines here, the exchange rate is about 1 USD = 2,100 kyat MMK

 

If I change USD notes in the local (registered) currency exchange office (which I did today), the rate is $1 USD = 4,400 kyat MMK!!  Naturally, I avoid withdrawing from an ATM machine....

  • Like 1
Posted
8 minutes ago, simon43 said:

The kyat to USD exchange rate is all over the place!  If I exchange USD to kyat in a bank or withdraw kyat from my Bangkok bank account via the ATM machines here, the exchange rate is about 1 USD = 2,100 kyat MMK

 

If I change USD notes in the local (registered) currency exchange office (which I did today), the rate is $1 USD = 4,400 kyat MMK!!  Naturally, I avoid withdrawing from an ATM machine....


There are two rates in Burma. The official rate used by banks and the black market rate. The latter did peak at just over 7,000/$ earlier this year but has been steady around the 4300-4600 level for past 6 months. Crisp $ bills required, 

Posted
10 hours ago, Mahseer said:


There are two rates in Burma. The official rate used by banks and the black market rate. The latter did peak at just over 7,000/$ earlier this year but has been steady around the 4300-4600 level for past 6 months. Crisp $ bills required, 

Yes, I know about the 2 rates - I've lived/worked in Myanmar many times since 2012.  My comment was that my $1=4,400 kyat is not a black-market rate.  It is the rate offered by the government-registered currency exchange offices on the high street, (hardly an 'under-the-counter' rate!).

Posted
13 minutes ago, simon43 said:

Yes, I know about the 2 rates - I've lived/worked in Myanmar many times since 2012.  My comment was that my $1=4,400 kyat is not a black-market rate.  It is the rate offered by the government-registered currency exchange offices on the high street, (hardly an 'under-the-counter' rate!).

The term 'black market' is slightly misleading and indicates deals can be done with shady characters which can be the case today around Sule pagoda in Rangoon but the exchange place I use is in Bogyoke market and is wide open for all to see so assumably operating legally. 
 

Best of luck with your projects.

Posted

For perhaps the first time in 20 years, I got food poisoning yesterday.  Spent the evening emptying my stomach into the toilet, and then a very unpeaceful night... I'm travelling today to the orphanages.  My stomach is ok now, but I feel rather weak.  Hopefully I'll improve as the day passes.

 

PS - It was a custard creme that did it!

  • Thumbs Up 1
Posted
3 hours ago, simon43 said:

For perhaps the first time in 20 years, I got food poisoning yesterday.  Spent the evening emptying my stomach into the toilet, and then a very unpeaceful night... I'm travelling today to the orphanages.  My stomach is ok now, but I feel rather weak.  Hopefully I'll improve as the day passes.

 

PS - It was a custard creme that did it!

Thank god for Imodium.

Posted
6 hours ago, simon43 said:

For perhaps the first time in 20 years, I got food poisoning yesterday.  Spent the evening emptying my stomach into the toilet, and then a very unpeaceful night... I'm travelling today to the orphanages.  My stomach is ok now, but I feel rather weak.  Hopefully I'll improve as the day passes.

 

PS - It was a custard creme that did it!

 Hope you are now okay Simon. 

Fortunately, during all my visits to Burma I never got the "Rangoon Runs" but Imodium (as mentioned elsewhere) came to my rescue in Vietnam, Cambodia, Laos and Thailand!

 

Posted

Thanks BurmaBill, Norfolkandchance.  To be honest, I was more annoyed than anything else, because I like custard cremes.  And yes - I brought along medicine just in case, so are feeling weak but better now.

 

Now I am in the small town of Nyaung Shwe, which nestles at the north end of Inle Lake, and is where tourists set off for boat trips on the lake.

 

IMG_20241222_142743.jpg.0d8299f4d067a4b13b7cbf2c041da463.jpg

 

I was last here visiting orphanages 6 years ago, and how it has changed, thanks to Covid and then the military coup.  Absolutely no foreign tourists of course.  There are local tourists, but my driver tells me that they all stay in nearby Taunggyi, and then make day trips to Nyaung Shwe.  So the town economy has collapsed 😞 No large hotels are open, no 'western' food restaurants, no tourist shops etc.  The mobile internet is stopped by the military and there are only a few hours of electricity each day...

 

IMG_20241222_151912.jpg.59758ece38ae9dcd5d18b06d959e87fd.jpg

 

My trip from Mandalay was not so good!  As I mentioned, I got food poisoning the day before, so wasn't feeling on top of the world.  My driver told me that the main route to Inle Lake had huge delays (4 hours), since every vehicle was x-rayed for weapons.  So we took a smaller road over the mountains.  This was a 6-hour 'switchback' journey on a small and very bumpy road.  Every few km we had to stop for police or military checkpoints.

 

As we approached Kalaw, the military presence was much tougher, and the soldiers were surprised to see a foreigner.  At 2 checkpoints, they did not want to let me proceed.  But my driver told them that I was an important foreigner, and the soldier didn't want the responsibility of stopping me!  So we proceeded.

 

IMG20241222112229.jpg.205e29f351cf4fb84684ee427605edba.jpg

 

Right now, I'm at a zero-star hotel in Nyaung Shwe. (I won't show you photos of the bathroom because maybe you've just eaten your lunch!). Since there are no minimarts open or western food restaurants, I bought some banana, fried chicken and fresh bread, which will keep me in the land of the living tonight.

Tomorrow I'll start my orphanage and monastery school visits/donations 🙂

 

I chatted with the banana seller, who spoke good English. My Burmese language ability is what language experts call 'pretty crxp'.  It's at conversational level for both spoken and reading the language, which no doubt is still much better than most westerners! She told me that I was the first foreigner that she had seen in weeks...

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