Intha fisher
Fishing carp with a conical net on Inle lake
Leg rowing fishers
Life on the Inle lake
Open air celebration in Thar Lay
Shopping on the market
Intha market women offer their pottery products
Scene in an open coffee bar
Silk thread from the lotus stem
Lotus weaving
Look out the window from the silk shop
Five friendly lady pilgrims
Rowing the boat
Children play in the shallow creek
Dogs life in Inn Dein village
Souvenir stall along the stairs
Nge Hpe Chaung village and its people
Women and girls in the tomato fields
Inside Nga Phe Chaung, the jumping cats monastery
Hydroponic farming systems on the Inle Lake
Shwe Inn Tha resort receptionst
Selling sacrifice goods Thaung Tho monastery
Fishers at the early morning
Yawnghwe village
Venue of the Dinghy Fever
Man carrying a basket full of coco
Buddha statue beside Botataung Pagoda
Dala Ferry terminal
Myself on the ferry crossing the Yangon river
Girl at the Bogyoke Aung San Market
The white elephant pavilion
Encountering local people at night
Kaba Aye Pagoda Road in Yangon
Young boy with his thanaka make up
Young novice getting monkshood
Monk faces
Young monks resting on the floor
Burmese monks
Young monks at the pagoda platform
Vendor stores along the walk up stairs
Golden decorated ceiling and its columns
Eastern stairways to the pagoda platform
Burmese people make pilgrimage to the pagoda
Gyar Twaya St to the Shwedagon premise
Old Yay Tar Shay lane in Yangon
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Skipper on the tiller bar
The way from Paung Pane to the resort Shwe Inn Tha the takes about 45 minutes. The first impressions about the daily life on the lake is marvelous.
About 70,000 people from the ethic minority Intha are living on and beside the lake which is as big as 112 qkm. Most transportation on the lake is traditionally by small boats, or by somewhat larger boats fitted with single cylinder inboard diesel engines.
About 70,000 people from the ethic minority Intha are living on and beside the lake which is as big as 112 qkm. Most transportation on the lake is traditionally by small boats, or by somewhat larger boats fitted with single cylinder inboard diesel engines.
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