7 nights from $1395
Come to Burma and feel the inspiration that prompted the noted British writer, W. Somerset Maugham, to write of it in the 1920s: “The Shwe Dagon Pagoda rose superb as it did on the first morning it had risen, glistening with its gold, like a sudden hope in the dark night of the soul ... glistening against the fog and smoke of the thriving city.” Burma, currently known as Myanmar, is a forest-clad country of mountain ranges and river systems, with an abundance of glittering, golden pagodas. It is located between Thailand, Laos, China, India, and the Bay of Bengal. After a period of isolation, it has again opened itself to visitors, while remaining one of the least Western-influenced countries in Southeast Asia. Burma has magical sights, friendly people, and its own distinctive culture. This is a country that is still catching up with its more prosperous neighbors, but you will find it full of charming cities and welcoming people.
Single Supplement: FREE.
Please note: Availability and price may vary by departure date. Please call for details.
It's Included
- Roundtrip airfare from Bangkok, plus 3 internal flights
- Accommodations for 2 nights in Rangoon, 2 nights in Bagan, 2 nights in Mandalay, and 1 night in Bangkok
- 13 meals—7 breakfasts, 4 lunches, and 2 dinners
- 9 small group activities
- Services of our own resident OAT Trip Leader, who speaks English and the native language
- All transfers
Optional Tours
Rangoon: Past & Present ($60 per person); Hot-Air Balloon Ride ($310 per person); Mount Popa ($60 per person)
Please note: Balloon flight is only available during the months of October through March. The tour must be reserved prior to your departure, and requires that you fill out and return a brief medical form. If you have reserved this tour but have not returned your medical form, please contact our Traveler Support Department.
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Day 1
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Depart U.S.
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You fly overnight from the U.S. to Bangkok, losing one day en route as you cross the International Date Line over the Pacific.
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Day 2
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Arrive in Bangkok, Thailand
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You arrive in Bangkok late this evening. You are met at the airport by your Trip Leader and escorted to your hotel.
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Day 3
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Morning at Leisure/Fly from Bangkok to Rangoon, Burma (Myanmar)
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Today we depart for the airport to catch a flight to Rangoon, Burma (Myanmar). When we arrive, we transfer to our Rangoon hotel and check in. Enjoy free time and lunch on your own.
Tonight, gather with your fellow travelers for a Welcome Dinner at a local restaurant.
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Day 4
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Explore Rangoon/Optional Rangoon: Past & Present tour
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After breakfast, we will set out to explore the city in a private coach with our local guide. We'll start at Shwedagon Pagoda, often called the Golden Pagoda. Shwedagon is the most sacred pagoda in Burma, housing relics of the past four Buddhas—namely the staff of Kakusandha, the water filter of Konagamana, a piece of the robe of Kassapa, and eight hairs of Gautama. The pagoda dominates the city’s skyline with its grandeur. We'll continue by coach to the city center, where we'll disembark to enjoy a walking tour around the area of Sule Pagoda, the City Hall, and the Independence Monument in Mahabandoola Park. We'll walk along Strand Road where we'll find remnants of old colonial-era buildings as well as modern architecture. Then we’ll proceed to the Kalaywa Tawya Monastery, where the Buddhist scripture is still examined and taught today. After lunch on your own, you have free time at leisure, or you can join the optional Rangoon: Past & Present tour. We'll visit The National Museum, a five-story building on Pyay Road that displays Burma’s history, culture, literature, and people. We'll witness the splendid Lion Throne of Burma’s last monarch, King Thibaw, on the ground floor. Then we'll depart for Rangoon’s busy waterfront, walk along the jetty, and see the local people going about their daily lives. We'll continue to Chinatown, walking along its bustling market and exploring side alleyways while taking in local culture and discovering new surprises at every turn. Later, enjoy dinner at Sakura Sky Lounge while enjoying a bird's-eye view of the city at night.
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Day 5
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Fly from Rangoon to Bagan/Explore Bagan
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After an early breakfast this morning, we transfer to the airport for a flight of less than 1.5 hours to Bagan, known as Burma’s “City of Four Million Pagodas.”
Many of the pagodas and temples are small and simple—the staggering number of them is striking. Although Bagan’s shrines, pagodas, and stupas are not actually numbered in the millions, there are literally thousands of them scattered over this remote plain—making this one of the most important archaeological areas in Asia. Please note that you must remove your shoes and socks to enter Bagan’s ancient temples, and it is respectful to wear modest dress.
First we'll visit Toyokpyi Pagoda, and then we visit Nyang-U market, where locals sell fresh produce and home-grown crops. Then we visit Shwe Zi Gon pagoda, a beautiful gold-domed pagoda. Then we visit Ananda, the largest and most significant temple. It stands out from the other pagodas, having more ornate trappings and graceful spires recently coated with gold leaf. Inside its white-washed walls are four large statues of Buddha, each displaying a different facial expression.
We stop to enjoy lunch at a local restaurant, and then enter the Gubyaukgyi Pagoda in Myingaba town (rather than a conventional town, Bagan is actually a loose collection of villages), where we see some of Bagan’s finest and most detailed murals. This small temple also offers some of the best-preserved stucco sculptures on its exterior. Afterwards, we also see the Sulamani Temple, a twelfth-century cave pagoda and an impressive work of architecture.
In the late afternoon, we experience an archaeological site up close by riding a horse cart amidst the pagodas and shrines. Most of these structures are red brick and date back a thousand years to the Bagan era.
We dine as a group at a local restaurant this evening.
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Day 6
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Optional Hot-Air Balloon Ride/Optional Mount Popa excursion/Boat Ride on Irrawaddy River
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Before breakfast this morning, we have the option to join a hot air balloon ride over Bagan. We'll rise early to enjoy a bird's eye view of ancient Bagan and its pagodas at sunrise. Then we'll have breakfast at our hotel.
We return to the hotel for an afternoon at leisure and lunch on your own. Or, come along with us on an optional tour to visit Mount Popa, the “Mountain of Flowers”, and for a look at a uniquely Burmese spiritual tradition—the nats. Like gods or saints, nats are powerful spirits who can punish or protect, but their stories are much more human: some of the 37 major nats include a suffering brother and sister, an opium smoker, and the king’s hunchback maid.
Our tour takes us to the temple of the nats, perched high on a volcanic outcrop of Mount Popa. To reach the temple, we drive through fertile farmlands growing sugar palms, nuts, sesame, and rice. We pause for lunch and a visit to the Medicinal Museum & Plantation to learn about the plants used by the mountain herbalists for cures and as offerings. Then we tour Taung Kalat Temple, home of an extensive collection of nat statues (plus a resident colony of Macaque monkeys). We finish with a walk through a local market before returning to Bagan.
By late afternoon we board a boat at a local jetty to view the locale from another vantage, from the waters of the Irrawadddy River. The people and country’s economy depend on this natural resource, as you can see by the barges, bamboo rafts, and fishing boats that ply the waters of this river. From onboard you can observe the local people going about their daily chores along the riverbanks.
We return to our hotel, and dinner is on your own again this evening.
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Day 7
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Fly from Bagan to Mandalay/Explore Mandalay
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We have an early breakfast this morning and transfer to the airport for a half-hour flight to Mandalay. When we arrive, we’ll visit the longest wooden bridge in Burma. The U Bein footbridge stretches almost three-quarters of a mile over the shallow Thaung Thaman Lake. It was constructed of teak planks and has withstood the elements for more than two centuries.
Continuing on our route to Mandalay, we’ll visit the Mahamuni Buddha image, the most sacred shrine in upper Burma, covered with so much gold leaf that its body has lost all proportion. Then we’ll enjoy lunch at a local restaurant.
As Mandalay is a major crafts center and the best place in the country to find traditional puppets, tapestries and wood carvings, we’ll visit the Aung Nan Shop to see how its crafts are made on-site.
In the afternoon, we explore more of Mandalay including Kuthodaw Pagoda and Shwenandaw Monastery. Time permitting, we’ll also visit Mandalay Hill for a panoramic sunset view.
We return to our hotel, and dinner this evening is on your own.
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Day 8
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Explore Former Royal Capital of Inwa/Boat Ride to Mingun
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This morning after breakfast, we will go to see a gold leaf workshop where sheets of gold are beaten into gossamer-thin pieces. Placing gold leaf on a Buddha image brings great merit to the faithful, so there is a steady growth of gold leaf on many Buddha images in Burma. Then we visit Inwa, which was founded in 1364 and lasted nearly 400 years as a royal capital. Highlights include the “leaning tower of Ava,” Maha Aungmye Bonzan (a brick and stucco monastery), and the elegant teakwood monastery Bagaya Kyaung. We return to Mandalay for lunch in a local restaurant.
In the afternoon we board a boat for a ride upriver to the village of Mingun. Here we get a glimpse of the local culture and stop to see the world’s largest ringing bell, still without a crack and weighing in at 90 tons. Bells are a common feature used in many of Burma’s religious rituals. It is said that people ring this bell after performing a good deed so they can share with others the merit they earned. It is considered one of the world’s sweetest sounds to the ears of a Burmese Buddhist.
We return to our hotel, and dinner is on your own again this evening.
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Day 9
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Fly to Bangkok, Thailand via Rangoon
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This morning, we fly to Rangoon, where we’ll visit the local business sector to browse the Scott Market.
Then we’ll proceed to Chaukhtatgyi Pagoda, which houses an enormous reclining Buddha, extending more than 225 feet. Then we enjoy an included lunch. In the evening, we’ll fly to Bangkok to join the main trip. We arrive in Bangkok and transfer to our hotel, where we continue from Day 2 of the main trip itinerary.
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