Worshippers pose for a group photo
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Traffic on the waterways
Rowing the boat
Pagodas in Jay Paw Khone
Romatic restaurant in Jay Paw Khone
Bridge over the waterway
Terminus Inn Dein village
Children play in the shallow creek
Dogs life in Inn Dein village
Ruins of pagodas
Way up to the hill top among hundred old pagodas
Old Buddha image
Old Buddhist props
Historical relief a temple guard
Souvenir stall along the stairs
Uncountable old and new pagodas
Pagodas as memory shrines
Buddha's footprint at Inn Dein monastery
Pagoda forest at the hill top
Pagodas at the Inn Dein hill top
Pagodas at the hill top
German Bavarian ladies set a stupa
Five friendly lady pilgrims
Boats bring worshippers to holy place
Waterway to the village
Phaung Daw Oo pagoda
Tahr Lay a place with an old pagoda
Some houses do have modern conveniences
Blacksmith work in Jay Paw Khone
Girl on the weaving loom
Look out the window from the silk shop
Silk weaver woman making the Yarn
Lotus weaving
Silk thread from the lotus stem
Silk made from lotus flower
Housing in Jay Paw Khone village
Simple home on high piles
Jay Paw Khone village
Along the waterway to In Paw Khone village
Handmade souvenirs to sell for tourists
Busy boat mooring
Karen market women
Pa'O woman buying vegetable
Market stall offering drilling potatoes
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Inside the Phaung Daw Oo pagoda


At its heart are 5 small gilded Buddha images from the 12th Century, varying in size from about 25 cms tall to about 45 cms tall. However, these days it has become virtually impossible to tell that they are statues of a person as thousands of worshippers have added so much gold leaf to the statues that each has become virtually a solid lump of gold – and extremely heavy despite their comparatively small size.
Legend has it that the 5 Buddha statues were originally brought to Lake Inle by King Alaungsithu aka Sithu I, King of Myanmar based in Bagan, in the mid 12th Century.
Ladies cannot step to the images to touch them with gold leaves, the reason is not explained.
Legend has it that the 5 Buddha statues were originally brought to Lake Inle by King Alaungsithu aka Sithu I, King of Myanmar based in Bagan, in the mid 12th Century.
Ladies cannot step to the images to touch them with gold leaves, the reason is not explained.
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