Overview
Bagan Cycling To Salay is carefully crafted route takes you along beautiful tree-lined roads and through rolling sandy hills to the charming riverside town of Salay. After an afternoon of exploring, a quiet evening awaits soaking in the tranquil atmosphere of this typical Burmese town. The second day we explore the rarely-visited western bank of the Ayeyarwaddy River, biking through traditional Dry Zone villages. Our boat will then cruise back upriver towards Bagan, letting us off for another section of riding along the riverbank, in the foothills of Than Gyi Taung.
Highlights
Bagan Cycling To Salay is carefully crafted route takes you along beautiful tree-lined roads and through rolling sandy hills to the charming riverside town of Salay. After an afternoon of exploring, a quiet evening awaits soaking in the tranquil atmosphere of this typical Burmese town. The second day we explore the rarely-visited western bank of the Ayeyarwaddy River, biking through traditional Dry Zone villages. Our boat will then cruise back upriver towards Bagan, letting us off for another section of riding along the riverbank, in the foothills of Than Gyi Taung.
Tailor-made trip
Golden Cycling Tours is a bike tour operator housing an experienced team of biking guide, bike mechanic, driver, cycling tour consultant and bicycle specialists. We can create a unique, custom-designed independent itinerary that is fully adapted to your needs, whether you are traveling solo, with family and friends, or as a group.
The itinerary above is only a sample that can be re-designed to better fit your needs and/or budget. Please click here to let us know what you are interested in adding or excluding to customize a selected itinerary or to design a completely new program just for you.
What’s Included
Tour Cost includes:
- Mountain Bike and helmet
- Boat trip mention in program
- All hotels , homestay.. (twin share ) and meals specified
- Cycle support by a/c vehicles ( to take care bike & rider and luggages)
- Permit tickets to villages and home stay
- All water, fruits and snacks whilst riding
- All entrances fee and sites mentioned
- English speaking guide
- All meals mentioned ( B = Breakfast, L= Lunch, D = Dinner )
Tour Cost excludes:
- International Flights in & out
- Departure Tax
- Visa Fees
- Alcoholic, and other beverages in the evenings
- Tips for guides and driver
- Personal travel insurance
- Any services not mentioned in itinerary
Things to be prepared:
- Hat
- Small backpack
- Shoes and shorts for cycling
- Sunglasses
- Gloves
Itinerary
Bagan Cycling To Salay is carefully crafted route takes you along beautiful tree-lined roads and through rolling sandy hills to the charming riverside town of Salay. After an afternoon of exploring, a quiet evening awaits soaking in the tranquil atmosphere of this typical Burmese town. The second day we explore the rarely-visited western bank of the Ayeyarwaddy River, biking through traditional Dry Zone villages. Our boat will then cruise back upriver towards Bagan, letting us off for another section of riding along the riverbank, in the foothills of Than Gyi Taung.
Tour Plan
8:00 Am pick up from your hotel and Setting off nice and early from Bagan not only beats the heat, but is in step with the locals who are all up at the crack of dawn. As we pass through the villages surrounding Bagan, giggling schoolkids and ladies carrying large baskets to market for the day’s shopping greet us with curiosity.
A couple of low rolling hills indicate our exit from the Bagan area and we then have around 20km of flat riding parallel to the Ayerawaddy River where we see glimpses of its tea coloured water through the gaps between the palm trees and peanut crops. The route is peaceful with minimal traffic if any and the road is mostly lined with elegant trees. Expressions of surprise and shy smiles await us as we ride through an area not often visited by foreigners.
The day rolls on as we encounter some undulating hills and pass through the Chauk area where we can see the “nodding donkey” oil pumps still laboring away on the horizon. Oil was discovered here by the British in 1902, giving birth to a company called British Petroleum.
A short stop at Ma Tin Win’s noodle shop to wolf down some of her signature specialities and then we push on to pass over a challenging little section of inlined road, then a descent to get back to the river bank and onto our destination, Salay.
This small, sleepy riverside town hides a surprising number of interesting places to visit but for now remains pretty much off the tourism radar. Elegant, although mostly crumbling, Colonial-period houses line the Strand Road on the river bank, some still crowned by the rampant lion emblem of the British Royals. Apparently, the British officials tasked with managing the oilfields at Chauk preferred this smaller town for their base, building these magnificent dwellings. Salay had previously been an ancient satellite town of Old Bagan, with a number of Bagan-era pagodas, dating from the 12C and 13C. It also hosts the largest lacquerware Buddha image in Myanmar, which is said to have washed up from the river after heavy flooding in 1888.
After exploring the town we unpack our bags at the newly-licenced “Community-based tourism” project in a small village just 4km from the riverside.