Life on the track

Taking a trip on the circle line train around Yangon gives you an insight to the local life. The carriages become moving markets as they rattle around.

Written by Michael Turtle

Michael Turtle is the founder of Time Travel Turtle. A journalist for more than 20 years, he's been travelling the world since 2011.

Michael Turtle is the founder of Time Travel Turtle and has been travelling full time for a decade.

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Circle Line Train, Yangon, Myanmar

“You should try the circle line train in Yangon,” I remembered someone telling me.

“It’s a great way to see a slice of local Myanmar life,” I believe was their explanation.

Well, as it turns out, they were right. Oh, so right.

Circle Line Train, Yangon, Myanmar

I jump on board the train with three other travellers from my guesthouse. It’s an old rattling chain of carriages that shakes my bones as much from the motion as the idea of spending an extended period of time on it.

There are long benches along each side and we squeeze into spaces scattered down one end of the carriage.

There’s a roped off area with two policemen sitting in it and they beckon a couple of us in to sit where there’s some spare room.

They smile. I’m unsure why but I smile back.

Circle Line Train, Yangon, Myanmar

The train trip is supposed to take about three hours. It’s a huge loop from the very centre of Yangon around the outskirts of the city. There’s a departure every hour and the trains just go around and around continuously.

Very quickly I realise the journey would be even longer except the train hardly stops at each station, just slowing down and pausing long enough for people to jump on and off and throw their bags through the door before it takes off again.

There’s a commotion before each station and often commuters start hurling themselves from the carriage as soon as there is platform to jump to.

Circle Line Train, Yangon, Myanmar

As we head further out of central Yangon, the buildings get smaller through the window, the houses become simpler and the train gets busier. The local Myanmar life I had been promised is starting to appear around us.

Circle Line Train, Yangon, Myanmar

The carriage is gradually turning into a moving food court as vendors jump on and sell lunch. There are simple things like fruit or biscuits – and more complicated dishes that take a couple of minutes to prepare.

One lady chops up a cabbage-like vegetable into a bag, mixes in some sliced omelette, throws in sauces and spices and then mixes it all together into a tasty treat for about twenty cents.

Circle Line Train, Yangon, Myanmar

Some of the locals, maybe initially shy or polite or even wary, begin to interact with us and it seems we have now been accepted as part of the rattling community.

I pull faces at a baby who seems to think it’s the best thing since sliced bread. (Although, because they don’t eat much bread here, I guess it’s just the best thing ever.)

Circle Line Train, Yangon, Myanmar

They seem to be taking their cue from the policemen in the carriage who seem more interested in showing off than doing any actual policing. One hangs from the railings in a pose that looks a bit like a monkey in a zoo.

When we show interest in his antics he shows us his slingshot and demonstrates how he uses it to catch criminals. (There’s no argument about gun control here in Myanmar!).

Circle Line Train, Yangon, Myanmar
Circle Line Train, Yangon, Myanmar

He then wanders down through the carriage to find more props to play with. When he sees a couple of fish in a passenger’s bucket, he pulls them out and poses for photos, hanging the food off his fingers while a cigarette burns slowly in his smiling mouth.

Circle Line Train, Yangon, Myanmar

About halfway through the trip, we hit the market in the northern outskirts of Yangon. You can hear the shouting and the crowds as we approach.

As the train slows down the first bags come flying through the doors, thrown from the platform. Then dozens of people climb aboard carrying baskets and boxes. Sacks of food are passed through the windows.

Every bit of available space on the floor of the carriage is filled with goods. Then more are packed on top. And then even more is shoved in spare spaces between legs and on laps.

The cargo now outweighs the passengers.

Circle Line Train, Yangon, Myanmar
Circle Line Train, Yangon, Myanmar

And so this is how we travel back to central Yangon – amongst the produce of a market.

Gradually people get off at different stops and take their bags and boxes with them and eventually I get some leg space back. By the end, we have picked up the routine of each stop and help the locals with their cargo before the train takes off again from the station.

We’re offered food to try and coffee to drink. We laugh with each other, although it’s never quite clear what the exact joke is.

Circle Line Train, Yangon, Myanmar

At the end we say goodbye to our friends, the policemen. I now understand why they smiled at us when we jumped on board – they knew what was to come.

They knew the chaos we would find ourselves in. After all, they see it all day every day as they go around and around that track.

That’s the circle line of Yangon.

33 thoughts on “Life on the track”

    • Imagine if they walked around in flip flops, used slingshots, and just generally mucked around with passengers. Cityrail would have such a better reputation! Let’s try to bring in some change on Sydney trains!! 🙂

      Reply
    • I think things are generally pretty calm on these trains. They get bored just going around and around so they try to make things fun for themselves and for the passengers. I certainly appreciated the entertainment. As long as they acted serious when they needed to!

      Reply
    • I wouldn’t say it was particularly adventurous. I just sat there and let everything happen around me. But it was certainly a lot more entertaining than your average trip! A lot of fun was had, indeed.

      Reply
  1. Cool experience – definitely a thing worth doing by the sound (and looks) of it! Or maybe it’s just because you wrote so well about it? Nah – must be both:)!

    Reply
    • I would recommend it to anyone who’s passing through Yangon. It feels a bit silly to go on a train that just ends up back where it started, but it is all really about the journey in this case!

      Reply
  2. That looks freaking awesome. Especially the idea of taking it without any need to deal with bags of your own or any need to be anywhere or get off at a specific spot. Just to ride the train.
    And seriously, this story is exactly why I love trains. There is so much life around them. One of my favorite articles of yours.

    Reply
    • Yeah, it’s very rare I suppose that you actually catch a train just for fun. There’s normally a practical reason and that makes it a bit of a drag. But when you know this is just going to be a pleasurable ride on the tracks, you enjoy it much more!

      Reply
  3. That’s just such a beautiful write up and just great pictures! I cannot wait to travel on train this week in Myanmar and your writing has made me want to do it!

    Thanks!

    Reply
  4. were there any livestock on the train? Just a bit concern cause I’m not the best friends of chickens and other feathery friends.

    Reply

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