Germany-based Farrail tours has just completed a Myanmar tour.
Go to
www.farrail.net and look through the tour reports.
It seems that only one of the three parts of the Nov.-Dec. tour has been printed so far.
After the trip was planned, the remaining few steam locos on the main system were withdrawn.
The tour concentrated on steam on a forestry railway; inspecting stored and plinthed locos; and visiting steam-powered mills.
My long-standing railway-enthusiast friend Lindsay Rickard (from Australia) was a participant. He made a point of inspecting and photographing Myat Yadana for me (and for Paddleducks).
His report: 'I did locate PS Myat Yadana. I was very lucky because my car driver that I had hired to visit Mt Popa knew about the steam boat! It is tied up at Old Bagan (not Nyuang U). I was shown over the vessel by an old man who said he was the engineer. He certainly knew a lot about the technical side of the 3 cylinder triple expansion engine used to drive the vessel and the many auxiliary steam engines used to drive pumps, assist steering, electricity generation and for raising the anchor. There was no sign of a diesel engine and he said there was no plan to install one. The superstructure of the vessel is generally in the same stripped down condition as recorded a year ago. Some people seem to live aboard. They appear to be for security as little or no restoration work is evident. Mechanically, the vessel appears in good condition and that all it needs is some water in the boiler and a fire to make it operational. Dates on the vessel are difficult to find but the plate on the Mawdsley's Generator showed it to be 110 volts, 72.7 amps, 8 kW running at 700 rpm and built in 1946'.
In his young working days, Lindsay went for his steam ticket so that he could work on a steam tourist railway as a hobby. He was surprised that the theory course (mainly men), and two nuns. They needed a ticket to run the steam boiler (hot water) in a convent.
The eight enclosed photos were taken by Lindsay in Dec.08, during a private extension after the Farrail tour.
Regards,
Roderick B Smith
Rail News Victoria Editor