Friday 19th Back
to Normal Life
I was up before 6, enjoyed a
dawn stroll along the beachfront and kept an eye out for dolphins. None today
but a squawk of pink galahs (parrots) were perched on the fence preening
themselves. I started the first of many cycles of laundry. We need to wash
everything just in case of hitchhikers. The garden and lawn looked good, most
of the pot plants were in good nick and only one of the big palms had died.
We seemed to have all the fridge magnets from our most recent trip and all
the trinkets had travelled well.
I haven’t given any time to
draw any conclusions or reach philosophical resolution of our travels. I just
know instinctively that it was the right thing for us to do at that time and
I don’t imagine we will ever regret it.
It was a wonderful
experience and we were extremely fortunate to have had the time and the money
to do it, and that it all went so well. We achieved everything we set out to
do and a lot more besides. We decided at an early stage not to try for Tibet
and Everest Base Camp. I feel totally content with that – it was going to be
extremely expensive, uncomfortable, irritating to be stuffed around so much
by Chinese authorities and the ticket scalpers, and there was a considerable
risk that we would have major problems with the extreme altitude. At the end
of all that, we could have got there only to find it clouded in and no view
of Everest. Having subsequently seen a large group of much younger seasoned
travellers have huge problems with 3600m in Bolivia, it is highly likely that
6 days at 3500-5500m in Tibet would have been miserable.
No regrets.
China, the Himalayas, The
Great Wall, the Warriors, Yangtse Gorges, Overnight recliner bed to Paris,
Paris!!! Alps, Venice!! Cunard round the Eastern Mediterranean (Athens, Istanbul,
Alexandria, Croatia), Rome, Florence, transatlantic crossing, Rio!! Iguazu
Falls, Buenos Aires, Patagonia, Chilean Andes, Bolivia, Machu Picchu!!!
Miami, Caribbean, transatlantic on the Epic, Barcelona, fabulous Greek
islands on Silhouette, Innsbruck in the snow!!, the Rhine with Elisabeth!! Norwegian fjords, the Arctic Circle and
beyond, 79 degrees N, Paris again,
EuroDisney, home for Hayley’s 21st, 3 weeks to plan and book the
next leg, Milan, Israel, Jerusalem! French Riviera, Monte Carlo!, Paris again,
Hamburg, Copenhagen, Estonia, St Petersberg, the Hermitage! Helsinki,
Stockholm, London!! London-NY on Queen Mary! cruising into the port of NY,
Air Canada! Vancouver, cruising the
Inside Passage (twice) Alaskan fjords and Glaciers, winning ALL the quizzes,
Hawaii, Waikiki beach, Pearl Harbour, Hong Kong, Penang, KL, Singapore.
And so many wonderful new
friends.
There were some tight
connections, some very tight connections, some potential documentation
problems, some delays, some uncertainty . . . Some milestones where we said .
. “it will be good when we get beyond that”. We cruised, we did group overland and we
carved our own trail. We did it hard and we took it easy. Some of those boats
were fabulous - just plain fabulous. And the rest were very good. So much
food! So many new tastes. So many extraordinary cities.
You might say it was quite a
commitment – to the experience and to each other. We have been together 6
years on a “while it suits us” basis and it was a poignant and beautiful
moment on the Radiance to commit to love, honour and be faithful to one another.
We won’t be going anywhere
for the next 12 months but after that . . who knows? And if we never do
anything like it again . . . we had it already.
Thank you for sharing the
journey with us.
Janine & Chris
In the window of the Inncrowd Backpackers in Singapore.
Chris' travelling shoes. Why so many? Who knows. 2 pairs of crocs were bought along away - and the tiny pair for Alyssa.
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Saturday, 20 October 2012
17/10 Back to reality
18/10 Flying home
Thursday 18th
Flying home
We started off with a re-weigh
of the luggage and took out a couple of heavy jackets to wear. We had to check
out at 11 but we dropped in at the Villas for a shared final dosai. It was very
gloomy when we got back to the hostel to get our bags – a series of taxis drove
past but they were all occupied, except one who said he didn’t have any space
in his boot for our luggage. Then the rain came – a solid tropical downpour
complete with high pitched thunder claps.
At that stage we would have
got drenched trying to get into a cab so we sat it out. Predictably, the
streams of water were matched only by the stream of vacant taxis! By then it
was nearly 1pm so we got the hostel to ring us one. The trip out to the airport
took 30 minutes but only cost $20.
One of the major reasons for
coming down to Singapore was to fly home with Tiger at a civilised hour and
from the delightful budget terminal here. Unfortunately for us, flights have
been redirected to Terminal 2 for the last 3 weeks. The formalities were very
quickly completed and we were delighted to weigh in bang on our entitlements.
We went upstairs for a
farewell gulp at Subway (in fact we had 2) and then suddenly realised that it
was time to clock into the departure lounge. By then it was too late for them
to deliver duty free to the plane so we missed out. Not that it matters – we are waist deep in
grog at home from previous duty free forays and we don’t really need any more.
There is always the Perth arrival hall duty free but it is relatively very
expensive.
There was an adequate amount
of leg room and we have grown blasé to 6 hour flights. We had bought biscuits
and assorted rolls from the Asian bakery and the trip passed smoothly, despite
kids kicking and wailing and adults snorting and hacking. Inner Serenity
prevailed.
We didn’t declare anything and
sailed through the exit queues pretty smoothly. The plans had changed last
night after last-minute problems with Warren’s and my cars. So Steph brought
Lissa up to fetch us. They had just arrived in the parking area when we came
out so we hopped in and took off. Lissa was awake all the way home, where
Warren was waiting for us. It was a huge pleasure to be arriving home at a
reasonable time after a short flight without crossing any time zones. We dumped
all our luggage out on the verandah and sank gratefully into our own bed.
Wednesday, 17 October 2012
Pirates AAAAArrrrggggghhhhhh
Wednesday 17th The Last Day L
Simple programme today – lunch at local Indian restaurant –
tried uttapam. Uttapam is a thick pancake,
with toppings
cooked right into the batter. Uttapam is sometimes characterized as an Indian pizza. Thanks Wikipedia. Retraced
yesterday’s steps to Sentosa to use free tickets for the Maritime Experiential
Museum. A lot of information about Chinese trade and piracy in the 1400-1800
era. Whoopee. Some of it was kinda interesting. The best part was when I got to
nap on beanbags for an hour while J went back to suck up some more info about mediaeval
maritime marketing.
Did you know ? …. The Chinese invented the compass. … and were the first civilization to build ships
with bulkheads (based on the strength of how a bamboo plant is
constructed). Interesting huh!
It rained non-trivially while
we were inside and we strolled back around the bay to Vivo, where we
rediscovered some sushi and chicken eateries. Home.
Tuesday, 16 October 2012
16/10 Universal Studios & Night Lights
Tuesday 16th Universal
Studios & Night Lights
What a great day! We rescued a
Vietnamese lady who was looking for the MRT – just said “come with us” and took
her to the station, showed her how to buy a ticket, rode with her to Clark Quay,
told her where the attractions were and gave her our map. We went on to
Harbourfront and the Vivo centre – a favourite stamping ground. We stocked up
with delectables from one of those Asian bakeries for lunch and strolled out to
Sentosa island.
Foreigners actually get a discount
here, which is a change, but you do even better paying with Mastercard – 10%
off and free entry to the maritime museum. We started just absorbing the
atmosphere in Hollywood then watched street performances by Sesame St and some breakdancers,
then made our way to Waterworld – a big stunt production set around a
futuristic “atoll” in the theme of the Costner movie which still holds the
record for the biggest financial failure of all time. The show was excellent
after we got over being told to arrive early only to be herded into an area in
full sun and left there for 15 minutes.
The outdoor auditorium was divided
into a wet zone, a splash zone and a dry zone. We went dry. (No really – you would
never have guessed it with a pair of thrillseekers like us but we did). They
started with 3 guys coming out with buckets and huge bicyclepumps which could
spray jets as far as the back of the spray zone. They had a lot of amusing
tricks which always ended up soaking the victims in the front half of the
audience. This made for a very good crowd warmup, particularly for those of us
who were dry at the back. The actual show was a cracking good display of
special effects and stunts with a lot of high falls, bangs and flashes and
intruding boats and airplanes.
Then there was the Donkey show from
Shrek – an ingenious animated performance with the image of the donkey on
screen interacting with a host in the studio and with members of the audience.
The donkey’s lips matched what the voice was saying, which was an amazing
technical achievement given that he wasn’t following a script but ad-libbing
about unpredictable things that happened.
Then there was a 4D performance of
a Shrek adventure, which featured chairs that shook and bumped in synch with the film, emphasised by puffs of
wind, sprays of water coming from the back of the seat in front and even
brushing against the back of your legs when spiders were about. We wore 3D
glasses, which created an amazingly realistic impression of spears pointing
right at us and dragons blowing fire into our faces.
On to a Spielberg-hosted show in a
sound studio, illustrating the impact of a Category 5 hurricane in a New York boathouse. Very
realistic, complete with a ship running in through the wall. Another theatre
performance of Monster Rock featured actors made up as the 7 most famous
monsters doing modern sing and dance routines.
Then it was on to the rides. We were
never going to consider the outdoor roller coasters – 2 of them entwined and
running in synch. The red one had seats placed in a typical train vehicle with
about 8 cars in a chain each containing maybe a dozen victims. That was just a
high level high speed rollercoaster. The blue one was really nasty – people in
individual seats hanging underneath the rollers, grouped 3 or 4 abreast and
maybe 20 or 30 longwise. They spent about half the time upside down or
corkscrewing. The two tracks wound round each other and the effect would have
been to create near collisions at very high speed and way up in the air. No
thanks.
We did go on the indoor
rollercoaster (The revenge of the Mummy) which flashed in and out of total darkness (apparently . . .
although it wouldn’t matter if {hypothetically} you had your eyes closed). I
had ridden this one with Warren 2 years ago and didn’t remember it as being so
violent. I ended up with my neck and back feeling jarred and J was a bit
bruised as well. (her bites are still
livid and itchy but at least there are no fresh ones today ).
We also went on the Transformers,
which we thought was a simulator – well it was somewhat but the vehicle also moved
about on a track. We were wearing 3D glasses and the effect was awesome – sooo realistic.
It felt just like being smashed about by a giant robot and dropping from a tall
building but you were still sort of aware that in fact it was an illusion
created by tilting the vehicle sharply, showing objects flying towards you on a
screen and blowing strong puffs of wind into your face while the vehicle shakes
and jars with impacts. I preferred that to racing around on a rollercoaster.
We did the Madagascar crates ride twice. Very cute low thrill water ride through scenes from the movie.
We watched the street show of ”I Like to moof it moof it” from Madagascar,
which was pretty short and not that good. I was done with rides for the day but
J finished off with all the kiddy rides – junior rollercoaster in Far, Far Away Land and the Jurassic
Pterodactyl. She also did the Jurassic Park wet water ride and the Flyer, which were both pretty exciting for her.
On the way out we dropped into
another restaurant (such extravagance) before we walked back to Vivo and caught
the train to Clark Quay, followed by a brisk walk down to the Merlion to watch
the sound and light show across the water in front of Marina Bay Sands (the
building shaped like a huge boat up on stilts). The show was underwhelming but
it was only 8pm and J thought it might be better from the other side at 9.30.
So we took quite a long walk round the bay and across the bridge to MBS where
we sat in the food court and had a choc muffin and a cold drink. We strolled
out through the incredible array of designer shops – Prada, Louis Vuitton,
Gucci etc etc and took a place on the gentle steps on the waterfront facing
back towards the lights of Singapore City across the bay. Very pretty just for
that - and then the show started.
It was quite stunning – a very
memorable performance apparently put together by Australians. They sprayed
sheets of water up into the air and then projected images and film clips onto them
as though they were white sheets. The pictures were extremely clear and there
were three main areas each about 20 metres apart, with great gas burners
blowing flames up into the air from in front and laser lights from both sides.
There was also music and effects such as streams of soap bubbles wafting in from
the left.
Real bubbles
The concept was to put on a display
with lights and water – the two elements that are essential for Life - and to make
the show a celebration of Life. It was all very clever and very beautiful and
very apt in a stunningly beautiful setting on a balmy warm night – one of the
great highlights of our extended holiday experience.
We then faced another long walk
back to Clark Quay to catch the train home. We were well tired but feeling very
satisfied after a really enjoyable day. We talked about what we will do with
the $30 million OZ Lotto draw tonight. We had been extremely lucky with the
weather – there was a quick and light shower while we were in one of the indoor
shows so we didn’t even notice it. The weather was bearably very warm
throughout the day. I had opted to hide the money belt in the room and go
walking in tracky pants and my new crocs, which was very comfortable. The new
tread is pretty secure unlike the old slicks which can be treacherous on smooth
wet surfaces, which abound in SE Asia.
The Lotto has jackpotted to $50
mill so that will be a good start (and premature end) to J’s return to working
life.
15/10 Bedbugs strike again
Monday 15th BEDBUGS
Aaaargh. These things do happen in
the tropics and with backpackers coming from all directions, often from bodgy dodgy
lodgings, it is occasionally inevitable. J had settled into the lower bunk and
banished me to the freezing wasteland upstairs in the full blast of the
ecconshner, which she turned down to 23. So she enjoyed the full attention of
the little monsters and got thoroughly gnawed.
We have shifted the luggage into a
storeroom, hoping not to have picked up any hitchhikers L This is exactly the stage of
a trip you do NOT want to pick up bedbugs because, annoying and uncomfortable
though it is to be bitten by them, it is utterly insignificant compared to the
disaster of taking them home with you! You can spend tens of thousands having
every scrap of clothing and furniture transported to a fumigation site while
the house is being bombed with toxic chemicals. Eeeew.
We borrowed a scale to weigh the
bags last night and were alarmed though not surprised to weigh in at 73kg.
There’s lead in them there Tshirts! And the fridge magnets don’t help. Luckily we know rule 1 – wear the weight – so
we shall board the plane bedecked in the heaviest clothing with sleeves and
pockets stuffed with the heaviest items.
Just got a reminder from the
airline, which includes the aside that it is extremely important to stay in the
allocated seat, thereby assisting the airline and the authorities to maintain
the highest standards of passenger safety – horse’s arse – so that they can
force you to pay for the privilege of sitting next to your partner.
They had cleared a room next door
by 10am and we moved in there while they fumigated the original room. They have
taken our clothes for washing and (cross fingers) there have been no further
bites so far today. J fires up in response to these things and erupts in big
red blotches that itch fiercely.
We had Indian lunch at our usual
Singapore haunt and enjoyed watching our tablemates thoroughly massaging their
food by (right) hand before eating it. We tend to eat with both hands and
whatever implements are available and wonder whether they are aware that we
have different hygiene practices or whether they are appalled by our behaviour.
They are pretty well caked in rice and relish up to the knuckles by the time
they get the food in their mouths.
Our neighbours were each hacking
into a large banana leaf rectangle loaded up with white rice, a pile of mixed and
minced vegetables (looking not unlike Dad Mash), several dollops of sauce or
relish and then 6 separate side bowls containing different sauces. The whole
thing is covered by a huge crispy pancake, which they tend to dip into a mix of
the rice, blended, rolled and massaged with various of the available relishes.
We then wandered down Race Course
Road to the Mustafa centre – a large and crowded shopping centre. We managed to
exchange most of our accumulated foreign currencies (5 of them) – they didnt
want Israeli Shekels. The rates were surprisingly good and no fees.
On the way back we dropped into a
few stores and could not resist buying just a FEW pairs of shoes (including
black and red crocks) and some bits. We watched
a bit of Pearl Harbour on DVD, which was poignant having just visited the site
and stood in the monument over the wreck of the USS Arizona.
We had dinner back at a fascinating
restaurant we passed this afternoon. The exterior is done up to look like a
jungle setting and the outdoor tables and chairs are made out of rustic lumps
of wood to contribute to the Tarzan image. The waiters are all done up in khaki
with Sam Brown military belts and pith helmets. I thought I had walked into a
re-enactment of a 1950s Delhi Police HQ. It was very striking – as much so as
the Hospital Bar/Pub at Clark Quay, where the waiters are dressed like nurses,
the drinks come in medical drip bags, and the furniture consists of clunky old
chrome hospital beds, wheelchairs and operating theatre lights.
Anyway, we went to the jungle
restaurant this evening. It was a bit pricey by our standards but very
delicious – the Rogan Josh was excellent – fully flavoured and a warm glow in
the mouth with a slight beading of sweat around your nose (the sign of a really
good curry). J was ready for an early bed after taking a couple of
antihistamines.
It's Diwali (or Deepavali) time when little India comes alive with lights and markets. The Festival of Light is celebrated mid Oct to mid Nov.
Sunday, 14 October 2012
14/10 Forward to Singapore
Sunday 14th Train to
Singapore
We packed, finding that we didn’t
need to put much in the new plastic suitcase – although we haven’t ditched J’s
holey backpack yet (its easier to carry). We took ourselves to the station,
Macca’d (yes it’s a verb too) bought some biscuity/nutty/chippy/cakey schtuff
for the train and headed off to the platform – our train is 40 minutes late L This meant sitting on
the floor on the platform until it arrived.
We had good seats, albeit not in
the solitary first class carriage, which had been full. My geriatric concession
fare was $7 and J paid $11. We were at the front of a carriage with our own
little table, facing forwards, heaps of leg room and unobstructed view of the
large flatscreen which, as usual, did not work. We stowed our big luggage on
the shelves about 3 metres in front of us and settled down for the trip.
We confirmed Malaysia’s place as 2nd
largest producer of palm oil. Mile after mile of plantations in measured
rows. The terrain was generally flat,
unlike the first leg to KL.
About 3 hours short of the border
there was a large influx of passengers. A Chinese man sat about 3 rows back and
settled into a mind-numbing nerve-jangling routine of crunching sunflower
seeds. For the benefit of those who were not following our blog in China 12
months ago . . .
After a while, I
became aware of a persistent and insistent noise as if nails were being clipped
close by. Regularly, infuriatingly regularly. On closer auditory scrutiny I
discerned that it was more like nuts being cracked. Grnch-crigggt 2 3 4
Grnch-crigggt 2 3 4 Grnch-crigggt 2 3 4. The train went through a tunnel, which
offered the opportunity to observe the reflection in the window of this
wretched little man in the row in front cracking sunflower seeds with his teeth
and reloading and unloading the husks with one hand. Practice has obviously
made perfect. Grnch-crigggt 2 3 4. Pandas at the Research Centre had the
ability to roll totally flat onto their backs and settle into a metronomic
rhythm of cracking the bamboo shell and twisting it to expose the soft inner
flesh Grnch-crigggt 2 3 4 then biting
off a length. They did it with staggering efficiency and utter precision.
Grnch-crigggt 2 3 4 Grnch-crigggt 2 3 4. This man is a Panda-morph. Heaven can
he keep this up all the way to Chong Qing? Grnch-crigggt 2 3 4 How many seeds
can he have?
There was also a large extended
family of Indian folk. They based themselves around the space between carriages
just in front of us and then overflowed in both directions. 2 small girls were
sat on the floor in front of us and the adults jostled one another in a
perpetual random Brownian motion seemingly without purpose other than to keep
the automatic sliding door opening and closing. GrrrrTHUMP GrrrTHUMP. They then
settled down and Mama1 stood herself just this side of the door with Papa1 just
on the other side, right in the sensor field for said door GrrrTHUMP GrrrTHUMP.
This also totally negated the ecconshning.
From a sociological standpoint, they
obviously felt most comfortable maintaining a constant babble which nobody
seemed to be listening or responding to. At least the children were quiet . .
for the time being. NOOO I am NOT a grumpy old man. Grumpy perhaps but never
old. We were aware that there was a solid mass of people between us and our
luggage but there wasn’t a lot in there worth stealing unless you were
particularly fond of football jumpers and size 2 crocs. And they looked
respectable and well turned out. And we just couldn’t be bothered.
After a while the girls (8-ish) got
over their awe at being in a train in close proximity to a white woman with
blonde hair and started seeking attention. They hung off Mama1 until she drove
them off and then they started wriggling and squirming and dancing. Which of course
is code for showing off. They went through a series of Bollywood type moves and
then had a go at Gangnam Style. We started smiling and they both launched into
shameless flirting with J, pushing each other and jabbering away while keeping
a corner of an eye out to make sure she was watching. One was very westernised
and is going to be a right little movie star.
We seemed to be sitting around a
lot waiting for passing trains or signals or something and it was getting late.
The kids got ratty and one was obviously feeling ill. J meanwhile was fully
ready to expel Vanilla Coke and Singapore was not going to come fast enough.
Eventually we arrived, after a
brief stop at Johor Bahru (a very clean and modern looking station) and an
on-the-run stamp from Malaysian immigration. And so across the causeway to
Singapore. We have been using The-man-in-seat-61 a very excellent website for
details of how to save money and book train travel all over the world. We found
it a godsend in Europe and were delighted that it covers Asia and most of the
rest of the world as well. We therefore knew what to do on arrival but
unfortunately we had to detour to get Singapore dollars (thought we had brought
some) and the train had got in very late. We caught the 911 bus to the MRT
station but then found that the trains had started closing down for the night
and we couldn’t get to Dhobi Ghat.
Fortunately the train ran far
enough for it to be a short taxi run into Little India and we easily directed
the driver to the hostel, where we settled into our favourite room and were
quickly and chastely stacked in our steel bunks.
Saturday, 13 October 2012
13/10 Last day in KL
Saturday 13th The Last
Shop
We walked out into the sort of
breeze that presages rain. At least it was cool. We made it to the bus stop at
the local station where J hoped to get a haircut but the salon was closed. So
we did a full loop round Bukit Bintang
on the free shuttle bus (purple). When we got back, the lady was in the salon
and didn’t have a client so J popped in and had a cut ($7).
We got back on the bus and went
half way round again to where we could catch the green one (which was also
painted purple) to take us to the twin Towers, now the 4th and 5th
tallest in the world. By then it was raining quite hard and we walked through
to the back where the fountains were going off full tilt in the rain. We
watched a couple of different patterns and then went up to eat in the food
court. This afforded us a second chance to have a go at the Malaysian dessert,
known as the ABC for short. This one had a wide range of ingredients but just
looks red.
Back on the bus, change buses and
back home. It had rained lightly but steadily throughout the day since about
10am. We went out again to get the remaining Tshirts and some bits and pieces,
which we dropped off upstairs and then went out for a Subway. Steph and Lissa
were on Skype. It is going to be
interesting to find out how much our luggage weighs L
12/10 Butterflies and lakes
12/10 Lake gardens
We set off from the hotel, feeling
our way West across freeways, rivers and rail lines. We took wrong advice from
one policeman and ignored good advice from a young chap but we got across to
the park, starting with the butterfly park. She who paid to go in reported a
heap of colourful butterflies in a tropical garden. She also elucidated on the
distinction between butterflies and moths (email her). I sat in the cool reception area and sharpened
up on some sudokus.
Getting around was uncomfortable
because it entailed a lot of up and down hill work and it was very hot. The
location of the attractions on our map did not necessarily dovetail with real
life and there was a measure of trial and error in our navigation. We found
ourselves going past the bird park but eventually came across the hibiscus park
and the orchid gardens, which was where we were hoping to reach.
They were very prettily laid out
with landscaping and fountains. The orchids spanned a wide range of full sun
and shaded types and some hung bare-rooted in the air while others attached to
tree trunks.
This was right at the top of a
hill, with roads curling around at significantly different levels, which made
for a much harder path than the way it appeared on paper. We had bought water
but by then we were very much looking forward to getting to the refreshment
kiosk at the Perdana Lake gardens.
Ais kacang is a Malaysian dessert
which is also common in Singapore and Brunei. Traditionally a special ice
machine is used to churn out the shaved ice used in the
dessert, originally hand cranked but now more often motorized.
Formerly, it was made of only
shaved ice and red beans. Today, ais kacang generally comes in bright colours,
and with different fruit cocktails and dressings such as attap chee (palm
seed), red beans, sweet corn, grass jelly and cubes
of agar agar as common
ingredients. Afinal topping of evaporated milk, condensed
milk, or coconut milk is drizzled over the mountain of ice along with red rose
syrup and sarsi syrup
We had enjoyed one such concoction
last year but on this occasion we had to settle for grape Fanta.
Getting across the roads back to KL
Central was quite challenging and entailed some dodgy stretches of walking
along freeway feeder lanes until we regained some form of pavement or secure edge. We
had Maccas and trained back to the hotel, arriving just before a humungous
thunderstorm rolled in. We are 5 storeys up, which left us feeling as though we
were right up among the lightning bolts. It was utterly awesome (to rescue a
much abused word). The thunder ground its way towards us, culminating in a
blinding flash with an instant CRASH, which then echoed, rumbled and
reverberated away across the city. We disconnected everything because we felt
very exposed up here.
The storm passed and the rain
gradually lightened. We had one more shopping trip to do, particularly to get
one of those red white and blue cross-woven raffia “Hong Kong suitcases” to
accommodate our luggage overflow. Back at the hotel, we transferred some
luggage to free up access into my bag to get the super-glue, which we needed
for some running repairs. Laundry, blogging etc.
More pics from butterfly park:
Look at the size of the alligator turtle
They are eating normal size pieces of cucumber.
Friday, 12 October 2012
11/10 Little India - don't bother
Thursday 11th KL Little
India – don’t bother!
We were up early, considering a day
trip to the Highlands but the prospect of several hours each way by bus did not
really appeal. We took the train to KLCC at the base of the Petronas Towers –
always an impressive and attractive sight. We had previously thoroughly enjoyed
a visit through the science museum there but on this occasion we simply raided
the gift shop, which we attacked with a credit card!
We had a very enjoyable lunch,
complete with a decadent waffle in the food court and had a bit of a wander
round the shopping centre. J had been eagerly anticipating a good look at the
fountains outside, which she had never actually seen working. We caught
something of a glimpse from upstairs, but when we got to the point of taking
the escalator down to the exit, the fountains had settled down to a trickle and
a handful of workmen were paddling around servicing the spouts and the lights
and dragging vacuum hoses around in between.
We found seats in the shade and
waited to see whether they would fire up the fountains again but there was no
sign of such an occurrence. It was very pleasant out in the greenery with the
slight breeze but it was still very hot and sticky and we were quite dehydrated
and happy to head back inside for a drink.
We were not quite sure of the exact
location of Little India so we asked for directions and were very surprised to
be directed to KL Central. It was certainly much further north than that so we
headed for Masjid Jamek. On arrival, we fell straight into a sea of market
stalls and, for no particular reason, I asked the seemingly stupid question “is
this Little India” and was surprised to be told that no it has moved to KL
Central. So she was right!
There were a good few stalls there
anyway and we had some pretty successful shopping there. I have been searching
in vain for a backup copy of my unusual stainless steel ring with rotating
chain loop round the outside. I managed to find one here and there in Hawaii
and HK and here but never the right size and with a range of mostly
extraordinary prices. Finally I found a man with a complete tray of them – for
$3 each! I settled for one J
It was threatening to rain again
but “we” decided ;) to go and check out the new Little India on the way home.
It turned out to be a considerable walk from KL Central, during which it
started to rain. One of us had been carrying an umbrella all day but opted not
to open it when the precipitation event commenced but we were each equally wet
very soon because it became extremely sticky. The new Little India was a huge
disappointment – a number of shops but hardly any stalls. The fountain lived up
to its reputation but I wouldn’t recommend going there just to see it.
By the time we got home it wasn’t
that late but we were totally shopped out and very happy to have a quiet lie
down.
10/10 Shopping, shopping and more shopping
Wednesday 10th Serious
shopping
We had toast and coffee downstairs
and took to Petaling Street. We are right in the middle of Chinatown and they
were just opening the stalls when we came out. There were heaps of Tshirts
jewellery etc, some very cheap and some with quite silly prices. There are
shops on either side of the road and then three rows of stalls running the
length of the block, all of which is pretty much under cover, give or take some
gaps and leaks.
SE Asia gets a bucket of rain, much
of which falls during one or more monsoons but there is rain through most
months to a lesser extent. Which makes it very puzzling that they tend to have
great expanses of pavement consisting of smooth tiles, which are an absolute
skidpan when they are wet, which is the case for much of the year. I don’t dare
wear crocs here and even in serious hiking shoes I still tread carefully.
Pavements also tend to be used by
motorbikes and/or taken over by the businesses next to them. There are regular
changes of level and we often find it is just easier and actually safer to walk
in the road, keeping an eye out for other road users. Who don’t pull back . . .
if you are not quite across the road when the cars arrive, they will come
straight at you without easing off at all. You would be extremely unwise to
count on them avoiding you.
We had a great time shopping.
Without killing all the surprise of Xmas presents, there was a heap of stuff
for grandchildren and a certain amount of matching required, which entailed
remembering where we had seen the other elements of some of the sets. We were
pretty happy with ourselves and our purchases by the time we finished.
We also walked down to the nearby
Central Markets and were making our way back there for dinner and more shopping
under the solid roof in anticipation of some bad weather. Unfortunately, it
beat us there and we spent a lot of time shuffling up and down through puddles
and slippery pavements while it pelted with rain. Eventually we got there –
only to find that they had just stopped serving dinner. We set off looking for
Maccas, which has however moved during the past 18 months. We ended up at
Subway instead.
Warren had mentioned a day or so
ago that Courtney was in South Africa and tonight she suddenly turned up on
Skype, which was a very nice surprise. Her agency had arranged for her to visit
a SA affiliate and she was sent for auditions for a couple of commercials which
are apparently due to be screened in Italy. Oh well . . it worked for Megan
Gale. I said I had just bought Lissa’s first Crocs and she said she had seen it
on the blog . . so there is the other reader. Hi J
9/10 KL Bound
Tuesday 9th Train to KL
Watched Pulp Fiction (strange
movie) had a quick lunch over the road, bought some biscuits, taxi to the ferry
jetty, 15 minute crossing to the mainland, long walk on the other side to the
temporary station and then we climbed into our First Class carriage. It would
have been quite smart 40 years ago but the upholstery was very worn and stale.
The windows were streaked with moisture and one way or another there was no
scenery of any note . . distant mountains, jungle, some palm plantations. In that
sense the journey was a disappointment. Hmm we still have the journey to
Singapore in a few days . . and we couldn’t get First Class for that L
We reached KL Central at 9pm and
took a local train to the stop just behind our hotel. We well knew the route to
the back door and were soon registered into a clean and comfortable room with a
good AC on the 5th floor. We were quite happy to fall into bed.
8/10 Penang Hill
Monday 8th Penang Hill
This being our last full day here
we decided to bus to the funicular that runs up the 3000 ft mountain. We had
some trouble finding the right bus stop so we changed the plan and aimed at
going to the Butterfly Park. However, just at that moment, the 204 bus
approached and the driver kindly stopped for us at the wrong stop. So we were
back on track.
Kek Lok Si Temple - largest Buddhist temple in SE Asia
Georgetown is much bigger than we
first thought and we passed some very large and spectacular temples and
mosques. The island is probably typical of the whole country, where apparently
the various ethnic and religious groups coexist closely and harmoniously. The
majority are Moslem and Malay but they would be regarded as moderates, with the
women attired in colourful clothes and headscarves. There was one woman on the
train with us wearing the full burqa and dark glasses hiding even her eyes.
Incongruously, her husband sat next to her in shorts Tshirt and thongs.
At the top of the mountain a mosque
and a Hindu temple shared the commanding views all around the island. It was
misty when we arrived but the sun shone through in patches and eventually we
had clear view of the mainland to the East and the open sea to the North. We
were amazed just how much of the land was built up with highrise blocks.
The view. Looked better to the human eye. We were just glad it cleared at all as it was totally clouded in when we arrived and others had no view at all in the previous days.
My Grandaughter Alyssa just loves owls due to 'Giggle & Hoot'. So this definately made us think of her. The markets are also full of all things 'owl'.
Georgetown ranks as the 8th
most liveable city in Asia and has large expatriate communities. The North
coast has long stretches of very good beach and clusters of resorts and
condominium complexes.
We had Malay lunch up the hill and
some bought some girly clothes. Back in town we stalked the markets and
collected a whole lot of boy stuff. We were lucky enough to be spared rain all
day. Dinner was back at the Indian restaurant from 2 days ago.
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