Saturday, November 2, 2013

Saturday November 2

                              
 Today, like yesterday, started as a serious beach day.    But Ali, who is considering an Iron Man Triathlon next year, was off at 8 am to tackle the highest mountain in Langkawi.  He survived but showed up late for the all day tanning session.  Round about 3 pm Joan and Barb headed out for some shopping, while Caroline Ali and I decided to try snorkelling on a nearby island.    We were dropped off on a deserted island that looked like a setting from an old James Bond movie. 
Spiney that punctured me
The snorkelling was tough.  The tide was low and we had to swim through the reef to get to the deep water.  The reef was populated with spike-like animals with one big eyeball.  When we got to the deep water the current was strong and we had to avoid be swept into the rocks.  The second time I went out my mask kept filling up with water so I couldn’t see properly and I hit the coral coming back in.  I now have 4 punctures in my skin and several scrapes.  The only picture I got was the spiky plant/animal that injured me.    


Friday November 1


                
Sky Bridge

                 
Today is a serious beach day.  We rented our chairs at 10 am and planted ourselves on the beach.  I have an E-reader with several new books and Joan swam in the ocean all day.  Caroline and Ali arrived mid morning and joined us on the beach.  Caroline had brought beach towels for all so we look like serious beach people.  The mornings are hot, but the afternoons are very hot, so we dunk ourselves every hour to cool off.  (except Joan who stays in forever).  Shortly before sunset we got a cab to the Skybridge in Lankawi and took the Gondola car 700m up to the top.  The Skybridge was closed but the view was great.  Sunset was slow that night so we started back down shortly before sunset.  What luck!  The cable car broke down.  We were stranded for 45min hanging 100meters above the jungle gently swaying in the wind.   Sunset came and went.  It’s a good thing nobody was afraid of heights.  After 30 minutes we called the emergency number posted on the Gondola door and they actually answered.  They told us they were switching to emergency service and we would be running again in 5 minutes.  Indeed shortly after 5 minutes we restarted and the gondola crawled back to earth.  We were each given a free bottle of water for our ordeal.                                                     
At the Top
Stranded


Thursday October 31


Ferry crossing
                                                      
 I had partaken of happy hour on a rooftop bar and ate a meal too hot for me to handle, so it was with trepidation I boarded a 3-hour ferry ride to Langkawi Island in Malaysia.  However the seas were calm and I didn’t turn green.  We arrived in Langkawi and when Joan saw a Starbucks coffee shop, there was no holding Joan and Barb back.  They both have a serious caffeine problem.  After their fix, we headed to our hotel – The tropical Resort.  It is a nice hotel, situated 100m from the beach and we walk through the woods to get there.   It is clean, has hot water and a very nice staff.  I quite like this place.  We walked through the town and we have several nice restaurants to choose from.  The beach is clean, with a bathtub hot ocean.  Joan is turning into a water baby.  She spends more time in the water than any of us.  Another thing we like about Langkawi is – laundry costs $1.50 per kilo.  We are superclean now.                                                                           
Ferry at Dock

Thursday, October 31, 2013

Wednesday October 30

Fishing Boat deck

Fish Delivery



 We had a great day today. We wanted to tour the island of Penang and so we hired a taxi with driver and set off. Our first stop was at a fishing village right next to the entrance to Penang National Park. We watched some catches being unloaded and transported into town on motorcycle delivery vehicles. We clung to the pier posts when the motorcycles came by to avoid any incident. The pier was colourful and interesting.
We went next into the national park and hiked about 1 ½ kms into the jungle to reach a canopy walk. The walk was definitely the highlight of the day. It was a rope and wire construction, 250 meters long in 5 stages from tree to tree and it swung 15 meters high over the jungle. It was just plain fun to be up there!                                                
After we returned to our driver, we asked him to take us to two other fishing villages which were over the mountain and down on the coast. Trouble is, they were not on the coast nor were they fishing villages. This was one of the very few times that our Lonely Planet guidebook has been wrong.
Joan and Barb on Canopy Walk
  We then went to the Botanical Gardens. The highlight here was not the flowers but the many monkeys roaming the grounds. They are always fun to watch.
We finished our day with a drink on a rooftop bar overlooking Georgetown

Tuesday October 29



We did a walking tour of Georgetown today. Georgetown is one of the 3 straits trading cities set up by Great Britain during the 18th century.  It has a long British history and is now one of the top tourist cities in Malaysia       
State Mosque

Temple Roof

Clan Jetty

We started at our hotel and took in the old colonial buildings first and then after our cafĂ© latte we went into Little India.  This has to be as close to India as it gets without actually being in India. Gold, jewellery, and clothes are all in the Indian fashion and the food is all Indian as well.  We all decided we like Indian food.   We visited the clan jetties where the Chinese clans own the jetty and there are hundreds of homes and businesses clustered on 1 jetty.  The newer additions have stilts made of concrete filled plastic pails.  It really is a city within a city.                                                                             

   Just before sunset we took a funicular up to the top of Penang hill.  The funicular goes up 800 meters in one shot and takes about 15 minutes.  It was built 100 years ago, but it has new cars and it runs very smoothly.  The sun set and the city lit up and I got my pictures of Georgetown and the Neon lit temple at the top of the hill.      
Georgetown at night
                 

Monday October 28


             
Malaka - Sultans Palace

Joan in Trishaw
             
We took the train to Georgetown today.  Travelling by train or bus in Malaysia is not that interesting.  Lots of Palm Trees and not much else.  We ate bananas and cookies for 8 hours on the train and arrived in the dark at Georgetown.  Georgetown is alive and happy at night and we had tea and beer at midnight, right on the street by our hotel.

Sunday October 27


Malaka has spent money cleaning up the riverfront the runs through the town centre.  We took a riverboat ride yesterday, and today we walked along the river.  There is a 10 km walk that leads past house and shops, most of which have murals on the front and sides.  The murals seem to depict a lot of history. 
      One of the hotels in Malaka offers a high tea.  We decided to try it out. We sat on the riverfront and watched the thunder and lightening and rain for 2 hours while we ate everything but cucumber sandwiches.  Alistair and Caroline  then departed for Singapore. 
      Because of the rain I went back to the hotel, but Barb and Joan went shopping.  While walking by the shops a man told them to look down.  They were beside a 6 foot Montor Lizard.  They might have panicked, but they got some pictures first.       
5 foot lizard in ditch

Sunday, October 27, 2013

Saturday October 26


                                     
Doors to a Chinese Temple
Caroline and Ali had joined us late last night, so we all toured the European area of town.  The down-town core has the official buildings and old Dutch architecture.  We went to only 1 museum but that was enough to give us nightmares.  The museum of beauty chronicles the brutality heaped on mostly women to make them more desirable.  From lip disc’s, nose plugs, ear stretching to tattoos and scarification – it all looks painful.
      On a brighter note Malaka has trishaws.  Old bikes with a side-car for 2 and the most colourful setups.  Most also have a sound system that specializes in loud music.  After lunch we took a trishaw back to the hotel.  Because of her dress colour Caroline got the pink trishaw and I had to take the yellow flowered special.  It clashed horribly with my red backpack.                                        
Caroline and Ali in the Pink Trishaw

                            
     At night tracked down the number one restaurant in Malaka.  The Pac Putra is rated the best on Trip Advisor and in the lonely planet.  It is a Pakistani/Indian special.  The 5 of us ordered 10 meat or veggie dishes a lot of Nan bread and drinks called Mango Lassies.  We ate in the parking lot along with a hundred other patrons.  Some of the food was cooked on the sidewalk, some inside the restaurant.  It was
Trishaw at night
great food.  All at less than $8 per person. 

Friday October 25


Kampung Kling Mosque
We boarded the bus to Malacca this morning and arrived in Malacca at 1 pm.  We crossed onto Malaysia after 1 hour and the roads in Malaysia are good.  Malacca is a UNESCO recognised village that has been a major seaport and trading town since 1400.  It has been owned, at various times, by the Sumatrans, Portuguese, Dutch, English and now Malaysia.   It is a popular destination for tourists and is famous for it’s mixture of cultures and fabulous food.   Our hotel is in Chinatown and this is the happening part of the city.  Shopping is good, but at night the street is blocked to cars and 1000’s of vendors put up stalls or have their carts on the main road.  After dark we wandered down main street and marvelled at the pure junk and gaudy beads that tourists will buy.  There is lots of food on the street as well.  Home-made potato chips, tarts and pastries, small squid skewers,  quail eggs and much more.  Even if I wasn’t hungry Joan made me eat the squid and the quail eggs.  Then she tried the potato chip, which we both liked.  The potato chip was made from one whole potato that was skewered first, sliced partially through on a lathe and stretched out on the skewer, and then deep fried.   All of the hot food is cooked right on the street in various ovens and fryers.  This makes our barbecues look sad.       
                                                                 
Quail eggs

Potato Spreader
                                                                                                

     
Potato Slicer

Thursday October 24


Back Alley Barber


The Prayer Room

The Great Mosque of Singapore
The girls went shopping and I went to the barber.  I found one in a back alley near China town and for the first time I had my haircut outside.   He was good and cheap - $6 for a cut and trim.  Afterwards I toured the Arab district in Singapore.  I was able to visit to Sultan Mosque.  The Mosque is impressive from the outside, but very plain inside.  I had to wear a gown, because I had shorts on, but it was provided free.  The massive prayer hall was almost empty and I took pictures through the door, but I was not allowed to enter.  I must have looked confused or religious because one of the monitors asked me if I was all right.  When I assured her I was just a tourist she gave me a 10 min intro to Islam.  I did not get around to asking about the place of women in the Mosque.
   That evening we went to Raffles Hotel and we all had a Singapore Sling at the Long Bar.  This is where the Singapore Sling was invented.                             
Caroline and Alister with Singapore Slings