Saturday, November 26, 2011

Malacca

Malacca holds good childhood memories for me. Even now, it is a place that I would look forward to visiting for a few days or so. I have relatives there whom I have been visiting from the days when my father would drive us all the way from Singapore in a car that had no air-conditioning. I wonder how we had survived those long journeys travelling, not on highways, but on narrow coastal roads and often enough found ourselves sandwiched like sardines because a trip by car was to be maximised by packing in as many people as the car could possibly accommodate in those days. 

I remember the old Morris Minor and the Volkswagon that 'swam' across a flooded road near Muar and I remember that on hot, humid days, all the windows were wound down and to sit next to a window was like a business-class treat on an aeroplane in those days. I remember that we passed by boring scenery of endless rubber tree plantations and when we finally saw padi fields and bullock carts on the roads we knew that we had arrived in the state of Malacca. These scenes are of course non-existent today. The padi fields are gone and the bullock carts are now tourist items located in Ayer Keroh where you can pay for short rides. The rubber trees are now replaced by the more lucrative oil palms. 

Still, nostalgia is something that stays with you throughout your life and is activated by unexpected encounters with the things that everyday living has pushed to the past and becomes forgotten with time like these thermos flasks and the display of cups of 'cooling herbal teas' that you could purchase to counteract the heatiness in your system - to balance the yin and yang in your body. Malacca could still evoke these feelings in me and as usual I overworked my camera to capture all that I felt connected with. Click here to see the photos taken over two days at Jonker Street and Bunga Raya (Chinatown) in Malacca.

Saturday, April 30, 2011

Lushan Hot Spring Village

We stumbled upon the Lushan Hot Springs reputed to be the best in Taiwan on the internet, booked our accommodation online and finally arrived there on the fourth day of our Taiwan trip. Getting there on our own was not difficult as we booked a Guoguang bus that was safe and comfortable that took us from Taipei to the town of Puli at the foot of the mountains (3 hours plus). There, transferred to a Nantou bus that got us to Lushan village in an hour and a half. We got to gasp at the breathtaking mountain scenery that we had come for as the bus climbed higher altitudes .














When we arrived at the village in Lushan we thought we had made a mistake in our travel plan because the place was like an abandoned town. We learned that on weekdays and during off-peak holiday periods, this was the expected atmosphere. Fortunately, the hotel had stationed its van not far from the bus stop to take us to our hotel across the river in a round-about way and we got there in about 5 minutes.


On foot you could easily cross over to where the hot spring hotels are using this suspension bridge. Lushan was badly battled by Typhoon Morakot in 2009 and is slowly rebuilding. The hordes of tourists have yet to arrive and locals were surprised that we made it there on our own.


On a free-and-easy trip, there was time for coffee.

In the afternoon the shops opened for business as people drive up in the evenings to enjoy the hot springs and to have a meal in the restaurants.
The small road leading to our hotel was lined with shops selling stuff that locals and tourists would be interested in.

Flowers along the way.








The Lushan Hotspring area was developed by the Japanese and that explains the presence of the Japanese style buildings we saw.
This building is a public toilet. 




Sculpture of an Aboriginal girl.
Take a photo here to show that you have been to Lushan.

This is the recreational club of the Police. There is a hot spring bath in there that is surrounded by Cherry Blossom trees and you can imagine how beautiful it must be to be soaking in the open pool beneath the blooming cherry blossom trees.
Further up and a short walking trail away, you will see the source of the hotspring waters of Lushan.

Monday, April 25, 2011

Bintan Lagoon Resort sunsets

If I have another life to live I would want to live by the beach and mark my time watching the sun rise and the sun set everyday and I shall paint these precious moments till my life takes off with the last ebb of the tide that I will see. I can imagine being tired of so many things in life but the sun's appearance and farewell are two events that can be repeated till the end of the world and I will still want to see them everyday if I were to live by the beach. 

Day 1 on Bintan Lagoon beach.




























Day 2 on Bintan Lagoon Beach.