Saturday, December 08, 2012

Singapore, December 8

Last day in Singapore and another good one! Miklos came to the hotel before noon and we took a cab to the Gardens by the Bay. This time we not only wandered around and went on the bridge between the super trees but went into the Flower Dome and the Cloud Forest Dome. These are two huge structures (domes...) with beautiful displays of their namesakes (with a few Christmas trees and decorations thrown in for good measure). Was most enjoyable.




Then lunch at a very good (expensive!) Italian place. And then to the top of the Sands hotel - the visibility was not great but good enough and we could admire the skyline again as well as the sky-high swimming pool and the Gardens from high above. This was capped off by pastries and coffee in the hotel lobby.


We returned to the center of town by cab and went to the Penakaran Museum. This is dedicated to the  Penakaran which are basically many of the locals here and they celebrate their mixed heritage. The museum was rather childish but very earnest and well meaning and was a good opportunity for quite a few jokes.

Finally we went to a barbecue a faculty in the center here was hosting. She lives in a typical complex which seems quite luxurious. The party was outside but it was amazing to see that not only does the complex have a huge swimming pool, but some of the ground-level apartments have their own pools! And Avi broke the week long spell of not playing with a baby!

And then it was time to say goodbye, go back to the hotel and sleep for a few hours. Now we are getting ready to board and start the long track home. עייפים אך מרוצים (tired but happy for our international fans - but it sounds better in Hebrew!)

Photos at: https://picasaweb.google.com/115788154995936631095/Singapore2012December8?authuser=0&authkey=Gv1sRgCJ3MjLGjiLa7OQ


Final word: Everything was on time, and time passed quickly. We were home around 2:30pm (22 hours after waking up in Singapore), met Yuval for coffee at 5 and then went to a holiday party. No more shorts and sandals for a while.

Friday, December 07, 2012

Singapore, December 6-7

Thursday we started at the National University, Singapore (NUS) where we met Avi's host and old friend Miklos. We had a nice lunch and lively conversations with 2 other faculty in the alumni club. So it was quite an international event - an Indian CS professor who has been here for 10 years, a young Singaporean CS professor, Miklos who is a Hungarian who has lived in Paris for many years and now shares his time between Paris and Singapore and we. This seems to be very common here - the university is full of people from all over and many of them seem to have settled here for good.

After lunch I took a cab back to town and went to replenish my dwindling book collection. As I got out of the store it started pouring so all the plans I had for exploring dissolved and I was lucky to find a taxi and get dry back to the hotel.

It cleared up by the time we all met for dinner. This time it was with Miklos, an Indian postdoc and an Indian visitor. We ate at the waterfront and struggled valiantly with large crabs - not clear who won but we at least are alive to tell the story. (They were tasty but so much work...)




Thursday Avi went off to the University where he gave the talk which was the purpose of this trip. The poster for this event is the scariest I have ever seen! 



I walked around most of the day. This time I walked towards Marina Bay - a very nice walk along the water and the density of malls is slightly lower there, but not much. There were fantastic views of the skyline and lots more unusual architecture - in particular the helix bridge which "is the first bridge in the shape of a DNA molecule"!





From the Marina Bay mall I took a bridge to the Sands hotel (amazing - 3 towers with a boat-like structure connecting them on top - apparently there is a promenade and swimming pool up there in the sky), and another bridge to the Gardens by the bay. This is a huge area of gardens of many styles and in between there are man-made "super trees" - tree like structures which like most other architecture here is over the top. They even have a skywalk between 2 of the trees which is a lot of fun.

Next I took a river cruise. The boat kind of retraced my steps from the morning with narration which was as silly as these things always are but the trip was lovely. I alighted (here people seem to alight from any moving object - trains, boats, taxis - a very favorite word) by the Singapore Merlion  - Singapore's mascot. I had seen him from different angles but never noticed his younger self close by. Cute.

After a shower I took a taxi to NUS to the post-talks reception. We did not stay very long as we had decided we have to visit the 70th floor of our hotel - it is the tallest building in Singapore. The night was very clear and the view completely breath-taking. We had the most expensive appetizer and drink ever but it was well worth it! Too bad the photos cannot do justice to this so I won't put any here!

We will soon meet Miklos for another day of tourism (some of it will be a repeat of yesterday but I don't mind). And then we will have to get up before 4am and start the long trek home. Hopefully we won't have a long lay-over similar to the one we had on the way over!

Yesterday's and today's photos: 
https://plus.google.com/photos/115788154995936631095/albums/5819213723050890881?authkey=CPaE0M-GutLKUg
https://plus.google.com/photos/115788154995936631095/albums/5819212928441221585?authkey=CNaJmaKX1NPC2AE




Wednesday, December 05, 2012

Penang, Singapore December 5

This was an easy day and will be a very short blog post. We got up latish, had breakfast and then I sat by the pool reading and Avi worked in the air-conditioned room. We checked out at 3pm and stopped pretending that we are Empire builders and took a cab to the airport.

In Singapore we took a cab directly to the tailor's shop and picked up the jackets. They look nice but  need a slight alteration so we will have a couple more visits there but we are rather satisfied with the experience.

Dinner in the mall by the hotel (Japanese soba soup - the air conditioning was so strong we needed hot food), Avi worked a bit on the talks he has to give and off to bed.


Tuesday, December 04, 2012

Penang, Tuesday Dec 4

This was an extremely busy day....

Breakfast on the seaside was nice view-wise (ocean) and weather-wise (breeze), and the food was just OK. Around 9 we started walking, and returned 12 hours later - Edna has quite a few blisters and the last stretch she was wobbling.

We talked at length to many people. The main point will probably repeat itself below - the mixture of cultures and religions here is amazing, and nevertheless all people seem to tolerate and welcome all others. The government is Muslim, but there are plenty of Hindu, Buddhists, Christians,... who came here from India, Pakistan, China, Nepal,...Many women wear headscarfs, a few wear the full "eye slit" covers, while many are in western closes. No one seems to mind how others look, even in religious sites. Another striking feature is how orderly things are, especially traffic, which is strange mainly since many things remind one of India, where chaos controls the streets.

First place we hit was the supreme court. We went in and sat in a trial, on the invitation of some legal person. It was nothing interesting - some architectural issue, but it was strange how the languages flipped from English to Malay and back. We escaped after 15 min, to start our dazzling culture mix tour. We started in a church, where we talked to Christina, who seem to be their main administrator. As we are talking, 5 university students, all women in headscarves walked in, and got a full explanation from Christina. I started talking to them, found out they are law students, at Masters level. Understanding from the Muslim girl yesterday that I should not take their pictures, I didn't even ask, when they asked if they can take a picture with us. Jew and Muslim on the Christian Cross background was very symbolic.




Then we went to a beautiful Mosque, about 200 years old, when this religion invaded Malaysia. A student who is now on vacation volunteered to guide us (all free, and people here seem to be surprised when tipped). We talked for about 45 minutes about everything, but mainly how children experience school in this multicultural society. He is a Muslim Indian (3rd generation here). As a kid he went to a Chinese school, in which there were a few Muslims and Hindus. Most material is common, but religion classes each one gets separately in the same school. Food was Chinese, but Halal, catering to the others. We talked about local politics as well, but I'll skip it. School kids were sitting around the studying the Koran - extracurricular for Muslims.

Next we went into a Buddhist temple. In contrast to the serenity of the other two, here as usual was hustle and bustle, lots of coming and going with incense and gifts like fruit to gods. We continued to a dozen more Chinese and and indian temples of various sorts, which are scattered in the very distinct but also close sections of "Little India" and Chinatown, and various shopping streets with various merchandise in which we didn't find many shoppers but everyone seemed relaxed.


 We talked to a joss-stick maker (that's the incense they burn in the buddhist temple) and bought a bunch so we could take his photo - he was quite adorable.









The day was extremely hot, and just at the peak when we most needed it (and after starting to believe that the many places called "cafe" have nothing but soft drinks, we found a really nice cafe with good espresso and also had a nice salad. It was called The Edelweiss and the waiter was Nepali.

(Change in scribes here...)


I had heard good things about Penang Hill and the funicular which goes up it so we walked in the direction I misunderstood from the map. Luckily we stopped in a traditional Chinese pharmacy and the charming young man at the counter explained we have to take a bus to the hill which is about 20KM out of George Town. He gave us directions but was so horrified to hear how far we had already walked that he asked us to wait a minute, disappeared in the back room and came back with an umbrella to protect us both from the sun and possible rain! We asked if we could pay but he said that is a promotional umbrella he got from one of  his distributors and he insists on giving it to us! So sweet and typical of the Malai friendliness!


The bus stop was very organized and the 204 came 2 minutes after we arrived there - exactly on time! Definitely not like India! Lots of temples and markets on the way and then we arrived at the funicular station. It's quite a steep hill with a 700 meter ascent, and definitely worth the ride. Beautiful views (and not too overcast) and the hill itself is covered with lush vegetation, birds and monkeys.

When we came back down the 204 was already waiting for us and we got back to the central bus station from where we started walking back to the hotel (well - Avi walked and I limped). On the way we found another of those food court places and ate more hawkers food which was mostly nice. And as we had bought some pickled mango on the way there we could eat that to get rid of the not so nice fish taste...

And at the end we had a miracle - we were not sure exactly which road to take at a fork (we thought we were still 10 minutes away from the hotel), so we picked the left one and 100m later we saw the hotel's familiar facade! It was very nice to take a shower and collapse!

Today's Photos: https://plus.google.com/photos/115788154995936631095/albums/5818344217277896673?authkey=COfCv4jenZ_yUA

Monday, December 03, 2012

Singapore, Penang, December 3

After breakfast at Starbucks we had an hour before going to the airport so we walked towards the river. Was that a nice surprise - a very beautiful walk, and most amazingly many many beautiful buildings - both in the Colonial district around City Hall and the more modern downtown buildings. And hardly any shops, malls, hustle and bustle! Across the river there were many smaller, colorful buildings and lots of waterside cafes - we'll definitely go back there later this week.

The airport is also beautiful and we enjoyed strolling through it on our way to the gate. They have a beautiful orchid garden with a koi pool - the largest koi fish we have ever seen!

We had decided to pamper ourselves and had booked the Oriental and Eastern Hotel in George Town. It's one of those old British Empire hotels and looks like a place out of a Somerset Maugham book. We were greeted at the door by a guy in khakis, knee-high socks and a cork hat - "Dr Livingston, I presume?" seemed like a good way to greet him but we held the urge back. The suite is charming and we have a nice view of the ocean from our window. (of course, on closer scrutiny we found all kinds of things which are not quite right, like the TV panel which is held together with masking tape, but the British Empire has declined after all.)


The staff suggested we take the shuttle to their sister hote (not half as grand) on the beach about 40 minutes away.  That was a very good suggestion - Avi swam both in the ocean and in the hotel pool there. He also had a long conversation with a very nice young woman from Bahrain. (We are very impressed at how modern and western Malaysia seems - you see quite a lot of very Moslim looking women but the vast majority are not covered at all. Reading the local paper also seems to indicate that this is a progressive country with rather liberal laws - a different kind of Moslim country). Then we walked through the overnight market (the normal watches-electronics-clothes stalls you see everywhere), and arrived at a square full of tables with lots of food stalls all around. It's a very nice system - you order from the food vendors and tell them your table number and they bring the food over and then you pay them. Was very nice and tasty - lots of Indian, Chinese (no pork!) and Malay (which seems rather similar to Thai) food. Also very cheap...

Then it started pouring and we got back to the hotel lobby to wait for the shuttle completely drenched. We were completely exhausted by then and dozed off on the ride back. It was wonderful to take a shower and fall asleep in this fancy suite!

Today's photos: https://plus.google.com/photos/115788154995936631095/albums/5818342125026015009?authkey=CLTcs_7h77OxBg


Sunday, December 02, 2012

Singapore - Dec. 2

We made it to the hotel at 8am. So we of course had to pay for the night we did not sleep but could check in immediately and take most needed showers. They did give us free breakfasts "out of the goodness of their hearts" as the check-in person said, and it was nice to eat non-airplane junk after such a long travel period.

Despite the tiredness we decided to go exploring after breakfast. We walked along Orchard Rd which is the main shopping drag. It's one of the most kitschiest places ever. Seems like any architect in Singapore can throw up any building s/he feels like - the more unusual and odd the style the better. So we walked and marveled at the impossible monstrosities all around us - and to top it off they were all decked out in Christmas decorations. The whole place is basically a huge shopping mall which extends over many city blocks. And we were shocked to see quite a lot of litter in the streets. But that might have been due to the early Sunday morning stroll when the streets have not been cleaned yet.


Our stated goal was go find a tailor and order a couple of custom made jackets for Avi. We "interviewed" about 4 such tailors - all Indian, all very nice and all explaining why their stuff is unique and their prices the best (we could not see the uniqueness and the prices were pretty much identical). So Avi haggled a bit and we settled on number 4. Avi was measured and they were quite impressed with his asymmetry (turns out that not only are his legs of unequal lengths, but so are his arms...). We will pick them up when we return for Penang, and if need be they will adjust anything which needs adjusting. Hopefully this experiment will be successful as it was not cheap. We did stay firm and did not order slacks or ugly blouses for me to their great disappointment.

We went back to the hotel for an afternoon nap which was cut short by the cleaning staff filing in (we forgot to lock the door...). So back out for another walk - back to the tailor for a meeting with the expert tailor(!). By this time of day the streets were completely packed with people - strolling, shopping, eating... There are so many different types of people it is very nice looking at them all and trying to figure out their ethnicities - Chinese, Indian, Phillipino, Caucasians and all possible mixtures. And they all seem to be living together harmoniously - so amazing when you compare to other places...  The streets were much cleaner than what we saw in the morning but still not as spotless as the way Singapore is always described. I even saw one guy spitting - shocking!

Then we explored Little India and the Arab Quarter. Little India is billed as "an experience for all senses" but we were underwhelmed - it's cute but rather sterile looking and not very interesting after having spent time in the real India. We were struck by the fact that there were hardly any women on the streets there.

The Arab Quarter is even less interesting  - a couple of mosques and a few men in Arab garb.

By then we were ready to collapse so we headed back to the hotel. Avi insisted we have a proper dinner which was a good idea. We went to an Italian restaurant at the hotel. It was very good but we did not enjoy it enough as we were nodding off...

The night was quite restful despite the 13 hour time difference. I slept for 8 hours and Avi is still asleep so we should be ok today. We have to leave for the airport around 11. It's a short flight to Penang, Malaysia so we should have some time to start exploring Georgetown tonight.

Today's photos: https://plus.google.com/photos/115788154995936631095/albums/5817514008860325025?authkey=CImL7uGsqaeCZw

Saturday, December 01, 2012

Hong Kong

Here we go again... We are on our way to Singapore with a 2day detour to Penang, Malaysia.

The flight over was a piece of cake as we flew business and slept well (but the food was rather awful despite that).

We had a very tight connection in Hong Kong but that stopped being a concern once we were told that the flight is delayed at least 5 hours... So here we are in the United Lounge and Avi is very happy with the mango juice he is drinking...