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Kuala Lumpur: Fish Reflexology

Posted by daveb on January 3rd, 2009

Asia was always going to hold some weird experiences for us, by I didn’t expect that they were going to involve fish and toes.

After our visit to the KL Menara Tower, as part of a promotion we were both given a voucher for a reduced price treatment at the local health spa. Oh goody I thought, I could do with a relaxing back massage. However, it turns out the treatment on offer was to be an altogether more bizarre experience. When the female promoter mentioned fish reflexology, Dave looked rather reluctant, having witnessed this experience on TV. Completely confused, I asked her to explain further. ‘Yes, in this treatment you put your feet in a special aquarium and the fish nibble the dead skin, making your feet all nice’. What?! As gross as it sounded, I convinced Dave we had to try this Asian inspired experience.

The next day we apprehensively approached the counter at the beauty spa. The male attendant couldn’t understand my concerns. ‘It doesn’t hurt’, he reassured me, ‘it just tickles a bit’. An information leaflet raved about all the benefits of foot eating fish, claiming one could expect improvements in circulation and general health as well as cleaner feet.

Our turn came around. Dave made me go first, claiming that he wanted to take photos. It took me a while to muster the inclination to put my feet in a pond full of ravenous fish (are we sure they weren’t pirhanas, they were pretty keen?) and when they began nibbling away it freaked me out too much, so that I squealed and withdrew my pinkies. A few attempts later and I managed to relax into the experience, which felt like little scrathces. Dave on the other hand didn’t manage more than 10 seconds at a time and gave up after a few minutes, reporting that it was way too ticklish for him. I’m not sure if there was much improvement in the condition of my feet, after 16 months of wearing open sandals in hot dry climates, I think it would take an ocean full of fish to sort out my feet. But it was certainly worth a go, if just to hear Dave’s laughter on the videos.

Here are the links to the videos (below), even if you’re pushed for time it’s worth watching parts one and two with the volume turned up…

  1. Fish Reflexology (Part One)
  2. Fish Reflexology (Part Two)
  3. Fish Reflexology (Part Three)
  4. Fish Reflexology (Part Four)
  5. Fish Reflexology (Part Five)
  6. Fish Reflexology (Part Six)

Kuala Lumpur: Petronas Twin Towers

Posted by daveb on January 2nd, 2009

After spending a lovely four days in the very Dutch tourist town of Melaka we jumped on a bus to Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia’s capital city. Still buzzing from Singapore, I was hopeful that K.L. wouldn’t be too much of a let down — surely it couldn’t be as good as Singapore, could it?

It blooming is! Another great Asian tiger and I love it. Whilst it’s technically probable that I’m still recovering from our Indian experience and life in a mini-monastery, I’ve got to note that since leaving that environment, everything–really, everything–seems spectacular and I am one grateful chappy. Kuala Lumpur’s got a similar vibe to Singapore, although I gather with less rules. The Petronas Twin Towers are now firmly in the number one spot as my favourite building(s) in the world.

Bad points? The city’s public transport system sucks a little bit. The trains, buses and monorails are run by different companies who must have refused to sit at the same planning table because even at ‘interchange’ stations, the walking distances between the lines are unreasonably long for a city of this size. Hence why the roads are clogged most of the day, although I must say that road pollution wasn’t particularly noticeable here.

Like Singapore, Kuala Lumpur is–sorry Mum–easily a city in which I could live and work. When we left London some seventeen months ago, I named this blog ‘Escape the City’. After falling in love with Cape Town, Singapore and Kuala Lumpur, I’m already starting to wonder whether I picked a bad title. Maybe it should have been ‘Escape London City’ or even ‘Escape to a smaller, more manageable human-sized city”.

Melaka: Not what we expected to find in Malaysia

Posted by Squiffy on January 1st, 2009

Singapore was definitely an improvement on India. However, it was still a busy city and I was looking forward to somewhere with a more relaxing pace of life. A couple of hours on a bus over the Singapore-Malaysia border, we found the perfect place to chill out. Melaka was formerly ruled by the Portuguese, Dutch and British and as such has a colonial feel, with lots of churches and ornate buildings. It’s a seaside town but the main feature seems to be the river/canal, and due to the Dutch influence, it strikes me as a Malaysian Amsterdam (without some of the Dutch capital’s more infamous sights).

Most importantly for us after our tour of India, Melaka has some lovely accommodation, including the boutique hostel named ‘Hotel Twenty’ where we stayed, and plenty of appealing places to eat and drink. We spent a few days pottering around town, reading and playing Monopoly back at the hostel, avoiding the sticky heat and torrential downpours common at this time of year. In the evenings we treated ourselves to cocktails at the Geographer Cafe and posh nosh at Harpers Restaurant, where we reserved the best table overlooking the river. So much for the backpacking budget! At least Malaysia is cheaper than Singapore.

Once we had recuperated and were ready for more sightseeing action we took a boat trip along the river, perused the noisy Chinese weekend night market and had a cuppa at a traditional Chinese tea house set in the tranquil gardens of an historic house – nothing too strenuous :o). The very friendly staff at the Dutch Harbour cafe lovingly prepared a typical Malaysian curry for us, mine without spice, Dave’s with the usual amount of spice. After a few mouthfuls, he declared it was the hottest thing he’d ever eaten and turned a bright shade of pink, much to mine and the staff’s amusement. He ate mainly cheese sandwiches from then on.

Note in the photos the very well dressed rickshaws – these were one of the main features of Melaka, and at night they sported flashing lights and ghetto blasters, each one out doing the next.

New Year’s Eve: Karaoke Special

Posted by daveb on December 31st, 2008

Following on from our less than brilliant Christmas Karaoke Special, we’re–somewhat–proud to present our New Year’s Eve message.

Recorded–sober–in a Singapore Karaoke bar to give our friends and family a giggle. To be honest, I didn’t have a clue what Cliff Richard’s “Millennium Prayer” sounded like and only figured out that the tune was Auld Lang Syne about half way through, when the pre-recorded backing singers chirped in. We were so bad that the Karaoke club manager brought us the bill just as we were warming up! If you enjoy, please consider making a little donation to your favourite charity.

Here’s wishing you a happy and prosperous New Year — may all your dreams come true!

Singapore: Truly a super city

Posted by daveb on December 30th, 2008

Oh boy, are we pleased to be in Singapore! After all that is India, it’s so super clean, relatively speaking there’s oodles of space and everything works! Most people who have told me about Singapore have said things like “it’s too clean”, “you can’t even chew gum”, “you’ll be bored in two days”. Now that I’m here and sipping my Californian-style latte, I can wholeheartedly respond: “Well, not me mate: I blooming love this place!”

The airport is lovely and it’s got free Wi-Fi internet. The MRT (akin to the Underground) is clean, air-conditioned and spacious — even at rush hour, compared with London. One Florence Close, the hostel in which we stayed was stunningly clean, tidy, homely, had the most adorable scantily-clad Persian cats and the young girls running the place were super nice. And, once you engage the Singaporeans in conversation, they are fabulous too. Oh and after travelling through mostly conservatively-minded (and conservatively dressed) countries for most of the last seven months, I’m very pleased to report that, here in Singapore, guys wear shorts and the girls mostly wear miniskirts or hotpants!

After catching-up with our blogging duties, we mooched around the city and its various shopping malls, delighting in the supersize Christmas decorations and ate at the finest cafes and restaurants that we could afford. We took a free open-top ‘Hippo’ bus tour down Orchard Road (think Oxford Street in London) to see the fabulous Christmas lights. We even pushed the cruise liner out to chomp our way through posh sarnies at Raffles’ high tea and then pulled up a couple of stools at the Long Bar, which is the only place in Singapore where littering won’t get you a hefty fine. In this very bar, the Singapore Sling was invented and it’s very nice too. We shared one though; they’re priced at S$25 (about £12) a cup!

Any bad points? It is quite hot (32 degrees) and very humid (65%). It rains–hard–for about thirty minutes every day at just after four o’clock. Compared to India, it’s unnervingly expensive. But then again, compared to India I’m sure that we’d find everywhere expensive.

For me, right here, right now, it’s perfect. “Now waitress, please would you fetch me another latte?!”

India: Dirt. People. Colour. Dirt. Noise. Dirt.

Posted by daveb on December 29th, 2008

As with my opinion piece on the UAE, I find myself starting this round-up of India with a big fat waiver. India is a vast country with an awful lot of people in it. Obvious as these statements sound, you really have to go there to understand them fully. Committed readers will already know that you can sit on a moving Indian train for over seventy hours and still not be at your destination. As such, read this post knowing that we’ve not travelled all of India. Nothing like it, in fact.

What I can tell you is that after spending a month and half here, I do feel somewhat qualified to give you my opinion on the place. The India that I have seen is a dog-eat-dog developing society. And it shows. There’s a lot of poverty here and also a lot of wealth. It appears that the majority of people look after themselves and their immediate family and that’s about it. You look after you and your own and to hell with everyone else. Think I’m being unfair and unkind? Possibly, but as a tourist touring the tourist strip it can sometimes appear that each day is just about not parting with every last Rupee in your wallet as the eager touts try to part you from them. Ripping off tourists is absolutely fair game here and we grew tired of the number of times an auto-rickshaw driver quoted a price of one hundred for a trip worth thirty. Bear in mind that thirty was still the inflated tourist price, the locals paid more like ten. (How do I know this? In Kolkata, Claire and I ventured into the suburbs where–judging by the stares we got–no tourist had ever ventured before. For a mile ride, the cycle-rickshaw driver was thrilled that he got the five Rupees that he requested, without bartering.)

People tell me that the government is corrupt and really couldn’t give a monkey’s about them. It seems that while laws and rules exist they are seldom enforced. Things are left to rack and ruin and it seems that scores of people needlessly suffer and die on an almost daily basis. Traffic flow is abysmal; people don’t care which side of the road they drive on, just so long as they get in front of the car ahead. I reckon that I’ve been driven the wrong way around a roundabout more times than the right way. The sound of car and auto-rickshaw horns fill the air and the interluding silences are rare and worth savouring.

I won’t forget the colour. The Indians are a colourful bunch and the women think nothing of wearing bright orange saris and, the men, day-glo yellow tied head scarves. Once past the touts and street sellers, the people were genuine, helpful and certainly very interested in us. On more than one occasion we found ourselves in rural locations where it was obvious that the locals had not seen many white people in the flesh. In Africa, this inevitably meant that we had our hair pulled, hands grabbed and made to hold babies. Over here we were encircled by a large group of silent men who would simply stare at us, completely straight-faced, watching our every movement with intrigue. We had to raise the first smile to break the cultural barrier which, once down, opened up some really memorable experiences. Like drinking chai tea in front of and audience of fifty men.

The transport, whilst mostly unclean, is frequent and reliable. The trains make crossing large areas of land possible whilst lying down. The auto-rickshaws make nipping into town and between the various tourist sights a speedy, if a little nerve-jangling, experience. The cycle rickshaws at least provide an income for the poorest folk and we tried to use them wherever possible — sometimes not realising how far apart things were! (In these cases, we tipped well.)

It’s time to mention the dirt, rubbish and smells. Don’t bring your Sunday best to India: my Mum gave me a white cotton shirt in Abu Dhabi. I feared that it might not look the same after a a month here. The whiteness didn’t even last two days and no amount of washing will ever restore it to its former glory. India has all the dust of Morocco with 1.8 billion peoples’-worth of rubbish thrown on top of it. And then they pee on it.

In parts, it’s really bad and difficult to get past this: we found ourselves bemoaning this more than anything. Once I saw a shopkeeper empty his rubbish bin onto the street, just a little to the left of his store front. Separately, our reasonably educated driver from our midrange hotel threw a plastic bottle out of the car window into the countryside. Upon seeing our shocked faces he attempted to calm us with, “don’t worry, in India there’s no fine for this”.

I read a newspaper article which stated that in 2005, over 50 million people in India did not enjoy the use of a private toilet and so would have likely defecated out in the open. Ignoring for a moment the difficulty in actually measuring such a statistic, let’s put that into perspective: the population of the UK is a touch under 61 million. Using my twisted logic that means–in absolute terms–that 5 out of 6 people in Britain would be pooing in the street. Add motor pollution, countless rats, completely “different” hygiene standards and you’re describing just about any Indian town or city. It’s a miracle that neither Squiffy nor I got sick — we are the only people we know that went to India for over a month and didn’t.

I want to write some more positive stuff here and it’s quite difficult. Seeing Jodhpur’s mountaintop fort and the city’s blue wash buildings reveal themselves at sunrise as monkeys swing between them is mesmerising. The Taj Mahal is stunning and a must-see. The Pushkar Camel Fair is biblical and I don’t expect to see anything stranger than a decorated camel in my lifetime. And that’s it for me. Rightly or wrongly, I just can’t get past the dog-eat-dog and the dirt. Shame.

And yet, having been only out of the country for a little over a week, reviewing the beautifully colourful photographs that I took, “rangss’s” insightful observation is already beginning to ring true:

“Don’t come to India because you will hate it and when you leave it, you will miss it.”

Portraits of India

Posted by Squiffy on December 28th, 2008

One of the most positive aspects of India for me were the people. Particularly in Rajasthan, they were friendly, fascinated by us aliens (especially Dad in his turban) and always keen to pose for a photo. When we showed them their portraits on the digital screen, they were often pleased and interested to see themselves in this way. I’d like to share with you some of the interesting faces belonging to a few of the people we spent some (albeit short) time interacting with. Can you spot the stooge?

India and Thailand: Between a rock and a hard place

Posted by daveb on December 27th, 2008

We were headed to Kolkata (Calcutta, of old) to spend our final night in India before jetting off to Thailand. Finally, we’re on our way out of here. Or so we thought. Phil (Claire’s dad and our helpful travel consultant) called as we were on the train, just a few hours away from the city. “Bangkok airport’s closed. Protests.”

This country won’t let us leave just yet. I’ll spare you the long story: we confirmed the news with the airline in Kolkata, our flight had indeed been cancelled. From Kolkata, destinational choices are somwhat limited and Squiffy didn’t much like the idea of flying backwards to Delhi or Mumbai to open-up our options. If we couldn’t get to Thailand, we couldn’t get to the Angkor Wat in Cambodia either. Should probably shelve Loas for the time being also — we’ll come back to do the three in a future trip. Perth, Australia, sounds really great right now and we could connect from Singapore. Don’t have an Aussie visa though. In fact, let’s just fly to Singapore and explore the surrounding area until our visa comes in. Next flight is only another day away. Booked.

So we had a ‘free’ day in Kolkata — actually a city that we really didn’t want to see at all. Many guidebooks claim that Kolkata is the poorest and dirtiest of all major Indian cities. Actually, from my experience, I’d dispute this. We were done with dirt and so paid a bit more for accommodation (to £13/night), food and took taxis around town. We ate cheese and tomato sanwiches for breakfast at a five-star hotel and I discovered that our hotel did the best Indian curry that I’ve come across in my month and a half in this country. Kolkata also has a great book store and nearby booksellers on street. We stocked-up with a number of cheap Indian-print books to tide us over in the next leg of our tour. No, I’m pleased to report the Kolkata that we saw was actually rather nice. Having said that, it’s still India and we now quite desperately want to leave the dirt and noise of this country behind.

That morning, as we were biting into our toastie, terror struck. Last night the Indian news channels had reported a “firing” at the Leopold Cafe in Mumbai, but details were scant and we figured that it was an individual, isolated shooting. The plasma screen in this town-centre Western-standard hotel opened our eyes to the bigger picture. Several major sites around Mumbai city were under siege, held by terrorists who had already killed and injured scores of innocent people and were potentially holding hundreds more hostage. We spent much of the day glued to the television, the news channels constantly feeding out speculative–often incorrect–details. Even though we were on the opposite side of India, it felt very close to home and we were extremely shocked and saddened for the people caught up in the tragic events. Whilst extremely grateful that we were well away from Mumbai, our disappointment at not being able to leave on a flight to Bangkok turned to dread when the news channel reported that all major Indian airports were reported to be on high alert: was it going to be safe for us to fly to Singapore even? It was one of those days when the reality of trouble in this part of the world was brought home to us, and we just wanted to be at home in the UK.

Gaya: I’m a tourist, get me outta here!

Posted by daveb on December 26th, 2008

We’ve got an early train from Gaya to Kolkata (Calcutta) tomorrow morning. Our guidebook and a handful of locals have indicated that it’s not safe to travel between Bodhgaya and Gaya in the dark. So we took a cab to Gaya during daylight hours and stayed the night there, much closer to the train station.

Wish we hadn’t! Gaya is a real in between town and not really a place worth hanging about. Our hotel was on par with the grimmest one in India. To escape the ‘orridness of our room, we sought out the area’s finest restaurant for some comfort food. Not such an easy task, but eventually we happened upon a reasonable looking hotel and took a table in their restaurant. Obviously, this town doesn’t see too many Westerners as, even though we sat in the corner, we quickly became the centre of attention for the staff and other diners. We ordered our food and pep-talked each other about how we’ve only got two more nights in this country to go.

A shape scurried across Squiffy’s peripheral vision, left. “I just saw a mouse!”, she alarmed. I called over our waiter, “there’s a mouse in the restaurant”. “It’s only a small one.”, he countered. It ran under our table and Squiffy squealed an impressive squeal. The only other diners laughed and the wait staff scratched their heads, wondering why the white girl got freaked. I stood, grabbed her forearm and lead her out of the restaurant, “come on, we’re leaving”.

After finding another food outlet–mouseless–we made our way to the nearby Internet cafe to fill some time before having to make our inevitable return to our grotty room. We didn’t stay too long at the cybercafe either, a huuuge black rat was scarpering across the beams a metre above our keyboard. Squiffy typed a one-handed, arms-length, one sentence e-mail and then we packed-up and left. Again I told the owner that we wouldn’t stay any longer because we were sharing the space with a large rat. He shrugged.

Upon returning to our hotel, we hid from the world in our silk sleeping bag liners. Someone please get us out of here.

GMTV Videos – Christmas Down Under Link

Posted by Squiffy on December 26th, 2008

We found the video of my Christmas Eve appearance on GMTV – click here and fast forward 3/4 of the way to the end to see me waving madly!

Festive greetings from Perth!