Showing posts with label Around the World in Eighty Years. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Around the World in Eighty Years. Show all posts

Monday, 20 March 2017

Singapore 2013 and 2017

At the beginning of this year, I went to Singapore! I've neglected the rest of my Vietnam travel blog series, but this trip inspired me to blog on my travels again!

Most of this blog will be from my trip this year, but some parts will be from my experiences in 2013.

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Singapore, Singapore

Highlights:
  • Marina Bay Sands and Gardens by the Bay
  • Night Safari
  • Botanic Gardens
  • The MRT (train) system; it's fast, efficient, and just amazingly convenient
  • Self-flush toilets (except in the airport where it flushed too frequently)
  • Taxis are still pretty cheap
  • I discovered my love for popiah here (strangely enough I never had it in Malaysia) - just don't get fried popiah because they're pretty much lame spring rolls!

    Lowlights:
  • It was raining a lot when we got there, but I actually kind of liked the rain, so I can't think of any other low lights

    Weather/Environment:
  • Wet and rainy (but this meant less crowds)
  • Nice temperatures

    Accommodation:
    This time I stayed at my cousin's place, but in 2013 my mum and I stayed at Marina Bay Sands for a few days. It is pricey, but very beautiful. And the rooftop infinity pool is great, obviously.

    Overall:
    I loved Singapore, and I would visit it again the next time I go to Malaysia. It's very easy to get around, and it's not that much of a culture shock because it's the most Westernised Asian country I can think of. The food is not as great as Malaysia, but it's a good country. There are a lot of fines though, so be careful with what you do, e.g. don't chew gum, etc.




  • The Marina Bay Sands light show at night as seen from Clarke Quay


    Marina Bay

    From the airport, we went straight to the Bayfront MRT stop which takes you to the Marina Bay Sands hotel and shopping centre. After lunch, we went to the ArtScience Museum, walked halfway across the Helix Bridge for some pictures, then went to the Gardens by the Bay, where we went to the OCBC Skyway and both the Flower Dome and the Cloud Dome.


    Marina Bay Sands Hotel

    Infinity pool on the Marina Bay Sands rooftop

    The infinity pool at night (can you spot me?)

    This hotel is beautiful, from the inside, from the street outside, and as seen from the city. It also has a night show every night at 8pm and 9.30pm (as well as 11pm on Fridays and Saturdays, check the website here) and the view is really great from Clarke Quay.

    Marina Bay Sands as seen from the Helix Bridge

    Best views: Helix Bridge, walking along the Clarke/Boat/Robertson quays

    Hidden gem: Many Singaporeans don't know about this themselves, but go to the eighth level of the Supreme Court to see a great view of the city, including Marina Bay Sands. The only downside is you are not allowed to take photos (there are security cameras), and at security downstairs you have to walk through the scanners and surrender any cameras. It has a great view though.

    Marina Bay Sands again seen from the Helix Bridge, but during the day


    The ArtScience Museum

    The ArtScience Museum as seen from the Helix Bridge

    My favourite building in Singapore because of it's beautiful asymmetry, which is also another reason I love the Opera House.

    You will pass by it when exiting the Marina Bay Sands Shopping Centre, and you can get a good view of it from the Helix Bridge.

    There is always a little free exhibition on the architecture of the building, and they have some pretty cool exhibitions and a cool gift shop as well. Check out their website to find out what exhibitions are being held when you are there. In 2013 they had a really cool Lego exhibition, and this year they had an Escher exhibition which was amazing.

    From the Lego exhibition from 2013

    From the Escher exhibition from earlier this year


    Gardens by the Bay

    The view from our room at Marina Bay Sands, overlooking the Marina Bay area

    Just a short walk from hotel, the Marina Bay area is all reclaimed land, meaning artificial land created from rocks that have settled over a period of decades to form the stable land that it is now. Reclaiming land is an ongoing process that is necessary for Singapore as it is such a tiny country.

    The Gardens are lit up every night at 7.45pm and 8.45pm, so a good idea is to start out in the evening so that by the time you finish, the lights are on.

    The Supertree Grove in the Gardens by the Bay

    The OCBC was the best attraction in the Gardens, as it provided an amazing view of the area and of Marina Bay Sands, and it's very cheap. Tickets are only $8 per adult (I'm pretty sure they were only $5 last time) and it's a pretty interesting walk 22m above ground. The artificial supertrees house solar panels that help to generate electricity to power the light shows. One downside is that the workers there rush you to keep moving forward because of the number of tourists there (and I don't remember them doing that last time).

    The OCBC Skyway


    The two conservatory Domes as seen from our Marina Bay Sands room

    The domes are pretty interesting. They house different plants and floral collections depending on the time of the year. But just as a warning, these domes are freezing. Bring a jacket.

    From the Cloud Dome

    The Cloud Dome is the taller of the two. You take an elevator up to the top then slowly walk down. It's an interesting place, but I think if you are rushed for time and on a budget, it can be skipped.

    From the Flower Dome

    The Flower Dome is the shorter of the two and houses different collections of plants depending on geographical region. I really liked the African area because of the baobabs and cacti, but the rest was not as interesting. In the centre, they have a floral display which they change every season or public holiday to reflect the time, e.g. Christmas, Chinese New Year, Easter, etc. This is better than the Cloud Dome but I think if you are rushed for time it doesn't need to be seen.

    One of the many baobab trees in the Flower Dome


    River and Night Safari

    I took the MRT to Choa Chu Kang, and took the 927 bus to the zoo. Purchasing a two-park pass is cheaper than purchasing passes separately, and I started at the River Safari. The River Safari is pretty straightforward as there is only one direction to walk in, and I also went on the Amazon boat ride. After that, we had dinner, and then we went to the Night Safari, first walking around the four trails, then going on the tram ride.

    From the River Safari

    I am not going to lie, one of the reasons I wanted to come to Singapore again was because the River Safari had not opened the first time I went to Singapore. I was super keen for the River Safari, but it turns out that the Night Safari was the better one, and the River Safari can actually be skipped to save money and time. I didn't go to Singapore Zoo, though, so I can't make any comments on that, although apparently it is similar to the Night Safari, so I would be keen on going there the next time I am in Singapore.

    A panda baring all in the Panda Forest located at the River Safari

    I discovered my love for flamingos on this Amazon River Ride in the River Safari

    The Night Safari is a zoo only open at night. The main attraction is the tram ride that goes around the zoo, however there is a huge line for this as soon as the park opens. I had a look at this suggested itinerary they had on the website, and I walked around the zoo first. It was raining but that meant that there weren't as many people walking around either. It's interesting that it's an open air zoo at night because this meant that when it was raining, some areas were quite slippery (good thing I was wearing joggers), and this was exacerbated by the fact that some places are not well lit, so it's easy to fall and injure yourself. I'm actually curious as to how lawsuits would work here, as the novelty of this zoo is that it is outdoors and open, but still I think it is very easy to slip and fall.

    Another thing that is both a downside and an upside is that the animals are not enclosed in cages, and they have natural barriers so you can sort of see them "in their habitat". For example, the coyotes have a moat surrounding their area, but it was a bit of a concern when they started running around and jumping here and there, because I was wondering whether or not they could actually clear the length of the moat as it doesn't look too big from where you are standing.

    Regardless, it was a really fun time walking around.

    Flamingos again at Night Safari!

    After we walked around, we queued up for the tram ride. By now, a lot of the crowd had dissipated, and while the queue still looked really long, it was constantly moving, so we still got on a tram pretty quickly.

    The tram ride was really a highlight. They ride to some places that you don't walk past, and they have a narration playing as you see each animal. You can't take very good photos because flash photography is not allowed (and they call you out if you take pictures with flash, like the girl in front of me did), but it's a great experience.

    After the tram ride, we queued up for the Creatures of the Night Show, but unfortunately it was cancelled because of the rain. We then quickly left for the taxi stand, and while there were a lot of people queueing up, there was constant progression of taxis, so we got into a taxi in a decent amount of time.

    The River Cruise at the River Safari

    The tram ride in the Night Safari was actually what I expected of the River Safari too (and why I was so excited for it). Maybe I'm just stupid, but I seriously thought the main feature of the River safari would be the boat ride, hopping onto a boat and having a look at a whole heaps of animals.

    Instead, the river safari is more like an outdoor version of the Sealife Aquarium, and then the boat ride is only a 15 minute thing and they show you random things like giraffes, so it's not that exciting. There is a $5 Amazon River Quest boat ride which is more to what I was expecting, but it was a bit underwhelming, especially because it went by really fast and you couldn't really see some of the animals as they were hiding or sleeping.

    Perhaps a better attraction would be the Singapore Zoo, which sounds like it is a daytime version of what the Night Safari is (but without the tram ride).

    A very blurry photo of the tram ride at the Night Safari


    Singapore Botanic Gardens

    One of the garden displays at the Botanic Gardens

    The Botanic Gardens was also a huge favourite for me. I got off the Botanic Gardens MRT stop, walked through the gardens to the other side, and caught a bus to the shops at Orchard St.

    A flamingo display in the Orchid Garden

    The Botanic Gardens are filled with different types of gardens that you can walk through. There is a box of maps at the entrance, and you can return your map to the box so they don't have to print more.

    There are so many things to see here that I was there for maybe 3 or 4 hours and still didn't have enough time to explore everything.

    A really cool display of what prehistoric trees would have looked like in the Evolution Garden

    My favourite gardens were the Evolution Garden, and the National Orchid Garden. Be sure not to miss the Orchid Garden, it closes at 7pm and the last entry is at 6pm. It costs $5 and it is simply amazing.

    The other gardens also have different opening times, and as I said I didn't check out all of them, but some of them you walk past a little section of them anyway.

    I would highly recommend this, and I would even suggest you do this instead of the domes at the Gardens by the Bay if you don't have enough time.

    Really cool bromeliads in the Orchid Garden


    Cultural Areas

    A Michelin-starred soya chicken hawker store in the Chinatown Complex Food Centre

    We decided to check out the different cultural areas all in one morning/afternoon. An interesting thing about Singapore is how embracing it is of different cultures, dedicating specific areas to them and even having a public holiday for different religious events.

    The line for the soya chicken shop

    Chinatown was up first. There are a few streets filled with little market stalls that you can walk around. You can also go to the huge Chinatown Complex Food Centre for a massive collection of hawkers stalls. There is one famous soya chicken stall in the red section of this food court, however the wait is something like an hour or so so I didn't bother, and I've heard at least two people say it's not that great.

    The MRT stop for Little India

    Little India was up next, where the smell of curry hits you like a brick wall. This was a bit underwhelming, mainly because all I wanted was some roti but they didn't have any! I had to walk around asking people where roti was sold, and eventually they pointed me to one shop that did all types of rotis and murtabaks. I was so disappointed in the lack of roti.

    Walking to Arab Street from Bugis

    Arab Street at the Bugis Junction MRT stop was last. Bugis Junction has a lot of market stalls, and then you have to walk a little in the opposite direction to get to Arab Street and it's surrounding streets. I thought this place was pretty interesting. The food was decent, although the people are quite pushy, doing a one minute memorised spiel on everything they have on the menu. There's a beautiful mosque there as well, so it's decent for photos.

    A mosque near Arab Street


    Shopping

    I don't have any photos of the shopping centres on Orchard Street so here is a Kaya Toast breakfast meal

    I planned to not do much shopping in Singapore because I wanted to focus on sightseeing, and I could do way more shopping in Malaysia, but I did go to Orchard Street for a bit after my Botanic Gardens visit and my goodness this is like shopper's paradise for anyone who wants to shop! The whole place is just an interconnected web of say 6 shopping centres, and you can literally shop 'til you drop.


    So there's my blog on Singapore, I hope you enjoyed it. I really loved this country and would highly recommend it to anyone.

    Tuesday, 16 August 2016

    Vietnam/Cambodia Trip: Part 4 - Ho Chi Minh City

    Over the summer holidays, my family went to visit my Dad in Vietnam for a holiday (he is based in Ho Chi Minh City), and we decided to head up to North Vietnam and Cambodia as well. This is the fourth of a six part blog series on the whole trip!

    Part 1 - Siem Reap
    Part 2 - Ha Long Bay
    Part 3 - Battambang
    Part 4 (this blog) - Ho Chi Minh City
    Part 5 - Sapa and Hanoi
    Part 6 - Mekong Delta and Cu Chi Tunnels


    This blog is more of a picture blog, as it was the most chill and least touristy part of our holiday. My dad stepped up to be our tour guide and just took us to random places, so there's not much to talk about here.

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    Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam
    Highlights:
  • Christmas Eve in a communist country was surprisingly very exciting and crowded
  • The general overstimulation of everything in your body; the panic you feel when you need to cross the road, the constant honking you hear from cars and bikes around you, and the sheer volume of motorbikes swamping the road
  • War Remnants Museum; it was an eye-opening experience that ripped my heart out of my soul
  • The shopping was fantastic because I could finally buy clothes that fit me!

    Lowlights:
  • The food poisoning
  • Which meant we were too terrified of eating street food until towards the end of our holiday, so we didn't each much of that stuff :(

    Weather/Environment:
  • Very humid and hot
  • A bit dusty, but not as bad as in Cambodia

    Accommodation: We stayed at my dad's apartment here, yay for free accommodation!


    Overall:
    There isn't too much to do here so I wouldn't spend too long in Ho Chi Minh City (aka Saigon, for the older people, or for those who do not want to refer to the place by its communist name), unless you wanted to focus on the food and shopping. It gives you a good understanding of Vietnamese culture, but there are more interesting places in the rest of the country.





    Christmas Eve

    We arrived Christmas morning, and so Christmas Eve was our very first night in Vietnam, and what a night to experience Vietnam! It was seriously INSANE the amount of people that come out to celebrate a Christmas holiday, considering Vietnam is not a Christian country.

    Here we were thinking that this was just a typical night in Ho Chi Minh City, when even my dad is stunningly surprised, yelling out to us over the roar of motorcycles, "I have never seen anything like this! There are SO MANY motorcycles!"

    (Sorry, I'm not sure why you can't fullscreen it, but just click it to play/pause)

    We went to the Nguyen Hue Mall, which is an outdoor pedestrian strip in the heart of the city, and it was incredibly crowded.

    The City Hall

    Statue of Ho Chi Minh himself

    We also had dinner at the Bitexco Financial Tower, which is the tallest building in Ho Chi Minh City. It was a cross between my belated birthday dinner and a Christmas Ever dinner, together with a "We are finally reunited with Papa Lim" dinner.

    We had the buffet there, and it was pretty great, although we do believe that this may have been one of the sources of our food poisoning.

    Bitexco Financial Tower, tallest building in HCMC



    War Remnants Museum

    The War Remnants Museum is arguably the thing that stood out to me the most on my visit to Ho Chi Minh City.

    It has really cool displays of military equipment, ranging from planes, to weapons, to little personal belongings of soldiers, which was all pretty cool.




    There is one section where they show the torturous tiger cages that the Americans used on their Vietnamese prisoners, which was horrific and terrifying.


    Description: "Tiger cages" are in fact special cells for the detention of political prisoners considered "stubborn" by the Saigon authorities. There are 120 cages of such type in Con Dao Island. Each cell measures 2,70m x 1,50m x 3m. During the hot season about 5 to 14 prisoners were kept in one cell. In winter time there was only one of two of them kept in it with their feet shackled to a long iron bar. Eating, drinking, sleeping etc... are only allowed in this place.
    Narrow passages were reserved to jailers who went back and forth and were ready to harass the prisoners. Talking, laughing, coughing, even slapping on mosquitoes might serve an excuse for the jailers to use violent measures against the detainees. They injured them with sharp sticks or shovel lime on them. A lot of prisoners received serious burns or vomited blood.
    The detainees' meals consisted of handfuls of rice of very poor quality and small pieces of decayed dried fish. Vegetables and meat were definitely non-existent. Each prisoner was given half a tin can of drinking water a day let alone water for bathing or washing. The lack of water was really a punishment inflicted on women, specially during their menstrual days.
    Prisoners' health got worse day after day. Obviously, casualties among the political prisoners kept in "Tiger cages" were high.


    The different torture techniques they used on prisoners. Definitely worth the read (click to enlarge the picture)

    The most outstanding part of the museum, though, was the Agent Orange section, which was just a gallery of images of those affected by Agent Orange. It was so incredibly sad that I couldn't help but cry... a lot. In the end I just couldn't take it any longer and I had to go out and sit down, wiping my tears away.

    "Only as little as 85g of dioxin could kill a whole city with a population of 8 million."


    Reunification Palace

    The Reunification Palace was pretty cool too. The outside looks really incredible, and when you go in there's one floor where you can look out and have a stunning view from the balcony.


    It's so called because this was the building where the communist North Vietnamese came to an agreement with the South Vietnamese people, thus reunifying the land. It's also sometimes called the Independence Palace.


    Apart from that, the building isn't that amazing to look at; it's mainly just an exhibition of how all the rooms of the building look. It can be interesting since they're done up really formally and neatly, but many of the rooms look quite similar and you can get a bit tired of it. I did enjoy the private cinema room they had though (of course).

    Oh yeh, they had a tank out at the front too.



    Miscellaneous

    The Rex Hotel: dining on the rooftop made me feel like I was in the middle of a Hercule Poirot story and someone was about to drop dead at any moment. Oh, and they make a mean clam chowder, too.

    Saigon Central Post Office: a pretty cool pit stop as you walk around the city

    Inside the post office

    Saigon Notre Dame Cathedral

    Saigon Opera House

    The American couple we met in Ha Long Bay recommended us this crab shop and it was actually really great. The place is PACKED and we had to go up to the fourth floor or something just to get a seat. It's also so good that another crab shop opened RIGHT NEXT TO IT with the EXACT SAME NAME (ain't no such thing as IP in Vietnam). The only way we knew which crab shop to go to was because I looked at the phone number on the business card and made sure it was the correct one.