Photos: Around Kuala Lumpur

Friday, January 8, 2010

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Photos: Kuala Lumpur skyline

Monday, January 4, 2010




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Photos: El Sanctuary, Malaysia

Tuesday, December 15, 2009

I was at El Sanctuary (near Malacca, Malaysia) for a camp with the Varsity Christian Fellowship group I was a part of at NUS. It was a great camp. Here's a few photos


This is Gerry. She spent a lot of the bible study times curled up on random peoples laps. Almost as soon as you picked her up she'd be asleep.


The view from the dining room


At El sanctuary there was a lot of large dogs. From memory there was 6 golden retrievers, a dalmatian and a saint bernard. Here they are sleeping out of everyones way, but most of the time they sat in the middle of the pathways where people could fall over them.


Some of the cabins and surrounding jungle

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Crossing the border

Monday, December 14, 2009

Singapore is connected by bridge to the south end of peninsular Malaysia. Crossing the border into Malaysia is quite a different experience of international travel than what I’m used to. The Singaporean public bus network doesn’t just cover Singapore, it also extends several kilometres into Malaysia. A trip from a train station in northern Singapore a bus terminal a few kilometres into Malaysia costs S$1.21 (AU$0.95, US$0.87). Coming from Australia where it takes hundreds of dollars and at least several hours on a plane or days on a boat to get overseas, the idea of travelling internationally at that price and on a city bus is a little mindblowing. I don’t think you could get 2 bus stops down the street in most Australian cities for that price.

Unfortunately Singapore and Malaysia did not co-operate by putting their customs and immigration centres together. That means you have to get off the bus at the customs centre for the country you are leaving, get back on the bus to cross the bridge, get off again at the customs centre for the country you are entering and then reboard the bus for wherever it is you are bound for. I must look like a shady character because both going into Malaysia and leaving Malaysia I was pulled over for bag checks. Coming from Malaysia to Singapore after you’ve cleared Malaysian customs and are just about to get on the bus there is a convenience store. I suspect they get a lot of business selling chewing gum. Chewing gum remains illegal to buy, sell and import in Singapore (with the exception of gum prescribed by a doctor for medical purposes) so some Singaporeans bring it back with them from Malaysia. Chewing gum takes on a whole new level of rebelliousness here!


Wikipedia article on the Singaporean chewing gum ban

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Photos: Malacca town, Malaysia

Saturday, December 12, 2009

The internet connection I had access to in Malaysia was very unreliable, hence the lack of blog posts. Hopefully over the next few days I should be able to get some of the backlog of stuff to post up, although it might not end up posted in exactly the order stuff happened. 











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