BootsnAll Travel Network



Archive for the 'Malaysia' Category

« Home

Southeast Asia in a Nutshell

Thursday, April 2nd, 2009

Angkor ThomAfter four trips and 11 months of travel in Southeast Asia over the past six years, we’ve pretty much exhausted the region. There are a couple of places we wanted to go to but never made it to – Camaguin in the Philippines and Sulawesi in Indonesia – but other than that we’ve seen and done just about everything Southeast Asia has to offer, and it’s time to move on to different parts of the globe.

So, as we prepare to fly from Singapore to Sydney tomorrow (but first: the bus from Malacca, and a fifth Malaysian exit stamp this year alone) for a brief rest and some catching up with family and friends, we find ourselves reflecting on the region, and to that end I’ll offer some of the best (and worst) of Southeast Asia – enjoy:

Best Country: A toss up between Indonesia, the Philippines, Laos and Burma (Myanmar). I still firmly believe that Indonesia has the most to offer but the distances are long, the transport is difficult and the food is ordinary. I’m almost ready to hand the crown to Burma – it has one stupendous historic site, plenty of Buddhist places of interest and lovely, sincere people (this despite them being among the most oppressed in the world, so much so that some of them are even trying to flee to Bangladesh, of all places, in search of a better life) – but it does lack some of the main natural highlights of some of the other regional countries like volcanoes, karst scenery and easy wildlife viewing. Virtually all of Laos is extremely nice but not much of it is spectacular, while the Philippines ticks almost all the boxes but it doesn’t have any pre-colonial sights, and while Christianity offers something new in the region, I found that I missed the eastern religions when I was there.

Best Large City: Singapore or Bangkok (Thailand).

Worst Large City: Jakarta (Indonesia).

Best Small Cities: Four spring to mind: Luang Prabang (Laos), Hoi An (Vietnam), Malacca (Malaysia) and Georgetown (Malaysia).

Best Instance of Wendy Getting Growled at by a Tiger: Seven Mountains Lake, Sumatra (Indonesia).

Best Food: Singapore. (Owing to a momentary brain freeze, I originally wrote Thailand as the answer to this one. One prawn laksa and one fried kway teow later, my senses have been restored.)

Worst Food: Indonesia.

Best Historic Sight: The Angkor temples (Cambodia), followed by Bagan (Burma) and Borobudur (Java, Indonesia).

Best Karst Scenery: The Bacuit Archipelago in Palawan (the Philippines), followed by Krabi (Thailand), Halong Bay (Vietnam) and, on land, various places in Northern Laos.

Most Surprising 6:40am Knock on a Hotel Door Accompanied by Huge Plates of Nasi Goreng for Breakfast: Kota Agung, Sumatra (Indonesia).

Best Wildlife Experience: A two-day Orang-Utan-themed boat trip through Tanjung Puting National Park in Kalimantan (Indonesia); then Bako N.P. or the Kinabatangan River (both Malaysia).

Cheapest Room: US$0.50 for a double room in Ban Huay Baw (Laos).

Best Underwater Experience: Sipadan (Malaysia), then Donsol for whale sharks (the Philippines) and the islands west of Flores in the Komodo National Park (Indonesia).

Best Meal: Snapper hot plate at the Gardenia in Labuanbajo (Flores, Indonesia), hawker-stall prawn laksa on North Bridge Road (Singapore), anything at Mai Kadee (Thailand).

Most Out-of-Place American Coffee Shop: Pyin-u-Lwin (Burma).

Best Instance of Wendy Getting Chased by a Fighting Bull: A bull-fighting arena somewhere near Bukkitingi, Sumatra (Indonesia).

Best Volcanic Scenery: It has to be Mt. Rinjani on Lombok with its extraordinary volcano-within-a-volcano (Indonesia), followed by Kelimutu on Flores (Indonesia) and Mt. Pinatubo in Luzon (the Philippines). Mt. Bromo (Java, Indonesia) gets all the hype but it’s too popular for its own good.

Best Beach: A hard one for us to answer, since we avoided most of the celebrated beach hangouts of the region. Of the ones we did visit, some favourites are Pero on Sumba (Indonesia), Gili Air off Lombok (Indonesia) and any strip of sand in the Bacuit Archipelago (the Philippines).

Best Sign: This one (Bali, Indonesia), and the one that read: FRESH RABBIT MEAT / PET RABBIT SOLD HERE (Kuching, Malaysia).

Most Surreal Experience of Being Mobbed by Dozens of Touts at a Bus Station: Siem Reap (Cambodia).

Best Filipino Fast Food: Biggs Diner, then Jolibee.

Best Rice Terraces: Batad (the Philippines), Bali (Indonesia). And, for something different, the Spider Rice Fields in Flores (Indonesia).

Village Most Completely Overrun by Tourism: A photo finish between Vang Vieng (Laos) and Ubud (Bali, Indonesia) – I’d say the former.

Most Claustrophobic Underground Hideout: Cu Chi Tunnels (Vietnam).

Best Markets: The floating market in Banjarmasin (Kalimantan, Indonesia), the fish auction market at Bandar Lampung (Sumatra, Indonesia), various markets in South Vietnam.

Most Picturesque Drying Chillis: Luang Prabang (Laos).

Country You’d Least Expect to be so Rampantly Capitalist Given its Recent History: Vietnam.

Fish Market Containing the Most Finless Sharks: Hoi An (Vietnam).

Weirdest Alms We Ever Gave to Buddhist Monks
: Uncooked rice and toothpaste (Thailand) – it turns out you’re not supposed to give them uncooked rice because they don’t cook their own food. Surely the toothpaste was useful, though.

Most Remote Places Visited: Wae Rebo on Flores, the Lingga Islands off Sumatra and Tambong Malahoi in Kalimantan (all Indonesia).

Best Decisions We Made: Choosing to wait in Semporna for three-and-a-half days to go snorkeling in Sipadan rather than giving up and skipping it (Malaysia); doing the same trip in Halong Bay twice to get a nice weather day (Vietnam); running away from the aforementioned growling tiger (Indonesia); making the effort to reach out-of-the-way Kong Lor Cave (Laos).

Best Train Ride: The journey over the Goktiek Viaduct (Burma).

Worst Decisions We Made: Going overland through South Sumatra rather than flying over it, and then not visiting football-playing elephants or Krakatao, for reasons unknown (Indonesia); not closing the zipper on Wendy’s bag while it lay on rocks near a river near Krui in aforementioned South Sumatra, and shortly thereafter seeing her camera cruising down the river (Indonesia); going to the so-called Tiger Temple (Thailand); setting a combination lock to an apparently easily guessable combination, resulting in disappearing money (Indonesia).

Toughest Hike: Mt Rinjani on Lombok without a doubt – on Gili Air the day after descending, we were so sore that we literally could barely move (Indonesia).

Best Value Activity: Tubing down a river for hours in Bukit Lawang (Indonesia) – US$0.30 for the tube rental.

Best Festivals: Funeral Ceremony on Bali (Indonesia), Ati-Atihan in Kalibo (the Philippines); That Luang in Vientiane (Laos).

Local Food You Wouldn’t Touch With a 10-Foot Pole: Balut eggs (the Philippines), these delicacies (Laos), 1000-year old egg (and it tastes like it’s been rotting for that long too – Thailand)

Best Caves: Kong Lor Cave (Laos) and Sumaging Cave in Sagada (the Philippines).

Best Photo: This one (Laos). Or this one (Vietnam). Perhaps this (Thailand). Or this one (Malaysia). I’ll let you choose, and I hope you enjoyed the tour.

Meanwhile, the journey continues…

Peninsular Malaysia: Giant Flowers and Old Ports

Wednesday, April 1st, 2009

We arrived on the Malay Peninsula last Friday night with a week to spare and a few different choices of places to visit. After much discussion we headed first for the Cameron Highlands, a tea-planting hill station north of KL. Though we’ve seen tea plantations before in Sri Lanka (around Ella) and India (Darjeeling), it turned out to be a good choice and, aside from a huge downpour on our first afternoon, we enjoyed three days of beautiful (but refreshingly cool) weather, nice scenery and delicious tandoori food from the local Indian restaurants.

Wendy with the RafflesiaOn our last day in the Camerons, we went on a ‘Rafflesia Tour’ to see the world’s largest flower in bloom. The Rafflesia only blooms for about one week, so it’s quite hard to find; it was only discovered near the Cameron Highlands 10 years ago for the first time, and now local villagers track blooming flowers and, when they find one, alert the travel agencies in Tanah Rata. We first learned about the Rafflesia at the very start of our first trip in Southeast Asia nearly six years ago, and now to finally see one in bloom in the last days of our last trip in Southeast Asia has a nice symmetry to it. The one we saw, after about an hour of hiking through the jungle, was in its sixth day of bloom, which meant it had already lost its bright red colour and the petals were drooping a bit, but it was still interesting nevertheless and the amateur botanists in us (or, more precisely, in Wendy) are happy that we can now tick off the Rafflesia box.

Porta de SantiagoFrom the Camerons, we journeyed south to our final stop in Malaysia, a place we’ve wanted to visit for a while: Malacca, once perhaps the most famous port in the world and, during the age of the great European voyages of discovery, one of the most sought-after cities in Asia. It was successively conquered by the Portuguese, Dutch, British and ultimately the imperial Japanese in WWII before Malaysian independence in 1957.

Today, Malacca (officially written Melaka these days to conform to Bahasa Malaysian spelling) is a UNESCO World Heritage listed town containing remnants of all periods of its colonial history, from a Portuguese fort to Dutch churches and British cemeteries. It’s a very pleasant (if hot) city to walk around, one of the nicest in Southeast Asia. For travelers like us, who have an interest in history and architecture, Malacca is a good note to finish the region on. We’re now heading to Sydney to rest for a week or so and plot our next adventures.

Sarawak: Of Orange Babies and Cat Cities

Thursday, March 26th, 2009

Leaving Brunei and its hot-water-taps-only behind us, we continued west to Sarawak, stopping first at Miri to visit the Niah Caves. I didn’t think much of the caves myself, and thought it was quite dangerous inside the large cave ... [Continue reading this entry]

Wildlife on land and in water

Tuesday, March 17th, 2009

Sabah is known as 'The Land Below the Wind' but could easily instead be called 'The Land Where You Have to Book Everything in Advance’, which might have been OK if we’d known that beforehand. We weren’t able to ... [Continue reading this entry]

Back on Borneo

Tuesday, March 10th, 2009

The food, spoken English and infrastructure are all significantly better – and the prices are much higher – but, all in all, the Malaysian part of Borneo is pretty similar to the Indonesian side; the familiar sounds of Bahasa ... [Continue reading this entry]

Leaving Southeast Asia

Monday, January 28th, 2008

It’s been a while since I wrote anything in this space, and it’s been a bit of a whirlwind tour for us in that time.

We flew to Bangkok about 2.5 weeks ago and spent the next 10 days ... [Continue reading this entry]