Tuesday 29 March 2016

Singapore...Raffle our feathers or sling it out the way!

 
Singapore, our last stop on this Round the World Trip, albeit for only two nights and one full day...what to do?
Easy, a walk through the City to the Marina Bay Sands Hotel, infamous for its three towers with an artistic vision of a boat across the top of the towers.
It hosts a hotel, shops, restaurants, viewing tower and of course an infinity pool on the 56th floor...
The views as you can imagine are stunning, although the day was overcast.
 
 
We then went through the shopping mall below the hotel, which hosts shops to suit every pocket, oh and an in door gondola ride...
 
After lunch, we walked around the bay to check out the best spot to watch the nightly light and laser show, before heading back to our hotel, for a quick nap after which we headed out to Raffles.
On the way we went through the area known as Bugis...here's what Wiki has to say. 
 
Bugis was renowned internationally from the 1950s to the 1980s for its nightly gathering of trans women... In the mid-1980s, Bugis Street underwent major urban redevelopment into a retail complex of modern shopping malls, restaurants and nightspots mixed with regulated back-alley roadside vendors.
Underground digging to construct the Bugis MRT station prior to that also caused the upheaval and termination of the nightly transgender sex bazaar culture, marking the end of a colourful and unique era in Singapore's history. Today, the original Bugis Street is now a cobblestoned, relatively wide avenue sandwiched between the buildings of the Bugis Junction shopping complex.
 
 
 
 
 
And now a little bit about Raffles
 

2015 was the 100th Anniversary of the infamous Singapore Sling, created by bartender Ngiam Tong Boon. At the turn of the Century, Raffles was 'The' meeting place and it was not uncommon to see 'gentlemen' sipping on glasses of gin or whisky.  However, back in colonial Singapore, etiquette dictated that ladies could not consume alcohol in public and the niche in the market was noticed by Ngiam Tong who created a cocktail that looked like fruit juice, was feminine pink in colour and clear alcohol, leading people to believe that the ladies were drinking a socially acceptable drink.
Raffles Long Bar, where we participated in our Singapore Sling, was first located at the old Ballroom and opened in 1921, at the current hotel's driveway. In the 1960s the idea of the Long Bar was created and was a long counter that covered the breadth of the Ballroom. In the 1991 restoration the Long Bar found a new home at Level 2, Raffles Hotel Arcade.
 
Sitting at our table, tucked away in the heart of the Long Bar, waiting for our 'Slings', you are presented with a large bag of peanuts, still in their shells. Looking around the other tables and the floor, we saw that all of the peanut shells were swept to the floor...a strange custom, or so we thought, until it is revealed to you that this is a tribute to the British planters who used to patronise the Long Bar.
The planters enjoyed peanuts while drinking in their plantations in Malaya and would throw the shells on the ground...! (The above information is to be found in the Long Bar booklet found on every table or at
 
After cocktails and dinner, we headed to the Bay to watch the evening Light & Laser spectacular, which was a good way to end our Round the World Trip. The following day we had a 14 hour flight back to London and then home.
 
On this trip we have been on twelve commercial flights, totalling 27,940 miles and have completed a circumnavigation of the globe. We have visited fifteen islands in six countries, on four continents. We have been on five luge rides, two private flights and sat in one and flown in two of the rarest planes in the world. We spent three weeks in one motorhome, a week on one luxury cruise ship and one on board 100ft schooner, one evening on a steam ship, one evening on a board around Sydney Harbour, and have been multiple dive/snorkel boats, day tripper boats and ferries and a horse and cart twice!
 
We have driven through valleys and over mountains, walked to glaciers and flown around the peaks. We have dressed head to foot in black neoprene on white sandy beaches, and wrapped up in sarongs to visit native villages, we have swam and snorkelled/dived on The Great Barrier Reef, and flown over it and the surrounding Whitsunday Islands. We swam with all manner of sea-life, with an abundance of turtles and jaw dropping coral reefs. We met numerous new people who became our friends, and met up with those who have been long time friends. We've eaten in simple cafes and dinned in wonderful restaurants and also had the most expensive drink we've ever had (£20 for a Singapore Sling) and attended one wedding.
 
For us, this was to be a trip of a lifetime, and it certainly fulfilled its premise. We can safely say we have 'ticked the box' headed 'go round the world'. However, we ticked many more boxes along the way. Although the photographs and video will always allow us to look back and view this trip, the memories in our hearts and mind will be the lasting effect of this trip. It was truly wonderful, or in the words of our Antipodean friends, it was truly awesome.
 
We hope you have enjoyed our travels as much as we did, and so until our next trip...
 
 

Tuesday 15 March 2016

Gili Trawangan

 
For those who have never heard of the Gili Islands, they are a group of three islands off the northwest coast of Lombok. Wikipedia states...

The islands are a popular destination for tourists looking for a remote island experience. Each island has several small resorts, usually consisting of a collection of huts for tourists, a small pool and restaurant. Most local inhabitants live on Trawangan in a township stretching along its east side just inland (which is also where most recent development is taking place). Automobiles and motorised traffic is prohibited on the islands by local ordinance, so the preferred method of transportation is by foot and bicycle or the horse-drawn carriage called a cidomo. Diving in and around the Gilis is also popular due to the abundance of marine life and attractive coral formations

This is what Lonely Planet says about Gili Trawangan, where we were based for one week...

Gili Trawangan is a paradise of global repute, ranking alongside Bali and Borobudur as one of Indonesia's top destinations. Trawangan's heaving main drag, busy with bikes, horse carts and mobs of scantily clad visitors can surprise those expecting some languid tropical retreat. Instead, a wall-to-wall roster of lounge bars, hip guesthouses, ambitious restaurants, mini-marts and dive schools clamour for attention.
 
And yet behind this glitzy facade, a bohemian character endures, with rickety warungs (food stalls) and reggae joints surviving between the cocktail tables, and quiet retreats dotting the much-less-busy north coast. Even as massive 200+ room hotels begin to colonise the still mostly wild and ragged west coast, you can head just inland to a village laced with sandy lanes roamed by free-range roosters, kibbitzing ibu (mothers) and wild-haired kids playing hopscotch. Here the call of the muezzin, not happy hour, defines the time of day.
 
Settled just over 50 years ago (by Bugis fishermen from Sulawesi), travellers discovered Gili T in the 1980s, seduced by the white-sand beaches, and coral reefs. By the 1990s Trawangan had mutated into a kind of tropical Ibiza, a stoney idyll where you could rave away from the eyes of the Indonesian police. And then the island began to grow up – resident Western hedonists morphed into entrepreneurs, diving rivalled partying in the economy, and outside money poured in to build resorts.
 
Our experience/time in Gili Trawangan was a welcomed week on the beach, after the hectic two months we had already had, and some more diving for David and snorkelling for me. Unfortunately, it being the rainy season meant that most of the week was overcast. This was not a problem for us, as we try to avoid the sun at all costs, but from a photographic point of view, having the sun is much better. However, the following photos should give you a general idea of the island, its beaches, flora, horse...and goats, sunsets and storms. Enjoy.
 
 
The arrival dock from Lombok...a work in progress!
 

 
The road outside our hotel, that goes all around the island.

 
A hotel renovation... in the making
 
 
A beach bar in the making...
 

A typical hotel
 
 
Some beach photos...
 



 
Some boat pictures...including one that was sinking...
 



Dave and a friend to the rescue...
 


James Bond impression...his work is done on the boat rescue.
 

 
The horses and goats on the island, traffic jams happen here also!
 


 
Some of the beautiful flowers found within walking distance of the pool.




 
And finally some sunsets overlooking Bali.
 



 
 
The weather cleared at the end of the week, giving a final clear dive and snorkel, where we saw more of the infamous turtles (not another turtle you hear people say on the islands). We leave the idyll of Gili Trawangan readying ourselves for what Singapore has to hold - and we only have two days to see that City.
 
Until next time.



Brisbane with Graham and Dian

For those who don't know Graham and Dian, they are friends of old, from Debden. They moved to Debden around the same time as us (many years ago), and we have not seem them since we left in 2007. So, it was a real treat to be able to stay with them for a few days (and interrupt their busy work schedule...as you can see below).
 
 
 
Leaving Graham hard at work, Dian took time out from her very busy schedule to show us the delights of Brisbane, its city centre and river. We took a fantastic trip along the river, taking in the skyline, houses and life on the water...
 
 
...around the city centre (BCD) we saw some truly beautiful buildings and sculptures, these butterflies below adorn this and many shops in the mall, which, Dian tells us has a wonderful bohemian feel at the weekend with bands, buskers and street acts filling the mall.
 
 

 
 
...as with all Cities these days, they all have their own 'Eye', or 'Wheel'. Brisbane's nestles seductively behind the oriental gardens and temples, melding culture, nature and old and new structures in an appealing way...

 
 
 
... on its reverse side, it is reflected in the modern glass building of the ABC TV Headquarters.

 
 
As with all City Business Districts, the towering sky scrappers rise ever higher into the sky, fulfilling whatever business need is required - offices, hotels, apartments, shops, creating a skyline that can be seen anywhere in the world.
 

 
However, the City is not just about business, it has its pleasure side to... and here are just two extremes of river cruising you can do... paddle powered
 

 
 
or modern diesel engine powered. This cruise liner was docked at the far end of the river, waiting for its thousands of guests to either embark or disembark, ready to go onto their next port.
 

 
Other sights along the river are the many and varied houses, all of which probably have their values in the millions, with their prime river front location and interesting designs, here are just three that took my fancy...if ever I were to think of moving 'down under'!
 

 
 

Finally, here are few views back along the river as we returned to meet up with Graham for dinner. Brisbane really does have a beautiful skyline, and the city had a real easy feel about it, made all the more special by Graham and Dian looking after us so well.
 



 
 
 Having said our farewells to Graham and Dian (and the possums that live under their house - how cute!), we took an 8 hour flight to Singapore, where we arrived at our hotel (Albert Court), at 10pm, had a quick beer, went to bed and woke at 4am, ready for our flight to Lombok.
 
 
We were greeted by our guide, who took us on a two hour drive through his country, to a small dock, were we met a boat skipper, who got his 'boat boys' to load our bags, and zoomed us over to Gili Trawangan...all in the pouring rain! Well it is the rainy season.
 
And that's for next time...