9/12/2012

Last Stop: Borneo

Okay guys, this is my last blog post! Can't believe two months are almost over... Now that William and Kate are starting their Asia tour and make the news the spotlight is moving fast and my best time is over. Ended my adventurous time with some really intense days in Borneo. I cancelled my plans of going to Sabah in the northeast of Borneo due to the earthquake with tsunami warning that took place just a few days earlier and flew into Kuching in the southeast region called Sarawak instead, West-Borneo. You won't believe it, but they had a bakery called "Baeckerei" opposite to my hotel, so I sneaked out a couple of times to get some pastry, so perfect decision to go there :-).

As everytime on my trip I was a lucky traveller again, meeting a Chinese-Malaysian Mr. Lim on my first taxi ride to the Kuching waterfront on my first night. We had a great conversation and some chemistry right away and it turned out that Mr. Lim, who is also Laksa-Paste entrepreneur (Laksa is a traditional Malaysian dish), is a big jungle fan himself. He is taking part in a pretty popular new sport around Asia called jungle hashing, where people run right through the jungle to follow pieces of paper showing them which way to go. That can take for hours, sometimes even getting lost in the jungle at night. What better jungle guide can you get?

So Mr. Lim joined me for two days using his taxi for our transport and leaving business behind for one whole day (well there was some business to do, but happily mobile phones also work in the jungle here :-)). After seeing some Chinese friends and having a big breakfast we visited Bako National Park on the first day. No cars go there, so we had to use a fisherboat from a village to reach the Peninsula. We spent all day walking the green jungle, seeing unspoilt jungle nature, animals and untouched waterfalls. Although Mr. Lim is thirty years older than I am, I had some problems following his runs and jumps through the jungle and we made quite some track in five hours, but still taking our time to enjoy the unspoilt nature, sometimes :-). Until a typical tropical afternoon rain- and thunderstorm hit us, my first one... I can tell you, I never saw so much rain pouring down in such a short time, turning jungle paths into rivers. A bit nervous about the weather conditions and although exhausted from our long day we hurried up to get back to the beach, where our fisherboat should meet us again. We didn't know then, that the real adventure was still before us.

To make it back to the little fishervillage before dawn we had to depart with the boat, although there was a big thunderstorm coming up and already on the open sea we figured out we couldn't drive around it. Riding through a thunderstorm with heavy rain, lightning and thunder around you on a fisherboat on the open sea is an adventure, but no fun. I really don't remember much, only lightning hitting the sea right next to us, thunder right above us, just closing my eyes and saying my prayers, hoping for god's guidance and shelter to bring us home. I was really scared and after we finally made it, laughter just broke out between us! Now I know why I never joined the navy...

That was definitely enough adventure and probably perfect, to end my trip! So the next day I just drove down to places with Mr. Lim, where orang-utans live wildly in the jungle, but are guarded by a wildlife center, that also provides food and medicine if needed. Also we visited a crocodile farm. It is fascinating to see the orang-utans living their life in the jungle there, watching the humans from the trees, not needing any assistance, because at the moment the jungle is full of fruit and other delicious food. As I'm still shocked by mankind's treatment of our oceans I was even more shocked to learn about how we threaten the survival of this species so close to our own existence. So after this trip one of the first things I will do is look into possibilities of supporting an organisation, that fights for the preservation of our world's treasures.

I'm already writing this from the beaches of the island of Langkawi, where I will spend the last days of my two months just relaxing and thinking about all my adventures the last weeks.  Spending my last days at Langkawi Lagoon Resort, a very quiet and nice place with great service and food, with 80 percent arabic people around. Perfect for me to learn more about their fascinating culture and religion while enjoying the sun, my book and the memories of the last weeks. It definitely was a lifetime experience, learning a lot about different cultures, the asian continent and myself and meeting so much nice and interesting people I hope to stay in touch with. It was fun writing this blog and a pleasure having you reading it and the thousands of clicks show me that you enjoyed it also.

I'm looking forward to come home!








9/09/2012

Singapore: The fine city


How do you make a community with millions of people crunched together on a small peninsula hardly as big as Hamburg work? Establish rules for everything, have video cameras and loudspeakers everywhere and take fines up to thousands of dollars for daily "crimes", like spitting on the street or chewing gum, that isn't even allowed to import because of the dirt it can cause on the streets when left there. Even waste of food can be fined and clumsy Eike almost got caught at McDonalds at the airport, spilling the milk for my coffee on the counter. Not that the mess was an issue, no, the waste of food was...

Welcome to Singapore! Although the introduction might seem weird to a westerner, I really like this city and enjoyed the couple of days I spent there. The strict rules have their benefit. If you want Asia light with a western city and all its amenities around you, go to Singapore. Everything is clean, convenient and efficient. No lines at immigration, no dirt on the streets, no crime, no offenses or even people who try to betray you, but all this has a price: a very expensive city and people crunched together in small apartments, space being a major issue with all the skycrapers using the space above us to live and work. If you want to figure out how efficient Singapore really is, have a meal at a food court as Ellen and I did. We had the famous dim sum in a restaurant recommended by the New York Times. While you are still in line waiting for your table you are handed a paper to place your order. Coming to your table it doesn't take a minute until your drinks and your appetizer arrive. The food comes perfectly timed after, so comes the bill. While eating, there are always people walking around for refilling your drinks. All in all you are done after 15-20 minutes...Another spectacular thing to watch is the build up of their formula one track right through the city. I'm definitely gonna watch this year's race, although I'm not a big fan of formula one!

After exploring the city on the ground including our neighborhood Little India and having high tea at the Raffles Hotel, we set off to the sky with the Singapore flyer, with 165 metres the highest ferris wheel in the world, quite an interesting experience for two people who are not the best with height. I topped the experience by visiting the top floor of Marina Bay Sands the next day, a ship on the top of skyscrapers, where they have a bar and a rooftop pool ending at the edge of the building. Singapore as Kuala Lumpur is definitely worse a trip, especially at the beginning or at the end of a trip before flying home, which Ellen unfortunately did :-(, leaving me back alone, having to make plans on my own for the next couple of days, the last days of my trip after six weeks Asia for me already...


9/06/2012

Paradise

Although we were longing to stay for another day in Kuala Lumpur to see more of the city and the sorroundings we had to go to the beaches again, everything was already set up, what a hard life :-). Forget everything I wrote earlier about beautiful beaches. The real paradise lies east of the Malaysian mainland on the Perhentian islands. No ferries or airplanes go there. The trip via Kota Bharu, then to a small jetty in Kuala Besut and an one hour adventurous and bouncy trip with a small fisherboat following is pretty long and strenuous. In addition there are not many resorts on the islands and the ones there are pretty simple. A good combination for not many people going there and for enjoying a lonely, beautiful and unspoilt place. Ellen and I saw the most beautiful beaches and clearest water we have ever seen. Let the pictures talk for theirselves! Once lying at that beach you forget everything and just enjoy the atmosphere and the moment.

Seeing the countryside on the east coast during our trip to the coast confirmed my first opinions on Malaysia. Although poorer there also pretty clean, friendly and more modern and the best: no dogs, Heaven! And from day to day I find it more and more fascinating, how all the cultures and religions live together peacefully in this country with so much tolerance and understanding for each other. A great example for the world, that has to be talked of more often!

I also had the greatest experience under water on this trip snorkeling in our private house reef just in front of our beach. Stingrays, Nemos, plenty of small and big reef sharks and all kinds of exotic fish all around you enjoying the unspoilt great corals. At night we enjoyed our restaurant with astonishingly good food, especially fresh sea food and barbecue. Maybe it helps keeping the islands unspoilt that no alcoholic beverages are allowed on the islands, not even during meals. Eating during sunset right at the beach, the monster dracula bats flying out to hunt and hearing the imam praying across the sea from a mosque in the village on the smaller Perhentian island will for a very long time not be forgotten! We have to thank the little travel agency Anjung Holidays at Kuala Besut for their great support, setting things up for us for some wonderful days in paradise!