Saturday, May 23, 2009

Zurich


Zurich is expensive. Lena has got my virus. Disaster nearly struck when I slipped stepping out of the miniature shower in our Easy Hotel and as I was holding my glasses I used them as brakes. Fortunately I was able to repair them. Getting an optometrist to repair them and the bicycles we hired were the only free things in Zurich apart from the air and water which are both very fresh.

We are both sickies now and the holiday has a lot left. Yesterday we paid 12 francs for a footlong or 30 centimetre subway as it is here - which is almost $15Australian for a sub. Mustn't complain though - Zurich is beautiful.

Sunday, May 17, 2009

Russian restaurant and local delights



USSR restaurant

Who would ever think that there was a Russian restaurant on the island in Malaysia? To my great surprise we found one! It was closed at the time we went past it as it was early in the morning (around 9am). Everything opens very late there and closes late too... Anyway, we decided to stick to local types of food as soon we will have a lot of opportunity to taste Russian...

Just another stop... Kilim rever

Beautiful Beaches of Langkawi





Oriental Village



Long way up to the top of the waterfall





Seven Wells waterfall


Cable Car and on the mountain top





Island Escape

We went to Langkawi Island for a couple of days. This big and beautiful island is located on the North-West coast of Malaysia about 1 hour flight from KL. We stayed in Langkasuka 4 star Resort on the beach. It is located very close to the airport - in fact, it is a 15-20 min walk. As we didn't have much luggage, we decided that a short walk will be a good exercise. This was a big surprise to the local people as on the way several of them stoped to offer us a lift - obviously nobody walks those distances.

After checking in the hotel we took a taxi to the nearest town of Pentai Cenang as it was a bit far even for such good walkers as us. There we hired a motorbike to give us freedom to move around the island.

We spent next 2 days exploring the island. There is a lot to see and do. The main attractions are:
-Seven Wells waterfall - the highest on the island;
-Cable Car - apparently, the steepest in the world, which takes you to the top of the mountain 700m above sea level;
-Beautiful beaches;
-Oriental Village - a pretty shopping and dining complex at the bottom of the Cable Car.

Petronas Towers


Orchid Garden in KL





Wednesday, May 13, 2009

FIRST DAY IN KL

Ok, finally in KL (Kuala Lumpur). A few more words about our flight with Air Asia. I actually thought it wasn’t too bad – it is pretty tiring to fly long distance with any airlines, unless you are in business class of course. In this case you get what you paid for. The only upsetting thing – there is no water available unless you buy it.


When we got to KL airport, all the passengers had to fill out a Health Form due to the swine flu epidemic. After that we all proceeded to the special screen, where heat detectors show your temperature image on the big screen. Peter’s image was bright red and he walked to the right. Mine had a green face, which was obviously bad as I was immediately sent to the left for a temperature check. After that I was given a note that “this person presenting this Health Alert Card may have been exposed to Influenza A” and then was released.

In KL we are staying with Peter’s aunt. It is a lovely old house, very similar to “town houses” in Australia. The temperature is VERY hot and humid; I guess it will take a couple of days to adjust. Peter’s aunt took us to a local Chinese Hong Kong style restaurant, where we had a sumptuous lunch followed by fruit, tea and barley water (hot drink, made of water, sugar and barley (“perlovka” in Russian)). This kind of food we were dreaming of since our last visit to Malaysia in 2004.


To be continued…


FOOD

Now I know why some say that Asian people “live to eat”. The choice is huge and life is simply too short to try it all. Apart from traditional Malay cuisine there are also different styles of Chinese, Indian, Japanese and other Asian specialties. On our first day we had traditional Malay dishes for dinner, including Carry Capitan (fragrant coconut and lemon grass chicken curry), Assam Laksa (hot and spicy noodle soup with tamarind and pineapple) and Bohpiah, which was my favorite (sweet and spicy steamed rice paper spring rolls filled with vegetables and nuts). The flavors and quality of the dishes were simply amazing – I’ve never tried anything even close to that in Australia.


Durian is a tropical fruit with hard spiky skin and very smelly but sweet flesh. According to Chinese believes all foods are either “heating” or “cooling”. For nutritional balance you need to have both in your diet. So after eating durian, which is “heating” Peter’s aunt gave us some mangustins (another tropical fruit, with dark brown thick skin and milky white refreshing flash) to balance it. So the entire day was a total gastronomical eye opener for me.

Monday, May 11, 2009

We’re in KL staying in my Aunt’s lovely old link house in PJ. We just had lunch at my Aunt’s local cafĂ©. She had duck with ginger, Lena had roast chicken with noodles and I had braised beef with noodles all 7 RM each. It came with complimentary servings of fruit, a glass of barley water and cup of green tea and the food was real, fresh and delicious. So Air Asia’s food doesn’t really compare.

When seen through the window of the light rail on stilts above the city, KL could be a city from a science fiction illustration. Concrete towers spring up amidst the exotic greenery of the tropics.
I’m on the first of what will be many budget flights. This one is from Coollangatta on the Gold Coast to Kuala Lumpur. It’s now 3.15am Malaysian time or 5.15am Australian. I don’t think anyone is actually sleeping except for the man or woman two rows behind me who sounds like he has a combination of an extremely bad cold and snoring that would make a walrus proud.

I have just realised that budget airlines are crap. You have to pay for water! You can’t bring water on board that’s more than 100 mls – my 250 ml fruitbox was taken by the baggage screening staff. I’m not sure what kind of security risk a 250 ml fruitbox poses – obviously it’s a high level threat.

Do they prefer their passengers to suffer? The irony is that the inflight magazine has a lengthy article on how important hydration is while flying. You’ve read the article, now buy some water!

To my left across the aisle is another guy with a terrible cold if not full blown swine flu. Only two hours to go.

If you prepay for food the quality and serving size are pathetic. It cost 19 ringgit for a meal. 19 RM in KL would buy a pretty fabulous feed. They give you a 250ml bottle of water with your lite-n-easy serving size of chicken curry. But don’t think of trying to fill up the empty bottle with water from the bathroom tap because that’s right - there are signs that say the water isn’t fit for drinking. Are they accurate? – I wasn’t game to risk it. I’m going to get swine flu from the walrus behind and the man on my left – may as well go for a course of diarrhoea as well. I decided to pay the four ringgit for 250 mls of finest Malaysian bottled tap water.

Even though the fleet is modern – this is a relatively new Airbus – it’s basically a cattle truck. The seats don’t recline in the usual manner. You push the button on the side of the seat and instead of pushing back you have to violently jerk your seat forward. The whole seat sort of slides forward four centimeters leaving you with less leg-room and no actual feeling of being in any sense reclined whatsoever.

The entertainment system that on other airlines is free is entirely pay-for-view/listen. The only thing you can watch for free is the map that shows the little toy plane crawling across the screen. I’ve seen all the movies and heard all the music anyway.

Have you ever noticed that if you’re watching a movie, any sort of cabin announcement will either pause or interrupt the movie? I find this more annoying than ads on television. The only announcement that should cause a break in the movie should be of the sort, “Ladies and gentlemen, this is the captain. I regret that all four engines including the spare have failed. Make your prayers to your God or personal demons because the unknown awaits. Thank you.” Not, “Ladies and gentlemen, headphones are available for purchase from the cabin crew for only 28 ringgit for your listening pleasure.”

The girlfriend of the diseased man on my left has just appeared out of the murk of the dimmed cabin. She’s obviously not too worried about getting his germs because she’s just stuck her tongue down his throat or maybe it’s his tongue down her throat. Either way those germs are getting unrestricted travel.
I think I miss the care factor – alright on proper airlines it’s irritating when they ask if you to return your seat to the upright position and to tighten your seat belt but it shows they’re doing their job. On this flight no one checked.


One hour and fifty minutes to KL.

Saturday, May 9, 2009

t minus 1

Moving day went relatively smoothly. Said goodbye to Ferny Hills and moved everything into storage. We're slumming it in my Uncle's place on the Gold Coast for a day before our KL flight but it already feels like I've lived out of my backpack for a year and I seem to have been wearing this t-shirt for ages.

Wednesday, May 6, 2009

T minus 2


My passport came back complete with Russian visa. My computer is going offline now.

This is the pocket snow-leopard that lives next door.