Showing posts with label Travel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Travel. Show all posts

Saturday, December 26, 2009

I-City Christmas Light Up

Christmas-Lights

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Sometimes the most unexpected finds are the most interesting ones. Driving to Shah Alam for a Christmas dinner hosted by blogger Sabrina both Viz and my head were turned to see the most garish sight along the highway which we eventually had to located. We stumbled into I City, Shah Alam with a display of Christmas lights, a veritable oasis in a sea of black. And it seems we were not the only one there as when we reached the place there were people milling about taking photos of just having a leisurely walk there. Usually I hate artificial fake lights but this display was beautiful in a garish kind of way and actually nice on some levels. Display will be up till new year so head there if you want to see it. I-City, Shah Alam, Selangor


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Red-Star

Sea-of-Blue

Electric-Flora

Star-Shine

Red-Tree

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Saturday, August 23, 2008

Pekeliling flats - A Forgotten Legacy

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One of the blocks of the Pekeliling flats.

Old places have long memories. That phrase rings true whenever you think of the Pekeliling Flats. Abandoned due to a decision to redevelop the Tunku Abdul Rahman Housing Projects (as its more formally known), which is one of the earliest public housing projects in Malaysia after independence, the place is now a hollow shell of its former self as the development stalled to a halt post 1997. Drive past Jalan Pahang near the Pekeliling roundabout and the KL General Hospital and you can't miss it. A few of the blocks had already been demolished but those near the Police quarters are still standing with a few blocks still occupied.

Yet the place is surprisingly haunting as you walk past it, it seems to glare at you and challenge you to enter it and at times I confess that I do get the creepy feeling when I was there. My friend Visithra who accompanied me actually mentioned that she heard voices coming from the vacant elevator shaft and felt cold chills at certain stretches of the blocks where sudden temperature changes can be felt. Yet the more common dancer would be from the broken debris littering the floor and the presence of drug addicts which loiter around for their fix.

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17 storeys upwards is a long way.

The place used to house thousands of living, breathing people and their absence is felt throughly though remnants of their past are everywhere to be found. Entering each room makes you feel like an archaeologist sieving through the rubble of the past to form a story of each of the occupant's life and times. Enter one and you find discarded toys and a graffiti of a list of football member's names. Next door is a doorway hung with mango leaves and leftovers of earthen pots belonging to an Indian family. Walk downwards and you see Koranic verses stuck to the walls and you know a Muslim stayed and prayed here previously. Downwards a discarded Christmas tree speaks volumes of past jolly celebrations.

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A kitten makes it home on a discarded mattress.

The place wasn't totally devoid of life. Where humans had left a void, life will come back to fill the place as we found a litter of kitten makes their home amidst the rooms, a pack of dogs somehow running about the 10th floor as if its their territory now and a lone plant stalk somehow blooming amidst the crack of a concrete steps shows how life can flourish in the harshest conditions. Yet death is also present as a skeleton of a cat shows that life is harsh. The Pekeliling flats may not be your typical tourist spot but it is part of KL's identity and past and to many of the previous inhabitants it was home and had been for a large part of their life. They shared their joy together, their sadness, their fears and their hopes. All these now echoes in the empty halls as the flat awaits its fate, one which doesn't seem to be going anywhere anytime soon. If you there make a trip there at least once, go in a group and alert others that you'll be there in case of anything.

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24, enough said.

Kumar

Who is Kumar? a questioned that may never be answered.

Living-Room

It so easy to imagine a family sitting on this sofa and watching the television, now it lies empty and vacant as most of the other rooms are.

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A hoard of shoes tells of a large family of school going kids.

Death

Death stalks the living here.

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A makeshift conference setting, but for whom?

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A sad end for a soft toy.

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Warning signs at the lobby.

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Pasir Penambang - A Fishing Village

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A group of kids entertaining themselves at the village jetty stop to give a smile and pose to tourists.

There is a small town, a fishing village that lies nestled next to the Sungai Selangor where the fireflies light up the dreary nights, where fishing boats cast out early to try their luck with the day's catch and hope to bring in a good load by the end of the day, where the paddy grows green as emeralds and golden when near harvest time and where time sometimes feel as if it never ticked a second towards the present.

Pasar Penambang lies off the Kuala Selangor road towards Sekinchan and here is one of the main centers for seafood products in Selangor for those city slickers that never does set eyes upon the ocean (I do miss living near to the coast). If you're down visiting Bukit Melawati for its famed fort and every so friendly monkeys, do give a thought to stop by here. Framed by a one street row of double storey wooden houses where the lower floors sell everything from dried shrimp to live deep sea fishes you are sure you're getting a good deal here with the wide range of products.

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The work table of the seafood shop reveals much of the store owner's business know how, many small shops operate here usually family business where every single member pitch in to help.

Most people would also know that Pasir Penambang or more synonymous to Kuala Selangor is a great cheap place for seafood. We had 20 of us gathered for our Flickr trip and we were at the local seafood restaurant (there are a few there and all can be assured to be as good) ordering perhaps 7 dishes consisting of steam fish, fried sotongs, crispy lemon chicken, seafood tom yam, two kind of crabs, kangkung masak belacan and drinks all around and at the end the bill came to about RM140 which to me was a bargain for the amount we had. The food was delicious and the price light on the pocket. Before we headed back we were sure to bring back some dried keropok to fry, dried shrimps which makes good aroma enhancers for any dishes, ikan bilis, some fish snacks and even a salted fish.

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The store owner comes to greet prospective customers, offering advice on how to choose good products and even haggling away if you feel like it though prices are reasonable enough.

If the town is an attraction, walk a few meters down and you'll hit the village. Built on stilts like most other coastal villages, Pasir Penambang is an all wooden construct characterised by narrow walkways which allows bicycles and motorbikes to pass and nothing else. The houses are open fronted and connected by the walkways, looking over the edge you can see the sea at your footsteps and if you dare go waddle in the mud. A friend of mine dropped something of his onto the mudflat and the ensuing trudge through the goo was a sight not to be missed, especially the expression on his face.

The Chinese character of the village is unmistakable, as you stumble onto a small temple adjacent to a house with incense burning offerings to the various deities especially to those most affiliated with the sea to ensure better catches and safe voyages. The people here are quite friendly and casual, most stopped to talk to us and give us their best smiles. We entered into a keropok making factory and the entire family clan was busy preparing and packing the crispy chips into plastic packings for sale from the youngest kid to the patriarch of the family who sat like a king in his chair overseeing the enterprise as his wife busily handles the accounts while the grandma was preparing the evening meals, all this taking place within the same room which was part business, part home and part living area.

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The double storey wooden shophouses that line Pasir Penambang's main street.

If you're there you have to take the opportunity to visit the other nearby attractions. As mentioned, the paddy fields near Sekinchan are a sight to behold but be sure of the season lest you end up in empty fields after harvest time just like us. You can make a trip to Kota Melawati where you can walk amidst the old sultanate fortress and feed the friendly silver backed macaques of which the young ones spot a brilliant golden fur. A bit farther down river you can take a river cruise at Kg Kuantan to watch the fireflies.

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A man looks to the river and tries to figure if he could get some fish for himself today.

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A friend decided to model at the village.

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No 2-25, a humble enough abode in a fishing village.

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A chinese prayer altar says much about the occupants here, most of whom are Chinese though other races also live side by side.

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The wooden walkways of the village connects individual houses which are built on stilts over the water's edge.

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A reflection shot of the clear sky and village houses.

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An occupant carrying goods back to his house.

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Look closely to find this wind mobile near the village jetty.

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The evening sun casts some pretty long shadow which can be loads of fun for shadow shots.

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Two mode of transports, both time tested and works.

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An old lady rests outside a friend's house to have a chat in between work and chores.

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Burnt incense at a chinese altar.

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These kids were playing with their puppies, too cute.

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Every friendly and shy all at the same time, priceless.

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The narrow lanes often means the best mode of transport is the trusty bicycle which most folks here own.

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Sunday, February 03, 2008

Scenes from Thaipusam 2008

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Drummer boy, Thaipusam, Batu Caves, Selangor, Malaysia.

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Carrying the idol, Thaipusam, Batu Caves, Selangor, Malaysia.

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Blessing ash, Thaipusam, Batu Caves, Selangor, Malaysia.

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Kavadi bearers, Thaipusam, Batu Caves, Selangor, Malaysia.

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Devotee, Thaipusam, Batu Caves, Selangor, Malaysia.

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Cheroot smoker, Thaipusam, Batu Caves, Selangor, Malaysia.

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Devotee exhaling cheroot smoke, Thaipusam, Batu Caves, Selangor, Malaysia.

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Friday, February 01, 2008

Kuala Selangor Travels - Monkey Business

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Flickr went ahead last week to visit Kuala Selangor. I've heard so much about this town and have been dying for ages to visit it and finally got the chance. Travelling through the oil palm plantations of Ijok and Jeram, heading down to the historic Kota Melawati, riding through the flatlands of paddy at Tanjung Karang and finally stopping at Pasir Penambang for seafood and a fishing village, it does seem that Kuala Selangor has all. The only thing we miss was the fireflies but heard that nowadays there was not much to see anyway.

The first stop brought us to Kota Melawati of which we took a RM2 train ride up the hill passed such suspicious attractions as the poisoned well (telaga racun) and batu hampar (where the japanese were said to decapitate their prisoners). The main attraction that people often associate the area with is the silverback macaques of which I've to admit I was a bit apprehensive at how 'friendly' monkeys can get after several bad experiences with simians especially when food is involved.

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The community of monkeys there are not so like their more feral cousins and does have some modicum of behaviour in the presence of humans, its not to say that they are afraid of you or are hostile, more like they seen so many people that they just don't care. I was utterly surprised to be able to get as near as several cm to the apes and not have them react aggressively. They were everywhere, hanging from the trees, sitting on the embankments, lying under the trees but mostly standing near people in the hopes of getting food. Several food sellers there offer small packets of vegetables that the monkeys like but some inconsiderate people actually hand the monkeys junk food which is bad for their system. Its a poor sight to see a monkey eating twisties which they were never meant to have ever.

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Kazzie had a little scare when an over eager ape tried to climb on her and clung to her shirts without letting go until she handed over her prize of greens which he then took and left. Prakash was the most reluctant to be near them and was keeping a good distance training his 200m lens from afar, as he described it a long standing phobia from an unfortunate event. The best and most attractive part of these monkeys is that the newborn babies are of a golden sheen apart from their grey and black parent's coat. The group seems very sociable and the mothers guard their young charge diligently, often having to discipline their overactive charge with a little spanking to put them in their place, which is naturally clinging with all four onto their mothers as she goes from place to place.

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Sadly it seems that their time may come soon enough. A change in the law recently rescinded their protected status claiming their numbers are too large and are causing a nuisance to their human neighbours whom I thought were the ones to have taken over our simian cousin's natural habitat in the first place. Hopefully these monkey will still be here for long to come, delighting visitors who deign to visit the area.

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The full photo gallery for the trip can be found HERE.

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