Friday, August 28, 2009

Harmony Tour

Okay, I'm a little behind on my posts. School, etc.

Last weekend the school organized a tour of Hindu and Sikh temples. I didn't take a whole lot of pictures. Even though we were told that we could photograph everything except certain items, it just feels tacky to be blatantly touristy in somebody's place of worship. Anyway, the students who led the tours did a great job and I'm incredibly thankful that I was one of the relatively few people who decided to seize the opportunity to go.


The Hindu temple was vibrant and noisy, full of people eating, praying and smashing coconuts (to symbolize the breaking apart of the ego). Like the many sculptures and deities, the whole vibe is about the divine manifesting itself in all aspects of life.




The Sikh temple was more solemn (but still beautiful). They also gave us a bhangra dancing lesson and tied turbans for us. Of course, it's usually just men who wear turbans but I wasn't going to miss out on it. One of my friends told me I looked like Simone de Beauvoir... One of the old ladies there was thrilled to see us all with our turbans on. She beamed and matted each of us on the shoulder as we passed. So cute.

Friday, August 21, 2009

Downpour

There is really nothing like a tropical rainstorm. When blue sky darkens before your eyes and and the rain comes down so hard that it seems like your little island in the sun might be sinking into the sea. The thunder isn't distant like at home - it's all around you, intense, personal.

There is rarely a sharp divide between indoors and outdoors here. In the relative shelter of the law campus's open-air food court, the walls and the conversations and my last-minute readings faded against the power of the storm.

Wednesday, August 19, 2009

The Singapore Experience: Shopping and (More) Food

What I did on my trip to Southeast Asia...bought a sweater. For the obscenely cold lecture theatres in this delightfully hot country.

Tuesday is my day off, so after a morning date spanning 15006 km I headed to VivoCity with three goals in mind. Long pants for a temple tour I'll be doing on Saturday. A sweater to bring to class. A hula hoop. Success on all fronts. Honestly, if I hadn't ben successful that would make me the worst shopper EVER because VivoCity is colossal.

Food courts are still intimidating at times. I could have gotten hor fun which jut makes me giggle like a schoolgirl. The Boy's uncle says I need to learn to make Hakka food, so when I saw a sign advertising "Hakka pork belly" I actually thought about it...well, until I actually thought about it. I settled on puri, which I had somehow always assumed would be crispy. Nope, just puffy bread. Anyway, as with a lot of Indian food I soon realized I had no idea how I was supposed to eat it.

Dessert was ice kachang which was good in a weird way. Can't say I'm totally sold on the idea of corn niblets in my sno kone, but I'd eat it again:



Oh yeah, and the good people of Singapore are polite enough to act as though it's perfectly normal for a Random Canadian Girl to be toting a bigass hula hoop around on the bus. Which I appreciate.

Tuesday, August 18, 2009

Haw Par Villa


On Sunday a few of us went to Haw Par Villa, a theme park based on Chinese mythology and built in 1937 by the family that created Tiger Balm.


Admission to the park is free; entry into the "Ten Courts of Hell" costs a dollar. If you want to see some fabulously graphic and campy sculptures - not to mention some really interesting "sins" - it's all on my Facebook page. Sorry - there were just way too many photos to post here.





Saturday, August 15, 2009

Bahasa Indonesia



Singapore's National Day was last weekend. I celebrated by leaving the country. What? The locals do it. Singaporeans are a patriotic bunch but loads of them flee the National Day crowds for nearby Indonesia. That's why we couldn't get a ferry to the beachy island of Bintan and instead settled for Batam Island, which we assumed would also be beachy, maybe just somewhat less nice and correspondently less touristy. Well.

One of the first things out of the mouth of our hotel's guest services rep was "Why did you come here? Why didn't you go to Bali?" The locals seemed similarly surprised to see us, four young western girls wandering around Batam Centre. Taxi drivers would drive slowly alongside us, honking repeatedly even after we waved them away. We were honked at by taxi drivers who were clearly already carrying fares. We were honked at by drivers who weren't even in taxis.

Armed with three phrases in Bahasa - thank you, how much, too expensive - we headed for a nearby mall and bargained for knockoff handbags. The shopping is really only cheaper if you're willing to haggle. Prices are rarely marked on the tags, and the prices quoted to us were clearly inflated. After you refuse the initial price, and especially if you do so in their language, it will drop by as much as a third.



Batam is famous for its seafood, and deservedly so. We had supper at the Golden Prawn, which we were later told is expensive for the locale, but it was good so hey. One of those places where you can see your food swimming or crawling around in its tank before you order.









OUr driver waited for us as we ate, then took us to a nightclub in a building shaped like a cruise ship. I mean, a full-sized cruise ship sitting there in the middle of the city. I'll have to get some photos from the other ladies because for some reason I didn't take any. And my mother will have a fit if she reads this because it's so sketchy, but the driver came INTO the club with us. And then proceeded to call his buddy, who tried to give us beer and assured me that he was "a good man." We didn't stay long.



Sunday was beach day. The guest relations rep gave us a list of recommended beaches and we negotiated a cab fare to one that was supposed to be a fun tourist area. We found ourselves on a tiny, rocky beach next to a rundown picnic area. Back in the taxi, zigzagging across the island, taking in expanses of nature peppered with little homes and shops. We headed for Turi Beach, supposedly a beautiful white-sand beach, attached to a resort but open to the public. Nope. Despite the assurances from travel websites, the hotel and our driver, the resort staff would not let us onto the beach. Instead, they recommended a place nearby that would let us pay to use theirs. After 3 hours we were on a small but nearly deserted resort beach. Honestly I loved every minute of it - that was why I had taken the trip, after all. By the time we left I'd gotten enough sun that I no longer matched my bathing suit, so I'd consider the day a success.



Sick of overpaying for taxis, we looked for a place to eat near our hotel. A couple of street kids came up and manhandled one of my friends so we ducked into the nearest pub - only to find ourselves in the local expat hangout. We chatted with the Australian owner and an English gentleman in a smoking jacket(!) who runs a business out of Singapore. Before we left a tough little Scot who works in the pub gave us advice on dealing with the kids in case they approached us again - "just punch'em in the face!"



I didn't get the vacation I expected. Instead I got a handful of new experiences. I was mystified by a new culture. I struggled with the language barrier. I contemplated the meaning of my relative wealth in bargaining with the locals. I laughed - a lot - at the constant stream of random events, at the unexpected results of every step. The four of us stayed up late in our hotel room, discussing what we could possibly tell people whe they asked about our trip. Our conclusion? It was so worth it - but really, you had to have been there.

Wednesday, August 12, 2009

I love love love love:

crazy pastries in the dining hall at breakfast

living the dorm life, seven years later

peanut butter scientists turned law professors

stepping out of the (completely unreasonable) a/c into a humid southeast Asian night

facebook albums

quickie video chats

clothes hung to dry outside my window

being constantly surrounded by fellow travelers

my life.

Wednesday, August 5, 2009

The food, oh baby the food.



I'm in a country that has been described as a food-lover's paradise. I'm currently downing a bag of mangosteen, which is pretty sublime. The mango selection is amazing. You can get pineapple and oranges and melons and dragonfruit and kiwi and green apples on just about every corner.



Laksa: Noodles, prawns, cockles, tofu and fishcake in a spicy coconut-milk gravy. Yummy.

I've been flex on the vegetarian thing in the name of adventure. I'm the kind of person who would eat deep-fried tarantula if given the chance - I've just been veg for so long now that when cruising the hawker centres, the words "beef" and "chicken" and "pork" and "prawn" don't even register in my brain as "food". It's easy enough to score a bite of somebody else's, though, so I can try pig's brain soup without actually ordering a bowl (although I have to say that BSE has made me hesitant to ingest any kind of brain). Note to travelers: some hawkers will attempt to charge you above the posted price if you're sharing with others. Even though they're giving you the same amount of food. If they try to spring that on you when they bring you your plate, stick to your guns and they won't pursue it for too long.



Rojak: salad of fruit, vegetables and dough fritters in a seriously rich sauce with peanuts on top.

Not pictured: carrot cake - no cream cheese icing in sight. It's a savoury dish made from steamed white radishes fried with garlic and eggs, served either black (with sweet soy sauce) or white. You can get it with chili sauce if you're into it (I am). Greasy. Delicious.

You can get any kind of mock meat imaginable, and they really go all-out with it. I had mock fish yesterday and it actually had fake skin on it. I've seen people order mock chicken and never even notice that they weren't eating flesh. It's really impressive.

Mostly, though, I've been going to "mixed vegetable rice" stalls where you can choose your vegetable or meat dishes and get them with a serving of rice. They're usually very cheap, generally less oily than the more elaborate dishes, and a valuable source of green stuff. Now, if I can get some brown rice I'll be all set.

Tuesday, August 4, 2009

Chinatown



The Nova Scotia delegation is all here. 3/4 of us went to Chinatown today with another exchange student for the purpose of engaging in the fine arts of gluttony and shopping.



I'm not going to show you the food right now; that deserves its own post, and I'll get on that next/soon. But Food Street is basically one big, open-air hawker centre.



This is the Buddha Tooth Relic Temple, which Lonely Planet informed me holds a ceremony every day at 7:30 to open the chamber and display the Buddha Tooth Relic, but alas. Nothing but a gorgeous building and some tourists taking pictures of it. So I settled for some mangosteens and a coconut.





Saturday, August 1, 2009

I'm a frosh

A number of exchange students, my self included were a little...miffed about being excluded from our house orientation activities. Well, this morning in the bathroom I got an unofficial invite to take part. So I showed up, and just like that I was adopted by my housemates. So at 25, I'm having the residence experience I never had. I learned the Chinese words for various parts of the human anatomy as we shouted them from the rooftop (as part of the sanctioned orientation activities - so much for the image of the reserved, mild-mannered Singaporean) and consumed buckets of sugary beverages.

These kids are a riot. This place rocks.