31 January 2011

Our pet Indian Mynah birds

A couple of Mynahs have decided to nest on our balcony, where the air-conditioning units are kept. They've built a little nest inside the metal railings, which are hollow. One of them tends to stand watch for the other, often doing a funky little dance from time to time and fluffing it's feathers.
Looks like I've been spotted - but they don't seem to mind...

Singapore's rainy season


It's been particularly wet this week. Going to work is like waking up at night! Am hoping it clear for Chinese New Year...

Random Singapore - Buddha Tooth Relic Temple

Random Singapore - Being a hawker is tiring

After a hard day selling pap, this guy couldn't take it anymore. But nobody's stealing his favourite camel!

Random Singapore - Hitler cat

Unfortunate markings on an otherwise-lovely cat!

24 January 2011

January update omnibus

January is popular month for religious/cultural holidays in Singapore. Coming hot off the heels of Christmas and New Years, there is the Hindu festival of Thaipusam (celebrating Parvati's vanquishing of the evil demon Soorapadman), and Chinese New Year (the most important festivity in the Chinese Lunar Calendar). It's wonderful really, because there are colourful decorations everywhere and a bit of a buzz in the air...

We finally did a proper visit to the National Museum, which uses an advanced audioguide system. It all works rather well, except there is far too much audio for the amount of content on display. In order to hear everything, you need to stand in front of any given object for 5 or 10 minutes, which quickly becomes unworkable. And because of the reliance on the audioguide, there is otherwise very little writing or identification of objects, which is frustrating when you decide to move at your own pace!

Still, it was interesting to follow the history of Singapore, and they have done an excellent job of recreating the feel of the original housing, the opium dens, and so on. They also evoke the war era very well, and I enjoyed the examples of Japanese propaganda that were dropped on the city, urging the British to abandon the war to make love to their wives back home instead.

We also bought tickets for the touring Pompeii exhibition, which had excellent mosaic displays and some stunning artefacts. In truth, nothing we hadn't already encountered in Italy itself, but we still gleaned a few new bits of information - plus one doesn't turn down the rare opportunity to see this kind of stuff in our neck of the woods.
Home-made Gladiator mask:
The following weekend we caught the touring New Zealand performance of the Rocky Horror Picture Show at the Esplanade Theatre. As always, its the first half that's more captivating, with more memorable songs. Still, it was a blast, and the guy sitting next to us certainly seemed to be having a good time - dorky dancing in the aisle and everything.

During the week we hopped on the MRT to Little India to see some of the Thaipusam activities. To show the sincerity of their faith, or to fulfil vows, devotees were making the 4km pilgrimage from Sri Srinivasa Perumal Temple (Serangoon Road) to Sri Thandayuthapani Temple (Tank Road). This is difficult enough given the burning hot weather on the day, but many of these had also pierced their cheeks, tongue, face or other body parts with sharp objects. Particularly hardy participants carried a kavadi, a cage-like structure that is 'worn' over the body. Adorned with peacock feathers and bright art work carved in aluminium, it also features dozens of sharp spikes criss-crossing its lower section. By virtue of these spikes, the some 15kg of its weight is thus secured on the devotees body! Grisly indeed, but it could have been moreso had the Singapore government not banned the carrying of milkpots on hooks at this year's festival...
Enlarge for the gruesome details!

This Sunday just passed, we had an exciting expedition to IKEA, to investigate storage and furniture options for our new house back home. IKEA is a wonderland of cool homewares - even I love it! I just wish we they had a store in New Zealand. We're looking into our shipping options now :)
Afterwards we went for a big walk around the newly-energised pre-Chinese New Year Chinatown! All the usual pap has been swapped-out for holiday themed pap. There are red decorations as far as the eye can see, and plenty of ornamental rabbits (this year is Year of the Rabbit). We bought a small hanging to decorate our front door. I then spent an hour queuing at the insanely busy Maxwell Rd food centre to get a fish porridge I had been thinking about all week...
Flowers and mandarin trees for sale...

Red paper decorations for sale...

From a series of artworks on display outside Chinatown Square, cut from red paper. This one shows the Singapore river. Very beautiful!

They love to sell masses of a single fruit. Makes for wonderful visual imagery!

20 January 2011

Yahoo! legal is doing a "picture per month" for 2011. January's theme is "self-portrait at work". This is mine...

05 January 2011

Malaysia - Pulau Pinang - 3 Jan

At Suffolk House, home of Francis Light, founder of the British-colonised Penang:

The amazing Kek Lok Si temple in Air Itam. The largest Buddhist Temple in Southeast Asia, this sprawls its way up the side of Penang Hill via a series of discrete, but interconnected temples, pavilions and other buildings. Very colourful and bewilderingly ornate...

If the buddha statue is chubby, then it's probably Budai (aka the "laughing buddha") from China, as opposed to the original capital-B Buddha...

Enormous statue of Kuan Yin, another bodhisattva like Budai:

Chinese calendar animals. Anna is Year of the Horse - I am Year of the Goat:

Malaysia - Pulau Pinang - 2 Jan

A light lunch in a breezy 'five foot way':

Inside another heritage property, very similar to the Cheong Fatt Tze mansion - except with the added ability to take photos. They both have the same layout, predicated on the principles of feng shui. This includes the following elements:
  • facing the sea
  • riding on the dragon's back, ie. with either a hill behind (in this case Penang Hill), or an artificial slope within the house by adding a few rising steps at the rear half of the property
  • incorporation of the Chinese elements - fire (by having the atrium open to the air/sunlight), metal (cast iron from Glasgow), water (pipes channel the rain under the house), and earth
  • gold is buried under the house for good financial fortune
No lucky ch'i for this fellow:

Malaysia - Pulau Pinang - 1 Jan

Out and about in George Town:

Chew Jetty, or Seh Chew Keo, is the biggest of the waterfront settlements in George Town. In the olden days (over a hundred years ago), different clans built sprawling jetties out into the sea to live and work from. Utterly fascinating, and a UNESCO World Heritage site:

At Fort Cornwallis, built by Francis Light:

January 1st is also the day that George Town celebrates it's City status, so we were back at the Esplanade in the evening to watch a procession of different performances - a wushu troupe, Indian dancers, a brass band playing a rendition of Lady Gaga's "Bad Romance", a Chinese lion dance, etc.