MYSIN Trip 2 - Penang

Often it is a book that introduces us to locations we've never heard of. And not just introducing, the book often kindles the fire within to visit and see the places. It is one of the curses and cures of reading a book. What happens afterwards often tells whether the book is great or not.

I've read many such books and many of which have kept the fire burning to visit the places associated. No need to relive the characters or the incidents, but to be there to see for oneself what the book explains in so many pages. Often the distance of time is too long to even associate a place with the book but if you are alert, you can catch glimpses of the book written all around the place.

Pa. Singaram wrote one book (or rather, one and a half, an unfinished book) long time back called 'புயலிலே ஒரு தோணி' (Boat adrift a storm). It was deemed a classic and was forgotten. I came to know about it 10-15 years back but couldn't get hold of a copy. Then you read about it in reviews, other essays mentioning how great it was etc. So it was till a few years back, when the book was re-published, I read it for once, then again and again.

The book describes the story of Pandian, who travels from Chennai to Medan to work in the Chettiayar's pawn broker business there. He travels around Malaya (as it was called then) and Singapore. The Japanese invasion happens and it disrupts the entire region's life as it was lived before. Pandian roams around Penang and joins INA when it was formed.

The story with its descriptions of life of Tamils in the Malay peninsula as it was in the start of the 20th century and through the second world war is gripping and it put the seed into my mind to visit at least some of the parts described in the book.

So it was that we visited Penang.

Day(s) 2-3


A view of Penang as the plane approaches the airport
Air Asia has a check-in policy in that if you cannot check-in your baggage one hour before the flight, you cannot travel. Without getting into the virtues of such a policy, it is suffice to say that when we tried to check-in at KLIA on August 20, 2014, we missed the deadline by 30 minutes.


There were only two options, either move to another flight to Penang one hour later and pay the difference or let a few travel in the flight without the baggage and one of us can take the next one. So we decided that I will be staying back to take the next flight while J will take the scheduled one with the kids. Our trip to Penang was off to a really rocking start.

   So after a delay of 2 hours, we checked into the hotel in the Tanjung Bungah in the north-eastern tip of the Pulau Pinang, as it is called locally. After such an eventful day, we decided to stay back and enjoy the beach for the evening.
Tanjung Bungah beach

The next day went to the Monkey beach in the North-western tip of the island inside the Penang National park. The taxis of Malaysia can give a tough ride for the autos for Chennai in terms of fleecing the customer. 60% of the money I've spent in Malaysia is for the taxis and except KL, public transportation is pretty much non-existent elsewhere. In fact, I've roamed around the interiors of Tamil nadu in public transportation which can be relied on and is more frequent than anything I've seen in Malaysia.

Penang National Park
Monkey Beach
Monkey beach is isolated stretch of beach with a few BBQ stalls and few tourists around. Andaman Sea here is like a huge swimming pool with hardly any waves and no depth at all. And there was no monkeys anyway. The boatmen again try to fleece you for all its worth and it is actually tiring to keep arguing with every guy you meet on the money.

Returning from the Monkey beach, we took a cab again, this time a 65 year old Tamil, for the trip to Penang Hill and Kek Lok Si temple.

The driver's father settled down in Penang about 70-80 years  back and the driver, Arumugam, was born in Malaysia and was brought up here. He shared a lot of information on the conditions in Malaysia, the relationship of the Tamils with the Malays and the Chinese etc. He also showed us some remnants of the Japanese occupation in Penang, including the head quarters of the Japanese colonel, locally called 'Thalavetti' (one who beheads), a ghastly name for the Colonel Tadashi Suzuki. It was a disturbing history which again reminded of the atrocities described by Singaram in his master-piece.

Funicular Train
Penang Hill is a colonial town which was used by the Britishers to avoid the sultry climate of George town during the summer months. A Funicular train runs to the top and it is a pleasure to ride it. The hill has some beautiful views of Georgetown and the Penang bridge that connects with Butterworth.
View from the top
Kek Lok Si temple was closed and we returned to our corner of beach for the night to prepare of our flight to Singapore. The only place I could not get to was the Thanneermalai Murugan temple, though I could get only a glimpse of it from the bottom of the hill.

The hawker complex
The dinner in Penang on both the days was at the local hawker complex near where we stayed. We could sample a lot of Penang specialities like the Ayam Laksa, Mee Goreng and the usual favorite, Tom Yam. There is one stall which sells Appam run by a local Tamil, Mani. Selling 6 Appams for 3MYR, it was cheap and the Appams were real good.

So it was on the fourth day, we started for Singapore.

MYSIN Trip 1 - KL - Petronas towers

It was a long time coming but it did came at last. The trip to the SE Asia is something we've been planning for the past few years and had to be postponed for one reason or other. And the destinations were also difficult to finalize, Hong Kong and Singapore or Singapore and Bali etc. But finally decided to look at it from the kids perspective and decided that Malaysia and Singapore would be the best for the kids. The locations, kid related activities and the host of amusement parks will ensure that the kids will not get bored and will have fun.

It is also one of our quirky customs to have the vacation trips coincide with our wedding anniversary which falls on August 24, to ensure that we were in a different location to celebrate it every year. With Vanathy's birthday falling on the August 25, it is twice the reason for doing the same. So the dates will be around that.

Also, we wanted to do it on a budget (to the extent possible!) since both me and the wife were big spenders. So things have to be planned around the budget and it means cutting down on a lots of things we usually go for in the vacations. Though we managed to stay within the budget, we still could find ways to splurge on the hotels, travel etc through various deals, early booking etc.

The preparations were to constantly scour for deals, finalizing the trip plan, where we want to go, what we want to do, how long to stay, maximize the time spent in places we want to go to, how to travel, travel logistics like visas, local transport etc. I did not want anything to be left out to surprise during the trip itself (though things did happen that threw the plans out of gear a few times as well, but it would be boring if it didn't happen that way after all!). Since we did not want to do a package tour (we never do!) the planning has to be extensive and through since we were traveling with kids as well. 

For me, the excitement of the trip is the planning. You have to read so may sites, learn, understand, go around searching for deals and think like a local to understand the travel in that area. The easy way out is to do a package tour but that wouldn't be a tour at all. There were a multitude of sites that I used to do the planning and some of which are Tripadvisor, Agoda, Malaysia Tourism, Your Singapore etc.

So it was all set.  

Day 0

Kuala Lumpur is a city which has some good memories for us. Its where we had our short honeymoon. It is a place I've visited multiple times (mostly on transit visits for a day or so). And the city itself reminds me of Chennai and other Indian cities and so you don't feel out of place even once.

We planned to use KL only as transit points this time as well and planned to visit Petronas towers and Batu caves only. The plan was to use it as the start point to go to Penang and beyond. But we will spend our first night on the trip here and visit Petronas Towers alone before taking off for Penang.
Where is our baggage?

So we landed in KL without incidents. The Air Asia flight was smooth and kids were all flutter with excitement on the trip and I slept through the flight as usual. One thing that always tries one's patience is the trip from KLIA to the city and it did this time as well. 

After checking in the hotel late evening, we decided not to visit Petronas in the night and instead walked around the Brickfields area. Our trip coincided with the Chinese Mid-Autumn festival and wherever we went we could see the festivities in full. So it started on our first night in KL.

There was a Chinese temple near the hotel and there was an endless procession of deities in decorated floats with loud music all around. Sibi was all excited and took to the spirit of the occasion and started enjoying himself.
  
There were priests in full dress with strange head gears and people were offering food on the road sides for their blessing. There was this full roast pig on the road which was 'blessed' by the priest by having it sliced with a butcher's knife in his mouth. There were fire crackers and in general a feisty atmosphere.

The next day was our visit to Petronas towers. It took some time while planning to find out whether to go for the Petronas or the KL tower but we finalized on the Petronas. We took the MRT from the KL Sentral and reached the Petronas towers for our 9AM visit.

The ticket queue is long and unless you're fine with the timing of visit being decided randomly, there is no reason to stand in it. Booking it online is much more easier to plan the visit for the day. The tickets are costly (though a limited free tickets are issued everyday in the queue) but the visit is worth it. 
  
The visit happens in two steps. First you visit the sky bridge which connects the two towers. It is a beautiful place with fantastic views of the city and then you are taken to the 86th floor for a view from the top. It is a fantastic place where you can feel the movement of the building under your feet and has again a lot of beautiful views. 


Huge skyscrapers have a way of exciting one's nerves. I remembered the visit to the other famous twin towers, which are no more, while visiting here. I happened to visit it 8 months before its destruction and though plain looking architecturally compared to the Petronas, was simply awed by the amazing views of Manhattan from its observation deck. 

May be because the sky scrapers remind us all of the ingenuity of the humans and our inherent competitiveness to build higher and higher only shows our thirst to achieve more and more.

We were off to KLIA again for the flight to Penang.

கீழடி அருங்காட்சியகம்.

உலகம் முழுவதும் இருக்கும் பல அருங்காட்சியகங்களுக்கு சென்றிருக்கிறேன். நியூ யார்க், கத்தார், துபாய், வாஷிங்டன், லாஸ் ஏஞ்சல்ஸ் போன்ற நகரங்களின...