I'm going to start this blog off with a picture that pretty much sums up what you're dealing with in South East Asia, and that is, fundamentally different taste buds.
Yes, it is what you think it is. Sweetcorn icecream. And not sold by a street vendor, but by KFC. Where it has presumably passed numerous taste tests in its route to market. I saw another similar advert in Kuala Lumpur, where a fast food chain had turned a picture of the Petronas twin towers into 2 cobs of corn.
I really liked our first stop in Malaysia, Georgetown. The city is a lovely place to walk around, and I don't say that often about cities. Every nook and cranny drips with colonial history. Little India and Chinatown give fascinating colour and vibrancy and diversity. But even lovely Georgetown can't escape the Beckhams. Kudos for Jo for getting this sneaky photo.
If you tire of the city, you could get hot and sweaty in the jungle with the 4 hour walk up Penang Hill, including, halfway up, if you needed any more of a work out than a jungle walk...a Jungle Gym!
At the top of Penang Hill are fabulous views over GT. Here we are at the top looking quite chipper considering we had spent 4 hours walking up and just been told that the Furnicular railway back down had been out of action for the last 2 months.
Melaka was our next stop. Many nations have owned Malaka at some point, tribute to its important past as a major point of trade with Europe, China, SE Asia etc. Personally, I find it much more interesting that they have big scary monitor lizards swimming around in their river.
Melaka was lizard central and here we are with Rocky the 8 year old iguana. Check out the tail and how excited Jo is to be holding it!
Here's an example of the kind of colonial influences that I liked in Georgetown, it's prevalent in Melaka also. Incidentally, this was near China Hill, the largest Chinese cemetery outside China. It's a pretty big place, so big in fact, it has it's own running club that jogs round the hill.
You can get tricycle taxis around Melaka. They're colourful and loud, as they have built in speaker systems booming out various styles of music, none of them good. Perhaps you choose one based on it playing the music you liked? Personally, I'd be a bit embarassed to be riding around town on a bike like this with Celine Dion drawing people's attention to you, but horses for courses eh.
While we were out lizard spotting, we came across a house in the oldest part of Melaka whose owners had lived there as children and were keeping it going as a museum. We sat in the chair that the King of Malaysia had sat in, and were proudly shown the marital bedroom, which looked cosy but a bit dusty.
No visit to Kuala Lumpur would be complete without a trip up the Petronas Towers. I have to say I have to really psyche myself up to get excited by tall buildings, but something about these Twin Towers really is quite staggering when you see them in the evening all lit up like rockets about to blast into space. I bought a glittery Twin Towers bottle opener that seemed like a fitting souvenir.
Being a transport planner, Jo has lots of friends who get excited by monorails. Finding postcards of the KL monorail proved impossible, so Jo's friends, you may find this picture printed out and winging its way to you as an improvised postcard.
Actually to be fair, I find monorails quite interesting too, and my trip on the Mag Lev in Shanghai was cool.
To celebrate the momentous occasion of getting our 60 day Indonesian visas, we popped into Beryl's Chocolate Kingdom and jostled with hundreds of tourists who had been bus-ed in and who, by the looks of their shopping baskets, had never seen chocolate before. We got to try some Durian fruit covered in chocolate. Durian is SE Asia's premier fruit, they love it. It smells vile and tastes, well, let's just say I was glad it was covered in chocolate. For those of you who are interested, according to Beryl's Kingdom, Switzerland eats the most chocolate.
We've experienced a lot of rain in Malaysia. It's the first bit of rain we've seen in months. In KL, it rains every day, one day it rained absolute cats and dogs for 5 hours. This was the scene as we drove into KL on the bus.
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