Showing posts with label Malaysia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Malaysia. Show all posts

Saturday, August 21, 2010

Typos on Signs

I've never really been a collector of anything but since living in Palembang, I've started taking photos of all the odd signs I come across. I even had all the Indonesian ones printed and put in a photo album just so I can look back and remember the good times we had there.

Anyway, here are three that I came across in Malaysia.

This is a very common mispronunciation in Malaysia. Many people have problems differentiating between the 'L' and the 'R' sounds and the two are often swapped around. Sometimes a "Lorry" is called a "Lolly" and here, you can see that the "Towel" has become a "Tower".



I always wonder if it was the printers who made the typos or the customer ordering the printing that wrote things down incorrectly. So, I guess these people only lend money out on Mondeys.



This one is my favorite from the trip. The top line is in Malay and is correct. I can't read the Chinese but I'm guessing that its correct too. The English line is almost a word-to-word translation of the Malay line. To know exactly where these people are moving to, you'd need to read all three lines since the number is on the Chinese line but the road name is on the English line.



I need to keep my eyes open for some Australian signs to collect...

Thursday, August 19, 2010

Pinang Peranakan Mansion in Penang

We visited the Pinang Peranakan Mansion in Penang back in early July but I never had time to post any of the pictures here. This was definitely a highlight of our trip to Malaysia. It was also during the time that Richard was also visiting so my workload was a lot less!

"Peranakan" is a term used to describe the descendants of Chinese immigrants who married the local women in South East Asia. The immigrants were often rich businessmen who already had wives back in China so, many houses, like the one we visited, were for their second and subsequent wives. In Malaysia, these wives were often Malay so the children usually spoke Malay. However, their immigrant fathers held tight to many of the Chinese customs and they lived by many of the traditional Chinese ways. They had a fascinating culture but it was inherently too chauvinistic to last. Today, Peranakan food and clothing is popular but little of the other characteristics survive. I am of Peranakan descent and enjoy the whole fairytale of that era but am thankful not to be a female confined to the home and forced to do embroidery and cooking all day long. You can read more about the Peranakan culture here.

The Pinang Peranakan Mansion we visited had none of the original furniture remaining but the current owner has decorated it with his own set of antiques. I think the only original items mentioned by the tour guide were the tiles, from somewhere in the UK and the iron poles around the center courtyard, from Glasgow.

This center courtyard originally didn't have a roof over it so that rainwater could be collected. As a tourist attraction, this house has the area covered to protect the furniture that is now in the house. The door you see is the side entrance that is used only by family members. Guests enter from another door that fronts onto the road.


This is the women's room where wives and daughters would chat and play card games while the men sat in a different room. I think the West had this practice too with the women going to the drawing room while the men went to the parlor...or something like that.


The Nyonya women did not have bound feet but this display of shoes (for tiny bound feet) from China was still interesting!


The wooden carvings, painted gold, were shipped from China.


These Peranakan families ate from a different set of plates and bowls each night of the week! And there were special sets for special occasions too.


Opium smoking bed.


I think this was the wedding bed.


And finally, here is the kitchen where the wives supposedly toiled in their beautiful kebayas.


And thats all from the Peranakan Mansion. We spent nearly three hours wondering around this house, trying to feel what it was like if it was our home.

Tuesday, July 20, 2010

Fishy Exfoliation

It was three years ago that I first heard about a Fish Spa. This was in one of the malls in Kuala Lumpur. Unfortunately, I didn't get to try it out back then and thought no more of it until last week.

Over the past three years, I think Fish Spas must have gone through a hype period and then a lot of bad publicity surrounding hygiene and the risks involved with having your dead skin removed by these fish. Well, I missed it all. Never came across the news.

We went to Penang over the weekend and I saw that there was a Fish Spa there. I had to try it!

I did have some concern over getting some sort of disease from the water but the tanks looked clear, they claimed to change the water daily and had a UV light there to kill bacteria. In addition, everyone had to thoroughly wash their legs with and enzyme before putting their feet in the tanks. My enthusiasm to try it might have biased my judgment a tiny bit so thankfully things worked out ok.

Once again, my enthusiasm made me stick both feet in without even thinking or preparing myself mentally and the result was me letting out a loud scream and pulling my feet out immediately. The fish had made a rush for the huge buffet I was serving and it felt like ten tiny fingers suddenly tickling underneath your feet. It doesn't hurt at all, just tickles like crazy.

Once I calmed down and had my giggling under control, we got this photo:



My verdict is that these little guys gave my feet a better cleaning than the pedicure I had a couple of weeks ago. It was a lot of fun for the whole family and the continuous laughing was an effective de-stresser. Would I do it again? I don't know. I would really like to but I am a little more paranoid about the hygiene now that I've gone and done more reading on it.

Saturday, July 14, 2007

Summer in Cameron Highlands

Its summer all year long where I live so we sometimes take breaks from the heat to go somewhere cooler. This is a photo of Aaron and I at a tea plantation in Cameron Highlands, Malaysia. I guess this fits in with the Photo Friday - Summer Time Carnival if you think of it as things that people do in summer.