A photoblog of stories, events, culture and travel. Let the images tell you what I see.
Wednesday, February 03, 2021
Happy Li Chun (Beginning of Spring) 2021
Thursday, January 28, 2021
Thaipusam 2021... Looking Back on Past Celebrations
Wednesday, January 20, 2021
Eight More Days to Thaipusam 2021... A Different Thaipusam due to Covid-19
A couple carried their child up Batu Caves as a sign of gratitude for Lord Muruga's blessing, one day before the second Covid-19 lockdown in Selangor. |
Wednesday, January 13, 2021
Happy Thai Pongal 2021
Sugarcanes for sale for Pongal |
Monday, January 11, 2021
Can Malaysia Survive Another Covid-19 Lockdown?
An empty Petaling Street on a Sunday... Wonder how many customers did the old uncle selling Ban Chang kueh (peanut pancake) gets each day? |
Thursday, December 31, 2020
So Long... Farewell Penang Ferry Service
As the year draw to a close, we bid farewell to 2020 and also the historical Penang Ferry Service, which will make its last trip today, ferrying both vehicles and passengers to and from Penang to Butterworth.
The ferry service, which started off as a passenger-only service by Quah Beng Kee and his four siblings in 1894, was later upgraded to became a vehicle and passenger service in 1925.
The operations of the ferries were later taken over in 1924 by Penang Port Sdn Bhd., a subsidiary of the Penang Port Commission (formerly Penang Harbour Board), and in 2017, it was then transferred from Penang Port Sdn. Bhd. to the Malaysian government owned Prasarana Malaysia for a token sum of RM1 and rebranded as Rapid Ferry.
I remember as a kid all the ferries were painted yellow and it was a joy when we crossed the straits as we would get down from the car to watch jellyfishes bobbing in the sea as the ferry passed by.
Later on these ferries were given a coat of multicoloured paint (as in the picture taken in 2014) and in 2017, some of these iconic ferries even had attractions of Penang painted on them!
The iconic Penang Ferry (Pulau Angsa) as seen in 2014 from the Hean Boo Thean floating temple in Weld Quay, Penang. |
Alas the ferry service will come to an end as 2020 closes... and this Penang iconic monument with 125 years of service history will be relegated to mere mentions in history books and our fond memories of the past. Farewell to our beloved Penang Ferry!
Tuesday, December 29, 2020
Menurun....
Tuesday, December 15, 2020
Something old.. Something new - the Merdeka 118
Something new is beginning to stand up in kuala Lumpur - the Merdeka 118 tower. As of middle of this year, it is the tallest construction site in the world. When completed, it will be the world's second tallest skyscraper.
The Merdeka 118 tower under construction as seen from an old part of KL (the Zhong Shan building in Kg. Attap). |
Monday, November 23, 2020
Flower Power... the Florists of Chalai Bazaar Trivandrum
Saturday, November 14, 2020
Happy Deepavali 2020
Sunday, November 01, 2020
Streets of Kathmandu... Rugs for Sale
Sunday, October 25, 2020
Dou Mu and The Ninth Day of the Nine Emperor Gods Festival
Thursday, October 22, 2020
Nine Emperor Gods Festival 2020 Day 6 - A Different Feeding the Armies (犒军) Ceremony at Ampang
Friday, October 16, 2020
A Smoky but Silent Nine Emperor Gods Festival 2020 at Ampang
Tuesday, October 13, 2020
No Go for Nine Emperor Gods Festival 2020 in Ampang and KL
Friday, October 09, 2020
The Day The Music Died... How the 'New Normal' has Affected the Ampang Nine Emperor Gods Festival 2020
Today is exactly 7 days to the eve of this year's Nine Emperor Gods Festival, and as the festival draws near, one cannot help feel a little disappointed as nothing much is actually happening due to the Covid-19 pandemic.
- Massive traffic crawl from Jalan Ampang leading to the temple.
- Friendly old aunties staying in the dorm (will miss seeing them having aged one more year)
- The crowd formed by devotees dressed all in white during the Feeding of the Heavenly Armies (Ko Kun)
- The stalls lining the roads leading to the temple and in the temple courtyard
- Processions for the invitation of the Nine Emperor Gods and Finance Minister
- Bridge crossing and fire walking and...
- Cheryl Hoffmann... she has gone back to be at her daughter's wedding (Congrats!!!)... I hope she will be back to join us in 2021
Wednesday, October 07, 2020
Fire and Purification - The Nine Emperor Gods Festival
Sunday, October 04, 2020
Nine Emperor Gods Festival: Bizarre Body Piercings When the Spirits Descend...
A spirit medium with a big rod through his cheek connected to a small push bike during the 2019 Kuala Pilah Nine Emperor Gods Festival procession |
Having a metal bar pierced through your cheek isn't a typical job for the faint-heated or the uninitiated. |
Thursday, October 01, 2020
Happy Mid-Autumn Festival 2020
Happy Mid-Autumn Festival (or Mooncake Festival) to all my friends. Pictured here is a type of mooncake called Moonlight Cake(月光饼) that is not frequently seen and is associated with the Hakka people.
This cake is very simple and made of glutinous rice flour, sugar, oil/shortening plus some flavouring like fragrant screw-pine (pandan). The cake when dry is powdery and crumbly, but exposed to humidity it becomes chewy and sticky. Not the usual rich and filling Cantonese style mooncakes but more than enough to give you a sugar rush.
The poem on the left is a popular poem associated with the moon and the Mid-Autumn Festival by a popular Chinese poet... take a guess which one is that.