Well, Dan and I have returned from our break for Eid in Malaysia. Just a bit of back story: I first visited Kuala Lumpur in 2007, on my way to Indonesia. Sandwiched between time in India and Indonesia, my one day in KL was a much needed break from chaos. The city is so much calmer than South Asian cities. The roads are paved, there are sidewalks, and being white isn't criteria for being interesting. However, since this week-long break was for Eid, the Muslim holiday celebrating the end of Ramadan, I was a little nervous that Kuala Lumpur, the capital of a Muslim country, would be a little crazy. Beyond that I was also a little nervous that getting out of KL would be somewhat impossible. We booked a hostel for one night in KL and got in pretty late. After spending what I later realized was literally 10 times the amount we should on a cab, we arrived at our clean and conveniently located hostel in Chinatown. The room was small enough so that you could almost stand in the middle and touch all four walls at once, and sleeping on the spring-loaded bed was basically like getting a night-long back massage from a car radiator, but the hostel was clean and not too expensive for Kuala Lumpur.
Dan in our tiny room in Kuala Lumpur
The next day we went first thing in the morning to the bus station and tried to get tickets to Mersing- a relatively small town on the East Coast of Malaysia where we would be able to catch a ferry to Pulau Tioman- a small island off the coast. To our dismay we were told that there were no tickets to Mersing for another few days. Eventually we were told to just buy a ticket to a larger inland city and try to catch a bus from there.
So with a plan ahead of us we set out in search of some delicious Chinese food in Chinatown. I should mention that despite the fact that both Malaysia and Bangladesh are Muslim countries, they are very different from each other. So, I was only a little surprised to find myself sitting in Chinatown in a Muslim country eating pork and noodle soup during the day during Ramadan. Malaysia is incredibly diverse, religiously and culturally. It's not uncommon to see women wearing long sleeves and a veil across their face next to women in short mini-skirts and spaghetti strap tank tops. Similarly, it's not uncommon to see a large mosque next to a Buddhist temple, next to a Hindu temple. I was also left with the impression that most people in Malaysia have a relatively negative view of Bangladesh. I was told it was conservative (when it's actually classified as a "moderate" country), there are many terrorists here, there are bombs all of the time, and that Bengali's have no respect for people who aren't Muslim.
After our soup, Denise (who we had met up with by chance at the bus station when we were all trying to get tickets), Dan and I all decided to get some moon pies. Apparently for the autumn festival in China there's a tradition of eating (and gifting) little pastries called moon pies. Since the festival was a few weeks ago they were still available in little packages in Chinatown. The cheapest I saw were about 2 ringgit (so about 60 cents) and the most expensive were about 20 ringgit (about 6 dollars). We bought some of the cheap cakes and enjoyed them on the street.
So with a plan ahead of us we set out in search of some delicious Chinese food in Chinatown. I should mention that despite the fact that both Malaysia and Bangladesh are Muslim countries, they are very different from each other. So, I was only a little surprised to find myself sitting in Chinatown in a Muslim country eating pork and noodle soup during the day during Ramadan. Malaysia is incredibly diverse, religiously and culturally. It's not uncommon to see women wearing long sleeves and a veil across their face next to women in short mini-skirts and spaghetti strap tank tops. Similarly, it's not uncommon to see a large mosque next to a Buddhist temple, next to a Hindu temple. I was also left with the impression that most people in Malaysia have a relatively negative view of Bangladesh. I was told it was conservative (when it's actually classified as a "moderate" country), there are many terrorists here, there are bombs all of the time, and that Bengali's have no respect for people who aren't Muslim.
After our soup, Denise (who we had met up with by chance at the bus station when we were all trying to get tickets), Dan and I all decided to get some moon pies. Apparently for the autumn festival in China there's a tradition of eating (and gifting) little pastries called moon pies. Since the festival was a few weeks ago they were still available in little packages in Chinatown. The cheapest I saw were about 2 ringgit (so about 60 cents) and the most expensive were about 20 ringgit (about 6 dollars). We bought some of the cheap cakes and enjoyed them on the street.
Denise and Dan with the Petronas Twin Towers in the background.
So after eating and relaxing for most of the day in Kuala Lumpur, Dan and I caught a bus to a town called Kluang. The bus ride was completely easy. We got to sit in the very front, and they played two US movies during the ride. I mostly looked out the window and came to the conclusion that Malaysia is very beautiful and very green! We got off in Kluang and had about a two hour wait for the bus to Mersing. In that time we managed to grab a bite to eat and some tea. Plus it was nice to have a little break after being on the last bus for about three and a half hours. That night was the end of Ramadan and the beginning of Eid, so everyone was celebrating. As we waited for the bus people around us were setting off fireworks. The ride to Mersing was pretty short- about an hour and a half- and when we arrived we were greeted by many moths, some stray cats (chasing, catching, and eating said moths) and a man with a notebook full of photos of his hostel. It was pretty late, about 11:30, and we weren't sure if we should go with this man. His price seemed reasonable, but he was being pretty pushy. An Italian woman we had chatted a little with seemed to think this man was trying to take us for a ride and overcharge us, and so she stormed off. Not really sure what to do, Dan and I followed her and quickly found ourselves walking along a deserted road hoping that a taxi would somehow chance by us. Eventually we gave up and went back to the bus station to take that man up on his offer. However, when we got back the man was gone, and we were shortly tracked down by the Italian woman who had managed to find a taxi in the meantime. The taxi driver confirmed what the man with the binder had told her- the place in Lonely Planet was closed. So he took us to the next place Lonely Planet listed and we ended up paying only 5 ringgit less than what the man with the binder had been proposing. Now, I'm not too picky about where I sleep, but on first impressions this place was pushing my limit. It was a little dingy- dirty looking sheets and walls that didn't reach the ceiling, so you could hear anything then went on in the place. There were huge dead months in a few places, and big holes in the walls. Omar, the man who ran the place (called Omar's Backpacker's Hostel) was a friendly sort of guy, and I took note that the kitchen was clean, and the bathroom didn't give me the heeby jeebies.
Fascinating
Destination
So we sat there until six am when we went to the jetty to try and catch a boat to Tioman Island. Much to our dismay we were told that the early ferry wasn't running, and the mid-morning ferry was full. We bought two tickets for the 2pm ferry and started our mental countdown for the eight hours remaining before we could get out of Mersing. We tried to look on the bright side of things- we now had time to go to an ATM and get some breakfast before leaving (we actually had time to do these things several times over, but let's not get too specific...) We decided to search for someone who could tell us where an ATM was and the first person we ran into was the man who had been soliciting us at the bus station the night before. 'How are you?' he asked with a great smile on his face? We told him we were tired and that we had tried to find him. We explained that we had stayed somewhere with bedbugs and he immediately said: oh, Omar's? He then asked us if we had gotten tickets for the 10am bus. When we said they were all sold out he told us that he had come down to get tickets for the people that ended up staying with him and, finding that they were sold out, had dome some finagling and had managed to get seats anyway. He pointed to the three people who were staying with him. I looked over and saw three people, all seemingly well rested, laughing, and eating something. The man then chatted with us for awhile about Bangladesh and the importance for educating women. He referenced female politicians in the US and Bangladesh and Malaysia and gave us his opinion on Bangladeshi politics and religion. Eventually he pointed us in the direction of an ATM and told us where we could get a bite to eat, and we trudged off, resenting Omar's at every step.
We ended up getting a bite to eat from a food stand run by a Chinese family. We weren't sure how it worked, and were much too exhausted by this point to really try hard to get food. We probably spent 5 minutes just standing or sitting with our mouths open, watching other people come and go, buying lots of food and eating it. Eventually someone took pity on us and asked what we wanted. She gave Dan a bag and he started filling it with pastries. We paid and went into a nearby coffee shop to eat.
Our nasty bed at Omar's Backpacker's Hostel
Dan, trying to be optimistic about Omar's. Note the dead moth stuck in the chicken wire wall above Dan.
Yeah, Omar's is a pretty classy place.
After we paid and started to get into bed, being sure to take out our sleep sheets and wrap them securely around us, I noticed that the sheets were covered in tiny little blood stains- an indication that there were bedbugs. I pulled my silk sleep sheet tighter around my neck hoping that the sheets were old and that any potential bug problem had since been taken care of. So at about 12:30 in the morning Dan and I shut the lights off and went to sleep. I dozed uncomfortably for about a half an hour and then woke up from being afraid of bugs. I woke Dan up (somewhat unsympathetically) and asked him to turn the light on. I then asked him to hand me my camera bag where my flashlight was. I was hoping that I could get out my flashlight, closely examine the bed, and then sleep feeling more assured that there actually weren't any bugs. BUT, as Dan dropped my bag onto the bed in front of me I saw, to my horror, a bed bug scurry quickly into the seam of the bag. No flashlight necessary! It was confirmed: we had bedbugs! So Dan and I spent the next half an hour or so removing the stuff from our room one item at a time, thoroughly checking every seam and crease and removing any bugs that we found. We put everything in the kitchen and then sat down at the kitchen table. We sat there, exhausted, until six in the morning, playing cards and playing the game: What would __________ do if he/she/they were here? After going through basically everyone we knew we decided there was no good solution. We were stuck in a small town that we didn't know our way around, in the middle of the night, with basically no other options. I spent a long time looking at a sign that said: Malaysia: Fascinating Destination. It apparently took me being awake at 5am at Omar's for me to realize what an interesting word combination that was:Dan, trying to be optimistic about Omar's. Note the dead moth stuck in the chicken wire wall above Dan.
Yeah, Omar's is a pretty classy place.
Fascinating
Destination
So we sat there until six am when we went to the jetty to try and catch a boat to Tioman Island. Much to our dismay we were told that the early ferry wasn't running, and the mid-morning ferry was full. We bought two tickets for the 2pm ferry and started our mental countdown for the eight hours remaining before we could get out of Mersing. We tried to look on the bright side of things- we now had time to go to an ATM and get some breakfast before leaving (we actually had time to do these things several times over, but let's not get too specific...) We decided to search for someone who could tell us where an ATM was and the first person we ran into was the man who had been soliciting us at the bus station the night before. 'How are you?' he asked with a great smile on his face? We told him we were tired and that we had tried to find him. We explained that we had stayed somewhere with bedbugs and he immediately said: oh, Omar's? He then asked us if we had gotten tickets for the 10am bus. When we said they were all sold out he told us that he had come down to get tickets for the people that ended up staying with him and, finding that they were sold out, had dome some finagling and had managed to get seats anyway. He pointed to the three people who were staying with him. I looked over and saw three people, all seemingly well rested, laughing, and eating something. The man then chatted with us for awhile about Bangladesh and the importance for educating women. He referenced female politicians in the US and Bangladesh and Malaysia and gave us his opinion on Bangladeshi politics and religion. Eventually he pointed us in the direction of an ATM and told us where we could get a bite to eat, and we trudged off, resenting Omar's at every step.
We ended up getting a bite to eat from a food stand run by a Chinese family. We weren't sure how it worked, and were much too exhausted by this point to really try hard to get food. We probably spent 5 minutes just standing or sitting with our mouths open, watching other people come and go, buying lots of food and eating it. Eventually someone took pity on us and asked what we wanted. She gave Dan a bag and he started filling it with pastries. We paid and went into a nearby coffee shop to eat.
I honestly don't even remember eating this.
Noodle soup- Noodles, squid, chicken, shrimp, cauliflower, corn, tomatoes, greens, chillis, cinnamon, cloves, aniseed, cardamom, mystery white balls... pretty good but a little tricky to eat since there was so much that actually wasn't edible. After getting some tea and eating enough to at least quell our hunger a little bit, we headed back to the jetty.
Dan stayed with our bags, and took a little nap, and I sat politely in front of where the handed out boarding passes. After waiting for awhile someone took pity on me and gave me a boarding pass for the 10am ferry. We were quickly herded onto the boat and slept the entire way until the boat slowed down as it headed into the first jetty on Tioman Island!
The boat dropped us off on ABC (Air Batang beach). I'm not exactly clear on what we did next, but I know we ended up finding a great place on the beach and I think we may have even gone swimming. We got food, and properly went to sleep after being awake for over 36 hours.
We spent the next week mostly on ABC. The decisions we had to make each day were: where do we eat? Should we swim, snorkel, sunbathe, lie in a hammock, or go for a walk? what should I eat? That was basically life on Tioman. We went snorkeling a few times. Part of the reason we decided to stay on ABC was that right off the beach there was nice snorkeling. We would just walk into the water, stick our faces in, and see pink and yellow coral, rainbow fish, jelly fish (with fish living under them), clown fish and anemones, sting rays, and many other kinds of fish! We pretty much spent every night eating at a sea-side restaurant that wasn't too expensive and watched the sunset. Most nights there was a lightning storm going on on the other side of the island and we could see glimpses of it when the lightning lit up the sky behind the high ridge of the island. Also nearly every night we were treated to an Eid fireworks display put on by the children who lived on the island.
Dan stayed with our bags, and took a little nap, and I sat politely in front of where the handed out boarding passes. After waiting for awhile someone took pity on me and gave me a boarding pass for the 10am ferry. We were quickly herded onto the boat and slept the entire way until the boat slowed down as it headed into the first jetty on Tioman Island!
The boat dropped us off on ABC (Air Batang beach). I'm not exactly clear on what we did next, but I know we ended up finding a great place on the beach and I think we may have even gone swimming. We got food, and properly went to sleep after being awake for over 36 hours.
We spent the next week mostly on ABC. The decisions we had to make each day were: where do we eat? Should we swim, snorkel, sunbathe, lie in a hammock, or go for a walk? what should I eat? That was basically life on Tioman. We went snorkeling a few times. Part of the reason we decided to stay on ABC was that right off the beach there was nice snorkeling. We would just walk into the water, stick our faces in, and see pink and yellow coral, rainbow fish, jelly fish (with fish living under them), clown fish and anemones, sting rays, and many other kinds of fish! We pretty much spent every night eating at a sea-side restaurant that wasn't too expensive and watched the sunset. Most nights there was a lightning storm going on on the other side of the island and we could see glimpses of it when the lightning lit up the sky behind the high ridge of the island. Also nearly every night we were treated to an Eid fireworks display put on by the children who lived on the island.
Island cats. We were always in danger of being followed by these guys. They were professional beggars. One night at dinner I was sitting too far forward in my chair and a cat jumped up behind me. I was startled, but was even more startled when two seconds later a second cat jumped up. The next night I was sure to sit all the way back in my chair, but then the cats just jumped onto my lap.
So the highlight for the entire week on the island was probably the day that Dan and I decided to go on a trek through the jungle. The island has a ridge going through the middle, so the hike was mostly uphill. We prepared with plenty of DEET lots of water, and our cameras (I regret to inform you all, however, that I shot almost exclusively in film that day, so the photos won't be available until I get myself out into Chittagong and find a place to develop film for me).
Before we could set out into the jungle we had to walk through Tikkek, the beach/city that was just south of our beach. It was basically one of the most brutal walks of my life. We had sunblock on (and with us) but it was a long walk along a wide concrete road without any shade. We definitely should have headed out earlier to avoid having to make the walk to the jungle trail head in such heat. But, I can honestly say it was worth it when we got into jungle. The path was a a narrow boulder path with some stone steps put in place during the steeper parts. It followed the power lines across the island, but the jungle around us was still really dense. There were times I couldn't see more than about 10 feet to the right or left of me. We were basically just surrounded by forty foot high ferns and huge trees, bugs, bats, birds, monkeys, and giant squirrels (which we were luckily quiet enough to see!) The entire walk was pretty tiring and I haven't been that sweaty in a long time, but it was also completely awesome. We hiked up to a waterfall and then decided we should head back because we didn't want to get caught at night in the jungle when the snakes and bugs really started coming out.
So after 5 nights on the island we headed back to Kuala Lumpur for one night (where we stayed in a really nice hotel), and then back to Chittagong.
Before we could set out into the jungle we had to walk through Tikkek, the beach/city that was just south of our beach. It was basically one of the most brutal walks of my life. We had sunblock on (and with us) but it was a long walk along a wide concrete road without any shade. We definitely should have headed out earlier to avoid having to make the walk to the jungle trail head in such heat. But, I can honestly say it was worth it when we got into jungle. The path was a a narrow boulder path with some stone steps put in place during the steeper parts. It followed the power lines across the island, but the jungle around us was still really dense. There were times I couldn't see more than about 10 feet to the right or left of me. We were basically just surrounded by forty foot high ferns and huge trees, bugs, bats, birds, monkeys, and giant squirrels (which we were luckily quiet enough to see!) The entire walk was pretty tiring and I haven't been that sweaty in a long time, but it was also completely awesome. We hiked up to a waterfall and then decided we should head back because we didn't want to get caught at night in the jungle when the snakes and bugs really started coming out.
So after 5 nights on the island we headed back to Kuala Lumpur for one night (where we stayed in a really nice hotel), and then back to Chittagong.
Back to Chinese noodle soup with sweet pork! Okay, not too creative of us, but delicious nonetheless.
2 comments:
looks like an amazing & relaxing trip! can't wait for the jungle photos. also, i would love to know what you thought our mutual acquaintances would do in the event of bedbugs....
p.s. i also love how that sign implies that the rest of asia isn't truly asia
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