Tuesday 26 May 2015

Revisiting Dempsey

Eric had been wondering for awhile why he was often hitting his right elbow on the wooden edge of the bed but it wasn't until Wednesday that he discovered the base had actually started to come away from the frame on his side, the mattress sagging deeply below his hips. With a phone call to the agent she was thankfully on the case and on her way to Ikea in no time, appreciating that we needed a replacement quickly. The owners were not quite so concerned and were trying to suggest we should go for the good discount deal they found which could be delivered in 10 days. While we were at work that afternoon they eventually did agree to an option our agent sent them details of (via an app on her mobile out at Ikea - thank goodness for modern technology) and the bed arrived the next morning and was assembled on the spot for us. Eric is sleeping better, not only because his side is no longer sagging but also because this frame is the standard western size, not the 10 cm shorter that locals usually have and we have endured to this point.

In fact on Friday I couldn't get him out of it, so just Heather and I walked from Yishun to Sembawang Park via park connectors and then along Canada Rd back to Sembawang MRT to confirm a new trail for the Monday walking group. We took binoculars but didn't see any new sightings. Just the same we were happy to have them with us as we spotted storks circling way overhead and tiny flowerpeckers. It was distressing to watch an oriole, a bird I have to this point admired for its beautiful plumage, ransacking the nest of another much smaller bird. The nesting pair were exhausting themselves trying to get it to move on but it was intent on its mission. The pair were moving so fast I couldn't identify them. Apparently the orioles do this just for the fun of it. Vandals!


Unlike the last time we walked in this area, this time we navigated through a network of minor roads, mostly named after the Commonwealth countries and former British colonies, such as Canada, Kenya, Pakistan and Sudan. Some, like Auckland, Durban, Lagos and Wellington, were named after their cities. The rest had their names taken after the overseas territories of Britain for example Bermudas, Falkland and Gibraltar. We wandered along Canada Road, which is lined with the classic colonial black and white houses of the former British Naval Base and still, to this day, houses the American, Australian, New Zealand and other allied forces families who are stationed here. This has now turned out to be a good option for a walk for next term. Below you can see the beautiful leafy gardens and the stunning black and white colonial buildings of the area. Like the last time we visited the park a group were playing petanque and we admired the beautiful Baileau House nearby.

On Sunday night we finished up the week at Bliss in Ang Mo Kio. Last time we went there, a mix-up with meals meant I ended up not being served so I was pleased that they were better organised this time and everyone enjoyed it.

Our Monday walkers met at Bishan and we walked from there to Stadium mostly via park connectors. It was a very hot morning and when we got there we found the stadium abuzz with preparations for the SEA Games which take place here in just 10 days. There has been a daily countdown and they are trying hard to generate interest in the community, urging everyone to wear red in support. I just get the general feeling that sport is not highly valued here in this money-driven community and unless you are in it, it's not that interesting. Just last week the stadium unveiled part of its brand new pitch. They have had trouble with the surface since the beginning but now have an Australia-based company HG Sports Turf supplying Eclipse Stabilised Turf - a combination of natural grass with artificial grass which should guarantee stability and an even playing surface. It works at the MCG and Gabba so hopefully here too, but they are cutting the timeline fine to be ready for next week. To maximise the chances they have put in more growth lights and additional fans for air movement, improved the irrigation system and installed moisture and temperature probes to manage the climate in the stadium. No expense spared. But seriously, if you are a finely tuned athlete like any of this mob, what would the surface matter. 


One of Eric's colleagues at Punggol shared a website he had found recently, describing escapades of an adventurous pair of young local lads who were looking for the abandoned Istana Woodneuk building. Home to Sultana Khadija, the fourth wife of Sultan Abu Bakar of Johor,  in its glory days the mansion was considered one of the most beautiful private houses in Singapore. With its blue tiled roof and its location on top of a hill, the mansion apparently commanded a dominant position on the landscape.

Sultana Khadjah died in this grand house in 1904. Before she died, she sold the property to Sultan Abu Bakar’s son Sultan Ibrahim Iskandar (1873-1959), who rebuilt the house in 1930 for his third wife Scotland-born Sultana Helen Ibrahim (1889-1978).  After the war ended the house reportedly hosted a number of colonial tenants. In 1945 it housed General Sir Miles Dempsey for instance and then-Commander-in-Chief, Sir Montagu Stopford. Former Governor-General Malcolm MacDonald lived there from 1946-1948. It was maintained well past the 1950s. Then the Malaysian royal family decided to abandon it at some point. 

The lads found locating the house challenging but once we had read the post and seen the pictures of its imposing entrance, the ornate metalwork and carvings, the large tiled awnings and regal balcony balustrades all being engulfed by tropical growth, we were keen to investigate for ourselves. Here's what they found.


Holland Road forms one boundary of the property and so we walked through the Botanic Gardens to meet Peter at the Tanglin Gate on Holland Rd. Using the pictures on the website as a guide, we did manage to locate the overgrown path leading up from the road. It is unmarked on any map, probably because the land  is still owned by the descendants of the Sultan. Unfortunately we were confronted with 'Do Not Enter - Area Under Surveillance' signs and being good citizens we abandoned our search. 



Instead we crossed the road and wandered through Dempsey Hill. The area was named after General Sir Miles Christopher Dempsey (1896–1969), the same name as above. During 1945, Dempsey was the Commander-in-Chief of the Allied Land Forces South East Asia (ALFSEA) and the General Officer Commanding the Malaya Command, which were both headquartered in Singapore. The grounds used to be part of a huge nutmeg plantation in the 1850s but a nutmeg-beetle blight eventually caused the estate to cease operations in 1857. It was sold to the British Forces in May 1860. Before the purchase, garrisons in Singapore were mostly located at Fort Canning and areas around the city centre.  The first barracks were built at the area where Dempsey Hill and the Loewen cluster are now. There were ten service barracks for 50 men each. In addition, there were wash and cookhouses, hospital wards, a school, reading room, library and officers’ quarters. Tanglin Camp, as it became known, was vacated in 1989 and handed over to the Land Office, which leased the barracks out to the private sector. The nineties saw the area gradually   transformed into a collection of restaurants, bars, art galleries and spas. We have visited this location a number of times but mostly at night. 

Tucked around the corner, we stumbled into the Museum of Contemporary Arts (MoCA), drawn in by the intriguing and comical statues in the grounds. The museum's outdoor exhibition, titled 'Going Forward, Going For Money', features sculptures created by the husband-and-wife team of artists Wu Shaoxiang and Jiang Shuo. The China-born, Austria-based artists fled China days after the Tiananmen Square incident in 1989 and their works are a reflection of growing materialism and consumerism in China. Jiang Shuo’s funny Red Guard sculptures are full of expression despite the lack of facial features. 


The almost faceless guards with their wide-open mouths represent the turmoil in China when the spouting of slogans and mindless indoctrination was the path to survival. As Jiang's work progressed her Red Guard figures began posing alongside material items that replaced The Little Red Book. You find them singing karaoke, drinking Coca Cola etc – all reflective of the luxury lifestyles of recent rich businessmen. Her husband Wu Shaoxiang is famous for his Coining series, where his forms are made out of bronze-cast US dollar notes, you can see them in the big apple above.

The interior of the gutted colonial building featured artist of the month, Zhang Lin Hai, whose works reflect his difficult childhood and youth, plagued by hunger, pain and suffering, in the wilderness of rural China. They were rather disturbing.


Then we walked by The White Rabbit and took a curious peek inside. It is a restaurant set in a long abandoned Garrison Chapel designed around the theme of Alice in Wonderland. The lighting inside was soft coming through the stained glass windows'


Known as St. George’s Garrison Church in the early years, and designed in the classical Basilica style of the Romanesque tradition, this building has continued as a place of worship to this day. On 25 October 1971, after the British forces had withdrawn from Singapore, the church became a civilian church and was incorporated into the Anglican Diocese of Singapore.



We walked back through the Botanic Gardens, stopping for lunch in the grounds, and caught the MRT home. In the afternoon I enjoyed a deep massage to my neck and shoulders which involved the therapist walking on me, that's a first. 

Thursday 21 May 2015

The MAE Great Race

On Friday we walked from home to Punggol Park along the park connectors with Peter and Heather. It was a very pleasant stroll but we got home just as the heavens opened. I had a quick shower and went out to lunch then, with Bev at Singapura Plaza atin Dhoby Ghaut. Of course that included a trip to Spotlight, the only shop of its kind in the country. 

After work on Saturday we caught a taxi to Lau Pa Sat to meet up with friends to celebtrate Jo's birthday. After dinner, where we all wore silly hats in honour of her passion for dressing-up, we moved on to 1-Altitude, the world's highest al fresco bar, also in Raffles Place. 1-Altitude Gallery & Bar is on the 63rd floor and boasts a spectacular 360-degree view of Singapore. 



The final week of Parent Teacher Interviews finished on Sunday and we made it through the week despite a number of other staff coming down with the flu and having to have time off. We had a quick dinner at Saturday House and caught the bus home even though it is only 2 stops from home, that's how tired we were. 

We have been looking forward to this year's Great Race for a few weeks, pumping Heather and June (who were on the committee organizing it) for clues, and adding finer details to our outfits. At last the day arrived on Tuesday. Again the skies opened and it absolutely bucketed down at about midday, but by the time we met up at Dhoby Ghaut Green it was just fizzling out to a drizzle. The funny thing was, hardly anyone took any notice of the pair of us on the train going in, wearing our team attire. I think that must have been because so many people in Asia wear His and Hers 'Couples Gear'. I felt much more comfortable when we met up with Melisa, then we were a team. Our team was missing two members, both home in bed with the flu. Perhaps that made it easier to make decisions. They swear they wore their shirts and hats all day in support. The t-shirts we had printed with the crossword puzzle, especially for the occasion, were appreciated by the others although we didn't win the best dressed award. Well, you cant win everything! And some of the other teams went to a lot of trouble.

We entered with no intention of winning but once we got started we just kept going. Melisa, our team captain, excelled at the task and used Google to get any answers we were struggling with, as we walked on. I'm impressed at how well this younger generation can multi-task. If I walk and look at my phone I'm bound to fall over, walk straight into something or into the path of an oncoming vehicle. The legs took us to Marina Bay Sands and out through Gardens by the Bay, back to Dhoby Ghaut we went up and over Fort Canning to Clarke Quay, from City Hall through Raffles Hotel and Chijmes, then Esplanade to Bras Basah where we finished at Wine Bos. The one leg we didn't do was the statues of Raffles Place, we just ran out of time. On each leg we discovered something we hadn't seen before which is what it's all about. 

The walking group started out a bit later on the Tuesday since Monday was such a big day. Eric led the walk from Aljuneid to Geylang and Joo Chiat. Everyone enjoyed the cultural diversity that wandering these streets explores. In Geylang, Singapore’s red light district, you find churches, temples and mosques side by side with its streetwalkers, brothels, Karaoke lounges and by-the-hour hotels. 
Right next door to Geylang is the Joo Chiat/Katong region, which traditionally has been the preserve of the Peranakans, middle class locals and the wealthy merchant class. The olden day opulence and charm of the place remains intact with traditionally Peranakan houses and shops. 
There's the homes.....

The places of worship......

The quirky ideas .....
In the evening Eric went to watch the latest Mad Max movie at Bishan while I stayed home. I did venture down to the shops below the HDB in search of a foot reflexology session but they were busy. After that full weekend it was back to work for a rest. 



Tuesday 12 May 2015

Legoland of Singapore

On Thursday morning I traveled over to Bukit Punjang to spend some time with Jo at her place sorting out some of her IT difficulties. It felt so much like what I used to do with the teachers in remote schools of the Top End a few years ago. So much has changed yet so much stays the same. We have lent Jo our little travel laptop while she sorts out what she will buy next. Today she told me it is teaching her patience, waiting for everything to boot up and open, I did warn her it is slow but at least she is able to use her photos and we could rescue all her older files from the other device. Then we enjoyed a lovely lunch before I headed home and went off to work. Felt like I'd been working all day....that's a novel experience for a Thursday of late!

On Friday we caught the train to Sengkang and the LRT to Farmway in the Punggol area. We walked from there to Riviera on the Punggol LRT loop. Here is a selection of the many birds we saw that Eric was able to photograph. Top left Pied Fantail, below left Blue-throated Bee-Eater, centre the lesser flameback (woodpecker), top right Common Iora and below right Brown Shrike.

It wasn't a quick walk as we were thrilled to see 24 different species in all, along the Punggol riverside walk. As well as those above we saw Little Tern, Grey Heron, White breasted waterhen. spotted dove, peaceful dove, parrot (unidentified), white throated kingfisher, collared kingfishercoppersmith barbetyellow vented bulbul, sooty-headed bulbul, black naped oriole, house crow, ashy tailorbird, white vented myna, olive backed sunbird, oriental white-eye, euasian treesparrow and baya weaver.
That's as many as we might see on a walk in the bush near the Darwin hospital so a good result here, in this much more built-up environment. 
There was other wildlife to be found too. 

Speaking of built environment, travelling around out there is like entering Legoland. The housing is block shaped (perhaps the colours are a little more subtle), the waterways are fake canals lined with instant transplanted trees, even our mode of transport - a dinky little light rail, feels like it belongs in a child's toyroom. 





Saturday went by in a blur, it is Parent Teacher Meetings week so very busy and lots of talk. On Sunday we turned up to work to discover some staff had been very thoughtful and made the mothers feel special for Mother's Day.After work Eric went home early, full of another cold so I met just Heather and June for an end-of-week debrief at Joe's. June heads off to Kuching in Sarawak in the morning for a weekend away. Peter usually joins us but he is in China. 












Our Monday walk was at Chinese Gardens in Jurong. We were missing a few but those that did make it enjoyed a lovely walk around the tranquil gardens. They are still working on refurbishing all the structures like the main entrance gates and pagoda. The pagoda has now been closed since the middle of November when we were trying to find steps to climb for the EBC trek. It is due to open for the 8th Aug National Day celebrations.


The thrill of the morning was seeing a parent Coppersmith Barbet feeding its baby and a Stork-billed Kingfisher roosting in a tree, both at very close range so I could capture them with my little camera. Do you see the tiny baby's head sticking out of the small hollow under the tree branch below right? 


Monday was also our 36th Anniversary so a real shame Eric was not feeling well. We had planned an evening out with friends but instead I went out on my own to join a few of the girls in Telok Ayer. Well no sense both of us being miserable! He stayed home and watched old episodes of The Big Bang Theory.


We spent Tuesday together instead, walking from Aljunied MRT through Geylang to Joo Chiat, scouting out a walk planned for next Tuesday, after the Great Race on Monday. This will be more of a cultural walk, such a colourful area with well loved shop houses, girls on street corners plying their wares and peranakan specialty stores. The streets of Geylang have a distinctly Buddhist flavour with many vegetarian eateries, temples and even a monastery. Then you enter Joo Chiat and the clothing stores are quite obviously Muslim.

You find something different and interesting each time you walk. Like these 3 giant glazed clay soup pots from China, also known as Man Standing Pots in Cantonese. Not sure any of our men could stand in one but they could certainly hold a crouching child.  When in use, the herbal soup was kept hot inside these clay pots.




At the Foo Hai Ch'an Monastery we found a beautiful image of the Goddess of Mercy and compassion, also known as Kuan Yin and in this case representing the one thousand armed Kuan Yin. 





In the afternoon we both enjoyed watching The Water Diviner. While many of the critics might have canned, it we felt Russel played the bereaved father very well and knowing a little about the conflict, having been to Gallipoli and Istanbul too, we understood some of the underlying story lines. Yes, there were some cringe cliche moments but you get that in most commercial films don't you? Good to see Chris Webb, brother of our dear friend Barb, listed as assistant director.  

Tuesday 5 May 2015

May Day

Now that it is May already the Great Race is fast approaching. Our team is called "Keep Calm until 50" and red. I had an inspired moment and decided to print t-shirts but that turned out disastrously (lucky I had a practice run on the inside of the back of mine). After some googling and hurried emails I spent Thursday morning at Queenstown where I had them digitally printed. Much cheaper than the old screen printing method and very fast. This is the front. Those of you who have visited should be able to do it.


The solution is on the back of the shirt. Everyone on the team is very happy with the print result and I have learnt what I did wrong. Don't try to print with a transparent background. So now I have plenty of iron-on tshirt transfer paper for my next inspiration......

I got to Bishan just in time to have a quick lunch with Eric before the scheduled pd session and then went straight to work so I was pretty weary by the time I got home after leaving at 9:30am. 

Friday was May Day so I could have recovered with a sleep-in but instead chose to walk with Eric and Heather around Sungai Buloh. At Kranji we were surprised by the huge snaking queue of people waiting patiently for the causeway bus to take them to Johor Bahru to spend the public holiday. There were also plenty of visitors at the wetlands park close to the Visitor Centre but as we walked further and further away the numbers dwindled. It was staggering to see the number of huge lenses the keen photographers were sporting, it is one of those occasions when you realise just how many wealthy people there are here. For us, the best sighting was of the copper-throated sunbird, considered rare here. Sungei Buloh is said to be one of the few places where there is good chance of seeing this bird and it was the first time for us. They eat insects but are best known for sipping on nectar. We were so close that we were able to observe one of them flicking their tongue in and out. Like other Sunbirds, the male is more colourful than the female.


We were away for about 5n hrs altogether and in the afternoon Skyped with both Adrian and later Luke. Adrian is finding the mornings cool (that day it had been 2 deg C when he got up). He'd spent the week out at Yuendamu again so was happy with his pay cheque. He is starting to have a bit of a social life with others from work and quite happy being the master of his house now that he has his own digs. Luke and Tahlia enjoyed their recent trip to Vic where they stayed with her family first at Philip Is and then near Leongatha. 

In the evening we were joined by Peter and Heather and walked out our back gate to a new bar called the Saturday House Bar and Grill on Paya Lebar Rd. The area is pretty industrial at the moment but a huge new condo and a new shopping centre are nearing completion close by so it will be a good location quite soon. The menu was well priced for both food and drinks and I'm tempted to go back and try the offerings for brunch. 



The weekend was long and difficult, particularly for Punggol who had to manage with 2 staff away on sick leave. We had early nights and it was probably a good thing the Monday walk was from Labrador Park to VivoCity, a relatively short one. We didn't take binoculars and what a pity because we saw our first purple-throated sunbird on the boardwalk through the mangroves at Labrador. This is the breeding season for sunbirds which might explain why we are seeing them so regularly at the moment. This one is a google image, borrowed because we were unable to photograph the flitting little critters.

In the afternoon we had another Skype session, this time with Sandy in Darwin. She is having to cope long distance with her family as they try to support a sister bedridden in a Sydney hospital. It is a very challenging situation for her and we send her our love and support from afar.  

Speaking of sending love and support, we are still hearing of the climbing death toll from the Nepal earthquake. What we still don't know is any news directly from Gudel itself, so we can only hope that that is a good sign. 

Monday night I had a date with William (McInnes that is) since we have discovered his 'Hello Birdie' program, the 'Boofhead's Guide To Birdwatching' is on AustraliaPlus TV. I enjoy his silly antics as much as just seeing the different Australian landscapes. Eric cooked up a lovely lamb casserole and we shared a bottle of wine he won in a recent work raffle. Unfortunately he woke up Tuesday feeling unwell with Gastric Flu again so we don't know what to blame, the food or the wine, but I'm fine. Maybe it was his lunch at VivoCity.

Tuesday was low key since he was unwell and I got the sewing machine out again. Mending is now done and a remake is underway. Parent Teacher interviews will keep us busy over the next 2 weeks.