Shopping, Wine & Baseball

Started the day of quite early and we we’re at the local, big, shopping center before the shops even opened.  Sat and had some quick breakfast whilst Rebecca enjoyed watching a fountain fill up then empty again in a repeating cycle.  We spent a couple of hours looking around the shops and far too long finding out that you can’t get a SIM card for our wireless gadget out here. We picked up a quick lunch to have back at the hotel and then returned to do so.

Next on the list was to do some wine tasting, this want the success it could of been as two of the three places were shut and one additional place turned out just to be a warehouse; still, we had some wine and chatted with the staff of the place we did go to and then returned to the hotel and I took Rebecca swimming which she loved, particularly as it was on the 32nd floor!

 
A few snacks from street vendors was the only option for dinner and then onto the big event of the day, to watch our first baseball game. We shortly realised that we know nothing about baseball, however it wad great fun and even though William was a bit of a nightmare Li just dealt with him so Rebecca and I could try to watch the game. Rebecca got a team to from the shop but panicked about putting it on as she thought that it meant she’d have to go and play! What goes through their minds no-one can know but this want a joke to her at all. Poor little thing got so upset

  
 We never know who won as we left before the crowds did but Toronto Blue Jays were looking good right to the end and we really enjoyed the whole experience. Happy days and tired kids!

Toronto Zoo

Having crashed out for a good night sleep, William had other plans of waking up at 4am for some milk and decided to throw it all up. Having finally cleaned up and woken up Rebecca in the process. We all finally managed to get back to sleep.

We were up and out the hotel by 10am and headed off to Toronto zoo. It was an enormous place and it was rather hilly in some places. 

Rebecca got to see her favourite animal the Hippos (large & pygnamy ones). Tony got to see the Polar bears and my favourite was of course the giant panda bears.

   
    
    
 We saw a lot of animals including the Canadian Moose (elk), grizzly bears, giraffes, meerkats, cougar, tigers, otters, hyena, Lynx, cloud leopard, tamarins, spider monkeys and a lot more.

  
The highlight was seeing the polar bears swim and being fed. 

Having spent nearly 8 hours at the zoo, we headed back to our hotel and found it was taped off the surrounding area. It turns out the tall spike on top of our hotel (Trump Tower) was the cause of it. No ideal and it took us a while to get back and driving the wrong way down a one way street was the only option

We finished our evening off by having a late dinner at a nice micro brewery restaurant which did a great white sangria.

  

Arriving in Toronto

Our day started pretty early and, due to Duncan’s wedding the night before, not only in a campsite on the south coast but also a head that didn’t want to be up at 6am.  We made the airport in good time and grabbed some food in one of the restaurants to sort things out which seemed to work a little.  Flight wasn’t too bad, Rebecca was great as she normally is but William was a bit of a pain although no where near add bad as other babies on the flight. He was good enough, and bad enough, that the flight attendants wandered off with him for a while at one point and Li immediately went to sleep!

Arriving in Toronto and all the bags were easily collected then we were given an upgrade to our car, so now have a big Jeep for the holiday. Really nice to be honest and loads of room. Satnav on and we’re shortly arriving at our very fancy hotel, Trump Tower, in central Toronto. Got to admit, it towas lovely  be greeted so nicely and with valet parking, although the £25 per day parking isn’t so pleasing!

Into the amazing room and then we kept getting disturbed with free stuff, first water then chocolates followed by Ice for the bar then a bowl of fruit! Headed out for some dinner and had a great burger and pulled pork not far from the hotel; crashed for the night as soon as we could on our return

Big Buddha

Our last day!   Starting at 5:30am (really nasty) and after quickly loading the car we drove to KLIA.  Helpfully, we didn’t have any details for where to leave the car, and even once we spoke to the agents we still didn’t really have a clue, so I dropped the luggage of with Li and went on a bit of an adventure by myself!

Flight to HK wasn’t too bad, although I really wouldn’t want to do any more than the 4 hours using AirAsia, there leg room is just really poor and you can’t get any sleep at all.  That being said we arrived safe and then had a good mince around the airport changing clothes, etc.  After dumping all our stuff with Left Luggage, we headed out on a cunning bus I found to the cable car station to head to the big budda.

We choose to upgrade to a glass bottom cable car on the trip up, but, didn’t realise just how bad the weather was up the mountain.   The wind on the way up was strong enough that I’m surprised they hadn’t stopped the cable car running completely (they would have done so in a ski resort) and then we entered a very large and quite boring big cloud, so had almost zero visibility.  In general though, the cable car was still quite good and Rebecca loved the glass floor; Li, not so much!

At the top we grabbed some very expensive, quite poor quality food, and had a quick wander around.  Then headed up to the big Buddha, which, given it was in a large cloud you couldn’t actually see until until about 15 feet away.   Li didn’t bother making the climb up the steps, but Rebecca and I did, and she was really good doing it as well.

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A few photos at the top were taken, back down from the Buddha, but given the cloud and the wind it wasn’t very pleasant; however, Rebecca has a new “thumbs up” pose that seems to want to do everywhere and took full advantage of this at the top!

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Back down the cable car; we took the same cunning bus back to the airport and, for I think the first time ever, had enough time to get a decent dinner.  So, a very nice Pizza Express was the order of the day, in fact, shockingly good, much better than the UK.

On to the plane, few bottles of red and I managed to get some of the good Upper Class whisky, and we’re on the way back.

Landed 30 mins early, meaning that there were no staff to get our buggy, but once collected, along with the rest of the luggage, we jumped in our waiting car and headed home.

Long grass, big pile of letters, the place looks a mess…but has a decent shower and looking forward to a nice bed & plenty of home cooked food now.

Orangutans and Caves

Our very boring proposed drive back to KL is looking more interesting now that I’ve been told of an orangutan sanctuary along the way, so we get on the road around 10am and drive for the 90 minutes to get to the resort that has the sanctuary in it.

The sanctuary itself is actually an island in the middle of a very large lake. After getting our boat tickets, we’re off for the 15 minute journey to arrive on the shore of the island. It’s very hot, around 35 degrees again and humid once more, we’re all beginning to become a little tired of both now after 12 or so days!

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The sanctuary houses 24 orangutans and the key interesting element is that we are in the cages, not the orangutans. We see a couple of big adults and then around 7 that are only a few years old and playing around. The rangers show their skills off by passing sticks and putting their food up high to get with the sticks. In general all good, but would have liked to have seen more of the bigger ones as well.

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An hour later we’re back on the road after what can only be described as the worst meal we’ve had since being away; what is it with chefs adding MSG to everything!

Three more hours driving and we reach one of the things we missed from our first visit to KL, the Batu Caves.

Just outside, north, of the main KL area, the caves are a Hindu monastery with a massive statue at the bottom of a very long set of steep steps. Once climbed we entered the caves themselves and they are enormous!. We entered the first cave which is like an aircraft hanger and then up some more steps to the highest of the caves which, it turns out, has a large hole in the roof. I’m not sure what you’d call this as it’s more just a very large hole in the ground rather than a cave, formed by water by the looks of it, but whatever, it’s huge!

Back down the steps and the last 30 mins drive back into KL went nice and quick, and Li had sorted out a good location right in the center of KL for our last night, saying that though, it was already around 8pm so not much of the evening left really. The serviced apartment that we have isn’t bad and is cheap, but glad that we didn’t have this type of accommodation for the entire trip as it’s just a little bit basic.

Out for the evening with one goal in mind, to do the final missing item in KL, get a photo of the Petronas towers from the sky bar at the top of the traders hotel, the best view in KL.  So with this in mind, we obviously mince around the shopping malls first, then go and have dinner, a very under welming dinner at that. Still the view was nice in the main KL City Park as they have coloured fountains all moving and dancing to classical music, very clever and effective.

Onwards to the bar to get my photos and, not surprisingly they don’t let children in the late, so I just grab a couple of quick shots and we head off to the apartment once more.

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Bed by 1am, with the alarm set for 5:30 to have time to get to the airport tomorrow morning.

 

Relaxing by the pool

Our intention today is to do nothing really as we’re getting close to the end of our holiday so want to relax a bit

Li located some fruit for breakfast and we headed to the pool for the hotel. Rebecca joined in the kids club they have and made, or rather decorated a mug and coloured in a keyring. She also made friends with another little girl and they played in the pool together a lot

  

We couldn’t be bothered to leave for lunch so had it around the pool area and were very pleasantly surprised at the quality and the quantity you got.  More playing around the pool, a few cocktails, and the back to kids club whilst Li and I feel asleep in the sun with William, in the shade of course!

  

Seeing that lunch was so good we decided to have dinner in the hotel as well which was excellent. Great select of Indian food and amazing quality.  I collected my suits from the tailor, all good there, and the day is done.

  

Tomorrow we have a long drive back to KL but have been told about an orangutan island that is on the way back that we can make a stop off for, so up early is the plan!

Georgetown

Out late afternoon and made our way tour Georgetown which is about 30 minutes drive away. On the outskirts we stopped on a busy road with a lot of restaurants and ventured into one that markets itself as a live fish market.

We had mussels, clams and mantis prawns. All of which were cooked very nicely, although the clams in black bean were without a doubt the best

 

Rebecca seemed quite happy with the fact she’s watching the poor little prawns being drawn dragged out of the tanks kicking and screaming just so she could eat them. The main thing is that from our point of view you know it’s fresh and to be honest you only kill what you eat so there’s no wastage either which is pretty good

After lunch, which ended up surprisingly cheap given the experience, we continued the drive into Georgetown, and came against the first big issue, no parking, anywhere. Or rather, loads of parking spaces but they were all full and queues everywhere. People just double park, blocking everyone in all over the place, basically a nightmare!

Anyway found somewhere after about 45 minutes and started to wander. The issue we found when doing the research for Georgetown is that although everyone tells you it’s great and loads of food, we couldn’t seem to establish where exactly it all is. So we walk and walk and to be honest it’s all a bit boring. We ended up looking at a big tropical fish place and walk for miles but don’t really see much. Georgetown is a world heritage site but after being there it’s because it really hasn’t changed in 150 years with the one key exception, in that it’s all had 150 years of weather attacking it, so is really run down

  

One of the best things there is the street art which is in a few different places, one of which seems to be quite famous

  

After a few hours of walking, a few coffee stops and a bit of street food it’s getting dark but the place is starting to come alive with street traders selling all different types of food. But, it’s not as good as Hong Kong or KL to be honest. We give up but are very tired as we have walked miles so Rebecca and I grab a rickshaw back to the car and head home. 

  

Georgetown, in general is worth a look, but a few hours there first thing in the morning, which we missed with all the markets may be good or failing that leave it to the evening, the daytime is dead.

Good news is that the camera which learnt to swim is now working again, and bizarrely the lens and the controls are all working better than before, maybe a good wash is helpful every now and again!

Penang – Batu Ferrangii

So much for a lie in, both kids awake by 9am! Had a lovely view from our window though.

 

We still managed to mince a lot and finally left the room after 11.30 to go hunting for breakfast/lunch. We found that being in a tourist spot, a lot of places were quite expensive compared to what we were used to paying in our last place.

Tony dropped off some laundry nearby at a tailors. After breakfast/lunch we went back to the tailors so Tony could check out some material for suits and he decided to order one.

We decided to lounge around by the hotel pool side which was inconveniently located on the other side of the road. 

   

We spent most of the day relaxing by the pool until it started to thunder and go dark.

We had some rain and lightening before we finally decided it was dry to head out for some food.

The tailor recommended a good restaurant called the Living room and it was backed up by a couple of Aussies who just finished eating from there.

The food was good and Tony got his curry. We ordered Beef Rendang, Chicken Penang, salt & pepper squid. Rebecca had grilled king prawns with Chips and a huge milkshake you can imagine. 

  

We took a stroll through the markets and picked up a lovely dress for moi and some funky socks for Rebecca. Nearly midnight before we got back to our room. Very tired kids.

Cameron Highlands and Penang drive

A really early start to the day (6am) to finish up packing and grab some breakfast before setting off on a long journey to Penang via the Cameron Highlands.

 

   

After a bit of mincing getting our luggage across the river, Tony set off to collect the car. It turns out the car has a dodgy battery and was flat. He hunted around for help to get the car kick started and it seems like a common practice as low & behold there were 2 men already on the corner of the road jump starting another car. 

We finally get on the road just after 8.20am and made our way to the Cameron Highlands. The roads were surprisingly well maintained and not a bad road surface. You get get a few cows mincing in the roads as you drove by. 

The kids and I managed to catch up on 40 winks {about 2 hours!} while Tony drove but soon woke up as we climbed the large hills of Cameron Highlands. 

The view was lovely in Cameron Highlands and we even tried out the local tea grown in the area (however I think Tony preferred his PG Tips still though!)

  

Rebecca had a good go with the camera as well

  

Tony took Rebecca strawberry picking as strawberries are very famous there. We stopped off for a bit of lunch in the town before heading on to Penang.  There also seems to a lot of flies around in general which was really off putting.

Rebecca has been subjected to squat toilets throughout the journey and has decided she finds them quite difficult. She doesn’t seem to understand why there isn’t ‘normal’ toilets about.

As we left Cameron Highlands, Tony plotted a route to get us back on to the motorway. We ended up driving through a Chinese vegetable farm area on an oversized pavement and we were getting quite a lot of dodgy looks as I think only trucks generally come through to collect the goods. However after weaving through these greenhouses we finally managed to get back on to a decent bit of road.

However we were surprised how cheap the toll charges for the motorways compared to UK and other places we have been to. The QE bridge crossing back home cost more than what the trip from Cameron Highlands to the bridge for Penang.

Many hours later as we got closer to Penang , the weather turned quite dramatically. There was lots of lightening and rain as we approached the island. The suspension bridge was quite long to cross and we couldn’t see much as it was dark outside. The lightening at one point was very impressive when it struck, it was so bright & blinding. We now  also know why the drains in Malaysia are so deep as the downpour was immense for short periods of time.

After a long day of travelling, we checked in to our hotel around 10pm and everyone was exhausted especially Tony. Bless him, he did pop out to go hunting for food to bring back. He did get a very tasty Indian curry and with 3 dishes and rice plus some poppadoms & nann, the total was less than £9 (bargain!!)

Kids finally put to bed by midnight and we followed not long afters.

River rapids and night safari 

Usual routine this morning of breakfast and Wi-Fi. Today’s mission is to try and find some money somehow as we are really running low in this silly town that doesn’t have any cash machines. First stop trying to exchange some sterling at the hotel place we’re staying at, 13% commission! Which is still better than the two hour drive but I’m not entirely happy. So we decided to try and push on and go to see the tour bloke we used before on the off chance he takes credit card, fully expecting them not to, and they don’t. But, spotting a missed sale he points us in the direction of, to be honest what I’ve been hunting for the entire time, an enterprising local that will break the credit card rules and “sell” you some money.  Finally, at a bargain 10% commission, which given that they have to pay 2% themselves didn’t seem that bad, plus we only needed £40.

Admin done we book a rapids boat trip for the afternoon for all of us and just Rebecca and I for a night safari

A quick lunch in the room and we head off to the jetty for our boat trip to begin. It’s good but partly add we’ve already done one we new what to expect and the rapids weren’t great. We still got wet and Rebecca loved that part

  

My highlight was finding the nice water proof bag that we kept the camera in was doing a great job of keeping the camera immersed under 3 inches of water the whole time. Camera zero, river one…. And it’s still not looking promising at midnight, only tomorrow well tell.

  

Dinner was in one of the floating restaurants again, lovely good and again very good value at about £8 for all of us to be completely stuffed, then Rebecca and I picked up our 4×4 for the night safari.

Off into the palm tree plantations and even through Rebecca did fall asleep we still managed to see a lemur, a couple of small wild cats, although not sure what they were, plus a snake and a few birds as well. Not to bad really for a couple of hours riding on the back of the truck. Home via our normal boat and Li’s done a great job of packing ready for tomorrow’s nightmare drive