Posts Tagged ‘Kuala Lumpur’

KL to Siem Reap

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We all crawled out of bed at 3am to ensure we caught the 7am AirAsia flight to Siem Reap, Cambodia. All of us were suffering from too little sleep.

Tune HotelTune hotel was passable for a few hour layover. We paid about 50 cents for the room and about $5 for air-conditioning and another $2.50 for the comfort kit (e.g. towels). A deposit of twenty ringgit for each key and ten for each towel was required. The room was tiny, with just enough room to shuffle sideways around the bed and a small bathroom, with a standard shower cubicle. Tune advertise ‘5 star showers’ and the showerhead was good, if not exactly ‘5 star’. We ended up storing some of our luggage in the bathroom to create enough room to move about!

Caught the shuttle bus the 700m from the Tune hotel to the LCC terminal. There was no line to check-in for the flight but the AirAsia staff member obviously wasn’t a morning person either. Either that or she simply doesn’t enjoy her job. Still check-in was relatviely smooth and we had a couple of hours to waste before we had to board, which we spent mainly at Old Town White Coffee, a Starbucks-like chain with a Malaysian twist. We all swallowed down some strong, sweet, coffee and Ally and I enjoyed some Kaya toast.

Had a marathon walk to the plane, across the tarmac – it’s quite an experience as nothing at the LCCT seems to be hidden – you walk past baggage handlers throwing luggage onto the conveyer belts and around various planes. In many ways it seemed like a security nightmare to me.

Once we were on the plane we discovered that Jo and Greg had been seated together, but Ally and I were about 12 rows apart, despite quite a few empty seats! As we waited an age to take off I was lectured by William, a fellow who apparently worked in ‘security’ and had apparently been from his native Chennai, to Malaysia, China, Thailand and various other places I’ve forgotten, all in the last two weeks. William has a theory that the world is going to pot because of an eternal battle between Aryians and Dravidians which I had no little trouble following. A very comfortable conversation for a Westerner to be engaged in with a fellow from India. However, he seemed a nice fellow and apparently held no malice against me.

After takeoff William was immediately off to the toilet, so I took the opportunity to find Ally and we found seats near Jo and Greg. Flight was fairly uneventful; I thought the seats were perhaps more comfortable than Siem Reap Airportthe Melbourne to Kuala Lumpur flight. Arrived in Siem Reap an hour late to be met which one of the most singular visions I had seen in my life. In the customs hall there was a large, half-moon sized desk behind which which were seated about 7 or 8 guards. Our visa application was passed along this line on identically dressed guards – all men – you all had one particular function to perform. After recieving our visas we got through customs without too much trouble, collected our baggage, smiled to the customs officials and prepared for the inevitable chaos beyond the airport.

Stepped outside the doors and… nothing. OK, there some men with bits of paper waiting for Mr or Mrs Whoever but no touts, no beggars and all very orderly. Had a quick drink and considered for a moment how much money had been invested in the airport at Siem Reap which (although small) is as modern and attractive, and orderly, as any I have seen.

We arranged a taxi at the taxi counter and Mr Vanna was our driver to the hotel, the Sala Bai hotel school. First vision of Siem Reap was the parade of new, ostentatious hotels which line the road from the airport toour hotel. And, of course, the scooters. Despite Mr Vanna’s insistent questioning we didn’t want to book any tours for Angkor, only to get to our rooms and settle down.

Our room wasn’t ready so we sat to get a drink. I had a lime juice, Ally a coke and Jo and Greg had a bottle of Angkor beer. The bottles of beer turned out to be 750ml and the total bill about $6.00. Spnt a pleasant hour drinking and adjusting to (different) chaos of Cambodia.

Sala Bai BalconySala Bai, our hotel, is primarily a school. It takes in underprivilged (a family which earns less than $25 dollars a month) young Cambodians every year and trains them in the trade that makes this two tick – hospitality. It is primarily NGO funded. The young staff are amazing – always smiling and perhaps even more endearing in their occaisional mistakes and uncertainty. The restaurant looks equisite and we ordered lunch and some drinks – Ally had a coke, I had a freshly-squeezed lime juice and Jo and Greg each ordered a beer (which turned out to be a 750ml bottle!).

We had booked the suite and a normal room and we were shown two keys, so Ally and I blindly chose one. We chose the normal room, which is gorgeous and very comfortable and all of $15 a night. Jo and Greg, therefore, had to suffer with the suite – three gorgeous rooms, including a lounge room, bedroom and an enourmous bathroom. I’ve read it described as the best value room in Southeast Asia and I think it’s hard to disagree for $25 a night. And the proceeds help to support an exceedingly worthwhile cause.

TuktukAfter a rest we hired a couple of tuktuks, intending to have a wander around Siem Reap and then to see sunset over Angkor Wat from Phnom Bakeng. After having to turn around to retrive Ally’s hat the two tuktuks ended up at different markets! After a short mobile phone conversation between the drivers we were all successfully reunited at the Central Market. We had a short wander round and the expert sales-people, whose high-pressure sales techniques can rival those anywhere, we were parted with about $20 for a selection of tourist tat. We met up with the tuktuk drivers who explained that it was now too late to see the sunset from Phnom Bakeng and suggested the Tonle Sap instead. Slightly incredulous, we consented to this plan.

The ride to the Tonle Sap took about 10 minutes, but it seemed far longer. I’m not sure whether tuktuks really are prone to tipping over in the pot-holed roads of Siem Reap, it certainly may have been somewhat less than the likelyhood of coming together with another tuktuk, or worse one of the cars or buses speeding past. Swerving to avoid an oncoming vechicle (and the accompanying horn tooting), particularly for tuktuk, bycicle and scooter drivers, is not considered particularly unusual or unnerving here. But the dusty, windy, uncomfortable trip did allow us a glimpse into the lives of many very ordinary Cambodians who inhabit the villages and shacks that line the road between Siem Reap and the great Tonle Sap.

Cute KidsWhen we arrived at the lake the ‘plan’ was to take a boat to view the sunrise over a floating village. However, it was immediately clear that quite a few tourists who had just returned from boat trips were rather disgruntled with what they had been charged and the length of the ride. The whole scene was rather unnerving and just smelt dodgy. We took a coupleo of photos, got hasselled by some amazingly cute kids and piled back into the tuktuks for the hold-on-to-your plastic handropes drive back into town. Got back to the hotel and, for the second time in the one day, needed some time to recover!

Our rooms had been cleaned while we had been out, the mosquito nets ‘assembled’ and the laundry taken. Talk about service!

SunsetWent out for dinner an hour or two later and ended up at a tourist restaurant which did quite passable fish Amok, curries and more Western fare. Wanded around Siem Reap feeling slightly more comfortable as we realised that crossing the road between scooters and whathaveyou was possible. Just kinda thrilling!

In Which Our Hero Wets Himself, Repeatedly.

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The theme of day one in KL was damp – from the slightly sticky sweet smell of the tropics as I entered the terminal, to the perspiration as I dragged my luggage to the hotel, to the down pour in the afternoon in which I managed to get drenched, to the enourmous shower-head in the hotel room which provided a great shower in spades. Welcome to the wet zone Adam!

After getting to the hotel, looking like someone who had spent half a day running under a sprinkler and leaving a little wet puddle on the lovely marble reception desk I was happy to take any room available. The fellow at reception – Ramesh – was somewhat brusque, which I put down to my damp condition. However, after seeing him check in another couple the next morning I took the lack of a smile or pleasantries less personally.

The room was lovely and all I wanted to do was get cleaned up and sleep. When the bellboy brought my bag, (and pointed out the lights would work better if I put my keycard in the appropriate thingy) I knew I should tip something but really had not the slightest idea how much – I shuffled through my wallet searching for an appropriate amount and slightly begruding the lovely fellow for my own discomfort and uncertainty. Amounts ranging from 20, or 30 ringgit to the 1 rinngit notes in my wallet all seemed plausible. Realising the situation was getting uncomfortable I grabbed a couple of notes and hurridly shoved them into his hand. I had tipped 2 rinngit and immediately the mental arithmatic kicked in and I realised I had tipped him about 60 cents. I tried to say something, but I was mute as he backed out of the room, thanking me profusely, as I made some sort of ‘I’m sorry’ / ‘Oh, my God, I’m drowning mime’ which I could appreciate fully because of the mirror directly in front of me.

Had a bath and couple of hours kip, then headed out to the Islamic Arts Museum. It was a fair walk from the train and, again, I was sweating like anything on arrival. I intended to eat at the Museum before looking around, but was informed the cafe had just closed before I arrived. It was very interesting, especially the special expedition about the Hajj, but to be honest after about half an hour my stomach demanded food and I was fading fast.

By the time I had finished in the Museum it was raining hard and I had no idea where to go for food. I headed out towards Bukit Bintang, stupidly, by foot. I used KL tower as a landmark and headed towards it. I got close to it and it started raining really, really hard. It  a was only then that I remembered that KL tower is at the bottom of a big, steep hill. Somehow managed to clamber up in the pouring rain and sought out somewhere to eat and dry off at the base of the tower. All the food outlets turned out to be expensive and unattrative. Sat down with a drink and contemplated my sad lot.

I didn’t really want to get a taxi because I didn’t know where I wanted to go and thought about finding the monorail as the weather had eased off. I literally completed one circuit around the tower and returned sopping wet, again! Gave in and took a taxi to Suria KLCC, the Petronas Twin Towers. Found a food court there, which I had missed earlier. Made a very passable supper out of BBQ Chicken Rice and red guava juice. Headed back to the hotel, which took all of five minutes, but again I arrived looking like I’d swam.

Collapsed into the bed, but left the lights on as I had to charge the camera and phone. Finally at 3am I turned the lights off for good and slept soundly until morning. I awoke feeling surprisingly refreshed, feeling at peace with the world and with none of the soreness I expected from the flight and all the walking of the previous day.

It’s a long, long way to Kuala Lumpur…

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AKA: AirAsia Ouch!

I'm flying!Flight from Melbourne to KL on AirAsia X was not nearly as horrible as I feared but no better than I expected. Check-in was again a breeze. Flight left twenty minutes late, but landed twenty minutes early. Seats cramped, but a bigger issue I found was the lack of legroom meant I couldn’t stow my bag below the seat in front. Overhead compartments seemed small and I had trouble fitting my (reasonably small) carry on inside. I annoyed everyone around me constantly getting up and down to access it that in the end I gave up, stowed it as best I could in front of me and tried to wrap my legs around it. This was uncomfortable even for someone with my short legs so I would definitely recommend bringing a second small carry-on with the items you are likely to need on board.
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Up, up and away

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Well, as per Adam’s previous post, we started out about half an hour late.  No too bad.  Being excited to be finally leaving we were not too worried about this, however also being way past our bed time we were getting very very sleepy as well.

I must say that the AirAsia staff have been unbelievably good.  The customer service is excellent.  The seats on the plane on the other hand……….think domestic flight Melbourne to Sydney only for 8 or so hours.  What’s that old Mitsubishi ad…..Not So Squeezy!!!!!!!  Oh well, for what we paid for the flights I can put up for a bit (a lot) of discomfort :) .

Anyway, here we are in very very humid Kuala Lumpur for the better part of the day waiting for our next flight.  Not much else to add at the moment other than the fact that I now have THREE, count ‘em THREE stamps in my passport.  Very tired, very red eyes and in need of lots and lots of coffee.

Next update coming soon………………………………….

Update: Ally is now happily ensconced in her Jakarta hotel.

Our Trip!

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View Ally and Adam SE Asia ’09 in a larger map

Four weeks over November and December 2009 to:

  • Jakarta
  • Kuala Lumpur
  • Siem Reap (Angkor)
  • Phnom Penh
  • Bangkok
  • Luang Prabang
  • Nong Kiaow
  • Vang Vieng
  • Vientiane