Friday, March 15, 2019

Colombo, Sri Lanka

Wherever I go, in or out of Australia, I always ask myself, "would I live here?" There are many beautiful places on this wonderful planet that Carl Sagan referred to as, 'the little blue dot' as he viewed it from cameras on one of the numerous exploratory space vehicles, possibly Voyager.

Colombo doesn't appeal to me as a place I'd like to live. There was rubbish everywhere as though there are no rubbish collection services, the buildings are in disrepair - possibly because they are very old, and it's a tad crowded for a simple outback boy.

However, in its favour, the people we met were friendly and pleasant. Perhaps if one actually spent some time there, it would become more appealing and one would focus on the positives instead of comparing it with other countries.

Obviously, the millions who live there are happy to call it home and have dozens of cruise ships with thousands of tourists visit, trample all over their temples and contribute probably millions to the economy.

Although it was nice to see how the others live and explore the ancient ruins and British era buildings, one visit is probably enough.

Robin
Off to Cochin, India.

PS: It was saddening and disappointing to hear about the violence caused by Islamists over the holiest of Christian holidays. How one can justify a belief in a loving, omniscient God with violence against your fellow humans is anyone's guess. The Koran instructs Moslems to subdue or kill what amounts to two thirds of the world's population - non-Moslems; now of course they are also killing off their fellow Moslems whom they believe are not orthodox enough.

If I was god, I'd be heartbroken to think anyone would carry out these acts in my name.


Friday, March 08, 2019

Beautiful Singapore - Jewel of Asia


I first visited Singapore in 1955 with my parents enroute to my father's new job with a tin mining company working out of Kuala Lumpur.

The only recollection I have from those days is the Raffles Hotel with ceiling fans that got my attention as I had never seen ceiling fans  before, and monkeys that hung about in the nearby trees.

I recall a story about the monkeys getting into someone's room and pulling their clothes out into the trees. If it's true, I can imagine how delighted the owners must have been.

Go forward six decades and Singapore is the model of a perfect city. With a mere four million local inhabitants, expat workers from all over the globe, and we tourists, it's no doubt changed significantly.

It's one of the neatest, cleanest cities I have seen only degraded by Little India that smelled and looked just like Big India. By comparison, Chinatown is much better kept.

We stayed at Robinson Quay and managed to do a Lot of walking with several inexpensive train rides and a tour. Near to us was the nightclubbing area filled with dozens of expensive restaurants, offers of high priced, but said to be discounted, buckets of beer. A 330ml bottle of local Tiger beer cost me $10 AUD. Later I bought a couple of tins of beer - 500ml for just over $5AUD each - Anchor, another local 500ml. A huge difference.

Wine is expensive in restaurants but cheaper bottles are available in specialist wine outlets and 7 Eleven stores. I bought two bottles to take on, the ship, a Jacobs Creek and a bottle from Chile.

So, the long and short of this is that it's expensive there for many things, but there are options to buy cheaper if one looks around.

It was more humid than we prefer and that goes with the territory so no use complaining about it. One just has to grin and bear it with frequent fluid intake, showers and change of clothes. Isn't that what the locals do?

If I was still young enough to work, spending a couple of years teaching something within my disciplines would be a high consideration because Singapore is so close and central to the rest of Asia. And such a nice place.

Needless to say, I took numerous photos of Singapore's iconic Marina Bay Sands Hotel, the three towers with a ship-like structure supported on top. It was also part of our tour.

Unfortunately, I've been unable to place them in the blog, but am working on a way to do so. See my related post.

Robin

Tuesday, March 05, 2019

Bangkok: No Power Shortage Here

A typical Asian capital, Bangkok is a critical tourist hub for Thailand that must rake in billions annually.

There are over 10 million citizens in Bangkok and an unknown number of tourists and unaccounted for locals.

We stayed at Ratchaprarop within the fashion area just out of Bangkok central. The supply of belts, bags, shoes, wallets, t-shirts and almost every other item of clothing is overwhelming. If you can't buy off the hook, there are tailor shops that will tailor you a suit in one day. As my days of wearing suits are over, I didn't investigate how good a one day suit is.

What occurred to me most often was the large amount of energy that is being provided to probably billions of air conditioners, lights and equipment throughout this city and elsewhere. One small building I saw had 20 split level air conditioners hanging from one wall. Presumably they weren't all working simultaneously, but presumably they could.

Where does all this energy come from? Obviously not from wind turbines and solar. I haven't seen a solar panel anywhere. Nor a wind turbine.

While Western Countries follow energy policies destined to turn them into Third World countries based on a well documented global warming Deception (See Dr Tim Ball's several books), Third World countries are steaming ahead towards the First World.

Any saving of C02 we make will have absolutely no benefit to anyone except the UN, to whom PM hopeful Bill Shorten has promised yet another $500 million if elected, and manufacturers of inefficient wind turbines and solar panels - China.

A gas that is essential for all life on earth that represents 0.04% of all gasses in the atmosphere has been demonised and is now accused of endangering all of us who inhabit the planet. What will people say about us in 100 years' time as they visit the remnants of our broken down wind farms - when they stop laughing?

Australia the lucky country is now the stupid country!

Robin