Archive for the 'Away!' Category

Locked and Loaded

Decided not the wait for the confirmation of my visa and went ahead to take the plunge.

Tickets have been bought for my one way trip on 25 January 2010. And I used 25,000 miles to book a short ski trip to Denver from 27-31 January 2010.

If for some reason something occurs, the downside is minimal: $100 to change the airfare, and 25,000 miles foregone. I think I’d rather that now than wait and pay a potentially higher ticket to Chicago and then shell out an additional couple hundred bucks for the ticket to Denver in lieu of miles.

2009, Coming Home Again

Yes, I can see why you want to leave Singapore, everyone tells me over and over, it’s not that exciting a place to live in, it’s so boring.

They are missing the point.

To be honest, it took me the better part of a year from when I returned to Singapore to fully appreciate life here. Not because there isn’t anything to do here – someone once said (probably my mother) that life isn’t boring, it’s the person who is – but rather that it took me a while to feel part of a community again. One cannot simply expect to stay away for 7 years and return to find groups of people eager and waiting to take you into their fold again. Once I finally settled in however, I packed my schedule to the brim with activities: climbing, diving, etc. This might be a tiny little island, but there is plenty to do both on and off the island. Case in point: this weekend, I will be climbing, singing karaoke, playing badminton, swimming, playing tennis, kite flying, and having dinner with friends.

No, I’m choosing to leave not because I don’t like life in Singapore. I love life here, and I think that this past year, I have come to see home as here.

~.~.~.~.

Now that the year is drawing to the close, it’s time to do the traditional and look back at some of the most memorable moments:

Best Article/Book
I haven’t been reading as much as I used to. Most of my literature this year consisted of books on wine, and old books from my bookshelves that I re-devoured. Off the top of my head, I can’t quite name one book that made an indelible impression on me.

That said, there are two articles this year that I have read, and re-read, and also forwarded on to friends. The first was a speech given by Karl Paulnack, pianist and director of music division at Boston Conservatory for Boston Conservatory’s freshman class: Things that Matter. The second was Steve Job’s speech to the Stanford 2005 graduating class, entitled Connecting the Docts. I have turned repeatedly to this latter speech in recent days, while trying to come to a decision on the move back to Chicago.

Best Trip
I’ve made quite a number of trips taken this year:
1. Work trip to Jiuzhaigou, China, January
2. Skiing in Innsbruck, Austria, January
3. Work trip to Kunming and Lijiang, China, March
4. Ski trip and visit, Colorado and Chicago, April
5. Diving in Dayang, Malaysia, May
6. Work trip and climbing trip, Tianjin, Dalian, Suzhou, Shanghai, Hong Kong, June
7. Diving in Tioman, Malaysia, August
8. Diving in Redang, Malaysia, September
9. Wine and hike trip to Tasmania, Australia, October
10. Upcoming diving trip to Sipadan, Malaysia


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Of these, I think the most memorable would be the week sojourn through Tasmania. Everything was perfection: the food, scenery, wine, hiking, company. The only lacking bit was time.

Best Wine
I haven’t tasted it yet, and I doubt I will, but 2009 marks the year I bought my first first growth wine, Chateau Lafite. In fact, I bought a case of it, along with half a case of Chateau Margaux, and several cases of second growth wines. These are for investment purposes. :)

Best Restaurant

I loved my trips to Ember, and Grand Asia has the best sizzling pepper beef ever, but hands down, the best restaurant of the year has to be Alinea, and not just for the hefty price tag. The food was as much of an experience as the service and the presentation. I doubt I will be making a return trip sometime soon, but no matter, that way the magic is preserved.

Best Challenge
Diving, diving, diving! I love it as much for the incredible scape and amazing diversity of life and color underwater as for the companionship of all my zany friends.

Tasmanian Wines: A Tasting Review

The following is a review of the wines we sampled in Tasmania. Some of the notes were written right after we stepped out of the winery; some after listening to our various (mildly tipsy) voice notes. We were not as diligent as we could have been, so in most cases, the notes center on wines we were most taken with, and do not cover each and every single wine that we tasted – around 100.

Moorilla (Hobart)
Jeff: I remember we liked the wines including the Pinots, but came away with the impression that the wines were a little pricey. They definitely are targeting the more upscale market with their erotic art labels. They also have a brewery.

From 2009 Sep-Oct Tasmania

Kelvedon Estate (Freycinet Vineyards)
Jeff: We went with the recommendation of our hostess at The Banc, a cosy (read, less then 10 tables) restaurant in Swansea, when she recommended the Kelvedon without hesitation. It had a beautiful nose. Very good, so much so that we bought another bottle to bring back to share.

Milton (Freycinet)
Didn’t think too much of the wines there. The pinots were a little disappointing ESP after the amazing kelvedon Pinot we had with dinner at the banc. The one wine I liked from Milton was the gerwurtz.

Jeff: This was definitely the biggest letdown of the trip, luckily it came at the start of our wine tasting tour so we forgot we even came here pretty quickly. I think their pinots were pretty forgettable, and whites were ok, but nothing that was too standout, except maybe the Gewurtz had a good nose ( If I forget which wine I liked from the winery the next day, then it probably wasn’t that good ). The lady behind the counter wasn’t too engaging and she was too busy putting scotch tape around the mouths of the stoppers.

Springvale (Freycinet)
Liked the two styles of Pinot from springvale. Bought both. The gerwurtz was not bad as well.

Springvale is reached after a long drive down a dirt track off the highway. You pull up in front of a ‘farm shack’ that houses their tasting room. (edit: Actually according to the website, the cellar door used to be a stable built by convicts in 1842!) There is something about the rustic style of the tasting room that I really like. Springvale is small and family owned, but they seem like they are open to expanding. They had someone who tried to export in the US but without success. One problem with export for them is their small production and their ability to consistently produce the quantity of wines because of the fickle nature of Tasmania’s climate.

I liked their two styles from Pinot. The cheaper, more fruit forward “Melrose” Pinot is the one that they are targeting to sell in Hong Kong. That one is made with second tier grapes blended with Pinot Meunier. Their main estate Pinot is made with the top grapes.

Later on in the trip, we opened a bottle of the Springvale Freycinet Coast Tasmania Pinot Noir 2007 we bought to go with our home cooked dinner of Italian sausage pasta. The wine was amazing, simply amazing. Very very good. Very approachable; soft. Can’t really feel the tannins; doesn’t really coat your tongue. Just goes down really well, very friendly, pairs very well with pasta and spicy sausage. Wine rounds out the pasta. Delicious wine.

Jeff: Very good, very soft, well balanced, good body, soft tannins, strawberries. Very smoooth.

Freycinet Vineyard (Freycinet)
Jeff loved the cab merlot from freycinet but since we already bought two other bottles we didn’t get that. Very few cab Sauvignon around here; they are mostly blended with cab franc or merlot. Suppose that is a cool climate thing. We had a super briny and bright Riesling. Little too tart on it’s own but so beautiful with oysters. Just rounds off perfectly. They also had another riesling that was blended with a german grape: that was just a touch sweeter; good to drink on its own. We also bought the fruit forward Pinot just cos it doesn’t have to be aged as long.

I really liked their two styles of pinot. Both styles were still less fruit forward than the other pinots we’ve tasted. The Louis Pinot is $24 and is a very good pinot at a very good price point. I thought the riesling was ok, but we bought it because it was a little extra tart but we thought that would go well with oysters (edit: it did!).

I also liked their cab merlot. It was really well balanced, full bodied and spicy, with a good strong finish.

From 2009 Sep-Oct Tasmania

Pipers Brook (Tamar Valley)
Giant vineyard compared to the others. More than 20 ha. Tried a whole range of wines. Loved the Riesling – bright with stone fruit and more floral than the Freycinet one. Me like. The pinots were lovely as well. The Ninth Island Pinot Noir was not aged in oak; you can smell the strawberries and some spice. The Pipers Brook was more complex – same nose of strawberries but the oak gave it a more earthy kick. Very nice! Almost tempted to get that but then we tried their blended wines, the 2005 Ninth Island Tamar and the 2004 Pipers Brook. Amazing noses!!!!!!! The latter especially. Ketchup!!!!!! Would go great with fries. Mmm.

Jeff: I really liked their Riesling, made me change my mind on Rieslings in Tasmania. Good nose and good finish. The SB was nice and light. Ninth Island was unoaked, fruit forward, light color but still good body. Pipers Brook Pinot was more complex, oaked, spicy and would pair well with meat. We also loved the blends. The 9th Island Tamar had nice big berry flavors, a light body, and good to taste alone or with appetizers. The Pipers Brook Tamar had softer tannins and a big ketchup nose. We really liked the Pinots and the Tamars, but were more taken with the Tamars so bought the two Tamars.

From 2009 Sep-Oct Tasmania

Jansz (Tamar Valley)
Jansz makes only sparkling. We tasted four of their wines, and even though we were quite impressed, didn’t go away with any. Perhaps sparkling just doesn’t speak to us as strongly?

Non-vintage Pinot Noir and Chardonnay – fresh apple juice.

Rose: faint blush, not as unique on the nose. No oak on the non vintages.

2004 Jansz vintage – can smell the oak on this one. Nose like like orange peel pound cakes. Actually like the chocolate orange truffle we had.

Jeff: The non vintage was very light and nice, I liked it. Vineyard was big, grand and glitzy. I remembered we liked the Vintage the best.

From 2009 Sep-Oct Tasmania

Daryample (Tamar Valley)
Small vineyard. Used to be family owned, but in 2007, the Sundstrup family sold to the Yalumba Group, which also owns Jansz. 2007 wines and beyond use glass corks. :) tried five wines – the SB 2008 was nice and bright with stone fruit. Wasn’t too big a fan of the Chardonnay. It wa ok but not exciting. Well they are reducing their crops of chardonnays and concentrating on the SB which we think are better anyway. Tried the 2005, 2006, and 2008 pinots. The first was very fruit forward and super light finish. The 2006 was a little more subdued on the nose with more spice than fruit but fuller bodied with longer finish. The 2008 had a completely different nose!!! I liked it. We left with the latter two.

Jeff: The SB was well balanced, very good nose ( stone fruit? ), and very good finished. 2005 Pinot had a very fruity nose. 2006 had a much fuller body and a better finish. The nose was more subdued but you get more of the spice. 2008 definitely tasted younger, could age a little more but drinkable now.

They are planning to cut down on Chardonnay production, and concentrate on Sauvignon Blanc and Pinot Noirs. They’re also the only winery in Tasmania that uses glass cork stoppers.

The cellar door was also a pretty stark shack, pretty bare in the interior except for the wine, which is all that matters. We were greeted by this hearty fella sitting on a wooden stool behind the counter; we could have mistaken him for some shopkeeper in a small town except he was selling some very good wine. He was a cool chill guy, cheery, nice guy. It was practically a private tasting because we were the only ones there and he gave us tips on things to do and see along the route.

From 2009 Sep-Oct Tasmania

Delamere (Tamar Valley)
Currently 6.5 ha. The owner just bought a whole ton of cuttings. Planning to expand to 20 ha. Owns 150 ha of land. He has worked in the industry for 9 years including Oregon. Thought their blanc de Blancs was better than the one at Jansz. The Pinot was good but not the best we have had so far. The rose was interesting – floral with a slightly bitter edge. Dined on the property, in the sun with the resident dog and chickens. :)

Jeff: Shane Holloway is the the owner/winemaker here. He struck us as a little rough on the edges, hippy, laid back west coast dude. He’s been the winemaker for 9-10 years, and has worked in Oregon as well. He wants to concentrate on just chardonnay and pinot noir. Bought property 2 years ago. They have a lot of land to expand, only planted a small part of the property. Have new cuttings that they are going to plant. They market a lot through sommeliers and have them come to taste their wines and add to their wine lists. Send some to the UK and Harvard group of students. We had a good experience here because he let us lunch on the lawn with his dog and chickens.

The blanc de blanc was pretty good. Rose was not bad. The chard was ok.The Pinot was ok, not the strongest. But he said the newer plantings should be higher quality vines, the wines from those vines should be better.

From 2009 Sep-Oct Tasmania

Bay of Fires (Tamar Valley)
Five wineries in and my palate is getting tired. About hundred thousand cases max. Liked their Riesling. – well balanced with a good nose. Like their Chardonnay too. Lightly toasted fun nose! Light body. The 2008 Pinot noir was pretty good. Long finish nice spicy and fruity nose but the body was a little on the light side. Tannins were very soft.

Jeff: Mostly white wines. Only red is Pinot Noir. Pretty big winery with 100K max production. They source their wines from all over Tasmania (unlike the smaller wineries) and some of the other vineyards labels use the winery facilities at Bay of Fires. They had a couple of sparkling but liked their sparkling pinot noir / chardonnay. Riesling was very good. Good nose, crisp, well balanced, not too light and watery. The SB had good nose but weak body, very light color almost like water. The Pinot Noir – very light body and color. Good noise, good long drawn out finish but the body was weak and soft. Might be better with age, or not. Lacking in complexity. TPS liked it. Chardonnay was a bit oaky, more oaky than previous chards I’ve tasted in Tassie.

From 2009 Sep-Oct Tasmania

Grey Sands (Tamar Valley)
This winery owned by couple who also have day jobs. Tasting by appointment. We had a private tasting on a patio overlooking the slopes of the vineyard. Amazing view. They don’t make their wines but send it over to the Bay of Fires to make. Everything is pretty much done by hand.

Greysands Romanesque Glengarry Tasmania 2005 – Jeff: Blend of 3 grapes – Touriga, cab franc, cab sauv. Very interesting nose is due to the Touriga grape. sweet bbq smell.

From 2009 Sep-Oct Tasmania

Stefano Lubiana (Hobart)
Jeff: Tasting room is also in their winery building, a big wooden barnyard building. Monique, wife of the winemaker, poured the wines for us. She was really nice and helpful and we had her ship the wines for us to Singapore. Their Alfresco Riesling was very refreshing and light, had a good floral nose. Their other whites – chards, sauv blanc were ok. Given the two styles of chardonnay, I couldn’t really taste too much of a difference. Their oaked version was really oaked very much and wasn’t that complex. Their Pinots were also a bit weak, because I don’t remember them being spectacular, and we were a bit disappointed because the winery had gotten good reviews for their Pinot. But I remember the Merlot being very well rounded and rich and full bodied and being surprised by the quality of it.

Meadowbank Estate (Hobart)
Jeff: Stefano Lubiana recommended we go visit Meadowbank. The vineyard is pretty big (40 hectares) and they have a big fancy tasting room cum restaurant with great views but pricey food. For such a big vineyard we were surprised that they didn’t make their own wines but sent their fruit over to Frogmore Creek next door. They had some pretty good wines. We liked their chardonnay, and preferred their unoaked ‘Meadowbank’ version. Their Pinot, especially their ‘Henry James’ Pinot was very good, very rich and full bodied wine. It was our most expensive bottle too at 49.50. I also liked their regular Riesling. The FGR Riesling was too sweet. They also sell a lot of their grapes to Bay of Fires for sparkling production.

From 2009 Sep-Oct Tasmania

Frogmore Creek (Hobart)
Jeff: They are also very big, and they have several labels under their control. In addition to Frogmore Creek, they also have the 42 Degrees South Label, the Wellington Label and the Rosalyn Estate Label. They have around 40 hectares (don’t remember if this includes their recent Rosalyn Estate acquisition). They also do a lot of winemaking for other vineyards as a contract winemaker including Meadowbank and Puddleduck. They had a lot of really good wine. I liked their Riesling better than Meadowbank’s. They also had a very good Gewurtz with a really big lychee nose. We liked it a lot. I also liked all three styles of their Pinot. They are all different but good in their own way, smooth, some with more tannins than the other but we decided to buy the Frogmore Creek 2007 Pinot. That Pinot had a little more tannins and a long finish. Their ruby pinot noir port was also very good, less sweet than your normal port. Their cab merlot blend was also excellent.

From 2009 Sep-Oct Tasmania

Down Under in Tasmania

I will probably get heartburn when we do up a final tally of the trip. Australia is not a cheap country to live in, nor is it to visit. I reckon the standard of living is even higher than that of Chicago.

It was a phenomenal trip nonetheless, and totally worth it.

Wine:
We left with two cases of wine – although we had pared down the number of wineries from our original admittedly ambitious list (we went to 13 in the end, plus stayed at another vineyard), we bought on average a couple bottles from each. The winieries here typically make two distinct styles of Pinot Noir: a more fruit forward, fresh and vibrant one, with a perfume-like nose of rose scented water and cherries; and a more complex, aged style that calls up spices (pepperberry bush, a Tasmanian plant) and oak trees. Look to the next post for a lengthier summary of the wines.

From 2009 Sep-Oct Tasmania
From 2009 Sep-Oct Tasmania

Accommodation:
We lucked out on the apartments and the one bed & breakfast that we found. They were all cute, spacious, and had different styles and charms.

Our first night, we stayed in newly remodelled apartment trailers with large living rooms and patios that overlooked the beach – beautiful sunrise. The second night, we stayed in a stone cottage with interior wood paneling and a kitchen in which we whipped up a breakfast of omlettes and fresh cherry tomatoes. This cottage, in Bicheno, also overlooked the coast.

From 2009 Sep-Oct Tasmania
From 2009 Sep-Oct Tasmania

Our first evening in Launceston, we stayed at a bed and breakfast. Although it was a little aways from the city center, the views were also gorgeous. The house was situated on top of a hill and from the living room you could look down into the valley and at the Tamar River. Beautifully apointed room, with small welcoming touches like a fresh jug of milk in our fridge for coffee and tea, and a decanter of tawny port with chocolate to enjoy in the evening. In the morning, we were also treated to a sumptuous made to order breakfast. Along with fresh juices, latte/cuppacino, toast, I had a beautifully done up saffron infused omlette with smoked salmon and hash, while Jeff got asparagus wrapped prosciutto with poahed eggs and hash. Such a treat!

From 2009 Sep-Oct Tasmania
From 2009 Sep-Oct Tasmania

Our second evening in Launceston, after a fulfilling day of tasting, we pulled up into Rosevears Vineyards to find our own apartment overlooking the grapevines and the river. Gorgeously done up in a contemporary style, with track lights, floor to ceiling windows. Just had to wake up for the sunrise again to snap some photos.

From 2009 Sep-Oct Tasmania

Our wooden cabin in Cradle Mountain was a delight too. Although it got really chilly in the night after the fire in our wood stove died out, we loved that it was set back in the woods and had a lovely smell of pepperberry wood. It was such a fun surprise to be cooking in the kitchen and looking out to see a pademelon (looks like a small kangaroo) curled up right outside. Too bad we did not catch a glimpse of what the other guests affectionately referred to as Rufus, the giant posum that loved to visit the hut.

From 2009 Sep-Oct Tasmania

Scenery:
Tasmania, for such a large island state, is very sparsely poplulated. We spent most of our evenings in tiny towns with population not more than a thousand – Swansea had 580; Bicheno 700. Even Launceston had just 71,000 people. After so many days in the countryside, it was a bit of a shock to return to Hobart, a town of 200,000. All these other random Asians and kids decked up in goth milling about. But then again, it is a small city – probably 20 blocks by 10 blocks?

From 2009 Sep-Oct Tasmania
From 2009 Sep-Oct Tasmania

We wished we had more time to do the scenery justice. As it is, it was lovely to drive down the highways of Tasmania (one lane affairs typically, like in Scotland), past the bucolic countryside and lazy cows and sheep grazing in the flourescent green grass of spring. We managed a five hour hike in Freycinet National Park, covering the famed Wineglass Bay and Hazards Beach circuit. Too bad the water was a little too chilly to splash around in, although that did not stop a quad of teenagers frolicking in the sea.

From 2009 Sep-Oct Tasmania

In Cradle Mountain, we hiked the Dove Lake Circuit, which, as the name implies, circled Dove Lake, with the imposing Cradle Mountain as a backdrop. We also did two short forest hikes and revelled in the deep greenery and moss. One of the walks was aptly named the Enchanted Forest Trail. We covered that at first light, when the grasses and shrubs were still encased in delicate sheens of ice that sparkled and glittered in the soft morning rays, and took exuberant delight in snapping dozens of pictures of the pademelons calmly grazing not two feet from the trail.

From 2009 Sep-Oct Tasmania
From 2009 Sep-Oct Tasmania
From 2009 Sep-Oct Tasmania

Food:
For the most part, fresh and delicious. We still dream about the calzones we picked up from Bread the first day we arrive in Hobart, as well as the super fresh beef and salad roll we picked up from the Ugly Duck Out in Swansea. But eating out in Tasmania is hard on the pockets. We made breakfast a couple of days and cooked dinner one evening but the food bill will be not much fun to look at.

From 2009 Sep-Oct Tasmania

In summary, a great and fun trip. We had a total blast and are putting Tasmania near the top of our list for a return visit. Still more wineries to taste and so much more hiking to do!

Gone drinking

Will be back on the 5th. Gone to Tasmania. Wine and hiking awaits!

Diving in Redang

What a weekend! It was a long weekend of: diving, singing, eating, and even some dancing.

We started off late on Friday evening, thanks to the long weekend and thanks to the traffic jam. It was a long overnight bus ride into Malaysia, but thankfully for good company and a relatively comfy bus, the journey wasn’t too torturous.

We arrived at our resort in Redang late Saturday morning, and had a bit of spare time before our first dive to enjoy the warmth of the sun on our backs, the light but cool breeze in our hair, and the sparkling crystal clear waters.

Two dives that first day. Lina and I were doubly excited; it was our first time breaking out our new underwater camera cases. Bijuan and Peirui were nervous; they were about to try open water diving for the very first time. While we suited up, Ruoxi and Jiahui watched from the comfort of their lounge chairs; their snorkeling trip was after lunch.

The dives were pretty fun in general, and we had a blast playing with our cameras underwater. Obviously, we still have a lot to learn about underwater photography techniques, including how to breathe and stay in neutral position without bobbing around while trying to snap photos of shy sea anemone fish.

Post-dives, we soaked in the beach resort atmosphere as best we could: that meant lazing around on beach chairs, and then stuffing our faces with delicious fares of curry, noodles, rice, lamb, chicken etc. In the evening, after the sun had set, we converged on the karaoke room, where we spent three happy hours generally shrieking away (and dancing), and scaring the other resort guests away with our crazy enthusiasm.

In the morning, we pretty much repeated the itinerary of the day before, with three dives instead of two, and with cake cutting (Huixuan and Jiahui’s birthday) instead of singing (a family of 20 had arrived, and they beat us to the karaoke room).

Good trip though. For getting away from Singapore and the world in general (no Internet access), for the diving, and for the excellent, excellent company.

From 2009 September Redang Diving
From 2009 September Redang Diving
From 2009 September Redang Diving
From 2009 September Redang Diving
From 2009 September Redang Diving
From 2009 September Redang Diving

The 56-Day Odyessy to Down Under via Chicago

Google maps may not be able to calculate directions to Singapore from Chicago. But oddly enough, it has some very detailed directions from the Windy City to a winery in Tasmania, Domaine A.

It involves some 56 days of driving and kayaking across the Pacific Ocean, via Hawaii and Japan. And oh, if you decide to walk instead, the journey would take you over 208 days.


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Counting Down

Seems like whenever I have a big vacation trip planned, I’m always busier than usual the week preceding it. This time around, the week before my much anticipated Tasmania hiking and winery tour, I am going to Redang, Malaysia, for a spot of diving, and to Suzhou, China, for work.

Counting down, can’t wait! First of all to Redang this Friday, where I will break out my new booties, fins, mask, and G10 underwater camera casing. Woot woot! Where I will get to hang out with some of my closest friends and hopefully still find time to make some new ones. Where we will get to enjoy the sun, sand, sea, and amazing dives.

Hopefully I’ll get enough rest though. Current schedule is to arrive back in Singapore late on Monday. Tuesday evening, I have golf with the clients. Then it’s back home to rush to the airport for a midnight flight out to China. In China for 2 days, then it’s back to Singapore; will arrive at midnight on Friday. And then Vivie comes in from Atlanta Friday evening for a sleepover at my place. I still have to work on Saturday, half day. Hopefully time for some rest in the afternoon, before Xavier’s wedding in the evening. Then to the airport to pick Jeff up at midnight. Then we fly out early Sunday evening for Tasmania. :D

Touring Tasmania

After many hours – yes, literally that, hours – of research, we have finally hammered out an itinerary for our upcoming trip to Tasmania.

There are many ways to explore Tasmania, and our primary consideration was to how we’d go about it. Go the hard core and adventurous route with the 6 day Overland trail by Cradle Mountain? But then we wouldn’t have any time left to see anything else, like say, for example, the wineries. Or just rough it out one night in a tent off Wineglass Bay? That was a tempting option, particularly since we could do it by kayak, but the cost was prohibitive. AUD$220 for a double kayak, a tent, and two sleeping bags?!? We could have easily paddled down the idyllic Wisconsin River and camped overnight three times for that price. Or, rented a cottage with a sea view and a spa, and still have money left over for a nice bottle of Tasmanian wine (which, ultimately, is more or less what we went for).

Given the constraints of time, we decided it was impractical to head too far west. The rugged terrains of the Wild West shall remain unexplored for now. So too Port Arthur and its environs. But we couldn’t bear to drop the famed Cradle Mountain off the itinerary; the Tamar Valley Wine Route was a no brainer; and the scenery of the East Coast looked too breathtaking to be passed up.

The end result – a jammed packed itinerary of hikes and winery visits, 16 and counting, with nights spent at cosy bed & breakfasts and self-contained apartments. The relatively inexpensive costs of the quaint but spacious apartments are a really nice surprise, especially since we’ve paid top dollar for nondescript and utilitarian – not to mention cramped – living quarters in Europe and the USA. :D


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Dive Tioman

Yay for long weekends, good friends, new friends, excellent food, beautiful weather, and fun diving.

This past weekend, a group of 10 of us – all inter-connected in some way or the other – ventured north to Tioman, Malaysia, for a spot of diving. Our experiences varied from the super experienced (Marcus the dive master) to the neophytes (Harn and Hock Guan who were taking the open water certification course), but over the course of the three days, our water confidence and diving skills improved; quite dramatically actually.

Our first dive was somewhat of a disaster on comic proportions. Some people had trouble descending and kept floating up to the surface; some people couldn’t control their buoyancy and kept sinking down; two people lost their masks and weight belt; and my regulator got twisted and I only sucked in water, not oxygen. That was scary. One minute I was fine, finning around and trying to peer through the murky depths (visibility was poorish). The next minute, I was drinking mouthfuls of water. I purged my regulator a few times in succession but in vain. After 10-15 seconds of struggling around, panic set in. In desperation, I threw away my regulator and fumbled around blindly for the spare. I couldn’t find it immediately, and my first thought was to try ascending, nevermind that we were 12 m deep and I probably would get the bends. But just as I started to kick up, Reny, our dive master, was there. He tugged me down, found my spare regulator and forced it into my mouth, continuing to grasp me down while I took deep breaths to calm myself down.

From 2009 Aug Dive Tioman
From 2009 Aug Dive Tioman
From 2009 Aug Dive Tioman
From 2009 Aug Dive Tioman
From 2009 Aug Dive Tioman
From 2009 Aug Dive Tioman
From 2009 Aug Dive Tioman

Some highlights:

  • The ‘aquarium’ dive we took on the second day was beautiful. Even though the visibility wasn’t the greatest, I felt like we were in our own Underwater World, with the dozens schools of fish surrounding us at each and every turn.
  • My nose seems to have developed some kind of reaction to diving. On a couple of dives, I surfaced to find my mask all bloody. Didn’t hurt though, so I suppose that’s fine.
  • I loved the coral formations at One Tree Bay, Tioman, the first dive on Monday morning. It reminded me of the undergrowth and lichens in a North American forest. I could feel my fingers itching to try some ‘bouldering moves’. Gorgeous.
  • Marcus told Lina and I over dinner about some kind of cucumber that you could ‘massage’ and it would shoot out a thick, sticky, white liquid. Needless to say, on our next dive, Lina and I were chasing each other and Vincent underwater with sea cucumbers. But no ejaculation of any sort; he lied to us the type of sea cucumber that would do that.*
  • Our last dive of the trip, at Labas, was phenomenal. Reny and Marcus deemed us experienced enough to swim through some tunnels/mini caves. It was a blast. We squeezed through some slightly narrow crevices to see blue spotted stingrays lounging in the corner of the caves, and emerged from the caves to see schools of fishes circling overhead
  • The others sighted a sea turtle and a couple of moray eels. I didn’t. Bleah, I think I have to learn to fin slower and pay more attention to my surroundings. Nonetheless, it was awesome to have perfect vision underwater. :)

* The sea cucumber’s defensive response to being touched:

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twit:agrainofsand

  • @yemingshi send parcels to work. that's the best insurance 1 month ago
  • Friend on my drive (golf): "like Cathy Freeman, ugly but she can run" 1 month ago
  • Wah. Just got two speeding tickets in the mail. One from SGP, one from AUS. TPR: "But you're such a slow poke on the roads!" 2 months ago
  • @originalxin wah mango and mint leaf sounds like a delicious combination 2 months ago
  • Wow. I dreamt I had a really amazing bottle of Tasmanian Pinot last night. Awesome smooth. Must be telling me something... 2 months ago

Twit:dead grapes

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