Friday, April 28, 2006
Vanishing trades ----the Indian Kueh Seller
today I met the same old kueh seller...still selling kueh.....but instead of carrying them in basket with a kandar stick...he pushes a cart...he must be at least 70 years or more....
when i first met him, buying his kueh in around the area in lumba kuda...i was only 6 or 7 years old.....today i'm 52......
seeing him bring back many memories.....friends and playmates....we have all gone our separate ways...my mom and dad...who always spoil us with purchases of kueh...& also laksa
somehow i also feel for him, so old yet still peddling kueh....does he need do it to survive...does he have any children to support him......yet i admire him....his desire to be independent and earn his own keep...syabas my indian kueh seller, i salute you for your tenacity & strength...
Thursday, April 27, 2006
The wonders of a neem tree
Dried leaves of the neem tree can be used as a natural insect repellent. Put some in your rice pot and stop weevils from invading.......
As a bookmark, and silverfish will give it a miss.......i haven't squeeze the leaves and apply the juice on my legs and arms to see whether they can ward off the horrid mossies......
Penang water - stress, new (higher) tariffs, cleaner water???
If we can get clean water without the need again to filter it at home......we don't mind paying a higher tariff....but installing new filters are just not enough.....the pipes carrying the water needs to be changed......the water leaving the filration and treatment plants is probably very clean...yeah even up to WHO standards but by the time it reaches our home......the water had picked up so much muck along the way...that it arrives at our home in a dirty state....such is our water....we need to change the pipes....and in Pg.....that's a monumental task......most of our pipes are ancient......
Tuesday, April 25, 2006
Few buses on the road today than it was a decade ago
Monday, April 24, 2006
Fast track for Naza's plant at Bertam
I hope this fast tracked plant will not come back to haunt the state and the people especially those living around Bertam.....i just hope.....
Sunday, April 23, 2006
Lunch at Seri Bahari Road
Feng Wei, i'm told, is run of chinese chefs from the former mandarin hotel (now agora hotel). they are the 40 year veterns in the chinese food cuisine business ...even the waitress are from the old restaurant.....the food is fabulous and for penangites...value for money......the choon peah is great.... it is always crowded....goh swee kee is good but slightly below one notch from feng wei.....
The coffee shop (at the right hand side as u r entering into pg rd from seri bahari rd) have a stall selling very good lor bah & 'hey chee' & tau kua.....great stuff....
so if u r in pg....why don't try some of the food at seri bahari road....
Saturday, April 22, 2006
Georgetown & its suburbs: Trees 7 - Our neems, the medicinal tree
Many in penang do not know that we have rows and rows of pharmacies in our city, lining up our roads in the form of our Neem trees. The leaves, bark, fruits and roots of these trees also known as Margosa trees, have been used in India as medicine for more than 2,000 years.
Known as the village phramacy, the tree had been the mainstay of indian ayurvedic medicine. Recently the European and US companies tried to patent on it. however, the Indian government sued and won, resulting in the patents being withdrawn. Thank God.....
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neem
Friday, April 21, 2006
"Our water catchments are safe" says Penang CM
Yet, for the life of me, I can never understand how the authorities could approved landfills so close to their water sources......in the case of Semenyih.....about 100 meters.......again i suspect the right hand of the local governments do not really bother about the other brnaches of the government i.e. the state government who is responsible for the water supply in the state and more so since the water supply had been privatised.......
We are always shooting ourselves in the foot.....& our governments seemed to be runned by the 3 stooges......well i hope in pg....we can do better.......PBA, the Penang Water Authority, seems to perform well thus far.......
Thursday, April 20, 2006
Metallic Pinang
.....maybe just pinang.........planting pinang trees around the roundabout would had been cheaper........but then again the I appreciate the metallic pinang....shows more class and sophistication
Ha....but at what cost my cynic self tells me.....but then again, nobody argues about the cost of the Lourve' Mueseum......yes Oscar Wilde says that of all cynics who know "the cost of everything but the value of nothing".......in malaysia we have all become cynics unfortunately........it is a survival mechanism........
Wednesday, April 19, 2006
Penang Second Link
What the heck, if some cronies don't get what they want from the second link......will they then postpone, truncate....or called off the bridge.......
No surpise that Malaysians rank politicians, government ministers and businessman at the bottom of the list of people they can trust....of course politicians rule the roost from the bottoms up....
Seeing how these groups are often one and the same person playing these three roles........it does not surprise anyone to see these three amigos at the bottom....
Saturday, April 15, 2006
Penang Lawyer - Sir Arthur Conan Doyle & Sherlock Holmes
Instead the Penang lawyer mentioned in the third sentence of the opening chapter of "The Hound of the Baskerville" referred to a ' a fine, thick piece of wood, bulbous headed, of the sort which is known as a Penang lawyer.' In the short story "Silver Blazes" the Penang lawyer is described as a "clublike walking stick".
Apparently Penang lawyer as a "walking stick" is a quite well-known product from this part of the world in 19th century Great Britain....as described by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, a gentleman's walking stick. He would most likely had one too, I supposed.
The Penang lawyer is made from the stem of a small (it cannot grow any bigger) palm known as Licuala acutifida, Griffith. The walking sticks are prepared by scrapping the skin of the stem by glass, they are then straightened by fire and given a polishing. It is also called Licuala spinosa (according to Kew Garden website on Licuala palms).
Source: Photo courtesy University of Florida-IFAS (found in http://www.plantapalm.com/vpe/photos/Species/licuala_spinosa.htm)
The term Penang lawyer came about most likely because of the way the English pronunced Malay words......Penang lawyer is "Pinang liar" in Malay or wild pinang as opposed to the cultivated ones......
There is another story why this clublike walking stick is called Penang lawyer....."a heavy walking stick, supposed to be so called from its usefulness in settling disputes in Penang"........probably during the early days of the settlement....when everything had to be referred to the office of the Indian East Company in Madras, India......a long way off by sail boat......
The third story of how the name came about is because these stick were originally made by convicts exiled to Penang from India....and these convicts were nicknamed "lawyers"....so the named stucked...
Trivia....trivia and more trivia
Friday, April 14, 2006
Penang - passover .....jewish cemetry......
Tonight, jews celebrate the passover and christians remember good friday....the death of jesus at twelve noon.
In Penang, we have the only jewish cemetry in South East Asia (correct me if I'm wrong....do singapore have one?). Sadly, we do not have any jewish community in Penang or in Malaysia anymore. The last recognised jew living in penang died or emigrated in the early 1980's. There maybe jews here, but i doubt whether they would openly acknowledge it......the current climate certainly is not conducive
Who are they? What were they doing? Except for the cemetry...they did not leave much behind....I'm told that the bungalow owned by Boon Siew in Tanjong Bungah , at the start of Sham Rock beach was formerly owned by a Jew......who was involved in the "Robinson's" of Penang known as "Whiteaways". I am not able to confirmed this.....
Thursday, April 13, 2006
Penang - Minden, USM - Battle of Minden 1759
In its previous "incarnation", many many years before USM (or Penang University as it was first called) established, the campus was a British military base, called Minden Barracks. It was home to a group of British Sodiers known by King's Own Yorkshire Light Infantry (KOYLI).
Their base in Penang was named "Minden" in honour of the regiment's heroic role they played with other light infantry in defeating the French in the Battle of Minden in 1759 (Minden is a town near Hanover, Germany).
The foot soldiers marched and fought against the French Calvary, based on a misinterpretation of its orders. There now occurred one of the incidents beloved of British military history. It is said that an order was sent that the infantry were to “advance on the beat of drum” and that this was misinterpreted as an order to “advance to the beat of drum”.
51st Infantry (KOYLI) attacking the French Calvary at the Battle of Minden
The French Commander, Marshal Contades is reputed to have said bitterly after the battle: “I never thought to see a single line of infantry break through three lines of cavalry ranked in order of battle and tumble them to ruin.”
Source:http://www.britishbattles.com/seven-years/minden.htm
Wednesday, April 12, 2006
Georgetown & its suburbs: Trees 6 - Angsanas flowering & u know its Cheng Beng in Penang
Come to Penang in early April and you will be greeted with garlands of delightful yellow flowers. These flowers of the Angsana bloom after each drought, welcoming the early rains.
Penang is a garden filled with angsanas, more so two or three decades ago than now....but still the giant angsanas of Mcalister, Perak, Western and Scotland roads never ceased to amaze me....planted more than 70 years ago, they are a sight to behold.....not the puny, wimpy ones you see in KL or Orchard Road (Singapore)...but giants that were allowed to grow unhindered many many years ago before "cars ate up penang" and whatever we have in terms of space between the front of the house and the side of a road.....
Giants or relics.....sometimes 'butchered' by the Tenaga and City Council staff....with their tops lopped off.....yet remarkably the giants still survived the butchery....
The angsana also known as "narra" in the Philippines produced a very beautiful cabinet wood....cabinets, tables, table tops, chairs and carvings made from the wood are exquisite. Belonging to the same genus Pterocarpus, as rosewood.....you see why the wood is so fine....
Tuesday, April 11, 2006
"Springtime of sorts" in Penang
Bungor (purple flowers) and Flame of the Forest (red flowers)
April showers in Penang comes after a period of drought of 3 months. The cloudless skies during the drought means more sunshine and daylight hours and together with the coming rains in april trigger off the flowering of trees and plants.......the longer the drought the more dramatic the flowers. A synchronous mass flowering of trees particularly in the northern states of the Peninsula (Perlis, Kedah, Penang & Kelantan) occurs once in three or four years......they are a sight to behold.....(yet many in penang are oblivious.....)
The most showy ones are the Angsana and the Flame of Forest (Semerak api) and in Penang, the Bungor (purple) and Jacaranda......the roads in Penang are sometimes littered with yellow confetti made up of fallen petals of the Angsana flowers........ a dangerous hazard to motocyclists as the wet petals after rain makes the roads slippery.....
Monday, April 10, 2006
Under a pokok tanjung, a vagrant did lay.....
Penang Public Transport - start a watch group
Lets start our Public Transport watch group at the grassroots level. Lets monitor the performance of our stage and mini buses along our routes.....LETS BOMBARD THE FEDERAL MINISTER WITH OUR FINDINGS.....BOUQUETS WHEN IT IS GOOD AND BRICKBATS WHEN IT IS HORRID....
Get a group of local users, device a simple form and start monitoring....peak hours and off-peak hours....c how the buses perform.....u be surprised!!!!
Last week on Wednesday, I was shocked to see two minibuses going SIDE BY SIDE, along residency road at around 8.00am EMPTY......
OR on FRIDAY, two stage buses, one filled with people and the one directly behind him empty......i don't know whats happening.....aren't they suppose to be 20 minutes behind each other
Sunday, April 09, 2006
Be seduced by the charms of Ole Penang
(Source of photos:http://skyscrapercity.com/showthread.php?t=143215---Old Photos of Malaysia)
There is something evocative about old photographs of the familiar places you passed by everyday. There is a certain charm that is seductive and enticing. It enticises you to reminince.
Nostalgic.....and with a dream-like quality, these old photos transfer you to another world......a world of quieter days, more placid......calmer and tranquil.....
Yet, these feelings are false. People who lived during those days have their share of problems and heartaches.....these are not captured in these idyllic scences.....the bad memories and pains are etched out....leaving behind only good ones that evoke nice feelings and good thots.....
Such are the joys of looking at old photographs.......
The joys of eating : Lunch at Carnavon Street
The restaurant was jammed pack with people.....the food was 7 out of 10. but in terms of portion and prize, it was good. The dish i liked best was the deep fried black pomfret in chilly sauce. I chanced to look and smelled at what the next table was having....and i believed they had penang style curry assam tumis with ray fish and it smelled delicious....certainly would go there again.
The other restaurant i liked is Feng Wei at Seri Bahari Road.....the choon piah or spring roll is par excellance....the price is very reasonable.....but then again its always jammed packed.....but one drawback, almost no parking is available.....
Saturday, April 08, 2006
Penang -The betel nut island
http://www.sabrizain.demon.co.uk/malaya/straits4.htm
The name Pulo Pinang had been recorded by Captain James Lancaster in 1591, as the name used by the native malays when refering to the island.
Despite having a name change by captain francis light to prince of wales island, pulo pinang is by far the most popular name....and the name prince of wales island faded away through disuse...until it was finally dropped....
Monuments & Memorials 2: Padang Brown
This is the field that many of Penang footballers had their first game of football. This is the field where Penangites of all races, Malays, Chinese and Indians played and fought....
But today sadly,the field had deteriorated....and had been invaded by foodstalls and hawkers.....
First, it was at the perak road and anson road corner in the early 1960's - which was very popular in in 60's and 70's.....one just have to say...lets go to the padang....and people would know what u mean...,....
Then, another hawker row was set up at the johor road & dato' kramat junction.....and finally in the 1990's another row of hawkers at the other end of johor road.....
Today, hardly anyone plays football in the field....there are no more matches at Padang Brown.
Hidden away at the hawker center, in the perak rd-anson rd corner of the field is a Memorial erected in honour of Mr. David Brown.....in whose honor the field was named after....he was one of the first settler and planter in Penang together with Francis Light.....until the early 1980's, his descendents still own much land in Penang.....estates such as Gelugor Estate and Brown Estate, Sungai Ara....he died in 1825 on a voyage along the Malacca Straits....
Friday, April 07, 2006
The vagrant tree - Pokok Tanjung
Thursday, April 06, 2006
Bus stop notices....woefully inadequate.....
Two important things missing from the brochures .........tel nos to complain via voice or sms........time schedule........people must be informed when the bus is expected to leave the main station.....so that they can guess when it will arrive.....maybe pg is still light years from having that.....
So in the maentime....u wait and wait......& wonder whether yr bus will arrive....not a very good start to the new bus system........
Wednesday, April 05, 2006
Georgetown & its suburbs: Trees 5 - A tree for Georgetown
Pokok tanjung at Pdg Brown near public toilet
Pokok Tanjong....and tanjong is the malay name for that part of Penang island we now called georgetown.....the State used to have visiting dignitaries plant it at the Esplanade.....go and see it.......
The tree is a shortish kind of tree with a heavy and low branching habit....it casts a very stong shade......to get an optimal height of trunk (say about six feet high)...one should always prune it.....The tree have small heavily scented yellow flowers......in my younger days this tree like the frangipani always evoke memories of graveyards......maybe it is the heavy fragrance....
Nowadays, it is not unusual to find......vagrants under the pokok tanjung....the cool shade...seems to attract the down and out of georgetown to take refuge under it....
Underneath a pokok tanjong......lies the down and out......sleeping away the pains of rejection......in a blissful world of dreams......to awake is to enter the world of the harsh and brutal......so sleep on......
The joys of eating : Economy fried bee hoon
The fried bee hoon in Pg tastes fantastic despite its lack of ingredients........I've had "similar" bee hoon in the Klang Valley and in Sabah which lacks the ommmph......anyway in order to liven the fried bee hoon the folks in these two places add fried eggs, yong tow foo and curry.......but still the taste of fried bee hoon in pg beats them hands down....
It must be something special.....probably it must be the finely diced up "chai por" they mixed in the bee hoon, which gives the dish its special taste....
Its cheap....it costs 80 sen and RM 1, however, with the recent fuel increase.....the price have gone up to RM1 and RM 1.2.....but it is still good value for money....filling and tasty....
The best fried bee hoon used to be sold in the morning near the Kuantan Rd. market....the stall is located at junction of kuantan road & dato kramat rd....however the original owner had left the scene....and since then.....its only mediocre....
Alternatively u can get tasty fried bee hoon in Kimberly Street at night....there used to be lots of stores selling this stuff in the seventies when i was in school... but now only two stores are left....both are quite good....but i like the one located further away from the cintra street junction....
Whoa......the joys of eating cheap, good and tasty food in pg....
Tuesday, April 04, 2006
Georgetown & its suburbs: Trees 4 - Politically incorrect name for a tree
The tree with the yellow flowers is known as Golden showers...or Cassia fistula....but in malay it is called rather rudely as "kotek mamak". The reason for such a name may be because of its fruit which hangs down like a pendulum....and its rather long.
Beautiful flowers....lovely english name....but what a name in malay....
Should I bus or should i drive?
I'm no fan of Dr.Teng but lets not jump to any hasty premature conclusions....lets wait for at least a month and then see how the new bus service in Penang pans out.....
I remember how our KLIA was lampooned during the first few weeks of its opening....yet when Hong Kong opened their new airport at chap lep kok....it took them over 12 months to get it right......KLIA managed to get it right within three months....i was there the 1st day of its opening...coming in from Sandakan....it took them almost 45 minutes to open the door....and my flight from KLIA to Pg left 3 hours late....i was lucky...my friend had to take a taxi back...
So who is to say....the bus routes and service in Penang may turn out to be an improvement....a heavy responsibility rests on Dr. Teng's shoulders.....he has to prove to the big man AAB, he is capable.....got chance to be next CM mah......maybe...so there's alot at stake for him......screw this one up......end up in the dustbin for political has beens.....
Maybe.....I'll walk instead....
Monday, April 03, 2006
THE CARS THAT ATE UP PENANG......
We have to break the car owning culture.... we have to break this habit and save our environment and our open spaces.......before we turn everything into concrete and aphsalt.....
Yet, the federal government is wrongly stimulating and fostering a society and an economy addicted and dependent on cars....by neglecting and ruining the public transport system.....malaysians are compelled to own and use private cars......because public transport is non-existence or is so unreliable....it is almost impossible to use one to commute to and fro from work.....
If we seriously do our maths with regards to car-ownership.....apart from the pyschic pleasure ownership brings and the status it confers; it so wasteful of our resources even at a personal level.
For most office and factory workers (apart from salepeople), our cars are used for about less than 2 hours a day on a weekday and maybe for a total of 8 hours for the weekends..... on the average. Most of the time our cars are sitting in the driveway or in some carpark "literally" wasting away..... We pay roadtax, insurance, interest and depreciation charges on a daily basis...... For eg. the cost of owning a Proton Waja (RM50K) on a daily basis ia around RM 21.30....this excludes running cost such as petrol and repairs, serviceing and parts.... for running costs add another RM10 or RM5 depending on how far u live...it will around RM26 to 30 per day....
(Insurance & road tax=RM 2 per day or RM 730 per year;
Interest charges =RM5.5 per day or RM 2,000 per year (say we borrow RM 40k @ 5%) ;
Depreciation charges = RM 13.70 or R 5,000 per year (RM40,000 in 8 years & scrap value = RM10k)
From the newspapers reports (from Penang at least), the main problem with the Bus services, is the problem of Companies "leasing" out their buses to individual bus drivers....the bus companies cannot afford to pay drivers the pay that they expect....but by leasing the buses out to the drivers, they then act as individual entrepreneurs and hustle for their fare......to maximise their revenue, they ignore the unpopular times and routes and focussing on the most "popular times' and routes ......and as the newspaper reports even to the extent of encroaching into the routes of others........
Surely we can afford to pay a little bit more for a better and more efficient public Transport...its good for the environment and good for our pockets....Government must be prepared to allow bus Companies to earn profits and pay their workers better, so that better services can be provided. If people use their private car less....fuel subsidies will be less....the Government cannot continue to subsidise fuel...it distorts demand ....wrongly allocates resources....is a lose lose situation....
I wonder how Singapore can do it........
Sunday, April 02, 2006
Georgetown & its suburbs: Trees 3 - SENTANG OR LIMPAGA, the Sabah connection....
One of the largest planted trees found along the Western Road is a Sentang tree or Limpaga (as it is call in Sabah) or Ranggu in Sarawak. There are several trees around the vicinity. Two just opposite the one shown in the picture, found along western road, at the junction of brown rd near the Masonic lodge. There are another two behind the western road cemetry along the road to the youth park.
These trees are indigenous to the Borneo island. I'm wondering who might have brought the seeds or seedlings and planted them in Penang some 60 or 70 years ago, probably just before or after the Japanese Occupation.
The seeds from these trees in penang were then taken to south thailand to be planted along the boundaries in rubber estates established there....that's why when the the trees became popular in the early 1990's some malaysians thought they came from thailand...however that myth was soon debunked by the ASEAN Trees Seed Center brochure printed on the species....
Is it a coincidence most of these trees were planted near Taman Jesselton (those of us who born before 1963 know that name was the old name for Kota Kinabalu)... the question is why are the sentang trees not found anywhere else in Penang....was there link here with Sabah...or north Borneo in the past...anyway why was the place called Taman Jesselton...was there any reason....??? and to find that trees indigenous to north borneo there in penang and nowhere else........i'm curious...very curious...
Second link and Monorail for Penang
.....Maybe we should build a giant car park at the ferry terminal in Butterworth and give them free and safe car parking services and encourage them to use the public transport system....but then again we must get it right....
We are still struggling to get the public Transport System right....Dr. Teng don't be so quick to say that the Public transport in Penang is ok already...u are a doctor u should know better...the patient can have a quick relapse....
The good news is that we will have a monorail system....lets take this opportunity to have an integrated seamless public transporation system complete with car parks to encourage people to leave their cars either at home (best) or at the very least leave them at the monorail or bus stations and commute to work by public transport....
Just think of all the fuel subsidies it will save the federal government...imagine we can reduce our collective fuel requirements by 10%....we probably save the government by RM400 million per year (maths may be wrong because of the straightline assumption i am using)