Tuesday, July 3, 2012

Singapore.


I had never been to Singapore but I knew a few things about it:
-        -   It is a small island city/state at the bottom tip of Malaysia measuring about 30km wide and 20km tall
-         - It is a center of world trade, particularly since it is situated at the convergence of three major shipping lanes
-         - It has a mixed population of Malays, Chinese, Indians and ex-pat British and Australians
-         - It has a Formula 1 race, something that Austinites are paying more attention to since an F1 track is being built southeast of town
-         -  Situated on the equator, it was going to be hot

I’m always interested to see new places and Singapore was no exception.  I had made sure that my first stop on my trip was Tokyo though since flying from Austin to Singapore would have involved a three hour flight to Los Angeles, an eleven hour flight to Tokyo and then another 6.5 hour flight to Singapore, plus time for layovers.  Since I was already in Tokyo, was fully rested and had dealt with the first two flights, a 6.5 hour flight seemed like nothing to me.  Seriously.

My flight was scheduled to depart at 6:25am from Tokyo’s Haneda Airport so I spent the night at a hotel right next to the airport.  ‘Right next to the airport’, however, does not mean ‘right next to my terminal’, so I was obliged to catch a shuttle in the morning.  I went to bed at 11:30 fully intending to wake up in time to catch the hotel’s first shuttle, the 5:02am, but woke up well before my alarm (at 4:06, to be precise), so I hustled to catch the 4:20 bus.  If I’d missed it, I would have had to wait until 5:02.  Anyway, it was sitting out there waiting for me and packed with travelers.  The funny thing is that even though it was 4:20 the sun was already starting to rise.  I’ve probably said this before but the thing that would drive me crazy the most about living up north would be the crazy long days in summer and the crazy short ones in winter.  Give me the more steady daylight hours of Austin’s latitude any day.

Anyway, I made it to my gate without delays and caught the last ten minutes of Spain’s 2-0 Euro 2012 quarterfinal victory over the French.  Nothing quite like a soccer tournament to unite foreign travelers, at least the male ones.  Today’s flight would be with Singapore Airlines which I mentioned in the Tokyo travelogue so I won’t rehash it here.  My one additional comment is that they are the airline most likely to put on the ‘Fasten Seatbelts’ sign.  Most airlines wait until it gets to the point of actually being uncomfortable but Singapore Airlines seemed to do it at the slightest bump.  Again, these are the things I notice.

The flight was uneventful and we landed in Singapore’s Changi Airport without incident.  I was expecting, being the tropics and all, huge thunderstorms when we landed.  Nothing of the sort was around thankfully though there were lots of tall clouds that we had to maneuver around and through to land.  No rain though.  In fact, the locals were telling me they were in a bit of a dry period.  That didn’t prevent the humidity from still being quite high, though not quite Houston levels, I think.  And, interestingly enough, the temperature never got above 86 degrees or so.  So for you people baking in 40 degree Celsius/105 degree Fahrenheit temperatures in Texas, people on the equator at sea level have it better than you.  I wandered around part of the island for five hours and never was in fear that I would dehydrate or collapse. 

I caught a taxi at the airport (sometimes the office sends a driver to pick you up but apparently not in Singapore which is ok).  I immediately showed how clueless I was about Singapore by attempting to get in on the wrong side of the cab.  I prefer to sit up front in the passenger seat (better view and, if the driver speaks English and is talkative, better conversation) and had gone around to the driver’s side.  You mean you guys drive on the left down here too?  OK.  Apparently they do in Malaysia as well.  Actually, that reminds of something: in Singapore, you must pay a tax of around $75,000 to $100,000 just to own a car.  That’s right, you have to pay huge money upfront just to own a car.  Why would they do that?  Well, on a small island that isn’t getting much bigger with a population of five million people, there is already gridlock around the island.  The way the government has decided to limit the number of cars on the road is the tax.  It’s of course not fair to lower income people but at least there is a fairly good network of buses and trains.  And cabs are everywhere and very, at least by my American standards, cheap.  I was thinking about the car tax and really, what would the alternative be?  A lottery?  No one owning a car?  It’s an interesting dilemma. 

My hotel was the Intercontinental, a swank hotel that was solely designed to remind me how much I feel uncomfortable in luxury hotels (though I have now decided that I need to get with the program since this may be my life for the next thirty years).  First, a man opens the taxi door even while I’m still paying the driver.  Second, another man offers to take my bags to my room even before I have approached the front desk to check in.  Not seeing the point of losing my bags when I might need them and no, I can take my own bags thank you, I politely refuse.  While checking in, another man asks if he can take my bags to my room.  What part of ‘no’ do you guys not understand?  Two minutes later a third man approached to ask.  Well, I was just then finishing the checkout so I still refused but he gave me this look and implied it would be quite difficult for me to do on my own so I said yes.  It turned out the difficult part was a small staircase in the middle of the hallway of maybe six steps which is about 1/10 of the number of stairs I’ve sometimes negotiated with my bags while in subway stations and airports with broken escalators.  In fact, the poor guy decided to go take a service elevator off to the side rather than mess with the stairs.  He opened the door to my room and wow, it was quite swank.  It was huge and felt like I was staying in a banana plantation owner’s house.  It had a very nice couch in it with lots of cushions (that I promptly strewed my clean clothes on), a nice desk, a huge soft bed and a bathroom with both a shower and a huge tub.  And wood floors.  Nice.  This I could get used to.

But back to the whole luxury hotel uncomfortableness thing.  I did tip the porter (I never know when it’s appropriate to tip but I don’t care, I do it anyway) so that much I can deal with.  But when I tried to leave the hotel, well, I didn’t want to go all the way down the warren of hallways to take the elevator down one floor to the front desk.  In any low- to midrange American hotel, from Super 8 to Courtyard, there is a stairwell you can use to go down to the first floor.  Just at the end of my hall was a door marked exit.  I opened it to find that it led onto the roof.  Incredulous, I took a peek around the corner to see more roof, not letting go of the door lest it closed and I get locked out.  Deterred, I turned around and headed back inside only to see a hotel employee staring at me.  Still disbelieving what I’d seen, I asked him if I could get out that way. He shook his head emphatically, I sighed and headed back down the half mile of hallways to the elevator.  On the way out the front door, a porter asked if I would need a taxi but I said I was going walking.  He didn’t acted surprised or miffed and, truth be told, I was really expecting some sort of resistance on his part.  Nice guy, eh.

One new experience at the Intercontinental Hotel that was luxurious that I did enjoy was the Lounge/Club.  I forget the full name of it (Business Lounge/Club) but I was given access to it by the lady checking me in because, well, I presume because I’m an international business traveler and they have a quota to meet.  What access to the lounge means is that you have a private area where you can chill out, have breakfast or drinks and overall just relax away from the other non-business traveler guests, i.e. the ones with kids.  No offense to kids but it was extremely nice to have a private place to quietly eat breakfast with other mostly solitary business travelers.  I was worried when I saw that there was a ‘Smart Casual’ dress code but that was never a problem as I was always dressed up for work anyway.  The breakfast food was quite decent as well which, in Asian terms, means I didn’t have to eat corn, kidney beans or fried rice :)  I can also understand why frequent fliers covet the airlines’ private lounges now.

At around 3 on the Sunday afternoon I arrived, I set out from the hotel for one of my strolls.  I really need to get a small backpack or messenger bag to carry my stuff in because I had to rely on a plastic shopping bag from Tokyo.  The equipment I was carrying consisted of:
-        -  Bottle of water
-        -  Umbrella (ever since I got caught in a freak thunderstorm in Slovakia two years ago, got drenched to the skin and lost a digital camera because of it, I always carry one of these, except maybe in Arizona)
-        -  Digital camera (waterproof, eh).  It’s nice not to have to worry about water anymore but it’s a bit too bulky to put in my pockets
-        -  Map of downtown.  I feel dumb these days using a map in this day and age of GPS but I don’t care; map-reading is a skill both of my kids will have, whether they like it or not.
-        -  Snacks. just in case I have a tough time finding a suitable place to eat.  If I stocked up properly before leaving the US, I should still have trail mix and granola bars (my latest discovery is Fiber One...those are awesome)

I was fully prepared to venture out into the heat as I had put on sunscreen, had my bucket hat and was wearing one of those moisture-wicking shirts that doesn’t show the fact that you are sweating to beat the band.  As I get older and travel to places in the summertime that don’t make as liberal a use of air conditioning as we do in the US, I realize that, man, I sweat.  It actually reaches the point of being uncomfortable in many places, even as people around me are walking around in long-sleeve shirts.  It’s weird and it really does bug me.  I mean, if you’re working outside, you’re supposed to sweat and that’s ok.  But when you’re strolling around downtown, you shouldn’t.  Anyway, wherever I travel, I refuse to let the lack of air conditioning or miserably hot temperatures deter me from seeing the places.  Thankfully the shirts can at least hide most of it; whoever invented those things should get a Nobel or something.

I tried to head to the ocean from my hotel but to do so, I had negotiate not one but two malls.  Singaporeans seem to like their shopping malls but actually I think they like their air conditioning.  Several times I’d walk into a shop and the ac was set so low a polar bear would shiver.  Or sometimes I’d walk past a shop with an open storefront and feel cold air blasting out into the open air.  Anyway, after finding my way through the malls and passing what was termed the largest fountain in the world, called the Fountain of Wealth, (I’m not sure if I believe them but whatever), I found the ocean. 

There’s just something about the ocean, isn’t there?  It’s calming and mysterious at the same time.  You can stare at it for inordinate amounts of time.  If there’s a beach, you can create a whole family vacation around it.  I don’t understand it but I knew when I started my walk that that was the thing I had to see first.  I sat there for maybe ten minutes just watching the harbor before pushing on. 
The rest of the walk wasn’t that thrilling really.  Singapore is just like any other city with its parks, markets, traffic and pedestrians.  In some ways, I get a kick out of seeing those normal things being replicated in a different culture.   Like the wedding I passed by that had probably one hundred guests under a pavilion with a large buffet and a very jolly MC describing the proceedings and giving instructions in both Malay and English.  In fact, it was a mirror copy of a birthday party I stumbled upon in a park in Bloomington, Minnesota, that was being given by an Indian family for a large Indian community (except there it was an older, but still jolly, Indian lady speaking in English with the microphone).  I saw people picnicking in small groups and large, teenage couples trying to find some privacy (including two who were getting a little frisky on a cannon I wanted a closer look at...I let them have it), parents walking with their children and tourists shopping.  I also saw unusual things like a cricket match which, after watching for ten minutes, I still didn’t understand, and Little India.  I had been warned by a former co-worker of mine that it would be extremely crowded since all of the Indian laborers would have the day off and indeed it was.  About 95% of them were young Indian men either walking around or sitting together in large groups.  You could imagine them enjoying the relief of being out in the open and not working or in their cramped living quarters.  The sidewalks were quite crowded and there were very few non-Indians around but that didn’t bother me.  Actually, as long as there are people around, I never get nervous when walking.  Anyway, I looked extensively for some flowing Indian-style shirts for Jennifer but decided not to get any due to the prices; if they were that cheap were they really going to last?

Singapore has an interesting history.  When the British East India Company showed up in 1819, the island was only inhabited by a few hundred people.  Before that, it had been a city/state off and on but kept getting invaded by Malaysia, Java and Siam (there was even one story about Siam attacking it but withdrawing after a Chinese messenger who happened to be passing through told them to knock it off).  The island had a spring not too far from the ocean which made it a good stop for ships needing to replenish their fresh water suppliers.  The British took the island over and proceeded to make it into the powerhouse of commerce it is today.  The British still owned it when the Japanese attacked Malaysia and Singapore in World War II; it did not go well for the British and they were forced to surrender.  The account is fascinating if you’d like to read it:


The food in Singapore was kind of Chinese-like but I think the guys in the office always ordered me things that they knew were more palatable to Americans like chicken and rice.  That’s ok.  I’ve experienced foreign foods wherever I travel and, while I like to try new ones, I always just go with whatever place people decide to take me to and eat whatever is ordered for me (though people know I want to eat local food).  The flagship meal occurred when I was treated by one of our service providers the night I was to fly out to Shanghai at 1am.  We ate at an oceanside seafood restaurant and it was one of those meals where there are nine thousand different things to try on the lazy susan including duck, sea cucumber and other interesting things that I don’t remember.  I’d told them I’d eat anything except sea cucumber since the only time I’d ever tried it I gave up eating it after seven minutes of chewing with no results.  The boss guy didn’t know that when he ordered though but this sea cucumber, while tasting revolting, was at least able to be chewed into little pieces and thus swallowed.  I’m pretty good with chopsticks and had no problems with that and I was also used to being relied upon to take the first bite of anything so that everyone else could join in.  In fact, the pecking order was me, the boss man and then the guy to my right.  After that I didn’t pay attention. 

We finished dinner around 9 but my flight wasn’t going to leave for another four hours (yes, I was cool with taking an overnight flight...that’s the confidence Ambien brings, eh).  So some of the guys from the service provider decided to take me to, of all places, a Latin dance club.  Yes, six older to middle-aged guys sitting in a Latin dance club in Singapore, drinking whiskey mixed with coke and watching mostly Chinese-looking people cutting a rug on the dance floor.  The band consisted of three Colombians and a lady from Adelaide, Australia, who looked vaguely Hispanic and didn’t even know any Spanish when she joined the band.  To my disappointment, they played mostly music that couples dance to like cha cha and salsa, not the more club friendly stuff I danced to back in my college days.  Not that I was going to get up and dance anyway, despite the best encouragement of my compatriots, none of whom were getting up and dancing themselves, hopefully not because they were dependent upon me.  Sorry guys.  Still, it was an interesting experience.  I spent a good part of it teaching them important Spanish words like ‘corazon’, ‘salud’ and ‘alma’ and explaining why the Cotton-Eyed Joe is the best dance song of all time. 

They drove me to the airport while one of the guys found the Cotton-Eyed Joe on his cell phone for us to listen to.  And with that, I was at the airport and on my way out for another flight.  The 1am-6am Singapore to Shanghai flight is supposedly popular for businesspeople since you can sleep on the plane and then go right to work but it was only a third full and looked to mostly be used by younger people and families.  I realized to my chagrin that I couldn’t take the Ambien since I’d been, um, drinking but thankfully had a free seat next to me and managed to knock out 2.5 hours of sleep which for me is enough. 

It was my third time in Shanghai and I really can’t speak much about it that I haven’t written before.  The experience of visiting Shanghai is always the opposite of what people think it would be: “Wow, you’re visiting Shanghai!”   Well, imagine flying into Houston and only visiting Pasadena.  Imagine flying into Dallas and only being around Fair Park.  Shanghai does have culture but the parts that I’m always in are more new and master-planned and surrounded by factories.  I will speak highly of my hotel which was right next to the office and I slept surprisingly well even though my mattress was seemingly made of granite.  Oh, and breakfast usually consisted of corn, kidney beans, cucumber, grape tomatoes, bread, fried pork and fried rice (which actually made it a fairly healthy, though unusual breakfast).  I even liked staying in my hotel since there is a pizza restaurant (that I almost never see anybody else eating in) on the first floor.  This time it was manned by bored teenagers watching music videos on their cell phones when I walked in.  But the pizza is actually not bad and of course pizza is my ultimate on-the-road comfort food.

Right now (Sunday morning) I’m in a hotel at a ski resort in Korea chilling out for the weekend but I’ll write more about that later.  Ciao!

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