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Wandering North

Chronicling my travel adventures since 2007

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Category: Around the World 2022

9 Articles
Posted inAround the World 2022 Asia Singapore

Singapore day 2: Mostly Museums

Singapore. Day two. I probably didn’t need to set my alarm for 5am, but I did. I wanted to make the most of the day. Leaving my hostel, I set out to get a coffee and a bite to eat. Singapore is not an early morning place; at least not where I was staying. Almost nothing was open except for Starbucks, and I wasn’t going to visit an American chain restaurant. I tried to go to a couple of hotel restaurants but was told they were only for guests. I am pretty sure this was not true.

Morning in Singapore

Now is maybe the time to mention that I did not meet a friendly person in Singapore. The people were, at best, cold and polite; and, at worst, rude. I have hardly ever thought that. Vienna, I think, and Hong Kong. Mostly I think people are great.  But not here.  Not in my brief experience. Anyway, I got a coffee and a juice and went on with my day.

This was a day of walking and museums.  I took the metro to the vicinity of Little India and walked from there.

The metro in Singapore is not expansive but suited my needs well enough.  Now is the time to mention that the metro in Singapore is also not friendly. I have never seen so many signs admonishing people for possible behavioral transgressions. There were signs that said no eating, no drinking, no talking, no pets, no durian, no bags on your lap, no sitting if someone else needs the seat, no holding the door, no standing near the door…it was a bit much. I just stood still and tried not to make eye contact.

Little India was a nice place for a wander. It was not as picture perfect as downtown and has candy-colored temples, busy markets, and side streets with street art murals.

Sri Veeramakaliamman Temple

Tan Teng Niah – A Chinese-style Colonial structure

I popped into the hawker centre there – the Tekka Centre – and had a meal from Pakistan (Delhi Lahori). Excellent and cheap.

Tekka Centre (Hawker Centre)

I wandered around some more, aimlessly, taking pictures of all the lovely buildings, street art, and scenes. It was hot though and starting to get to me.

Street Art in Little India

Around Little India

I walked quite a way in the punishing heat and humidity to the Raffles Hotel.  (There’s that name again – as noted in my first Singapore post, he founded the modern colonial Singapore.)  The area around the hotel was not great. A big mall. Big buildings. Busy, wide streets. But the hotel is beautiful.  A low rise, gleaming white colonial era building with palm treed courtyards and Sikh men in white suits and turbans at the door.  It is definitely of another era.

Raffles Hotel and my one and only Singapore Sling

I was there, like so many tourists, to visit the Raffles bar to have a Singapore Sling, as this is the bar where it was invented.  And what a bar!  Dark wood panelling and wicker fans. Well-dressed bartenders. Jazz playing.  You could imagine Humphrey Bogart or Ernest Hemingway there.  Unfortunately, smoking was not allowed.  I had the cocktail, which was excellent.  This was the most expensive thing I did in Singapore.  It was $37 cdn dollars for the standard version.  Worth it for the experience, but one was enough.

I didn’t find Singapore that expensive for the things wanted to do.  Meals were normal to inexpensive and most of the stuff I wanted to see was free – walking the streets and looking at art and architecture.  Price-wise, Singapore was fine – but stick to one Sling.

From the bar I went to the National Museum of Singapore.  It was excellent.  I knew almost nothing about Singapore’s history and this was a great overview.

National Museum

From there I planned to go to the Singapore Art Museum, but it was closed so instead I visited the National Gallery Singapore.  Definitely worth a visit, but also had I skipped it my life wouldn’t be dramatically different. 

Paintings at the National Gallery

After that I went to a fun mini museum: the MINT Museum of Toys.  It’s a small space, several storeys high with just displays of toys. I really enjoyed it. So many things I remember seeing (or in the case of a couple of things: having) and an interesting look at things like horror toys or Beatles toys, or all the diverse modern Barbies.  It was cool.

Museum of Toys

The rest of the day was sort of vague. I wandered, drank coffee, smoked cigars, ate Thai food.  I am really glad I got to visit Singapore.  Two days was fun, but I’m content not to return.

I had a flight home very early in the morning, via Tokyo, back to Vancouver.  Heading back to where I started out when I flew to from Vancouver to Saudi Arabia.  All around the world, visiting Saudi Arabia, Bangladesh, and Singapore.  A great trip.

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Posted on 17 August 22
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Posted inAround the World 2022 Asia Singapore

Singapore at Night

I’m sure there is a lot to do in Singapore at night if you want to enjoy some foodie experience or go clubbing or just get drunk with all the foreigners who seem to be there for precisely that purpose. But I didn’t want to do those things. I gobbled up some inexpensive Thai curry and then started walking from the area of my hostel to the Gardens by the Bay.

I walked along the waterside promenade. It reminded me a little of Vancouver; all the waterways and people out walking – except that Singapore had much more appealing looking patios and architecture.

The city looked nice, with all the tall buildings clustered together and lit up. The restaurants were packed and people were out enjoying the evening air. Out too were the buskers. Lots of them on the walking paths, playing music. The thing I found weird though was that all the ones I saw (maybe seven of them) were playing the sappiest, blandest songs I have ever heard. It sucked. Not the voices or talents, but the song choices were the worst kind of music I can imagine. Bland, meandering, vaguely romantic trash. I found this disappointing. I love buskers but give me something with some energy. Some jazz, an electric guitar, an accordion…something. But I was clearly in the minority opinion, based on the crowds appreciatively applauding and throwing money into hats.

As I got over to the area across the water from Merlion Park, where the dome-shaped Apple store is, there were crowds of people waiting. For something. I loitered a bit and then music and colored lights engaged as fountains erupted from the still waters and began one of those choreographed water and light and music shows.  It was very Las Vegas.  A bit corny.  I mean, I’m certainly glad I happened upon it, but I also found myself judging it for its general lameness.

I walked off before the crowds disbursed and carried on to my destination.

The Gardens by the Bay are … a huge garden by the bay.  But they are more than just a garden, they are a proper attraction, with rare flowers and plants and cloud walk platforms.  I’m sure it is lovely in the day, but I went at night when it was quite dark and I could see nothing except for the super tall, tree-like pillars, covered with plants.  Like something from another planet.  I went to see them because they looked so unusual and specific to Singapore.  What I didn’t know is that there is a light and music display that happens every evening.

I immediately rolled my eyes. “Great, another corny display.”  I had already been appalled by the buskers and underwhelmed by the ‘water ballet’, so I braced myself for the bore to come.  But then all of the lights came on and started swirling and sparkling and music swelled.  The songs ranged from classical to traditional, to jazzy and showtune-y; all paying homage to Singapore musical styles.  I wanted to hate it, but I was delighted.  It felt like Disneyland (which I love).  It felt corny in just the right way and was magical and fun.  I can’t explain why I like this and not the water show and I would totally get it someone hated both, but I found some joy in it.

It was a great end to the day.  Singapore does feel, in many ways, artificial and hollow and materialistic, but there are some nice things there.

I walked back to the strip of restaurants and bars along the water near my hostel and ended day one of two for me in Singapore by having a cigar and an iced tea on the patio of a middle eastern restaurant, watching the crowds of tourists getting increasingly inebriated against the backdrop of pretty, colonial buildings and still water. 

Read More about Singapore at Night
Posted on 17 August 22
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Posted inAround the World 2022 Asia Singapore

Impressive Singapore: first impressions

Singapore is one of those places I had no interest in. I never doubted that it was clean or safe, that it had world class restaurants, a high standard of living, and excellent shopping; I just don’t care about those things. Give me dirty, overcrowded, dodgy, chaotic cities. To be fair to Singapore, because I quickly dismissed it, I didn’t spend any time reading about it. I might not have gone at all, except that on my flight back to Vancouver from Bangladesh, many of the flights had layovers in Singapore. It was my opportunity to see it for myself.

I would spend two full days and two nights in Singapore, which was enough. I saw what I wanted to see in that time – but it was at an exhausting pace. I think stretching it out to three days would be more reasonable.

A teensy bit about Singapore

The micro country of Singapore is an island at the tip of the Malaysian peninsula, just above the Equator.  Singapore was a trading port city back in about the 14th century.  In the early 17th century, the Portuguese destroyed it and then then it remained in relative obscurity until the British colonel and governor Sir Stamford Raffles (his name is everywhere) arrived in 1819 and ‘founded’ it as a new port. Singapore became a British possession in 1824 and it became an important trade location and, later, military base.  It was occupied by the Japanese in WWII and the British lost control to the Japanese in 1942 at the Battle of Singapore. It then fell into more bad times post war with a loss of infrastructure and continued discord in the region as it and other former British colonies moved towards sovereignty.  Singapore was part of Malaysia for a time and then became its own country in 1965.

Today Singapore is very wealthy and multicultural.  Known for being clean, expensive, and modern, having great food, having a ban on buying and selling chewing gum for non-medicinal purposes, having the death penalty for many crimes including drug trafficking, and having caning as a possible punishment for many offenses including voyeurism.  Oh, and it is illegal for men to engage in sex with each other.  Not women though.  Countries are complicated.

First Impressions

I landed at about 5am. Breezed through the airport where, disappointingly, they do not stamp passports, even if you ask.  Twice.  I took a taxi to my hostel. There is no train, there are buses, but I just wanted to get to where I was going with maximum efficiently.  It wasn’t too expensive. I forget exactly how much. Maybe about $30 cdn.

My hostel, KINN Capsule Hotel, was located right in the centre of downtown, in a perfect location near restaurants, the harbour, the subway, a hawker centre – pretty much everything I needed.  The hostel was tidy with clean and comfortable dorms; the kind that are like little pods, closed with a curtain. It was great in many respects, except that it didn’t have a kitchen, just a coffee station and the hang out area was designed in such a way that it seemed like they didn’t want people to hang out.  Anyway, I was there such a short time I just needed a place to sleep.  The hostel was pretty cheap by Singapore standards ~$70/night cdn.

hostel pod

My failure was thinking that I did not need to book a bed the night before I arrived.  (I know better but was trying to save money.)  I got there at 5:30am to drop off my bag.  What I really needed was maybe 2 hours of sleep.  That would have to wait.

As I walked out, the sun was just about to come up and I stopped for a coffee.  Once up, the city was illuminated but still quiet.  People were out jogging and doing tai chi along the waterfront promenade.  The city did look flawlessly clean, and the tall, skinny towers gleamed and reflected in the still waterways.  Lower to the ground were British colonial buildings, with buttercream columns, and pristine white statues of British figures.

waterways

My first impression was that it was a very impressive looking city.  I would not say it is beautiful and it did not excite me, but it did feel impressive and, importantly, it didn’t remind me of any other city.  It wasn’t like Seoul or Singapore, Hong Kong or Taiwan. It seemed more refined, more uptight. Well put together in way that looked great but doesn’t seem like that much fun. That’s why the word that I keep coming back to when I think about it is impressive.

Colonial Buildings

Day one

I spent my first day walking around the central downtown neighbourhood, the waterfront, the harbour, and Chinatown.  I walked along the waterways and to the Merlion Park, which is a scenic view of the water with a large Merlion statue/fountain.  Merlion? Yep. The city’s national icon is a Merlion: half fish, half lion.  It is supposed to be a reference to Singapore’s origins as a fishing village combined with the original name for the city, which translated to ‘lion city’.  I was told that many people hate the Merlion statue.  I liked it.  It’s white and pretty and different. 

Merlion!

From this view you can see over the water to some iconic modern structures.  It is all quite scenic and impressive.  I got a fresh juice and continued to wander.

En route to Chinatown, I sopped and had breakfast.  I went to a coffee and toast place.  Or more specifically a Kopi and toast place.  Singapore has its own coffee traditions.  First, they call it kopi.  It is roasted differently.  It is strong coffee served in small portions with sugar or condensed or evaporated milk or many other variations.  “Kopi-O” is coffee with sugar.  “Kopi-C” is coffee with sugar and evaporated milk.  And so on.  The Kopi is served at breakfast with toast.  You can get the toast a myriad of ways, but the traditional way seems to be butter and kaya (some kind of sweet coconut jam), served with soft boiled eggs.  I ordered the breakfast set but didn’t have the eggs because eggs are gross.

Kopi & toast (and eggs)

I walked to Chinatown.  I visited the temples, including the Buddha Tooth (replica) Temple (I think it is hilarious that they just openly admit that it’s not an actual relic) and the Hindu Sri Mariamman Temple.  I liked the Hindu temple much more.  The Buddhist one is very new and feels it.  It looked impressive (there’s that word again) but felt a little cheap. 

Buddha tooth replica temple

Chinatown was great for a walk though. The streets are lined with these pretty two-story buildings, painted pastel colors and with wooden shutters.  Lanterns hung in the streets.  And there were lots of appealing cafes and shops to poke around in.  I was also looking for (and found) a cigar shop/lounge but it was closed. 

Feeling peckish, I visited the Chinatown Complex Food Centre, one of Singapore’s famous hawker centres.  A hawker centre is kind of like a food court, but it is partly outdoors, and each food stall is of the highest quality; often with a family making a few dishes for many years to perfection.  There is even a Michelin star hawker centre stall.  And it is cheap.  I had a bowl of some sort of laksa type of vegetarian soup for less than $5 and it was excellent.

Hawker Centre Soup

I spent the late afternoon doing more of the same: walking and poking around the streets. I took shelter at a café for an hour when a torrential downpour made the streets impassible. I had a cigar along the water at a Thai restaurant.  As the sun started to set, I headed out again after a short nap and went to the Gardens by the Bay and did more eating and walking, but I will put that in a separate post. 

Rainbow windows

My first day in Singapore was really good.  Not exciting, but pleasant.  I enjoyed the walking and the sights.  while it is quite modern, it has enough of its own character that I still found it interesting – and impressive.

street art murals

Read More about Impressive Singapore: first impressions
Posted on 16 August 22
1
Posted inAround the World 2022 Asia Bangladesh

Day trip to Sonargaon

On my final day in Dhaka, I was determined to visit Sonargaon. It seemed to me to be best day trip from the capital.  I had originally planned to do it earlier in the week, but it was surprisingly closed so this final day was my last chance.

Sonargaon is an historic, mostly abandoned city and former capital of the Bengal region. It was settled in the 13th century and over time and various rulers and through various wars (I was going to summarise them, but, seriously, it’s a lot) it came to be a major river port city known for literature and learning and commerce. Today it is an area popular for trips outside Dhaka, festivals, and crafts.  There is also the abandoned town of Panam Nagar, which was, by the 19th century, a bustling merchant and administrative centre. It is now a stretch of decaying, beautiful buildings. 

Getting to Sonargaon

When I planned to go to Sonargaon I meticulously figured out the route by bus. It is quite doable by bus on one’s own from Dhaka, provided you start out at the right bus station.  Because I ended up going on a different day – a day on which my flight to Singapore was scheduled in the evening – I was paranoid about going solo arriving back in Dhaka too late and missing my flight, so I hired a car. But if I had not had the flight, I would have made my way there solo, which would have involved getting a bus from the Gulistan bus station in Dhaka and taking a bus to Mograpara to the stop by the side of the road and then walking or taking a rickshaw to the site. Once at Mograpara, it was obvious that the distance from there to the Sonargaon Museum would have been easily walkable (maybe 20-30 mins) and that there are tons of rickshaws and businesses. No worries of being stranded. The only unpredictable part is the traffic in and out of Dhaka, which is highly congested, but it should take about 3 hours to get there. To go by bus would cost only a couple of dollars. To go by private car is a lot more and I missed out on the fun of the public transport, but I also didn’t spend my day rushing and worrying about missing my flight.

tuk tuks

Sonargaon Museum and around

If you google pictures of Sonargaon you will usually see this:

Sonargaon

And it does look exactly that beautiful.  There is a small collection of gorgeous buildings along the water that you can visit (and I did). They are nice inside, but the exteriors and the setting are really the draw.  Around them are waterways with little boats for rent, lush, green picnic areas, and some odd, colorful animal statues.  It is all quite pleasant.

family at Sonargaon

It was very busy with visitors, but not many tourists like me; mostly it was local families and school groups.  Many of whom wanted to introduce themselves and take selfies. 

The Museum at Sonargaon is also worth visiting. It has a great collection of arts and crafts on display (clothing, musical instruments, jewelry, tapestries, etc). My enjoyment of the museum was somewhat hindered by the school kids that were there that just stared at me or asked for pictures.  It was all kind and friendly, but I did feel rather on display. I had to say no to many of the photo requests, but I did agree to take a picture with this one group of kids because they were so nice, but you can see on my face how awkward it all was.  Me and children? Not a natural combination.

Awkward photo No.327

The Abandoned City of Panam Nagar

From the Songaraon Museum area we drove a short distance to Panam Nagar. Panam Nagar was a thriving and prosperous area until the mid 20th century when ethnic tensions between Hindus and Muslims and the Indo-Pakistani war sent the mostly Hindu residents away and left the area abandoned.  What remains is a long road lined by ornate British colonial era buildings slowly crumbling.

Panam Nagar

It is so photogenic, with the bones of the architecture there accentuated by the deterioration and discoloration; it is surrounded by vibrant greenery.

Almost every building had people in front of it taking highly posed shots in colorful clothes.  All locals though. And me.

I did get persuaded to pose with a few families and with one female police officer who approached me, causing momentary alarm, only to be dissipated by a bashful request for a picture.

detained by the tourist police

There isn’t much to do there, but strolling amongst the buildings and under the trees was lovely.

Back to Dhaka and Onwards

We drove back to Dhaka at a crawl in the traffic.  At least I was comfortable and got to take in all of the decorative trucks (not as ornate as those in Pakistan, but vividly painted with scenes of flowers and rural areas) and beat up buses.

trucks and buses

Back in Dhaka, I had time for a cigar in the garden at the Ambrosia Guest House where I was staying before I taxied to the airport for my red eye flight to Singapore.

Bangladesh had been awesome. Dhaka was a delight.  I felt so free and alive.  Especially after the subdued and Jeddah.  Everything was super affordable and the people area amongst the friendliest I have met.  I would love to go back one day and see the rest of the country. Sail the green waterways and take in some small-town life; search for tigers in the jungle.  It says a lot for Bangladesh that I would return.  Maybe someday. This time, I had one more stop on my short round-the-world trip: the not as delightful and very different Singapore.

Read More about Day trip to Sonargaon
Posted on 15 August 22
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Posted inAround the World 2022 Asia Bangladesh

Foiled plans on a Pleasant day in Dhaka

My third day in Dhaka, a Thursday, was originally to be the one where I would travel outside of the city to see Sonargaon. I had planned to go on that day and researched the bus routes, but as it turns out, those sites are closed on Thursdays (not that this information was available anywhere online that I found). So I moved my planned trip to Friday and decided to spend Thursday visiting various museums on foot.  The thing is, they were also closed on Thursdays, a fact that was also not communicated online or anywhere outside of the signs on the museum doors. So I didn’t see any museums in Dhaka, but I did enjoy walking to them. Being flexible and easy going manages to keep me pretty content while travelling. (If only I could import more of that easy going nature into my non-travel life.)

The excitement of the city streets that I experienced on my first day was still there, so I was happy to be out and about. I felt free and happy as I walked from my hotel according to the route I had chosen. I bought some sweet lentil ball snacks from a little bakery and tea from a tea stall and had a little snack in the shade under the trees.

sweet treats

I walked first towards the Bangladeshi parliament building, Jatiya Sangsad Bhaban, designed by Louis Khan and built between 1961 and 1982.  I knew I wouldn’t be able to enter the grounds, but I wanted to get a closer look from the gate. It is this super modern, quasi brutalist structure that seems totally out of keeping with anything one would imagine about Bangladesh. It looks like it should be in a Soviet country.

parliament building on the right

I walked around it, taking shelter under some thickly leafed trees (along with everyone else) during a short but powerful downpour. I then crossed the street and walked through a park where locals were strolling and relaxing under the trees or diving off the bridge into the small river below.

Park Life

I walked to the various museums that I would not be able to visit. 

A closed museum

Foiled, I walked to the New Market and wandered around there for a while, which was pleasant. I walked across an overpass where I got a terrific view of the exhilarating chaos of the market area outside the market.

organized chaos
the New Market

I saw some new things, including horses pulling carriages covered in mirrors and jewels. I assumed they were for weddings or something ceremonial, but I found out that they are part of the regular public transportation system. Like you can take a bus, a taxi, a tuk tuk, a rickshaw, or a jeweled carriage. Like Cinderella. I tried to take pictures, but couldn’t get any good ones.

One is rewarded for walking in Dhaka; rewarded with little things that might be missed if on your phone in a rickshaw or whizzing by in a vehicle. I saw a monument that was basically a giant machine gun, endless portraits of, Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman, the country’s first prime minister (for less than a year, as he was assassinated in a coup in 1975), a monument to rickshaw pullers, kids playing cricket, cute cafés, and some sort of … Siamese twin dog? I’m still not sure about that last one. I saw a dog – or two dogs – but they were definitely physically connected at the hips and had suffered some serious physically trauma to their back(s). It was really weird and disturbing, but I like weird, and I wouldn’t have seen these things if I wasn’t wandering aimlessly.

Street Scenes

All of this walking (and it was a lot, like over 20 km that day), took up most of the day. I walked back to Ambrosia guest house where I was staying and had a cigar in the garden before heading out for dinner in the area at a restaurant that was upstairs. I forget the name, but it had leafy patios going up and up, like a tree house.  There evening air was so pleasant after the heat of the day.

cigar time

I slept soundly with plans for my actual visit to Sonargaon, transpiring in the morning.

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Posted on 14 August 22
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Posted inAround the World 2022 Asia Bangladesh

A Day in Dhaka

For my second day in Dhaka, Bangladesh I had hired a guide. It seemed unnecessary, in a way. On my first day I had seen and experienced so much and satisfies myself that Dhaka is perfectly fine to explore solo, but it turned out to be a great idea. Having a guide met me get a little deeper into Dhaka, to see things I wouldn’t have found on my own, and it was nice to have the company.

I booked the tour through Bangladesh Eco Adventure and had Afridi as my guide. He was great, as was the tour. I was so happy that he didn’t pick me up in a car. We started out on foot from my guesthouse and hopped in a tuk tuk to get to the market during the busy market.

Tuk Tuks

The tuk tuks in Dhaka are a little different. First of all, they call them CNGs, which stands for compressed natural gas.  Unlike the colorful tuk tuks of SE Asia, or Dhaka’s blinged out rickshaw, they are a stately grey. The most notable thing though is that they have cages. When you get in the back there is a metal cage separating you from the driver, and there are cages on the sides, which are locked from the outside. So it is like a little deathtrap. (You can unlock the doors yourself from the inside if you slip your fingers through the cage, so you aren’t entirely confined.) As with tuk tuks everywhere, haggling pre-journey is essential. 

The death trap tuk tuk or CNG

Kawran Bazaar

We snaked and jerked through the traffic to the Kawran Bazaar market. And what a market! So lively and crowded, busy and colorful. Piles of produce, sacks of spices, stalls of house wares, labyrinths of raw meat. It was terrific. Men with huge, flat baskets carried fruits and vegetables, apparently acting as porters or personal shoppers for wealthier residents.

Afridi took me into the dark corridors at the heart of the market, where the lighting is uniformly green, to hide imperfect limes and squash. There were bricks of amber colored sugar and mandalas of tobacco leaves.  Deeper inside were freshly beheaded goats, still leaking blood onto the floor, and blacksmith areas, where young men beat white hot molten metal into knives.

We also walked through the areas where many of the vendors live, at least during market days. Tiny bunks separated with tarps and repurposed rice sacks.  From the roof we got a view over the market.

Alongside the market were train tracks, also busy with less organized commerce.


me, on the wrong side of the tracks in Dhaka

Dhaka University

From the market we caught another tuk tuk to the University, which was an impressible Mughal structure surrounded by a green respite. We walked around the grounds and had a bite to eat (lentils and rice) at the outdoor cafeteria. We mostly looked at the art department where there were rows of busts, sculpted by the students, graded, and then mostly left out amongst the gardens.  Afridi said this is partly to do with the ban on Muslims making art depicting the human form. It was a lovely spot.

Dhaka University

Sculpture at Dhaka University

University lunch spot & mobile libraries
murals around Dhaka University
me in front of a particularly colourful mural at the University

Back to the Old City

We took a tuk tuk to the old city, where I had been the day before, but we stopped for local tea from a street stall and drank it in the courtyard of the policeman’s barracks.

Tea time. Weirdly, served in a “Canada” mug.

old city streets

We visited the famous “Star Mosque”, which is beautiful but was under construction, so I didn’t see it in all of its glory. It is amazing the stunning and small mosques hidden in the ramshackle Old City streets.

A view of the Star Mosque. Not visible are the many stars.

To the River

We then walked to the river’s edge, near where I had been before, but this time, I got to go out on a boat. It was a comfortable, relatively small, flat-bottom boat paddled by a single boatman.  

Me & Afridi & our boatman

We floated along the river past commuter boats and ships. It was heavenly. There was a perfect breeze and was quiet and relaxing.  The boat ride also took us past factories – the sort that make those cheap, disposable clothes and that both provide jobs and subject workers to horrible conditions. Yeah, those.

All along the river people went about their business and enjoyed the weather.  I saw two very little girls standing on the end of a boat, holding up in front of then a small piece of torn cardboard; they repeatedly posed and smiled at it – pretending to take selfies. 

The Ship Yards

We docked on the other side of the river and hopped out to explore the shipyards where enormous commercial ships were being repaired and painted. To look for defects or thin spot in the metal, men pounded on the ships’ hulls with hammers, creating a loud cacophony. 

We also saw people making enormous propellors by digging the mould into the dirt and then pouring molten metal into it. Once cooled, they smoothed off the rough spots.  All of this done without any protective gear of course. Most men wore sandals.

Back on the boat, we went to the other side and had lunch at a local spot near the courthouse where I met several barristers on break. Once I mentioned I was a lawyer the conversation turned to work before I naturally flowed into a chat about Islamic black magic and horror movies.

Wrapping up (and a few more photos)

It was an excellent day that left me exhausted and full.

My first two days in Dhaka had both exceeded my expectations.  Not every place can do that. I went to bed excited for day three, where I had almost nothing planned.

textile printers at the New Market

flower sellers & the ‘Pink Palace’
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Posted on 13 August 22
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Posted inAround the World 2022 Asia Bangladesh

Discovering Dhaka, Bangladesh

I like cities, better than nature if I am being honest. Sometimes when I pick a city to visit it is because it has something specific I want to see, but sometimes I am just curious about a city itself. Dhaka, Bangladesh was one of those cities. I had little on a list of ‘sites’ to see in Dhaka; it was just the city itself that appealed.  Everything I read about it suggested it would be either a lively chaos or a miserable cesspool. (Seriously, most people had nothing but negative things to say about it.) Either way, I knew it would be interesting.  I’ll just say now, I loved it. I loved it instantly and throughout. 

Bangladesh’s flag

It started the moment I stepped out of the airport, having flown there from Jeddah, Saudi Arabia. People crowded, shouting, pushing perilous towers of beaten-up luggage, cars bumper-to-bumper, instant heat and smells of people and exhaust and perfume. Terrific.

I got a taxi to take me to my accommodation. Dhaka is notorious for its traffic, and we did spend a little time crawling along, but I didn’t mind because everything was exciting.  The overcrowded buses that looked like they had been through 50 years of bad driving, the tuk tuks, bicycles, rickshaws, and trucks, all jockeying for position. I’m sure that if I lived there, I wouldn’t be so enthusiastic, but as a new arrival, everything seemed new and thrilling.

And then we pulled up to the high gate of my accommodation: the Ambrosia Guest House. I can confidently say I would not stay anywhere else in Dhaka. There are no hostels to speak of and most of the budget hotels look grim. The fancy hotels look generic and are in a dull part of town, but this Guest House is in a perfect location for a walker like me, just off a main road but slightly tucked away with a beautiful garden oasis. I had a big private room, use of the common areas, and enjoyed breakfast each morning with the other guests. In the evenings, I had a cigar in the garden. 

Ambrosia Guest House garden
Ambrosia Guest House

But I didn’t travel to Dhaka to luxuriate in gardens. So out I went.

Street Scene

The streets in Dhaka are wonderful madness. Endless traffic with a parade of colourful rickshaws, creating a cheerful din of handlebar bells. Old, repurposed, red double-decker buses from the UK. The regular city buses, so beaten up but painted with colourful patterns and sometimes with whimsical hearts or birds. And of course, bicycles, tuk tuks, and people on foot, like me, all moving together. It is chaos, but it works. 

Bangladesh buses

Everything is loud, from the voices to the horns and bells, to announcements made over loudspeakers about, presumably, things for sale at the central market. 

Buildings and BRTC Buses

It is colourful. Not just the buses, but the people, many dressed in bright local or traditional clothing, stalls selling fresh flowers, businesses covered in a riot of multicoloured signage that can only come from a lack of regulation.

Nothing is orderly or slow. It is all terrific and exhilarating.

I walked for a bit, stopping for coffees or teas.  I wandered through book stalls and shops at the market and meandered around taking it all in.

I then hailed a rickshaw to take me to the edge of Old Dhaka. That was fun. I discovered later that I paid about 10x more than I should have, but the price I paid was still like $3 cdn, so it was cheap – especially since I was paying for a slightly-built human being to pull me by the power of his own cycling whilst I rode in my sparkly rickshaw seat like a king.

Riding the Rickshaw

I was dropped off at the Dhakeshwari Temple, a candy-coloured Hindu temple. I can’t tell you much about it, but it was busy with worshippers and had altars of slightly fearsome, slightly comedic looking gods.

Dhakeshwari Temple

From there, I wandered towards the Lalbagh Fort. It wasn’t difficult to find. Buildings in Old Dhaka are not that tall and eventually I saw the walls and the tops of the fort ahead of me. The entrance fee was negligible and well worth it.  The fort structures inside are fine.  A bit like the Red Fort in Delhi or the Lahore Fort in Lahore, but much smaller.  The real treat are the grounds, lovely expanses of green with beautiful flowers.  

Lalbagh Fort
The gardens around Lalbagh Fort

It was all locals (and me) inside, everyone enjoying the serenity. It was there though that I discovered the Bangladeshis’ fondness for selfies. I couldn’t go a few feet without being asked to take selfies with people. One person asked me to hold their baby for the photo. (I declined that. I’ve never held a baby in my life and was not to start with a stranger’s child.) Eventually I had to start declining the selfies or I would never get where I was going. People asked me where I was from and, smiling, wished me happy travels in Bangladesh. Both the selfies and friendly greetings happened everywhere. Even people that spoke very little English would manage to ask me where I was from and say, “thank you”.

Selfie! Selfie!

From there I visited the Armenian church, a pretty buttercream and yellow church surrounded by trees. I was let in by the caretaker who unlocked it and was happy to show me around. (All my pictures were lousy, but it is worth visiting.)

I stepped out of the church and was trying to decide which direction to walk next, when a young man approached me. He spoke English and asked me where I was from and if I was lost. I explained I was just looking around and he suggested I walk to the river and told me the way. He gave me his business card and said that if I needed anything, to contact him. That too was not the only time that kind of hospitality happened.

I did walk down to the banks of the Bariganga River. The river is the life of the city, connecting it to the rest of the country. The waterways are filled with passenger ships, cargo ships, and little boats transporting people and goods. It is as energetic as the streets.  I sat on the banks of the river, smoked some cigarillos and watched the action.  I did not go out on a boat that day but did the next.

Banks of the river

After that, I continued to walk the streets of Old Dhaka.  Old Dhaka is, well, the oldest part of the city. The streets are narrow, sometimes not even wide enough for cars.  The buildings are in poor repair and the streets are lined with shops, restaurants, small mosques, and tons of food vendors.  

Old Dhaka
More Old Dhaka

Mysterious fried snacks filled with vegetables or meat, sweets, fresh juices, overly sweet tea, fruits, plates of curries and biryani. I ate some things where I was able to discern that they were vegetarian. I assumed I would get some sort of food poisoning not matter how careful I was, so why not go down enjoying the local food? (Amazingly I did not get sick on this trip.)

Yet More Old Dhaka

I walked back to my hotel, getting there after dark.  

Dusk in Dhaka

On the way back I saw something I had not expected. I was on a busy street with sidewalks and there was a man lying down. I hadn’t seen this yet in Dhaka, so it caught my attention. Plus, the man was lying in an uncomfortable position…with his eyes wide open…and not moving.  I stopped. Also not moving: his chest.  I know what a dead person’s open eyes look like and this was it.  No one else was stopping, so I walked to the corner, where there was a group of policemen. I approached them and tried to say what I had seen, but they didn’t speak English.  I tried to communicate through miming. I pointed, then leaned back with my arms crossed over my chest. Made a slashing movement in front of my throat…but they didn’t seem to understand.  So I carried on.  At that point it wasn’t exactly an emergency situation, and I did what I could.  It was a little jarring to see death in the middle of a city that feels so alive, but you can’t have life without death. You just don’t often see it.

I had only been in Dhaka a half a day but saw so much. I finished the evening in my hotel’s garden with a cigar, reflecting on all of it.

A few practical comments: 

  • As I discussed in a previous post, I did have to get a visa ahead of time, but there was no other hassle entering the country.
  • Dhaka is inexpensive. Like, really cheap.  You can obviously spend more if you want to go to western-style restaurants and cafes, but just walking around, taking local transport, and eating at casual places or on the street, you would struggle to spend $10.
  • This is one of those places where you should have cash. I brought a mix of Euros and US dollars and exchanged them for Bangladeshi Taka as needed. I did try some ATMS just to see if they worked. Some did. Some didn’t. You can’t expect places to take cards unless they are more upscale.
  • I felt completely safe, day and night. It is so busy and there are always people around and they are exceedingly helpful.  No one was rude or leering or threatening in any way. Probably the only risk is tripping or stepping into a hole in the sidewalk.
  • It was really hot and humid. Staying clean was impossible. That said, despite the heat, it felt good. There are so many trees and often a nice breeze, especially near the river. 
  • Most people didn’t speak English but often there would be someone around who would speak it a bit if you really need to communicate. 
  • In case I haven’t made it clear: I thought Dhaka was awesome and was happy to have more days ahead.
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Posted on 11 August 22
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Posted inAround the World 2022 Asia Saudi Arabia

Jeddah, Saudi Arabia

It was a trip to Bangladesh that led me to travel to Jeddah, Saudi Arabia.  I was going to fly through there anyway, but why not spend a couple of days?  But Jeddah was already and recently on my radar. For many years I wrote off Saudi Arabia as a travel destination altogether.  Too repressive of women and their government seemed too … problematic.  But over the years I travelled to so many other countries with problematic human rights and social policies that why single out this one country as a no-go zone?  And over time, Saudi Arabia did lift some of their laws.  They allowed women some more freedoms and put in place a tourist visa program that actually welcomes tourists, so the time seemed right to visit.

Saudi Arabia’s flag

Saudi Arabia is, of course, huge, but the only bits that appeal to me are the desert ruins and Jeddah.  The desert ruins I would have to see on a tour (I don’t drive & there isn’t adequate public transportation) but a couple days in Jeddah seemed like a good way to see something of the country.

I had booked my flight to Jeddah where I would spend three nights and two full days. Not a lot of time, but as it turned out, just the right amount.  (I have already posted about the flights and visas for this round the world trip on another post.)

I arrived in Saudi Arabia from Vancouver via stops in London and Cairo.  While I waited to board my flight, I noticed all of the signage for Mecca.  Jeddah is the closest airport to Mecca and my flight was full of people making their pilgrimage.  Many were dressed in specific white robes that they are required to wear before passing a certain boundary around Mecca, called miqaat or miqat.  On the flight there was an announcement 15 minutes before passing this boundary so the pilgrims could prepare themselves and recite certain prayers. I’ve never had that on a flight before. It felt a little weird sitting inches away from people engaging in a religious ritual while I watched some random horror movie on my seat back.

I landed in Jeddah and, having already secured my e-visa, I entered into the country without issue.  I changed some Euros into Riyal at the airport and got a taxi.  It was all quite easy.

I had booked myself into the Red Sea Palace Hotel.  There are no hostels in Jeddah that I could find.  There are a ton of very fancy (and expensive) hotels.  I picked the Red Sea Palace Hotel because it was right by the old city, Al-Balad, which was the area I was interested in.  Most of the fancy hotels are in a fancy area quite far away and that area did not appeal to me at all.  My hotel was fine. Clean and comfortable and not too pricy, though still more than I prefer to spend.  The location was perfect.

It was in an area that was older and had a lot of restaurants and a market and was basically across the street from Al-Balad, the historic centre.

the edge of Al-Balad
me in the morning, while I still looked presentable

Al-Balad, a UNESCO site, is this lovely and intriguing area founded in the 7th C but filled will beautiful buildings from about the 1600s.  Many of them have been restored and many are currently under restoration.  Others are still dilapidated.  They are mostly a few stories tall and feature balconies with colorful wooden screens, designed to provide shade from the punishing sun and also protection to women from the gaze of people outside of their households.

Al-Balad buildings

It is a lovely place to explore and it very photogenic. I loved it, but was a bit disappointed by how quiet it was. There are some shops and cafes in Al-Balad, but most didn’t open until late in the day, and at all times it was just quiet. I understood from people I talked to that because it was August and so hot that people weren’t so inclined to hang out. Things got busier in the evening, but still, there were not a lot of people around.  After all, Saudi Arabia is not a poor country where you would be more likely to find people crowding outdoor cafes in the evenings to escape the heat. People have houses and AC and seem to prefer to frequent the fancier restaurants and malls in the newer areas. That said, I did find some places to enjoy a tea and a bit to eat and there were some people out playing backgammon and visiting, but it was far from lively.

Al-Balad in the evening

In Al-Balad, apparently, there are some small house museums one can visit, but they seemed to be open only to people on tours, were difficult to find, and when I did find them they were just closed.  I did find one art gallery in an old, large house.  It was free, contained some lackluster paintings and I was the only person there.

The areas just around Al-Balad were more energetic.  There were shops and markets.  People hard at work selling textiles and spices, butchering meat, or making hookahs.

Shops and streets around the historic centre

My first day was spent exploring these areas. I finished the day having Indonesian food and Wong Solo, a popular restaurant near my hotel.  That atmosphere was lacking but the food was excellent.

The next day I decided to see a bit of the sea and what lay beyond the historic centre. I caught a taxi and had it drive me quite a ways up the corniche and drop me off.  I decided to walk back.  As you head north everything is quite modern.  Big malls, hotels, restaurants, and commercial centres.  None of it appealed to me.  Plus, it is very car-centric.  Long distances between things, big busy streets, and not a lot of charm.

me in Jeddah, along the corniche

I decided to walk back along the corniche, along the sea.  The sea is lovely of course, but it was hot. And humid.  I walked for miles, with little to stop and enjoy apart from a pretty white mosque.  I took refuge in a Starbucks – a place I would usually avoid, but it was just so hot.  I needed refuge and there was not much else around.

The heat was increased by what I was wearing.  Saudi Arabia does not require that women wear abayas, but you need to be covered at least to the elbows and knees.  That said, I realized right away that wearing an abaya is the way to go.  I found that if I didn’t wear one – even if I was fully covered, I was not treated as well as when I was wearing an abaya and headscarf.  So I wore leggings, a long-sleeved, light shirt, a long black abaya and a headscarf.  I looked ok, but I was sweltering.  I guess that is part of the reason why I saw so few people walking.

Me in the lobby of my hotel dressed to go out. Headscarf in my bag.

I felt like an outsider. Aside from a few conversations conversations, I didn’t find the people to be super welcoming and felt like I was at arm’s length from really experiencing the culture. I think visiting places outside of the major cities would be a different experience.  I should say that the were people who I did engage with were very nice.  One two occasions, people just came up to me on the street and gave me bottles of water.  The man who was making hookahs in his shop invited me to watch and take photos.  The coffee kiosk in a small square was busy with construction workers who went out of their way to make sure I got what I needed and had a shady spot to sit.  Most people did not speak English, but their gestures and efforts told me they were kind and hospitable.

While I didn’t love my walk down the corniche, I did like Jeddah, but specifically the area in and around Al-Balad. 

I had an excellent meal at Foul Fattah, a popular local restaurant on the edge of Al-Balad that served up delicious breakfasts of foul and hummus and fresh flat bread with spicy pickled peppers, and had some of the friendliest people I met in Jeddah.

Foul Fattah

I spent both of my evenings enjoying cigars and cool beverages in amongst the buildings of Al-Balad.

I had worried that two days might not be enough.  They were.  I had a good time and while there was more I could have done, I was happy with what I saw and glad I went.  That said, I didn’t love it.  It was interesting and Al-Balad was beautiful, but the vibe or soul of it wasn’t for me.  In some ways I feel bad saying that, but in other ways, it is kind of a welcome change to not always be gushing about how ‘amazing’ my travel destinations are.  This is, after all, just an account of my experiences.

views in Al-Balad, Jeddah

I would go back to Saudi Arabia, but only if I were going to see some of its amazing-looking desert vistas and historical ruins outside of the cities.  It would be interesting to visit some small towns and engage with people more.  I’m not at the stage where I am re-visiting many places, but maybe someday.

I left Jeddah at an ungodly hour on a flight to my next destination, one I was eagerly anticipating: Dhaka, Bangladesh.

Read More about Jeddah, Saudi Arabia
Posted on 9 August 22
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Posted inAround the World 2022 Asia Bangladesh Saudi Arabia Singapore

Planning for a short ’round the world trip

Trying to decide where to travel next is not a science for me. I don’t have a process or a list of criteria. A place will just start to become interesting to me through something I read or saw, and usually it will be a place that is far away geographically and culturally from the last place I went.  So I can’t say why exactly, but I decided I wanted to visit Dhaka, Bangladesh. It had been on my radar for a while. It looked crowded and exciting and intense. I decided to go.

Bangladesh is very far from Vancouver. Multiple stops would be required and when I was doing my flight research, I saw that a number of the flights went through Jeddah, Saudi Arabia, somewhere else I had never been.  I also found that several of the flights back to Vancouver took me through east Asia, and many through Singapore, another new-to-me destination.

This is how my ‘round the world’ flight itinerary was built.  I decided to spend two full days in Jeddah, four full days in Dhaka, and two full days in Singapore: starting in and returning to Vancouver. (Plus making connections in London, Cairo, and Tokyo.)  It seemed like a great opportunity to see three places in one go and circle the globe in one trip. Saying ‘yes’ was an easy decision.

my route

Of course, a trip like that requires a bit of planning.  I worked out the flights (all separate; not a ‘round the world’ ticket) and then needed to sort the visas. The visa for Saudi Arabia was easy to get: an expensive and instantaneous e-visa. The visa for Bangladesh was a different story, being one that required an application to be made by mail or in person with loads of supporting documents and a fee. It also required several follow ups by email and several recitations by email of things already provided in the application. It always amazes me when countries that have very low levels of interest from tourists make it exceedingly difficult to visit. Singapore welcomed me without hassle.

Bangladesh Visa

I booked my accommodations. A proper hotel in Jeddah, a cute guest house in Dhaka, and a capsule hostel in Singapore.

Red Sea Palace Hotel in Jeddah
Ambrosia Guest House in Dhaka
Kinn Capsule Hotel

I devoured guidebooks and blog posts, studied my maps, and tried to memorize some basic phrases (many of which I quickly forgot).

I packed my backpack with two outfits suitable for all three destinations, plus an abaya for Saudi Arabia, and cigars to last the trip.

It came together quickly. I was so excited. All around the world to visit three very different destinations.

I don’t often write planning posts, but this was an ambitious itinerary and I have gotten a lot of questions about how I picked the countries and why I chose them, about the visas and the packing. So there you have it.

Onward to Jeddah, Saudi Arabia.

Read More about Planning for a short ’round the world trip
Posted on 4 August 22
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About Wandering North

Welcome to Wandering North, where I have been blogging about my travels since 2007.

Dale Raven North

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