Thursday, December 30, 2010

Ah, Byron Bay. You're just what I wanted

So I left the rain of Brisbane behind me, to walk smack into the rain of Byron Bay. Seriously, Australia, seriously.

Having convinced Tom (totally did no convincing whatsoever) to both stay in Aus and come with us on our trip basically by just talking about it around him, I was happy to step off the Greyhound into the hug of my giant buddy. He had suggested that I stay at the Arts Factory hostel, his favourite place in the world, and once I'd confirmed my intention to head that way, he decided to come with. We both booked into the 'small tee pee' for 2 nights - the Arts Fac is made up of normal dorms and wierd little places like a tee pee, a love shack and all manner of sleeping abodes. We thought ours sounded like a great idea, until it rained everywhere, was freezing at night and we realised we were situated right next to the busiest bar bit. Not even ear plugs helped, but then I guess we should stop being old and boring.

One of the many friendly water dragons just wandering round the Arts Fac
There's heaps to do at this hostel, especially when you're down for sitting in hammocks reading. Taking advantage of $3 schooner happy hour was excellent when we walked into their fantastic pillow cinema with a beer in each hand to watch a movie for only $5, and I dragged Tom out for an amazing 3 hrs surfing on the second day. I'm sure I was a terrible teacher, but the hire was cheap, the sun wasn't too scorching and the water was perfect for some mad funs in the waves. Thanks Byron!

On xmas eve, David and Vadym stepped off their terrible and overpacked Greyhound bus (this should have been a harbinger for the terror of our later Greyhound journey, but it wasn't heeded, of course) to join us at the Arts Fac. We'd abandoned the idea of camping, thanks to the totally shit weather, but the guys brought 2 tents with them, just in case. We managed to snag the last 4-room available and set about arranging a great xmas eve and xmas day. This mainly involved buying 75c reduced but delicious muffins and titting about in the pool.

Xmas day was pretty phenomenal. Since leaving the UK this is my third xmas without the family, and when all is said and done, it's better. No worrying about offending any family members when you open their shoddy presents and have to feign pleasure, no arguing with said people, no forced overeating and ending up watching the Vicar of Dibly at 9pm wondering if its too early to go to bed. We started the day off with Irish coffees, ate a pretty mad breakfast of cereal and croissants, then headed to the beach for surfing or messing about the in the sea with a ball, if you're David and Vadym. We then headed back to the hostel and made a meal (haha! punnage) out of cooking an immense and fantastic stirfry thing, the most work falling to Tom as chef in residence. The sweat pouring off that man was testament not only to the heat, but to the effort put in by all. Cranking up the festive tunes while cooking, then sitting down with cheap champagne and guzzling the whole expanse of food followed by a massive pannetone was the highlight of my trip. We had drinks, crackers, balloon animals and presents. Thanks guys for a great xmas day :)


As was tradition, we then headed to the pool, decided against a rain-soaked rave in a quarry (which apparently was terrible, thankfully) then got a bit drunk and watching David get angry as he repeatedly lost at Shithead.

Merry Christmas indeed!
Boxing day was somewhat more adventurous - we hooked up with the guys running the Happy Coach (THC - punnage!) to go to Australia's Cannabis Capital, Nimbin. A torrent of terrible jokes and a tour guide with a beer in his hand by 10am told us we were going to have an interesting trip, but nothing could have prepared us for the hilarity of some humourless Germans also on board. The first stop was at a pub where you could crack your own fresh macadamias (which I did with inherent glee, and literally filled my pockets), and the only boy German with a group of po-faced girls approached our great driver Tony to ask when we were leaving: "I am a very impatient man". Now, this fellow was dressed like a Cambridge reject from the 50s - beige shorts, sailor boy shirt, over-organised satchel and one of those beards that's made to make it seems as though you've got a jawline, even though he was heaps skinny. This mesh of outrageous outfitting was topped off by a boater, and after hours of quietly hating him, this headgear had given rise to the nickname Pat Rafter.

Funnier though, was his and his posse's reaction to AC/DC being played back on the bus at ear-splitting volume. I don't know whether this was Tony's quiet revenge for the pub episode, or whether he really couldn't see the reactions his music choice was eliciting, but as the fun amongst us sang along at the top of our voices, Pat and his buddies put ear plugs in and literally cowered away from the rock, pulled disgusted faces at each other and making fresh attempts to push themselves into the seats every time a new song came on. I haven't laughed that hard in ages.

The fantastic Tony
Anyway, we eventually made it to Nimbin, which is less of a town, more of a strip of street with weed-themed shops and cafes lining it. Dodgy-looking dealers are everywhere, and the whole shebang seems a  bit too much hassle for a place which is famous for selling weed. I never really feel all that great about place which are too much into the green (I'm talking marijuana-themed merchandise and whatnot) but we had a great veggie sausage sizzle courtesy of Tony, bought some amazing 50c cupcakes, and Tom was mad pleased with his hemp wallet. It's definitely a strange little place.

THC - The Happy Coach (unless you're German)
Pat amused us all on the way back again, and we reached Byron just in time to watch Tron Legacy, which I totally bummed in all respects. Desperate to watch it again, just for the unbelievable visuals!

We later said goodbye to Tom who was headed home, and caught a late Greyhound bus to Coffs Harbour on a whim. The rain had got even more hectic as we headed out to catch the bus, and we were all soaked as we got on. Vadym was getting dripped on even inside the cabin, and poor David was getting so drenched that he and his friendly American seat buddy had to create a water-catching device out of a curtain and a rain coat, which didn't stop him from getting soaked yet again. By the time we stepped off the journey an hour late in Coffs, we were all ready just to catch a cab and bitch for half an hour before falling asleep.

Coffs Harbour
It turns out that like most of Aus, there isn't a lot to do in Coffs when its raining, and we exhausted all its possibilites in about a day. One thing it does do well though is cafes, and we had the best breakfast of the trip at a place called 'Art. Surf. Eat' or something, had wicked fish and chips (or potato scallops if you're me, which I am) then a pretty phenomenal bowl (yes BOWL) of chai throughout the day. We also had a picnic feast of fruit and threw financial caution to the wind to buy hundred-dollar train tickets for the overnight back to Sydney in the evening. Breakage of seat; excitement from Putin; oranges; ginger beer; fun; sleep; back home.

A fabulous little trip, all in all.


Wednesday, December 29, 2010

Beautiful Brisbane

Well, my time in Aus is almost up - having got well infuriated with the whole visa palaver I decided that it wasn't worth the effort to stay in a country that I'd pretty much done with, for just 6 more months, and arbitrarily picked January 5th as my date to depart this sunburned country, and December 18th as my last day at work.

The last couple of weeks were mental: the best xmas work party ever (drinks, speedboat ride round Sydney harbour at sunset, drinks, bus, cocktails, drinks, bus, teppanyaki restaurant, djembe workshop, drinks, presents, bonuses, drunks), saying goodbye to my best French friend Astrid, 4 huge dnb/dubstep shows at work, one of which was total capacity and full of 19 year olds puking on the promoters and a dick of a DJ hooking up with girls in the dressing room, and generally tidying up ends. December 18th, 4am though I walked out of my venue for the last time, and 15 hrs later was on a plane to Brisbane.

The insanity - 500 teenagers packed into Shush for Borgore. James, Pip, myself and security had to form a human barrier to stop the mob throwing the equipment off stage with their dancing. Kids were lining up an hour and a half before the show, and one dude puked down James' legs after only an hour.
Photo by tee eightch photography
The No Sleep Til festival seemed too good to pass up in my last month in Aus - I love NoFX especially, and people like the Dropkick Murphys pretty seriously float my boat, and an invitation from my great friend Garrett to head up to QLD with him to the Brisbane version and a free stay at his buddy Ben's place sealed the deal. I jumped off the plane, into a cab, into a Queenslander house (the first time I'd ever heard of such a thing), out of my clothes, into a pool in the dark with a beer in my hand and I was happy as Larry. As I was chatting with the guys in the water we heard rain on the roof next door, and a second later the flash reached us. It was pretty gorgeous...

Hello Queensland!
...until the next day, when the rain hadn't bloody stopped. And it didn't stop, all day. Now, I'm 24. My hardcorest days are behind me, but I still consider myself able to party. After a delicious breakfast courtesy of Alice and Kieran we got pre-drunk at Ben's place with a heap of great people and headed to the fest, having fun with more and more awesome peeps, but 6 hrs later, soaked through to even my underwear with nothing but a cold breeze and no way to get warm, I was done. I've seen NoFX before, and didn't even want to shift from the pathetic shelter of the bleachers to get $9 half-strength drink, let alone mosh about in the mud and torrential rain with a load of kids. I got a cab with some others back to Ben's place and by the time the others rocked up, I was warm, dry, and came loaded with a case of beer and a bottle of Canadian Club.


Despite 2 fantastically fun days at the house with Garrett, Ben, Jose and a menagerie of others, which culminated in a drunken 2 hour youtube sesh on the bed and several communal showers, I decided to move to a hostel for my 2 remaining days in Brisbane to see the city and not outstay my welcome (even though I did crash Garrett's family lunch and have Ben bring me my new treasured NoFX shirt!). After all the stresses of work and life over the last few months, the Tuesday brought me the happiest I could be: wandering to GoMA, the Gallery of Modern Art, the Queensland Art Gallery with a fantastic exhibition based on surfing by Scott Redford, 2 glorious hours immersed in coffee and Jane Austen in their cafe, a photo-filled walk through the Streets Beach (a beach they've set up in the middle of the city - genius!), meandering through the Botanical Gardens as the sun set and a margarita and a burrito with a new friend.

Scott Redford @ Queensland Art Gallery
I was fairly well in love with Brisbane by the end of it, and sad to see it go as I boarded my bus to Byron Bay, with the timezone setting on my phone freaking out all the while.


Thanks for an amazing few days, friends!

Sunday, December 5, 2010

Monday, November 22, 2010

Ridiculousness

So it turns out that running a venue comes with an interesting platter of side effects. Not the 'swollen head, migraines and extensive bleeding' type, but the angry Christians type - which might well be worse.

As much as I bitch about it, I've got to expect noise complaints, bitchy neighbours and power-tripping police officers when we put on drum & bass and dubstep on a regular basis (on two of the best systems in Sydney too). I might hate having 12 cops with sniffer dogs traipsing into my venue at 10pm then making snidey remarks when they find nothing and leave, or being made to stand in the road listening to the noise coming from the top deck of the building because the cop does not know how to do his job properly and I do know, but that comes with the territory of dance music. They hate it.

However, metal gigs are usually easy. They have their own gear, people like them and  if I book any band after 11pm they're up in arms as they all want to be home by midnight, so they never play late shows. Plus, anyone who plays in a metal band is necessarily nice, polite and somewhat shy. Even if the band is called C*nt Butcher, I bet they're exactly the kind of people you take home to your grandma for tea: totally mild-mannered.

I wasn't expecting the fallout, then, from booking a metal festival. I didn't even bat an eyelid at the name. But some crazy Christians did.

Everyone knows that metal is full of rhetoric, ridiculousness and general OTT behaviour, which most of the time is in stark contrast to the actual members of the bands. The 'Black Mass' festival then shouldn't even raise an eyebrow. But one group, trawling for no particular reason on an Adelaide underground metal forum, found the info and went apeshit, starting a campaign of harrassment against us, the venue and the organisers for alleged appropriation of 'sacred' Catholic symbols and putting on a 'satanic' event, which they believed was going to comprise of animal sacrifices and whatnot.

They complained so aggressively and so vehemently to the RSL board that the decision was taken out of my hands entirely, and as I've just found out, targeted the replacement venue so much they they too had to cancel the event, leaving the organisers thousands of dollars out of pocket and seriously gutted. They were aggressive on the phone, threatened physical violence against the performers and made it their own little pathetic crusade to have this harmless event shut down.

Along with being absolutely ridiculous, totally hypocritical to supposed Christian traits of tolerance and runing someone's livelihood for no real reason, this brings up the question of why your beliefs should dictate what is out of bounds for someone else. Does me wearing a ring on the 4th finger of my left hand despite not believing in marriage mean that I'm desecrating the 'holy union of marriage'? Does some metalhead wearing a pentagram misrepresent Pagan beliefs? I don't think so.

Anyway, its all a learning curve, and next time I'll know to book an offensively-titled metal fest on Christmas Day or something when they've got better things to worry about, like non-virgins playing Mary in nativity plays and Christmas puddings not containing the right amount of holy water.

The upside of this is that everyone knows about them, and they called me "fairly contemptuous" on their Facebook page. Anyone who knows me will realise that having personally annoyed a fundamentalist religious group totally made my day.

If you fancy checking out these psychos, and marveling at their lack of tact when protesting at abortion clinics,  the 'gay mass' and other insane actions, here's their website: http://www.catholictakingaction.blogspot.com/

Thursday, October 28, 2010

Farmville

It’s well known that the great Rabbie Burns wrote "The best laid schemes o' mice an' men / Gang aft agley". What's slightly less well known is that he was trying to make it across Malaysia on Hari Raya when he wrote this.

I was trying to get from Penang to the small town of Lenggong in Perak and thanks to the impending festival my best laid plans were definitely ganging agley. These plans in summary were this: Catch ferry from Georgetown to Butterworth; catch bus to Kuala Kangsar; catch local bus to Lenggong; get picked up there.

In reality, this happened: caught ferry to Butterworth; found out that due to people travelling home for the celebrations the only bus to Kuala Kangsar was full; waited an hour and caught bus to Taiping; got to Taiping, wandered round a bit, waited for a bus and tried to get on it only to be told it wasn't what I thought it was, caught the right bus into Taiping town centre, waited some more, caught a bus to Kuala Kangsar, realised that I hadn't seen another white person since I left Butterworth, caught the local bus to Lenggong and got some mad confused stares from the locals, obviously wondering why the hell some fairly androgynous pale person would be going to where they're going, had a series of minor freak outs when I noticed that I had no idea where to get off, no idea where I was and no idea where the unexpectedly long bus trip ended up, closed my eyes and crossed my fingers when the bus FULL OF PEOPLE decided to go over a WOODEN BRIDGE, breathed a huge sigh of relief when we pulled up at a bus station, tried to call my contact to no avail twice, finally got him and was told he had already been down to pick me up once (only later would I understand how annoying double trips are for him), bought a drink from a girl who proudly yelled "THANK YOU HOW ARE YOU" when I'd given her my cash, got settled in for a bit of a wait with my book, and finally looked up from my pages into the face of Ladia, who'd made his way down to get me (again).

Travelling in the lap of luxury....

My decision to go to Perak Permaculture Farm and volunteer for a week had been a rushed one. I googled Perak, saw the link, saw one single, vague but glowing recommendation and emailed to book myself in. Because of this, I didn't really know what to expect, but being picked up by a dreadlocked Czech guy in the world's most beat up 4x4 was definitely not it.

Ladia and Hana Kuta, the raddest Czechs in Asia, have had their permaculture project for 2 years now and the journey up to the farm from the town feels like stepping into another dimension. With Ladia's 4x4 literally falling apart as it struggles up the hills into the jungle, you feel further and further away from real life and by the time you pull up in front of the farmhouse you’re ready to step out into Narnia. This isn't too far from the truth.

The view from my window
When they say it's in the jungle, they really mean it. The farmhouse and the other building, separated a little, both lie within the site of an old tea plantation, surrounded by mountains which are dripping with the kind of greenery you don’t really believe exists. Running through the site is a small river, which pools just by the farmhouse creating a natural freshwater jacuzzi - the sort of thing they recreate in posh spas, but a million times better because its real and full of teeny fish that suck at your skin if you sit still long enough. All around the site is unbelievable flora, things I've never seen before, interspersed with planting areas which have been saved from overgrowth by the hard work of Ladia, Hana and their volunteers; in my 8 days at the farm I learn the truth of Ladia's saying "If you don't take care of something here, the jungle takes it back".

The jacuzzi

The guys also run a homestay to generate a small amount of income; as the farm is non-commercial, this helps them keep the whole place going. They often have people who pay to stay there, sample Hana's amazing cooking and learn from the couple about sustainable farming, the nature of the place, and their unconventional lifestyle. When I arrive a lovely Chinese-Malaysian couple are staying, as well as Ladia and Hana's friend, Zahir (who despite having an American accent, is from KL).

ZAHIR!

Volunteers at the farm are expected to work for a minimum of 5 hours a day in return for free accommodation and as much food as they can eat (they don't say this, but its very much the case). As I'd already messed Ladia about with my changing arrival time I was keen to get stuck in but really had no idea what I was doing. I'm not the most green-fingered person (anything more animated than a tissue just dies in my presence, and we even had to let our pet snail Rupert go because he was depressed) so I was a bit nervous of ruining something important at first, but by the time I got to have a go at a tree with a machete, I was going all Feral Man and making MAN SOUNDS. I even got a machete blister - still a source of endless pride for me.

My room was away from the main house in a block above the animals - there are goats, chickens, ducks, rabbits, turkeys and even a little quail kept in this part of the site. Having heard the stories of tigers coming down after dark and even an elephant once or twice, I spent a part of my first night having a mini spazout that the scratching at my door was a big cat who'd managed to scale the stairs, but I realised soon enough that it was a bat and I am an idiot.

My room - no tigers

As a novice volunteer my daily duties were to gather food for the animals when I got up, feed them all and water Hana's nursery. Generally then breakfast was ready, and after the first feast of the day we'd get to work on whatever was needed. Sometimes this was hacking away some jungle to make room for planting, or building the wall for the pond around the back, sometimes it was weeding, or putting the seedlings into the ground. Surprisingly often this was heeding the call of "GOOOOOAAAAATTSS!!!" and running down the hill, or up the hill, or wading into the veggie patches to capture the goats that he broken free and try to stop them eating three week's worth of vegetables, which they do amazingly fast. I got a perverse enjoyment out of grabbing the errant goats and wrenching them up to where they should be, especially the first time when we decided to let them graze further up, which involved cajoling them into jumping across the stream. My goat did not want to be cajoled, and in trying to pull him across, I slid into the muddy bed of the stream, leaving a flip flop behind as I retrieved my foot. Goat 1, footwear 0. Fun factor: off the chart.

The goats were all fairly lovable animals, apart from Big Daddy, who gets a little carried away when he smells women and is tied up at all times for this very reason. Big Daddy goat gets a whiff of your pheromones and out comes his nasty little penis, all pointy and blood red. Ladia explained to me how to grab his horns and wrestle him to the ground to reassert my position of power if he ever tried to mount me, which I listened to with distinct attention as well as the knowledge that if that ever actually happened I'd just be running away and crying.

The offending fellow

I had expected my green fingers to come out in the jungle, but not my cooking skills. However, Hana is an unbelievable cook and would often rescue me from the physical labour by asking for my 'help' in the kitchen (even though the only thing I contributed was a pair of hands and some reggae tunes to cook to). This chick has the ability to make a total banquet out of 2 potatoes, an egg and some spinach, and by the end of the week I’d got hopelessly addicted to Hana's Tofu Balls and Black Jungle Cake, which is like Black Forest Cake but heaps better. I’d also learned how to make rosella jam, and would force it down the throat of anyone unlucky enough to come near when a jar was open.

I also hadn't expected to make such good friends. After his first trip Zahir came back up to the farm with a couple of friends, Tanner and Zhariff, and a few days later two fellow Brits, Hannah and Doug, turned up to volunteer. After some epic meals, shared drinks, some sessions on guitar singing ‘hits’, and a very horrible, emotional experience involving a Chinese psychopath and the farm’s poor, poor dogs, we were pretty tight; so tight that I ended up heading back to KL with the two Z’s and Captain America (Tanner) after my time at the farm was up.

Unofficial anthem of the trip

Before that time came around though, I'd cleared, fertilised (this sounds weird - not with my own poo) and planted my own pitiful little veggie patch, which forevermore will only grow vegetables that are like me; small and English. I'd also got WAY more into the fertiliser thing than I would ever have thought possible; at one point I found myself knee-deep in compost pits teeming with cockroaches and, in one, a mouse nest, using all my minute amount of strength to overturn the steaming faeces to get to the better stuff underneath. I was adamant that if it was worth shovelling shit, it was worth shovelling the best shit, and spent an afternoon lovingly preparing it the best way I could. I've no idea what the chickens thought to the sight of me watering their waste then jumping up and down on it to pack it into the pit.

One thing I didn't get involved with was the fishing, apart from in the capacity of official photographer. There's a big pond around the back of the farm, which serves as the source for the fish everyone eats. As a vegetarian (for environmental and health reasons, as well as just preference these days) I don't eat fish, but I don't eat fish because commercial farming is driving many species to extinction and farming methods ruin the sea as well as the seabed and everything that lives there. By this dictum, I should be able to eat fish that's from sustainable sources, fished in a positive manner. The farm's fish is caught by Ladia and the volunteers, with a big net, from their own pond. Sure, I said, I'll eat one of those. But I don't really want to catch it.


So in plunged Ladia, Tanner, Zahir, Zhariff and Doug with a big ass net, to drag along the pond and catch some dinner. First time, no fish. Second time, one fish. Third time; losing faith. Evidently the fish are vaguely annoyed with their territory being trawled, and have taken to hiding in the holes at the side of the pond whenever they see the white strings of death. This was frustrating for the guys but hilarious from the bank, and this turned to amazement when Ladia got serious and caught everyone’s dinner from their hidey-holes with his bare hands. Hardcore.

Dinner tasted good.

Best cat EVAR

Every day I spent there I learned something new; how pineapples grow, what wild lemon grass looks like, what sugar cane tastes like, how to chop things down, how to plant things, how to grow things, where this goes and that goes and how this happens and how to avoid chemicals while still stimulating your plants, as well as being introduced to a vast array of Weird Shit that grows nowhere else than Asia. The most fantastic experience of my trip, though, was the waterfall trek.

THINGS GROW IN THE GROUND

When I heard the phrase “river trek” I hadn’t considered that this trek would actually take place IN the river. Yet there we were, waist deep in the water, scrambling over rocks, straining under branches, picking coffee beans off trees on the way, making hats from giant leaves and secretly hoping that we were picking up the biggest leeches on the way, just for bragging rights. By the time we got to the waterfall I’d lingered in the water long enough to pick up several, including a big mamma leech on my ankle who was getting fatter by the second. Rather than be grossed out like I imagined I would, I took a perverse pleasure in taking the lit cigarette and holding the burning end to the little sucker, watching him fall off my leg writhing in agony and then seeing the relatively massively hole in my leg gush out a heap of blood. And this, from a vegetarian. Apparently these wounds just don’t stop bleeding, so the thing to do is to drop ash onto the wound, to encourage the blood to coagulate; and it does work!

With this fun over we took to the real experience; kitting off and sitting under the mass of water falling from the rocks above. If there’s a more divine sensation, I don’t know what it is; it’s like a baptism, but less creepy. We took turns to sit under this deluge laughing like children then slid down and over the big rocks made flat and smooth by the water erosion, smashing into a bigger rock at the end of the ride and loving every minute of it. We climbed up to the top of the waterfall, burning off our little visitors and taking in beauty of the view and that of the jungle around us. Then we had all the fun of trekking back down to the house, picking up more leeches and panicking a little when the sun went down very, very quickly and we still weren’t back.


A few days earlier a mad storm had come over, and while the people who live in Malaysia had sat inside, used to these tropical thunderstorms, Tanner and I, as the tourists of the group, had stripped down to our swimmers and run out to play in the hot rain, revelling in a situation we’d never find ourselves in at home.

Life at the farm isn’t for everyone – cold showers, bugs, holes instead of flushing toilets, scorpions, mad sunburn, hard work, epic heat and rough-and-ready accommodation aren’t welcomed by some people – but the experiences you have there are so beyond your normal scope of life that they’re absolutely priceless.


As we headed down to Lenggong, waving au revoir to a teary Hana with promises of coming back to put on a reggae festival the next year, I sighed that sigh lamenting the fact that everything this awesome must always come to an end. I missed the farm, and the people there, before I even stepped out of the crazy, broken 4x4 and back to reality.

Thursday, October 7, 2010

Terminal wanderlust?

Douglas Coupland first summarised this condition in Generation X, a book that both scared and comforted me. According to him, it's

"A condition common to people of transient middle-class upbringings. Unable to feel rooted in any one environment, the move continually in hopes of finding an idealized sense of community in the next location."


I don't think that I had a middle-class upbringing (although it wasn't strictly working-class either), and I don't know if I'm really searching for an "idealized sense of community". Rather, I think my TW is related to newness.

I haven't lived in the same area for more than 12 months since I was 18. Even through uni in Manchester I changed location every year, finding new local shops and bars, new things to do, and having a nice new, different pad to crash at when wandering got too tiring. Now I think it's a problem. I was in Toronto for 12 months, and now I've been in Sydney for a year, and I love it - I'm even trying my best to extend my visa - but a part of my is itching to go (specifically, my feet).

My recent too-brief jaunt to Asia has worsened the situation, and having made some great friends over there I'm fairly desperate to go back to Malaysia. I listen to Bob Marley and all of a sudden want to be in Jamaica. I watch a Rammstein video and need to be in Berlin. I can't be in all of these places and can't afford to travel constantly.

Is this wanderlust really terminal? Will I ever settle?

Monday, October 4, 2010

Malaysia!


I managed to cobble together enough Singaporean dollars to bus myself over the near border to Malaysia's southernmost city, Johor Bahru, where I could change my unrippable Aussie bucks for some much happier Ringgit. The bus between cities is only an hour, and would be shorter if it didn't insist on taking the long way around. My tentative plan was to stay the night or at least all day in JB. This plan changed the instant I got out of the bus station.

It's not that Johor Bahru is a horrible city, but stepping straight from the clean shiny streets of Singapore onto the filth-ridden pavements of JB isn't the best introduction to Malaysia. I had grabbed some interesting treats from a hawker stall to satiate my hunger (as I couldn't afford breakfast in Singapore) and strode on to discover my first taste of this new country, only to be hassled by guys, troubled by sights and feel totally uncomfortable. I am fine with people staring when I'm a lone little white girl travelling abroad and I'm used to guys whose only bit of English is "hello honey you like to make love?" with the accompanying disgusting smile, but something about the atmosphere of the city made me not want to be there any longer than necessary, and finding nothing more than some fake Fendi bags and a shopping mall within the short distance I meandered sent me straight to the bus station. It was a stop-gap anyway - no need to stick around.

I love you Asia
I wandered in the general direction of the station, or what I thought was the general direction according to my trusty Rough Guide, and not for the last time on my trip, I suddenly realised I was halfway along a motorway with no real footpath and understood that this probably wasn't the right way. As I turned back on myself to return to the city centre and get a cab, a man sat at the bus stop I'd now passed twice shouted "Hey where are you trying to get to?" to me. I told him and he advised "No, no. The taxi is expensive. Sit down, I'll put you on the right bus." He proceeded to chat about Malaysia with me while we waited for the bus,  gave me change so I didn't have to waste the extra 30 sen (about 10p) on the bus fare, then flagged down the right one and sent me on my way. I was overcome with gratefulness....and even more so when I arrived at the main station to see that he'd come up on his scooter to also make sure that I got on the right bus to Melaka without being ripped off. He checked my ticket, checked with the seller, pointed me in the right direction and gave me his email address in case I got in trouble in the country. I could have hugged him and waved as the bus left with a tear of gratitude in my eye.


So Melaka was a dutch settlement, and man, does it show. From the sheets of colourful flowers to the actual windmill,  it's totally the Asian Netherlands. It's a small city, centred around the Dutch square, and walking around it kind of bewilders you. It's got a particular charm, though, and I again filled my evening with the wonderful night market on the Jonker Walk, buying some gifts, eating fantastic unknown treats and taking an inordinate amount of photos. The joviality of the people once again struck me as I went into an empty cafe only for the proprietor to search through the whole place to find me an adapter to charge my camera, give me free internet access and to put Bryan Adams on for me (!!) presumably because I look like the sort of cat who likes to listen to the Groover from Vancouver.

Melaka by night
I was, again, planning to stay in Melaka for another day but after I chatting to Melik, the owner of the resplendently beautiful Emily's Guest House, a place made from mostly recycled materials with a pet rabbit called Mr Playboy and an entrance hall with a koi pond and gorgeous archway, I felt like I'd exhausted Melaka's possibilities for me and I went to catch a bus from the unmarked secret busstop nearby. I did, however, sample Melik's amazing kaya, a substance I grew to love to the point of obsession by the end of my trip, which is basically a sugary coconut spread with egg yolks. It's amazing.

Mr Playboy
After an 8-hour bus trip, which was actually more of an 11-hour bus trip, during which I very nearly found myself at the mercy of ten angry macaques (is there any other kind?), I gathered myself at the ferry port in Butterworth. It was sparsely populated with myself and just a few late night Penangers (Penangites?) trying to get home, but in the dark, when I was tired, with little energy from a day travelling and not much enthusiasm, it didn't look all that great. It was a delightful trip over the short expanse of water as you point straight towards the bright lights of the night time city, but while staggering to find a hostel with a room, I wasn't too impressed. The next morning, though, Penang's main city of Georgetown looked much more hospitable, and after yet more help from locals (who clearly had been briefed by their cousins in JB about my inability to look after myself) got on one more bus to the National Park in the top left corner of the island. On the bus trip I met Leigh, a girl staying at my hostel headed in the same direction, and we trekked through the park together, stopping to paddle in freshwater rivers, hanging out at the beach at the end of the hike and searching out ice creams when we were badly in need. The forest there was astounding and it was great to clamber, duck, stride and sweat.


I spent the evening looking for some Malaysian pants (of which there are apparently none in Malaysia) but before the sun went down I noticed that there was a fire next to my hostel! Oh my god! And there are...people standing around......watching? And it's money that's on fire? I was perplexed. Thankfully a friendly local saw my frankly shocking facial expression and explained to me that it was actually a ritual related to the festival of the Hungry Ghost. This is a time where the doors of Heaven and Hell are opened up and the spirits of the deceased are free to roam the earth, and Chinese Malays celebrate this by    giving offerings to their dead relatives, or to those whose families did not properly grieve them when they died. What I was seeing was a huge pile of burning fake "Hell Money" with a lady praying to it, and there was a selection of food and drinks next to it. Chinese Malays also leave an empty place at the table for their deceased during this time.


I was lucky enough to be in Malaysia during the time of 3 massive festivals. Because the population of the county is mostly made up of 3 different races - Malays, Chinese and Indians, who live mostly in harmony, at least culturally - there are a myriad of holidays and celebrations throughout the year. During my short trip there was the Hungry Ghost Festival (Chinese), Ramadan (Islam) and Hari Raya, which I was informed is like Malaysian New Year, but its actually the culmination of Ramadan so it's really a Muslim day. However, all of Malaysia closes down (as I was to learn to my chagrin while trying to get from Butterworth to Lenggong which resulted in the most ridiculous set of bus journeys ever) as most people trek back to their home towns to be with their families and hold 'open house', which is basically where they make a ridiculous amount of food and open their homes up to anyone. I was temped to sample such Islamic delights by crashing in on some unsuspecting lovelies, but as I was up in the jungle trying not to get humped by a goat at the time, I was somewhat hampered in this plan.


Wednesday, September 29, 2010

I went to Singapore

This post is mainly to please Astrid, who is adamant that I should be blogging about my recent travels. Bonjour ma petite amie!

So I recently went to Singapore. I knew little about it and have previously had no real desire to go, but due to me possibly (hopefully....all smiles at the immigration people and whatnot) staying in Australia, I found myself with a non-refundable return flight to London to get rid of. Seeing as I didn't have enough time to make a trip home worthwhile, and I already had a stopover in Singapore booked, I decided to extend that stopover a little, travel up through Malaysia and fly home (back to Sydney) from there (via Melbourne). Hooray!

And so it was that I found myself wandering round Singapore at midnight totally lost, with a half-empty rucksack (I travel light) and a new camera around my neck. I'd been wanting to replace my lame Coolpix for ages and as the boy and I came across a cheapish old D70s we finally went for it and I ran off to Asia with it immediately. This was excellent but it did make me look like an impish tourist ripe for theft. Thankfully, Singapore has all but blotted out crime (including the heinous acts of jaywalking and chewing gum) with a massive list of fines to hand out and a heavy-handed approach.



This has also made the place ridiculously clean and gorgeous looking, in that sort of faceless, big-city-done-good type way. What makes it different to somewhere like Bilbao though, despite the fact that they've embraced consumerism with both hands, is that there is so much Asian greenery everywhere that the nightlights of the districts have this eerily beautiful look to them; so, having missed the last train from the airport, missed my stop on the bus and been kicked off at the last possible point, I was wandering around taking moody shots of the city streets rather than concentrating on finding my hostel.

A quiet spot in the Botanical Gardens
I did find it, eventually, and the next day satiated my Singaporean wanderlust to an almost retarded extent. I walked round the city for 12 solid hours, taking in everything that the hypnotizing, fairy-tale Botanical Gardens had to offer - which was, by the way, pure awesomeness. I ate some amazing bready stuff that I can probably never ever recreate properly in English words, but one was a rice loaf type flat thing with pasta and pine nuts inside (!) and one was a literal cube of amazingness with strawberry cream cheese in it. I had a foot massage, and a Singapore sling (best morning ever, by the way), I clicked away, oblivious to how much I must have looked like a total douche, and had the most wonderful time.

It has a crown because it's totally boss
I ate dinner with a very inquisitive and sweet Indian man who had mistaken me for a professional photographer and wanted to chat about cameras, then I headed down to the Harbourfront, picking up some durian ice cream on the way. The ice cream peddlers sell from a little cart, and cut a slab of your selected flavour to either go between two slices of white bread or two wafers. I got my balls out of my purse and went for durian as I was sure you wouldn't be able to smell it and I was feeling a bit devil-may-care - and god, it was totally delicious. Even worth the stares as I was getting as I was mentally pegged as the stupid white tourist who was dripping ice cream all over her camera and her face. The massive ugly casino thing they've plonked in the middle of the waterfront didn't appeal to me beyond looking at the outside in a bewildered manner, so off to the Red Dot Design Museum I trotted, through the steaming, gorgeous-smelling night markets (how do they manage to not make a mess on the streets, I wonder?).

In the Design Museum
The museum was heaps cool, but even better was the traditional Chinese tea place that I stumbled on (and for stumbled on, read "found in the Rough Guide and sought out with the aid of a very precise map"). I hate using the word "quaint" but it was totally worth the usage, and while my guy explained to me the intricate and strange manner in which the Chinese tortured themselves by drinking tea I stared with the sort of open mouthed, bug-eyed glee only exhibited by kids watching magicians or OAPs watching Countdown. I am so in for this sort of shit, and I sat there pouring the water into the teapot, letting it brew, pouring into the pouring pot, into the smelling pot, into the sipping cup, again and again, and slowly but surely getting through my elicit-looking packet of oolong while taking in the soothing words of my Simone de Beauvoir book (She Came To Stay, if you're asking) before dragging myself back to the hostel where I collapsed into bed and finally realised how much my feet were actually killing me, and probably had been for the last 6 hours.

I was having a very pleasant time on my own in Singapore.


The thing is, I had places to be and money to not spend (Singapore is fairly expensive). I had shafted myself financially and had to rely on not losing my hostel key overnight - which sounds easy, but I've done stupider things - so that I could use the deposit to buy the next morning's bus ticket on to Johor Bahru and out of this teeny tiny, clean and slightly anal country once and for all.

Friday, July 16, 2010

Winter? Yeah, right

It's winter in Sydney. It's 15 degrees right now, and gorgeously sunny. I can deal with this.

I've always thought of Australian winters as everyone else's summers, and to be fair, its not like that. We've experienced the coldest winter here since way back when, but in all honestly its not been so bad. The worst thing is that they don't have heating or insulation in the houses, as it would literally cook you to death in summer, so the frustrating thing is not being able to get properly warm ever. At least back in rainy Manchester you get home, take off your sodden clothes, put your warm comfies on and have a hot tea and biscuit and bask in the cosiness. In Sydney you sit in front of your tiny ineffective heater, cursing the country for not being as warm as promised on the brochure. We even had 2 weeks solid of rain, and I got so pissy it was sort of ridiculous, given that I come from a country where rain is the chief produce and have just lived in a country where "-20....-35 with windchill" wasn't an unusual morning forecast.

However, that lasted only for a few weeks, and it's started to get warmer again - or at least the weather is tricking me into believing so this week. It's that perfect sort of weather where you're not shivering but also not sweating out of every pore on your face and working out how many clothes you can dispense with without becoming a hoochie. I enjoy it.

I've also found that surfing in the colder seasons is quite different to catching waves when its baking hot and you're constantly worrying about getting the top of your ears burnt. Yeah, you have to wear a wetsuit, and getting the damn thing on and off is sort of an ordeal in itself, but the breaks are cleaner, it's much more of an achievement that you managed to drag yourself out there in the first place, its less busy, the Manly Surf Liability School's numbers are thankfully depleted, and its actually warmer in the water than it is out of it. Plus I've started to get passable at it. I stand everytime, I'm catching both smaller and bigger waves (the first is difficult because there's less power to push you; the latter is difficult because you might actually die) and I am sort of carving here and there, and riding the swell right in rather than getting overexcited at being up and nosediving into the white. The dude at my favourite cafe told me back in January that it would take me 4 months to get good; he was right. It all just comes naturally now, and even the board doesn't seem so solid (crew) when it hits me.


Other updates......our house is now a happy little 3-person home, and living with a boy is actually fabulous. He cleans and washes and doesn't really cook but he does buy chocolate and download movies and heats up my bed at night, so we'll let him off on that one. I think 3 is the perfect number to live in a place, and this is my third house in which that has been the case - the first two times I was the gooseberry with a couple, and as much as I loved both those situations its nice to escape that role!

Work is going well, and we're opening up a new venue in 2 weeks with a huge ass drum n bass party for everyone, with 11 DJs playing. Its all on my shoulders a little, as I named it, am doing the graphic design for the flyers / logo / website / everything, and have to book all the performers and promote it and arranged a paint party for all my friends to help my tag and stencil and spraypaint the massive ass black wall on the far side, and its a lot of pressure, but it's also pretty awesome. It might give me chance to stay in Aus too - something I didn't want to do, but something that is seeming more and more appealing as time goes by.

I've discovered my spiritual home, which is Cult Sinema at the Annandale hotel. They play really bad b-movies every Tuesday, and you can eat Thai food while you chill on couches and try to win awesome giveaways such as a Shinto boxset! They showed Pin (A Plastic Nightmare) as well as the amazingly-titled Stray Cat Rock: Sex Hunter, which was not only unexpectedly fantastic, but made me want to see the whole series, and confused the bejeesus out of me for the whole night.

I went to Melbourne and fell in love with the place. It's a lot more indie, funky and less pretentious than Sydney by a long shot, but then again Sydney has its positive side too. I am hoping to go back for at least a weekend to visit the friends I have there, as the city also contains what I strongly believe to be the best bar in Australia. Sydney doesn't have much of a bar culture, and this place is basically just a basement with a ton of couches thrown in there, a good vibe and great music pumping throughout. I could not have been happier sat down there with a group of good friends from Canada, Sydney, Melbourne, the US and a bottle of Bulmers in my hand. Pure bliss.


I was also in a music vid with my favourite Frenchies Astrid and Laurianne, which was heaps of fun and a total pleasure as I love the band and their music. They're lovely people, kick the ass of every venue they play in, and have a hell of a lot more ingenuity than most famous performers around at the moment. They love what they do and do it because they love it, and that's so commendable it makes me want to hug a bogan.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ex-D9_TmRVg

It seems I've also convinced David to move to Sydney - I hope its as good as you expect mate, we can't wait to have you stay!

Thursday, April 29, 2010

A Hippy, Not A Buddhist

In my attempt to squeeze every little bit of life out of my remaining time in Sydney, I find myself doing increasingly bizarre things.

2 weekends ago I went to a meditation retreat at Nan Tien buddhist temple near Wollongong, the largest of its kind in the Southern hemisphere (although everything in Australia is allegedly "the largest in the Southern hemisphere"). It's a gorgeous site, and we got to wear proper robes and bow and stay silent for 28 hours.

Yes, you read that right. Me. I stayed silent for 28 hours, and that includes the night sharing a room with my 2 friends. Not a sound made its way through my vocal tract (apart from a muffled laugh or few), even when I was eating on a table with 5 strangers, doing tai chi or getting bowed to by a group of elderly tourists who, despite all my hair, my air of confusion and my less-than-noble gait, assumed me to be a real monk.

People go on about meditation and how it changes their lives and stuff. I was all set for this sort of realisation, but in fact just came to the conclusion that I really enjoy my constant and slightly oppressive cascade of random thoughts; getting rid of them just makes me uncomfortable. Or sleepy. So meditation is not for me.

Neither is Buddhism, apparently. I've always considered it one of the more palatable religions, but I'd never really considered how the idea of karma is so similar to, say, Christian ethics before. One of my many issues with Judeo-Christian ethical systems is that they are inherently selfish; don't be bad or you'll go to hell; act in a 'good' way and get to heaven in the end. This seems to me to be, in itself, negative, and so the whole 'holier-than-thou' attitude of hardcore Christians really pisses me off.

I thought karma was much more altruistic than that. Turns out its not. As the amazing Reverend Yo (this rad woman monk (nun?) with a shaven head and wicked shoe-socks) explained that there IS a hell in Buddhism, and that one has to act well in order to shake off your negative karma in order to progress to nirvana, I realised that it's pretty much the same thing. Shame.

I still think that atheist ethics are just fundamentally better; be good for the sake of being good. Of course, it also leaves open the possibility of being bad for the sake of being bad, but that's just the way it is. It just means that those who choose to act well are purely good people.

Last weekend was a lot less deep: I went to a 'doof in the bush', or for those English-speaking people amongst us, a tiny little electronic music festival 4 hours outside of Sydney. There were only 600 people there, mostly old hippies, young hippies, and weekend hippies, and it was fantastic. I've never been to such a positive event  in my entire life; you made a million friends instantly, everyone pitched it, it was environmentally sound, and there was even tree-planting (which I would totally have joined in with, was it not for my physical inability to leave the tent apart from to crawl to the toilet vomiting at the time). I even met a bushtucker expert who gave me his card and promised to give me a bushtucker tour (no jokes) when I make it to the central coast! WOO HOO!

This weekend is my first in about 3 months for which I have no plans, and it's also my last before the Ukrainian gets here.....