All posts by Ruth

3rd Art Class

One15Marina

Hi Everyone,

    Our instructors say, “It’s okay; learn from your mistakes.”  I’m definitely learning a lot because most of what I do is mistakes.  This is very much the work of a beginner.

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My Philippine supermarket dresses.  I had photographed them “having a party” on the boat.  But there is so much detail I was so far over my head trying to paint them. And I didn’t draw enough of the detail first and then I drew it so light I couldn’t see it when I started to paint.   And I thought we were supposed to finish the painting during the class time so I rushed which didn’t help.  It still isn’t done and it will be interesting to see what it finally looks like.  I will have to try a second attempt.  In these art classes each person does her own thing.  I use the pronoun her because there are only women.  Older, younger, locals and visitors like me.  They were all painting with oils, many pointing out to me how much more forgiving oils were because you can paint over areas to “fix” things.   Try that with watercolor, especially when the paint is still wet and you make a huge mess.  The teacher comes around and gives guidance.  There were times when I dreaded when he would come to me because though I don’t know how to do things right, I know when they are wrong.  But it is the point of taking classes and he just reminds me what to do and that helps me to remember hopefully preventing the same mistake in the future.   After class I had lunch with a lovely young woman from Manchester, England living here for several years because of her husband’s work.  She, however,  is having a difficult time finding work so she is taking these art classes and also volunteering at an afterschool program helping kids with homework.  She showed me how to get from our art class to the Chinatown MRT.  I had been taking the Tanjong Pagar MRT which involved changing trains and the Chinatown line is direct to Harbourfront.  Chinatown was jam packed with tourists.  It was hot and by the time I got back to the boat, I was pooped.  But it is a good experience and all of the women are very encouraging of each other.

clip_image004  The studio.  Unfortunately they charge for studio time so you can’t just hang out.  It’s fair since they have to pay their bills too.

clip_image006  You come up the really slow elevator to the 4th floor, walk out the double doors onto this balcony.  It would be wonderful to just sit there.  There is no charge for that so I might just do it one day.  Unfortunately this area isn’t open before class.  Our teacher comes about 9:45 to unlock the 4th floor and class starts at 10 sharp.  It ends at 12:30 so there is no time to waste.

clip_image007 The view from the balcony.  The long building across the street with the first floor archways was a “stable” for rickshaws.  More about that in another email. 

clip_image008 The ground floor cafe. Randal and I ate there when we came to find out about the classes. If you stand next to the tree and looked up you would see the balcony outside the studio. 

Not far from here people live and work in those lovely shophouses.  I could easily live in a neighborhood like this and am getting spoiled rotten the longer we stay!  Of course if we stayed 6 months I could have a library card.  And I like the area around Little India too.  So much to like about Singapore

Ruth Johnson

DoraMac

Shophouses correction and addition

Hi Everyone, again

I just came across this article in the magazine database I access with my Roanoke County Public Library card.  It’s an article from the International Herald Tribune about shophouses.  It won’t go on www.mydormamc.com because it’s copywritten, but I thought it does explain a good bit about shophouses.  The ventilation comes from a central airwell and not the windows.  Maybe you could change that Audrey on the blog.  Anyway…if you’re interested you can read this.  If not, don’t worry, there’s no test.

Ru

 

Shophouse fulfills a Singapore dream.(Finance).Sonia Kolesnikov-Jessop. International Herald Tribune (Feb 6, 2009): p.14. (995 words) From Military & Intelligence Database

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Full Text:COPYRIGHT 2009 International Herald Tribune

Byline: Sonia Kolesnikov-Jessop

SINGAPORE — After renting one of Singapore’s historic shophouses for almost two years, Marcel Heijnen, 44, dreamed of buying a similar place but thought he could never afford it.Then, despite all the odds, the Dutch expatriate and his girlfriend Dawn Mok, now his wife, found what they were looking for on their first day of house-hunting in late 2001.”The price was 710,000 Singapore dollars, which was actually quite cheap for this type of house, because the previous owner was desperate to sell it,” the graphic designer recalled. That was about $473,000.”But we had to decide immediately because the house was going to be repossessed by his bank unless he sold it, so we had to make a decision nearly on the spot.”He added: “I remember thinking it felt large. It just felt right.”Shophouses, the two- or three-story row buildings used for residential or commercial purposes, or a mix of both, were introduced to Singapore in the 19th century by Chinese merchants and Arab and Jewish developers.The traditional structures typically have a narrow frontage, sometimes as little as four meters, or 13 feet, but are quite deep, sometimes extending all the way to the alleys between blocks. Many also include a kind of central airwell, a feature incorporated from traditional southern Chinese urban architecture, to provide ventilation and light.Along the front of each row of houses runs what is called a “five-foot way” – a covered walkway, sometimes more than five feet wide, formed by the overhang of the upper floors, a design legacy attributed to Sir Stamford Raffles, the founder of Singapore as a British colonial outpost.The city-state demolished many of the houses as part of its modernization in the 1960s and ’70s, but some remain, though not always in good condition.Renovated units usually have colorful facades, often with European-inspired neoclassical motifs and louver windows, and are in demand among home buyers.They typically sell for around 2.5 million to 3 million dollars on the east coast and as much as 5 million to 8 million dollars in the prime areas like Emerald Hill, off Orchard Road, said Susan Ye, managing director of the Isabel Redrup Agency, which specializes in the historic properties. They typically rent for 6,000 to 13,000 dollars a month, she added.The Heijnens’s house, which dates from the 1930s and which they own freehold, had been renovated and extended by its previous owner so the couple had to do only minor renovations when they moved in, spending about 50,000 dollars to attach a new bathroom to the master bedroom, install a kitchen and recondition the floors.”The house had actually been used as a shop and storage space for Chinese antiques, so the space was very bare. But one of the advantages of the previous owner’s trade was that he had replaced the first floor flooring with wood that he had salvaged from an old bungalow. Our floors are probably older than our house,” Heijnen said.”He also used his contacts in the trade in Indonesia to have some woodcarvings made for the fanlights above some of the doors and windows,” he added. “These carvings are not original to these houses, and we can see from our neighbors that window mesh would have been put in those fanlights, but they still look very nice.”The 280-square-meter, or 3,000-square-foot, house is typically narrow – just 4.8 meters wide and 23 meters deep – and stands on about 125 square meters of land. A visitor immediately steps into Heijnen’s office, before moving on toward the large kitchen and dining area at the back of the house.Upstairs there is a living room, with the master bedroom and bathroom at the rear. His wife’s office is on the third floor.One of the downsides of these long and narrow row houses is that they can be fairly dark inside.To remedy that, the Heijnens decided in 2004 to create a large airwell, a vertical shaft from the ground floor through to the pitched roof. This major structural work, which forced the couple to leave the house for two months, also provided an opportunity to make some repairs to the previous owner’s renovations. In all, the work cost $120,000.The couple also had to seek permission from the Urban Redevelopment Authority to keep some of the detailing on the facades, including some old decorative tiles from Malacca and wood carvings. The items had been installed by the previous owner but were not in keeping with the original facade, which is covered by a conservation program.Heijnen said their architect managed to persuade the authorities to allow them to keep the detailing and to permit the construction of a short staircase to the attic.”It’s quite nice to know that the authorities here are slightly flexible, because they do want these old properties to be preserved,” he added.Since then, the couple bought a plot at the back of their house for $35,000. Although small, the additional space allowed them to replace the kitchen wall with floor-to-ceiling sliding doors, which let in a lot of additional light.”The house has been a slow labor of love, evolving with us,” Heijnen said. “The best points of living in such a house is the character, the feel of the place and the very high ceilings. We also love our neighborhood and I like it that when you step out of the house you’re onto the sidewalk. Some people might think it’s not safe, but really it’s not an issue in Singapore.”He added: “Maybe one downside is the layout, which is O.K. if you don’t have children or guests. But because the house is narrow, you don’t have much space you can close off, so just about everything becomes a walkway to the next space.”The couple is mulling more renovations because the large attic space above the living room could be converted into a second bedroom. “I wouldn’t mind knocking out the ceiling and opening it up,” Heijnen said. “More for the visual space than to create a mezzanine.”

Source Citation:Kolesnikov-Jessop, Sonia. “Shophouse fulfills a Singapore dream.(Finance).” International Herald Tribune (Feb 6, 2009): 14. Military & Intelligence Database. Gale. Remote Access. 18 Feb. 2009
http://find.galegroup.com/ips/start.do?prodId=IPS.

Bugis

Sentosa Island, Singapore

Hi Everyone,
  Bugis is one of those words that would make an American kid laugh and a parent frown when hearing their child say Bugis, Bugis, Bugis.  In some ways that would be an accurate assessment.  According to Wikepedia,  “Bugis Street, in the city-state of Singapore, was renowned internationally from the 1950s to the 1980s for its nightly gathering of transwomen, a phenomenon which made it one of Singapore’s top tourist destinations during that period. Underground digging to construct the Bugis MRT station prior to that also caused the upheaval and termination of nightly transgender sex bazaar culture, marking the end of a colourful and unique era in Singapore’s history.  An attempt by the Singapore Tourist Promotion Board to bring back the former glamor was unsuccessful.”     It goes on to explain where the name Bugis originated.  “According to knowledgeable long-term residents of the area, before the arrival of the British, there used to be a large canal which ran through the area where the Bugis, a seafaring people from South Sulawesi province in Indonesia, could sail up, moor their boats and trade with Singaporean merchants.It was these people after whom the thoroughfare was named. The Bugis, or Buginese, also put their sailing skills to less benign uses and gained a reputation in the region as being a race of bloodthirsty pirates.”  When we were in Makassar,  which is in South Sulawesi, Indonesia, our guide Ruslie said the same thing about the Buginese seafarers.  But what Bugis means to me is National Library, the Bras Basah Complex with lots of great used books stores, Commercial Straits Art Co, Art Friend, the Singapore Art Museum and lots of places I haven’t yet discovered. 

  I spent most of Thursday visiting most of those places. 

clip_image002  Before leaving the boat I made sure I had (top to bottom) my Singpore map, blue MRT card for the Singapore subway system, white One15 Marina card for buses to and from Sentosa Island, the MRT map, the street atlas page with the library and other good places high-lighted in yellow, the Sentosa Island and the one15 bus schedules and the Vivo City Mall directory in case I absolutely couldn’t avoid going to Vivo City Mall for printer paper.  I also had my phone..not in the picture.  Randal and I left the marina on the 9:15 Blue Sentosa Island bus.  It dropped us off at the entrance to the mall and we walked to the MRT entrance.  Randal was going off to do his thing and I to do mine, but we both were headed the same way on the MRT.  I got off at the Bugis MRT and by 10:15 I was at the National Library Central Library.  http://www.nlb.gov.sg/

clip_image004  from Wikepedia

I spent almost 2 hours browsing the really large watercolor collection choosing the ones with “The Beginner” in the title.   I was in the part of the library with the circulating collection and it was quite busy which was nice to see.  But it was quiet and roomy and very comfortable.  The staff was very helpful too.  I would have stayed much longer, but the Singapore Art Museum has free admission hours between noon and 2 pm. 

Before I went off to the museum I had to,  HAD TO  stop at the Commercial Straits Art Co. just across North Bridge Street from the library.  http://www.straitscomart.com/   Luckily the library and the museum are free!  Then it was off to the museum which was just a fast 10 minute walk.

The regular admission to the museum is 8 Sing dollars, about $5.50 US.  That’s not tons of money, but free is better.

http://www.singart.com/museum.php?page=the_building   is the link to the museum page that shows photos of the building which had originally been a Catholic School.

clip_image006  photo from Wikepedia

Much of the collection was too modern and performace related for me, but I really liked the 3rd floor gallery with the current exhibition of local artists.   http://apad.org.sg/  is a link to the The Angkatan Pelukis Aneka Daya (Association of Artists of Various Resources) known as APAD, founded on 29 July 1962.  The exhibit included some wonderful watercolor paintings.  I did stop at the Museum shop and spent just $4 US.  As I was finally leaving the museum I thanked the man at the desk for having the free hours.  He asked me to do a quick survey and then gave me a free museum bag!

By then it was about 2:15 and I still had to buy computer paper and get some food!  I walked into the Raffles City Mall which has an MRT stop attached but in the entire mall there was not one place to buy computer paper.  At least that’s what a very knowledgeable local told me.  She said the electronics shop on the 3rd floor might…..  I just left and continued walking back towards the library and went next door to the Bras Basha Complex where along with used book shops they have stores that do sell computer paper.  I bought some, the 100 gram weight and put it into my new museum bag.  Then it was off for lunch at the Toast Box which I had eyed earlier in the day.

clip_image008  Kaya Toast  photo from http://www.mylittlefoodblog.com/

It looked exactly like this.  It tasted just like toast with butter and marmalade.  I was starving and the toast and tea at the Toast Box were just as wonderful as High Tea at Raffles Hotel which I doubt we’ll do since men must wear long pants and Randal has vowed never to do that again.  It took longer to convince the cashier that I wanted to order tea with no milk or sugar than to gobble down my toast and tea. The British drink tea with milk and sugar so it is supposed that all westerners do the same.  I knew the toast would have enough sugar without adding more to the tea.    “Kaya, also called srikaya (from the word meaning “rich” in Malay based on its golden color) or coconut egg jam, is a coconut jam made from coconut milk, duck or chicken eggs which are flavored by pandan leaf and sweetened with sugar. The spread originated in Southeast Asia, most likely Indonesia or Malaysia. This is reflected by its tropical ingredients santan (coconut milk) and pandan leaf. Kaya is sweet and creamy, available as a golden brown or green colored spread depending on the amount of pandan and extent of caramelization of the sugar. As with other jams, kaya is typically spread on toast to make kaya toast and eaten in the morning but is enjoyed throughout the day. It is also used with glutinous rice to make kuih seri kaya.”  Wikepedia  

Then it was time to Go Home!  I found my way back to the Bugis MRT.  At HarbourFront caught the 3:15 bus back to Sentosa Cove and was back on the boat before 4. 

You can see from this email that I didn’t have my camera with me.  I have found it almost impossible to buy AA batteries that last longer than 20 photos and many batteries won’t work at all. The fact the Duracell is going to be made in China is not encouraging.   The local Giant brand wouldn’t take even one photo.  So I’m going back to my old Kodak with the lithium rechargeable.  Also,  I knew that no photos would be allowed in either the library or museum.  And though I know everything on Wikepedia isn’t accurate, by their own admission, the photos are not copywritten and they do have info you can’t find easily about local kinds of things. 

clip_image010  Remember the game, “In my bag I have..” and you would go through the alphabet naming everything in the bag.  All my bags were full by the time I got home.  That was another reason I didn’t take the camera; I had enough to carry.  But from now on I will.  I miss it when I don’t have it.

clip_image012  Water, sweater for the AC in buildings and MRT, umbrella for the afternoon rain, stuff I bought at the art store, freebies from the library, a “thing” from the museum shop and my museum gift bag that carried the photocopier paper home.  I had the small sketch book thinking I would have time to sketch.  Next time.  It certainly felt heavier than it looks.  By the time I have the umbrella, sweater, water bottle, pocketbook, maps, keys, camera in my backpack, it already weight a ton. 

Ruth Johnson

DoraMac

First art class

Sentosa, Singapore

Hi Everyone,

Had my first watercolor art class today. There were 5 of us.  Three of us were taught in English and 2 in Mandarin though I think they too understood English.   Very humbling to actually try to paint watercolor that looks like real watercolor and not like watery acrylic.  The class started promptly at 10 am and ended 15 minutes late at 12:45.  An acrylics class was to begin at 1 pm so our instructor Shan had to make us stop and clean up.   We all would have sat there for several more hours trying to fix our mistakes….which you mostly can’t do.  But as Shan says, you can learn from them. 

http://www.myartspace.com.sg/Pages/studio/studios.html  shows pictures of the studio and the building housing it and the Art Cafe.

Our Instructor  (from the MyArtSpace website)

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Wen Shan

“After graduating with a diploma in fine art, Wen Shan spent 2 years in
Paris to learn French and major in life drawing. He passed the Test de
Connexion de Francais and mastered the fine art of life drawing at
Atelier Beaux-Arts de Mairie de Paris. The capital of the arts offered him
ample opportunities to meet artists from different parts of the world and
to be inspired by the dynamic arts scene.
As an instructor, Wen Shan’s primary role is to inspire and maintain
participants’ interest in art. He believes that critical thinking, self-critique
and learning from mistakes are important approaches in learning art.
Wen Shan offers guidance to learners in developing their own style and
statements through self searching and appreciating masterpieces.
To sharpen his sensitivity of seeing, Wen Shan keeps his hands busy
with still life, portrait and life drawing.”

Shan was informal, encouraging and professional.  He didn’t let us get away with mistakes.  He told us what was wrong and how to fix it, or in my case a few times, fixed it himself.  The students were all supportive of each other too.  There were 4 women and one young man and from what I could see we were all beginners.   I’ll take some photos of them next time if they don’t mind and of the class/studio too.  During the class we are all pretty focused on just trying to do our painting.  The time just flew!

Shan gave us a few instructions and then told us to draw the still life composition.  When we had been drawing for a bit Shan demonstrated the correct way to get the objects placed correctly on the paper.  He helped us see the relationship between the 3 objects,  the positive shapes of the objects and the negative spaces between the objects. 

clip_image003 Our subject.

Then came the even harder part, painting with watercolor.  We worked with only one color and changed its lightness or darkness by varying the amount of paint and the amount of water.  Something that sounds so simple as painting with one color and water truly takes a great deal of skill.  And lots of practice!

clip_image005  First  we had to practice washes.  Mine aren’t so good.  The ones on the left are too uneven. The ones on the right were to go smoothly from light to dark and dark to light.  My transitions aren’t good. 

clip_image006  It actually looks better in this photo than it does in real life.   I don’t usually paint on such large paper and lost track of my paint and what I wanted to do.  I painted the larger areas too slowly and the small areas too fast.  The bottle shadow is totally wrong.  BUT…I did see what I was supposed to be trying to do so I will practice.  It was interesting painting with only one color and water. 

It was a really good first class and I am eager to return next Saturday.  I had no problems getting myself back and forth from the class.  I left the boat at 8 am and caught the 8 15 Sentosa bus to the Harbourfront MRT, switched trains at Outram Park and got off at the Tanjong Pagar MRT.  I stopped to buy a new umbrella at the small wet market near the MRT and, even with stopping to take photos as I walked, was still over an hour early.  The studio didn’t open until 9:50 so I just wandered around.  That was fine, it’s an interesting area,  but that left no time to talk with the other students.  Actually only Janell (I think that is her name) and I were early.  The others were actually 10 to 15 minutes late!  Because I had to pay for a few supplies after class I didn’t get to chat with the others then either.  Next time.  If you look at the Wikepedia article about the area of Tanjong Pagar they do a pretty good job.  I need to do some more research before I write about it. 

Ruth Johnson

DoraMac

Art Classes

Hi Everyone,

I signed up for watercolor classes today!  I had discovered the classes searching the Internet;  had an email exchange with the director ; and today Randal and I went to see the studio.    www.myartspace.com offers intro classes and then some follow-up sessions.  I’ll take 6 sessions, each lasting 2 and a half hours.  The first one is this Saturday at 10 am.  It takes about 40 minutes to get there, so I’ll leave the boat at 8 am just in case!  The studio neighborhood seems great for exploring. It looks to be part of Chinatown.  To get there we took the Sentosa bus to the HarbourFront MRT stop and took the MRT one stop, to Outram Park on the NE line.  There we changed trains and took the EW green line train one stop to the Tanjong Pagar MRT station.  “fm tanjong pagar mrt station , walk towards maxwell road and / or  tanjong pagar road.we are near maxwell food centre, behind fairfield methodist church.”   Those were Kathryn’s direction.  It was a 10 minute walk from the MRT station to the wonderful building where MyArtSpace is located on the 4th floor. 

When we first walked in I thought, “No way can I take classes with these people; they already know how to paint.”  But Angie Chan who runs www.fill-your-walls.com welcomed us (as she was turning on the lights having just arrived herself)  and assured me that beginners were truly welcomed and encouraged.  Actually MyArtSpace wasn’t open on Wednesdays, but since we were there she called the manager to see if he were coming in. He would be there in 5 minutes!  Chankerk, the manager and also one of my future teachers was also very encouraging.  He in turn called the director to make sure I was eligible for the price specials (the first 3 people to sign up kind of thing) and I was.  He told me how the school works and added up the costs.  Not cheap for a “just for fun” artist so I needed to think.  Randal and I went downstairs and ate an early lunch at the ArtCafe.  Randal said, “Go for it!!” so after lunch I went back upstairs, signed on the dotted line and put our money where my mouth is.  I do keep saying I want to take lessons so now here’s my chance. 

It will be a lesson in independence for me too.  I have to go by myself, meet lots of new people by myself, and I’m not used to that anymore.  I especially am not used to traveling around by myself on public transportation.  I walked all over JingAn and Bijao in China where I truly couldn’t get lost.  But really, it’s pretty easy to get where you are going here too because the MRT makes sense, almost all people speak English and when they give you directions they know  what they are talking about.  Before we left the Tanjong Pagar MRT station we weren’t sure where to go so got out a map.  A Singaporean saw us, volunteered to help and gave us excellent directions.  (We had left this morning before Kathryn’s email had arrived.)  So it won’t be hard; I’ll just leave myself lots of time.  I promise lots of photos from this experience; just didn’t take the time today.  I’ll use all of that time I get to classes early to take street photos. 

After that we went to the Homely Hardware Supercenter.  That’s not a typo, their word for homey is homely.  There probably isn’t really a word homey, at least not to describe how comfortable a home is.  I think a homey is someone who lives in South Boston, or is that a Southy.  Anyway, I though Homely Hardware warranted a few words here.  It had taken us several trains and a fairly long walk to get there.  It was pouring when we left so flagged a taxi to take us to the MRT.  The driver was a several generation Malay, the original inhabitants of Singapore.  We talked politics thanks to Randal bringing it up.  He was hoping Obama could settle the issues in the Middle East, a very tall order. 

Though we were pooped and carrying too much stuff from the hardware store we stopped at VivoCity in Harbourfront to go to Giant Supermarket where you have to put a coin in the slot to get a shopping cart.  You get your coin back when you return the cart. Usually we just use those quickie shopping baskets so we don’t buy too much to carry.   I took the cart so I could put my backpack with half the hardware stuff in it into the cart.  But using a cart meant we bought more than we could easily hand carry.  It was mostly fruit and veggies, but other things too.  We went out to the taxi stand and it was pouring again.  The walk from the marina drop-off point to the boat was a bit soggy, but we’re cruisers so we should be able to do wet.  It was almost 5 pm.  We were wet, tired and hungry.  But we had food and towels and no plans but to sit and sit and sit.  We had started the day with a 40 minute walk around Sentosa Cove, fast becoming a daily routine.  Yup, we like Singapore.

Ruth Johnson,

Doramac

walk around Sentosa Cove

One Degree 15 Marina

Sentosa Island, Singapore

Hi Everyone,

  Yesterday morning Randal and I biked around Sentosa Cove.  But we decided the path was better for walking than biking so this morning went out to walk around the very upscale area along the water’s edge with views of the Singapore skyline and the working harbor area.  I’d love a tour of one of the homes. Lots of new homes and condos being built.   Maybe we could pretend to be buyers!  But probably not.

There is a lovely flat paved path but it’s too narrow, winding , and short for biking at a speed where you actually get exercise. 

clip_image002  Walking path with the homes on the left side and the water’s edge the right.

clip_image004  One of the homes we passed along the way.  They all seem to have lap lanes and wonderful views of the water.  The path goes right by, not very far at all from the end of the pool so there isn’t so much privacy if people were sitting outside or even inside with the blinds open.  Each home does have a small fence to delineate a boundary.

clip_image005  Another home that we passed.  Lots of glass and stone and concrete and light.

clip_image007  Lots of yards had clear glass fences like this one with the sun reflecting the view of the water and the walking path.  The decorations were for Chinese New Year.  There was almost always a pool behind the fence.

clip_image009  There were incredibly beautiful homes along here and this was their view.  The skyline is visible behind the cranes and cargo ships.

clip_image011  One Degree Fifteen Marina with the `city skyline behind.  The marina is located 1 degree 15 minutes north of the equator.

Last night we had lots of visitors on the boat who had emailed us asking for a tour.  The Diesel Duck is still pretty unique in the cruising world and Randal still loves bragging about how wonderful they are.   After the multiple tours which actually lasted a few hours and during which we met new people,  we were invited to join them at a small party at the end of the dock hosted by the sailboat “Charisma.”  As I type Randal is giving an impromptu tour to a German man living in Singapore with an aviation related computer business; his programmers are mostly in Jakarta where he says there are aviation industry people willing to learn computer programming. The world is definitely smaller here.   Several of the people we met last night have work that takes them all over Asia and the Middle East. 

Yesterday we also took the bus to Vivo City Mall to see what else was there besides the Giant Supermarket. Lots of upscale stores where I will try to find a new bathing suit eventually.   We ate lunch, visited PageOne book store where I bought a watercolor instructional video, bought a few things at the Cold Storage fresh foods supermarket and then took a taxi back to the marina.  We still haven’t quite figured out where to catch the $1 bus or the free One 15 bus back from the mall.  We’ll learn.  Tomorrow we’ll go into the city to for boat projects and just to explore.  At some point we’ll start in on the museums and bird park, but for now it’s just wander around the different areas of Singapore and enjoy big city life.

Ruth Johnson

DoraMac

Settling in At One Degree 15

One Degree 15 Marina

Sentosa Island, Singapore

Hi Everyone,

   Randal and I went into Singapore center yesterday.  We walked out of the Marina and caught the bus that takes you off Sentosa Island to Harbour Front  and Vivo City Mall or the MRT. It’s about a 10 minute ride.   Vivo City Mall has a Giant Supermarket with great reasonably priced fruit and veggies and yogurt.  There’s lots of other stuff too like you’d find at your local Kroger store, but when you have to carry it all to a taxi or the bus and then down to the boat, you shop lightly.  We had stocked up on lots of paper products, chicken and pork in Sebana Cove so we don’t need lots of stuff at this point. 

   So we caught the bus from the Marina, took the MRT to the Little India area and went to the Sim Lin Tower and Sim Lin Square which have lots of electronic products.   Randal actually picked up something we’d ordered our last trip.  We got several things we needed though not all because some shops were still closed from Chinese New Year.  After a quick lunch at Burger King (a treat for Randal) we set off for the National Library.   Our walk took us through Chinatown and the rows and rows of stalls set up for Chinese New Year sales.  A Singapore Chinese flea market.  Pretty quickly we decided to continue on to the library and got out our map.  A lovely lady, born in Singapore but for the past 30 years living in Australia, guided us on a shortcut over to the National Library.  She said she’d left for Australia 30 years ago, WHEN SHE WAS VERY YOUNG!  She kept emphasizing that she had gone very young so I wouldn’t think she was old, I guess  But she was very nice and took us the quickest way to the library.  Everyone seems to know where the library is located and that’s quite nice, I think.  Of course everyone seemed to know how to tell us how to get anywhere we needed to go.  The MRT, the book stores… And they were correct too!!  Most people speak English, though some accents can be difficult to understand

Unfortunately, it was NO GO at the library to get a visitor card.  There are requirement, like you have to stay here for 6 months or have a greencard work permit… So we just didn’t qualify.  RATS!!!  We can go in and use all of the National Library resources and any of the branch locations; but we can’t borrow material.  I’m really disappointed.  The Bras Basah Complex is right next to the library and that’s where there’s lots of used book stores and a really good art supply store.   So I guess I’ll have to just read in the library and buy cheap books next door.  I did email the library system and asked if we could PLEASE have a card, but I haven’t heard back.

   That was yesterday.  Today we stayed around the marina and did chores.  Later in the day I went for a walk around Sentosa Cove next door and it will be a great place to walk and bike.

clip_image002

I found this map on the Sentosa Cove website to show you where in the world we are. 

Amazingly I’ve been everywhere they note except Dubai.

clip_image004This is a terrible map of Sentosa Island, but it does show where we are and the great area for walking and biking; all the dark brown area above the line is where we can walk and bike on a bike/walking path around Sentosa Cove. Sentosa Cove is mostly a high end residential area with most condos having lap lane pools.   Maybe below the black line too, but I haven’t gone there yet.  Most of the green area is amusement parks and beaches and places we’ll probably skip.

So we seem to be getting over missing Sebana Cove… though we do wish all of our Sebana Cove friends were here too.

So that’s it.

Ruth Johnson

DoraMac

Arrival in Singapore

www.one15marina.com

Hi Everyone,

Arrived safe and sound (about 1:45 pm) and found out our boat had grown 7 feet upon arrival at the marina in Singapore.    In 2007 we left the Chinese boatyard with a Diesel Duck model 46′ plus 2′ which is a total of 48 feet.   But at the marina in Singapore, measured with a tape measure laid along the pier where we are tied, from our anchor to the far side of our hanging dinghy we are 55 feet so we have to pay for that!  You pay by the foot.  In Sebana Cove, where we were this morning, we paid for less than 50 feet because our registration papers indicate the boat is less than 50 feet.  We can take the dinghy off its hangar and put in onto the boat deck somewhere and get remeasured, but we won’t save much money and the dinghy will be in the way.  So we’ll just pay them the more money since it’s their marina and they get to make the rules.  

Last night was our last in Sebana Cove so we walked around the docks and said good-bye to our cruising friends.  At one point Randal said we’d better stop visiting or our dinner would be really late and he would be really drunk.  Everyone offered drinks and chats and it was all very nice.  But sad too!  In Sebana you have to make your own fun so cruisers have get-togethers at the drop of a hat.  And our van trips to Sungai Rengit were little fun outings where you met new people or got to know others better.  Here, at OneDegree 15 Marina the attraction for us is Singapore and boat supplies and repair more than social gatherings with other cruisers or sitting by the swimming pool.   We are birthed on Delta Dock to avoid the rolling found in other birthing areas and also because we are a visiting boat.  Not sure how many of our neighboring boats have live-aboards. Most seem empty.  But the marina is big and full so don’t think we are stuck off in an abandoned area somewhere.  Lots of security here.

We left Sebana Cove, Malaysia and are now in Sentosa, Singapore.  We had to check out of Malaysia yesterday with their immigrations and customs and into Singapore today.  To check in here you call Immigration on your VHF radio when you near the Marina at a place called Sisters Islands and they come.  You pass them your documents (carefully so they don’t end up in the water.)  They stamp your passport, return your papers, carefully,  and send you along.  They didn’t come onto the boat.  We called about noonish and they came about oneish but were very nice.  Our regular crew list form that we’ve used everywhere else wasn’t acceptable so the immigration man redid them.  Randal had to sign 5 copies of something and the immigration official then had to sign and then they left with 4 copies and we kept one.  There was no charge for that, but there was a fee for customs which we paid through the marina when we arrived.

  The small Immigrations boat.

clip_image002  You can see the grassy area in front of the tall buildings.  That’s Sentosa Island where we are.  The tall buildings are Singapore.  There is a bus on Sentosa Island that takes you to the mainland.  We’ll take the MRT from there into Singapore city. 

clip_image003  The skyline of Singapore just before we got to Sisters Islands and did Immigration.

Tomorrow we’ll start to explore.

Ruth Johnson

DoraMac

Singapore

Quick Updates

Sebana Cove

   Hi Everyone,

A small change in plans.  We’re going to wait until after Chinese New Year to move to Singapore.  With lots of shops and offices being closed for several days and with lots more crowds in the streets and on the metro and…with me getting over a bout of food poisoning….it just seemed better to wait until the end of January to move.  Monday late afternoon I ate an apple and not long after that I started to get really sick.  I won’t go into details since I’m sure you can guess.  Luckily, a few days before, we got to know the folks on Reeflections II, Robin and Ian.  Robin is a nurse.  So I asked Randal to go get her Monday night.  Just having her come onto the boat made me feel better.  I was huddled under the covers with the chills having no clue that was coming from a fever.  She made me take Panadol and then brought some 1000 Plus which is similar to Gatorade.  We were all out of Gatorade but when we get more, some will be stored with the medical supplies.  I had a few awful bouts of sick during the night but the fever broke. Robin came back the next morning to check too which again made me feel better. Tuesday I felt better if I stayed laying down and took a compazine pill fairly often, though I still couldn’t eat anything.  Today I can walk and talk and had some toast and tea, but I have no desire to do much.  I had needed to lose a few of the pounds that I had gained here, but that wasn’t the way I had in mind.  I have eaten apples here for several months so I don’t know why I had the problem Monday or if it really was the apple.  But today I feel lots better though think rest rather than a bike ride will be the order of the day though the weather is beautiful.

  So that’s it from here.

Ru

The Roti Man

Sebana Cove, Johor, Malaysia

Hi Everyone,

The Roti Man of Sungai Rengit

  Hot off the griddle egg and onion  Roti Chani is the best food on earth!  The best roti chanai maker in Sungai Rengit and maybe all of Malaysia is Azaha of Restoran Azaha  # 50 Jalan Baker, 81620 Sungai Rengit, Pengerang, Johor, Malaysia.  He opens early in the morning, so if you aren’t there by 10:30 am, you sadly might hear Azaha say, “Sorry, none left.  You should come early.”  It’s half apology, half admonishment for being late!  One day I got the absolutely very last roti, and it was just plain; the eggs all gone. And twice Randal and I have biked to Sungai Rengit and arrived too late for any at all. So we have learned; be early if you want a roti.

Sebana Cove used to do two Sungai Rengit runs in the morning, 9:30 and 10 am.  We’d take the 9:30 van just to be there early enough to make a beeline to Azaha’s.  Now the van only goes at 10 am.  this past Thursday I took the van to town, got off at the post office, mailed a letter and ran to Azaha’s.  (Randal was on the boat doing boat things.)   Luckily there were a few of the roti dough balls left so I could order 3 egg and onion roti chanai to go. As I was ordering, another cruiser, Cliff, came along and ordered 4 egg and onion to go.  There were enough for Cliff, but I saw only a few more remaining for customers who came later. Azaha says the egg and onion are the most popular.   Azaha prepares about 300 roti for the weekday mornings and between 450 and 500 for the weekend.  He sells out every time.  Along with the roti you are given a dish with a spicy soupy dip made with boiled lentils and lots of hot spices.

Roti means bread and canai means different things to different people.  Azaha says roti means bread and canai means how he pulls and stretches the dough to prepare it for cooking. If you search on the web you’ll find lots of different interpretations, and spellings of roti chaini. For now we only care about the ones Azaha makes.

clip_image002 Here is Azaha starting out the roti. You can’t see the small ball of dough in his hands. He keeps them in a plastic container near the eggs. The dough is made ahead of time and stored in the plastic box. Order a roti and the magic begins.

clip_image004 It tarts out small and then Azaha stretches and spins and stretches and spins and drizzles the ghee and, and, and……. The arrow is pointing to the almost empty box with the waiting roti dough balls. You can see some stretched and folded roti on the grill. And you can also see the restaurant is open to the street like most shops.

clip_image006 Stretching and flipping in progress.

clip_image008 Stretching it thin. The holes don’t matter. Onion pieces are placed on the stretched dough and then an egg is cracked on top. Next the sides are folded over and onto the grill it goes. Yum! The worst part is wait!!!!

clip_image010 Here we go. I think I had actually ordered a plain roti on this particular day. My tea is in front, Randal’s coffee in back and two bowls of sauce.

clip_image012 Randal with his roti chain and sweet, strong local coffee. It’s served with lots of sugar and milk. The same with the tea. We like to sit where we can watch Azaha work but often we sit where we can find any place to sit when the “restoran” is full.

clip_image014 Randal paying the bill. A great value meal and very popular in many countries for breakfast.

Way better than anything McDonalds or Burger King can do!!

clip_image016 Enjoying our “take out” roti. The roti are packed in Styrofoam boxes and the sauce is put in small plastic bags rubberbanded at the top. They are fine warmed up in the microwave. But nothing beats them fresh off the grill at Azaha’s where you can hardly wait to shove that first piece into your mouth. I used some mixed with rice and veggies for dinner and it was great. Sort of a curry flavor, but not exactly. I used some of the left over sauce mixed with rice and veggies for dinner and it was great. Sort of a curry flavor, but not exactly.

There is at least one other roti man in Sungai Rengit. We had some of his one day when we had biked to town and were too late for Azaha and too early for the Chinese place we like. We washed them down with 6 glasses of milky ice tea. Very VERY full after that meal.

clip_image018 We were hot, thirsty, disappointed and tired by the time we ordered. We gulped down our first ice tea and so ordered 2 more. They didn’t come so we asked again….ending up with 4 more. We drank 5 of them! They are very sweet and milky and FILLING! Randal thinks the tea tastes like chocolate milk. I had ordered 2 egg roti but couldn’t finish it all. Miserably full

Looks like we may be moving to Singapore on the 22nd.  If the weather is good, if we’re ready, if….. But that’s the plan.  Mixed feeling for me.  I am really looking forward to the Singapore library system, but I’ll mix our Sebana friends and the great biking here, and our favorite roti man!  Will keep you posted.