Saturday, September 29, 2007

Signs of the Times

I have started collecting pictures of signs, sayings and advertisements. These are a few of my favorites!




I found this one on the outskirts of Chinatown. Anything to do with fish heads is considered a great thing here! I'm not sure exactly what fish head noodles are, but will probably not be finding out anytime soon! Also many times in the older districts, instead of calling them cafes or restaurants, they are called houses or eating houses.






We have Internet Cafes here all over the place. The government is trying to get the whole island with no cost Internet service in public places. You will still have to pay for it at your residence. You can go a lot of places - cafes, parks, etc - and just sit and use your laptop for free. So this would be for those that don't have it yet in their area. $2 Sing for an hour comes out to approximately $1.32 American. Cheap at any rate!









Islamic Montessori? I am looking now for the Buddhist and Hindu Montessori schools - I am sure they must have them! Maybe I can find one for Chinese Montessori - but would I be able to read it? Guess not! Actually, Montessori schools are very popular here - in our end of the island alone, there are 7 or 8!


This sign is next door to my favorite Mexican food place in an area called Holland Village. Strip is the name of the establishment and between the Ministry of Waxing notation and the hairy gorilla, I guess you can figure out what this place is all about. I think it's absolutely hilarious advertising!


















This one isn't a sign, but I just love it! We were exploring one day and were out back of a Chinese temple when we encountered this tree. We were trying hard to guess the significance of all these newspapers hanging in the trees. You wouldn't believe all the possible explanations we came up with. One of the temple workers came out to chat with us and we asked about the newspapers. He said they tape newspaper around the budding fruits to keep the birds away while the fruit is growing and ripening. None of our guesses even came close! Imagine that! That's my friend Patsy in the picture. Her husband was also a Delta Captain and now works for Singapore Cargo, too. We do a lot of exploring and sightseeing together.











This one cracks me up everytime I see one. Yes, it's exactly as the picture depicts. Many of their crosswalks are like a giant speed bump with stripes on it. They are never called crosswalks - whether they are raised or not - just zebra crossings - many of which just happen to be raised. The first time I asked about it, the taxi driver was very specific - they have white stripes on black pavement, so they are called zebra crossings, he tells me. I wasn't about to argue with him, but for the record, most of the stripes are yellow on black pavement. But I guess that wouldn't be as much fun, would it?








These are equivalent to our No trespassing signs. Just like the picture says - they will shoot you! It's written in 6 languages just to be sure you get it!











In the US we have industrial parks - here they have estates! Doesn't matter what size it is - it's an estate. Must be a British thing!







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This is the sidewalk sign for my favorite Mexican restaurant. The restaurant is called El Patio. They have inside and outside tables covered in serapes with white table cloths on them. The food is excellent and the margaritas great. But why this cactus has a pacifier in it's mouth beats anything I've ever seen for advertising or a logo for any kind of restaurant! I'm only from Texas - what would I know about advertising for a Mexican restaurant?

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Shari - not long now!
Abby - Mei Mei will be there soon with lots of presents!
Lynn - still hot there?
Deb Mac - read about you in the paper!
Matt - kiss Jellybean for me!
Sam - package coming!
Dinosaur - good to talk to you
Heather - still the future, still there!

Saturday, September 22, 2007

Lights, Lanterns and Mooncakes!

It's another festival time! Because they have so many different cultures here - they celebrate them all! It seems like it is time to celebrate one thing or another every week or two. I'll try to sort out and explain the different stories and legends that go with this one.

This is a Chinese festival in origin. It's called by several different names and celebrates a couple of things, but they all seem to overlap. One name is the Lantern Festival. Another is the Moon or Mooncake Festival and, lastly, the Mid-Autumn Festival. What it's called just depends on what area of town you are in, who you are talking to and what part of China you are talking about. But they are all tied together through these traditions and legends. All of China celebrates mostly the same festivals and holidays, but because it is such a vast country, things tend to differ from one part of that country to another. Basically it's all the same celebration with regional traditions and explanations handed down over centuries.

These festivals are going on all over town. These pictures were taken down at the Clarke Quay area. It is a hugely popular area in one part of downtown where a river inlet comes into town from the sea. To me, it seems like the Riverwalk area in San Antonio, except it's larger and the river in this area is wider. Boats up and down the river, shops and restaurants lining each side, people strolling up and down the sidewalks along the river front. They set up a lot of festivals and celebrations along here. One night this coming week, we are headed across town to the Chinese Gardens, a long green area along a large lake. The lanterns there are supposed to be beautiful and plentiful.




Here's some of the info I have found:
The date of Mid-autumn Festival also known as Chinese Moon Festival is on the 15th moon day of 8th Chinese lunar month (Chicken month). The new moon day is the first day of a Chinese Lunar Month. The first day of 8th lunar month is 11th September 2007, the Moon Festival is on 25 September 2007. The time period always includes the Autumnal Equinox, the first day of fall.

This is a day to worship the moon god. According to folk legend, this day is also the birthday of the earth god (T'u-ti Kung). This festival signals that the year's hard work in the fields will soon come to an end, with only the harvest left to attend to. People use this opportunity to express their gratitude to heaven (represented by the moon) and earth (symbolized by the earth god) for the blessings they have enjoyed over the past year.The Chinese believe in praying to the moon god for protection, family unity, and good fortune. The round "moon cakes" eaten on this festival are symbolic of family unity and closeness. Pomelos are also eaten on this day. The Chinese associate these with protection and in eating them are expressing the hope that the moon god will give them protection. This is also known as a time for lovers to tryst and pray for togetherness, symbolized by the roundness of the moon. This is a lantern depicting the moon god and the lovers that are hoping he will bless them.

Moon cakes - these are "cakes" range from small to large, one layer, with a filling inside. The cakes themselves are extremely dense, very heavy. Cake in our culture generally indicates something sweet - these are most definitely not. They have lotus paste and/or sesame paste for their basis, which are not sweet in the least. The small amount of filling might sometimes be a little sweeter, but not much. The best I can describe it to you is it's like old fruitcake without the fruit. I was given some with about 7 people watching my reaction. Of course, I was shocked because i was expecting something sweet like the word suggests to me. I didn't show my distaste, but did request a glass of water as soon as it was polite enough to do so. These cakes are very popular here. Like King cakes for Mardi Gras - they are only available during this festival. Actually , as with a King cake - you can special order one at other times, but not everywhere will make one on demand. Best advice here is to steer clear of mooncakes.





Here is one of the legend that goes with them: Once, according to Chinese legend, mooncakes helped bring about a revolution. The time was the Yuan dynasty (AD 1280-1368), established by the invading Mongolians from the north. The Mongolians subjugated the Han Chinese. According to one Chinese folk tale, a Han Chinese rebel leader named Liu Fu Tong devised a scheme to arouse the Han Chinese to rise up against the ruling Mongols to end the oppressive Yuan dynasty. He sought permission from Mongolian leaders to give gifts to friends as a symbolic gesture to honor the longevity of the Mongolian emperor. These gifts were round mooncakes. Inside, Liu had his followers place pieces of paper with the date the Han Chinese were to strike out in rebellion -- on the fifteenth night of the eighth month. Thus Liu got word to his people, who when they cut open the mooncakes found the revolutionary message and set out to overthrow the Mongols, thus ending the Yuan dynasty. The dates for this legend tie in with the dates for the mid-autumn stuff.






The Lantern Festival is a festival known to be for families and children. Lantern festivals traditionally date back to 230 B.C., when Chinese began to decorate and display lanterns on streets to pray for peace and to celebrate the harvest. Such festivals can range from a few lantern-covered streets to entire cities strung with lanterns. Chinese lanterns are also specialities for this festival. The most common are the paper folding type. However, there are many varieties of lanterns made of different shapes and materials. You will see the smaller ones that are lit from inside with a candle and children carry them around extended on a stick. Many times people will attach a wish or a hope to the lantern hoping that the moon god will grant these. The lanterns range from the very small to huge things lit from within that top out at over 20 feet high. On this family occasion, parents allow children to stay up late, and take them to high vantage points to light their lanterns and watch the moon rise before eating their moon cakes. While walking along the quay where these lanterns were, you could see parents pointing out the moon to the little ones and the little ones with their stick holding their lantern. It was very sweet to watch. All the pictures you see here are of the lanterns on display. They look to me a lot like giant balloons. But they are not. Many are made with paper and coated with wax in case it rains. Others are made from a stiff plastic and can stand alone.


The moon has long been an object of curiosity and worship in many Asian cultures. To the most ancient ancestors of the Chinese, the sun and the moon were considered the "chief objects of veneration. In ancient Asian mythology, there is a strong relationship between the moon and water. The moon is said to regulate reservoirs and supplies of water. There is a suggestion that the moon produces fertility and freshness in the soil. The moon's role in bountiful harvests is widely recognized during autumns around the world. This lantern depicts the sea and our famed "pink dolphins".




In Chinese celestial cosmology, the moon represents the female principle, or yin.

During ancient autumn Moon Festivals, women took center stage because the moon is considered feminine. Only women took part in Moon Festival rituals on the night of the full moon. Altars would be set up in households, and when the full moon appeared, women would make offerings of incense, candles, fruit, flowers, and mooncakes.

The legend of the Moon Goddess, Chang O (Chang-E in other translation), reflects the feminine principle of yin, as opposed to the masculine principle of yang, which is symbolized by the sun.

The legend of the moon goddess is that she was a beautiful woman held prisoner by a king who wanted no one else to view her beauty. She was very unhappy and prayed to the moon god to help her. Miraclously, one night right in front of the king's eyes, she floated up to the moon and lives there shining the moon's glow on things to highlight their beauty because of her beauty. Girls are taught from an early age to pray first to the moon goddess that they will be beautiful, then next they pray to her to find them an attractive mate and lastly, that they may have beautiful children. This is the Moon Goddess depicted on top of this lantern.


Absolutely nothing Chinese would be true or complete without the dragon or dragons to guard and protect everything. They and the color red are predominate in this culture, though the color red also extends into and plays a huge role in Indian culture also.

So there you have it! And I always thought it was only the man in the moon up there! You know they say - behind every good man is a woman - so true in all legends and cultures!


Love to you Shari and Doug!
Abby - I bought you some lanterns!
Kelly - hope you have enjoyed reading this!
Doreen - quite the adventure, huh?
Patsy - won't be long now!
Lynn - can't wait
Heather - still the future, still there


Wednesday, September 19, 2007

A Whole Lotta Shakin' Goin' On!!!

Last Wednesday, Septmeber 12th at approximately 7:10 pm Singapore time they had a major earthquake in Indonesia. It was centered about 265 miles from us off the coast of the Indonesian Islands.


Having been through any number of hurricanes and tropical storms, several very close calls and brushes with tornadoes - I can tell you I was not excited at all about adding earthquake tremors to that list.


Picture this: It's evening. 24th floor. I'm sitting on the front balcony with our very good friend, Wayne, drinking iced tea and watching dusk settling in. Nice breeze, very pleasnt, casual conversation. All of a sudden, I'm in the middle of a sentence and I get the strangest sensation. It's like you are very off-balance, even though I was sitting. You feel almost weightless and slightly nauseous. Very strange feeling. Then it dawns on me - the building is moving! Wayne says not to worry - it's only a tremor, it will last about 15-20 seconds. Well, a minute and a half later, it finally stopped. We stayed on the balcony the whole time. We turned on our chairs at one point to look inside the apartment. The two rocker/recliners are going back and forth like crazy all by themselves. The chandelier over the dining room table is rocking back and forth in an arc, the globes on the lights are touching the ceiling, then it swings the other direction and touches the ceiling that way. Things were really moving. Wayne said to check the computer in about 15 minutes and he bet there would be news of a major earthquake in Indonesia. Sure enough - 10 minutes later it's on the news and the Internet.



At 7:50 am the next morning Singapore time , here it went again. That one was a 7.9 on the scale. Chairs and chandelier went crazy again. Now, if I think we're experiencing tremors, I just glance into the dining room and see if the chandelier is dancing. It's a pretty good indicator. I keep reciting my mantra that our neighbor Bob told me before - Just remember, Debbie - a swaying building is a good building. Well, I am here to tell you that may well be - but it sure is a very weird feeling to feel this and see it.


If this is only a tremor - I would hate to actually be in an earthquake!



Here's a bit of a lesson -


That earthquake registered 8.4 - considered to be a major one. During the next 48 hours they had 5 major earthquakes - 6.0 and higher - in the same area of Indonesia. Anything above 6.0 is considered major. In the week since that first big one, Indonesia has ad in addition to the 5 large ones, they have also experienced 61 smaller eathquakes that measured from 4.8 to 5.9 and they have experienced approximately 300 "ground movements" that register below 4.8, smaller ones and aftershocks. You couldn't pay me enough money to live in Indonesia!!!


Singapore does not sit on any fault lines. We just feel the tremors from the ones in Indonesia. The fault line runs through the Indonesian Islands, then turns and goes up towards Japan and another part of it runs out into the Pacific Ocean. The Indonesian Islands are known as "The Ring of Fire" because of their volcanic and earthquake prone activity in that area. Sometimes, these quakes will cause tsunamis as this first one created about a 9 foot wave that struck about 20 minutes afterwards. The next one caused a tsunami, but fortunately that one headed out to sea. We are not in a tsunami prone area either due to the way Sinagpore sits in relation to the islands surrounding us. I guess it's possible, but they say the likelihood of that is very, very small. Never say never, I suppose.


If you glance at the map below you can tell where we are in relation to the earthquake area. If you find Singapore at the base of Malaysia, then follow a line straight down to the tiny islands that are on the left side of Indonesia. These quakes have generally been centered in the area between those islands and the Indonesian coast. Look close on the map below to see where Sinagpore actually is. I'm not naming any names, but some of you seem to think we're in China!

























Love to you Shari!
Abby - hope you're having fun with the packages!
Rusty - I don't think you are ever at home! Sorry I missed you!
Millie - good to talk to you!
Marilyn - sorry about the echo - weird, isn't it?
Heather - Yes, yes!

Saturday, September 8, 2007

More on our day trip with pictures

Here's a little more info on our day trip to Sentosa island, along with some pictures. Sentosa Island is considered a resort and recreation area, but it's also considered to be part of Singapore. A ship channel lies between the two islands. It is accessible by a bridge that goes across, there is a cable car and a mono-rail over.


This is a picture of the "Merlion". Pronounced Mer - like the first part of the word mermaid and lion just like the animal. Way back when Singapore was being discovered and explored, one explorer said he came upon a creature unknown to him. It was very big, very ferocious and had a roar that shook the trees. From his description to others, it was decided he'd seen a lion. Back then there were quite a number of different species of animals all the way through Malaysia down to here, so it's possible it actually was a lion. Years later another explorer told stories of having seen mermaids in this area, but that they were an animal mermaid. More than likely he saw dolphins. But having seen dolphins during his travels, he insisted those are not what he saw. He said it was bigger and more ferious. So it became legend that Singapore and the surrounding islands were protected by a "merlion", a mythical creature that was half lion and half mermaid. He is said to swim the waters all around Singapore protecting it. There are several statues of merlions scattered throughout the islands, but this is the largest.
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This is the "Dragon Fountain". It is a long, low and almost like a mini-river. It starts at the base of the Merlion - you can see him in the distance. It has water running through it, but not deep. It goes on for about 100 yards. It is made entirely of small mosiac tiles. It represents a dragon and has other animals such as frogs, lizards and fish incorporated into the design also. The colors are very vivid. Very pretty walk alongside it.

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I tried to capture the tangle of tropical vines and brush - it is so thick in some areas you can't possibly walk through it. This is an area alongside one of the walkways. It's very green and there are thousands of different trees and plants. I don't know how anyone could ever hack through some of the growth to explore, much less clear out enough to build housing. The British who settled these islands really had their work cut out for them! Malaria is not a problem here, but the mosquitoes are known to be the type that carry "dengue fever"- pronounced ding - ee - just ask me about the case I had! +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
This is a view from one of the walkways through the upper part of the island. There are beautiful views everywhere you turn!

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A old colonial house that was built in the early 1900's. It's perched up high on almost solid rock. They use it now for a restauarant. The British built these at the turn of the century. Almost every building they built here in the islands was built along these lines. They were always white, red tile roof and black trim. The black trim almost isn't visible - it's usually just under the eaves. Most are one story, some two story. For many years there was no building on any of these islands taller than 3 stories. They are referred to as "the black and whites". There are a surprising number of these that are still around. Now days they are all owned by the government and are protected as a historical property. They can be rented to live in and in some cases to have a business in. There are very strict guidelines as to how they can be altered to accomodate a family or a business - which means they almost cannot be changed in anyway! I have gotten to go inside one - the lady living there said they are a maintenance nightmare! But they are very pretty and old-worldly. These are the types of houses the British built to live in - the barracks they built for their troops were almost like these, except inside was always open air with the ceiling being up two stories for ventilation with a tin roof. There are still a good many of these buidings left to, but they are not as protected from change.
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This is where one of the local herb farmers has his place. You can go here to drink tea he has brewed from the herbs he grows. Or you can buy the herbs to take home with you. There are some that are familiar, but many more that are not familiar at all. And they can use almost anything to make tea out of! Spices and herbs we would usually use to flavor food with, they will also use it to make tea! This guy has this place with a little open air living quarters under this canopy, along with his tiny little kitchen area where he brews his teas. A leaf cover overhead and everyting else just open.
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This is what nutmeg looks like before it's ground up! And yes, they also make tea out of it! He had trays of different spices sitting all through the garden grounds drying.

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This is the Chinese man who lives here and grows all the herbs and spices. In the background is a laminated sheet with pictures on it describing what some of the plants are and what ailments they cure. There is an herb or spice to cure anything and everything - or so they claim!
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He is very serious! Can you tell?

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This is an area that has been recreated to show the houses the native peoples lived in from way back when up through World War 2. Because of the way the islands are situated, a tsunami would affect the areas in Indonesia and Malaysia, but Singapore very little. Same with a major typhoon. The surrounding areas take the brunt of it. By the time the storms cross over those land masses, it weakens them considerably, then there's not a large enough area for them to build up again before they cross over land again. There are storms here, particularly during the monsoon season, but nothing as bad as Malaysia and Indonesia get.
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This is one of the beaches. They have trucked in white sand from Indonesia. People come down and have picnics. They play sand volleyball and sand football - which we know as scoccer. They build sand castles and sit looking at the water. Very few people swim because the ships, which you can see iin the background, keep the waters too stirred up. Also, we are told there are sharks between us and the Indonesian Islands. Would not doubt it in the least! I think there's a good reason you don't hear about someone trying to set records swimming between all these islands! I guess if a ship didn't get you, a shark would! There are some small islands outside the shipping channels that have pretty beaches where you can swim - about a 45 minute ferry ride across to. They also run several flights a day - 737's, A320's and 777 - almost always full to Bali where, of course, the beaches and scenery are just beautiful. I've seen pictures others have taken and I cannot wait to go there!


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Shari - love ya and hope Abby is feeling better!
Lynn and Aunt Darlene - you would just go crazy with all the great things that grow here!
Marilyn - how are you feeling and thanks for the Alaska pictues!
Regina - how are you?
Heather - Still, still