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Sunday, December 13, 2009

My short Shenzhen trip.

With a tight schedule planned for the 4 days I am there, I doubt I will see much of Shenzhen, if there is any opportunity to do so it would be in the late evenings.
The flight took slightly more than 4 hours arriving at almost 9 pm. It certainly helps that Malaysia shares the same time zone as China, without which I might need a while to get orientated.
A blast of cold air hit my face as I step off the plane into Boa’an International Airport, it’s the beginning of colder weather in Shenzhen, what a pleasant change compared to hot and humid Kuala Lumpur a couple of hours ago. The winter here I am told by my Chinese office colleagues is very mild and at between 17 to 19 degrees celcius for the duration I was there it was rather comfortable.
Now let’s see the instructions from our Shenzhen office again, take only the red taxi not the green one and show the hotel address written in Chinese, travelling in Shenzhen is safe but pay attention to your belongings!
Me with the "Red" taxi in the background.


The advise sounds sensible for travelling in any part of the world. Shenzhen is a city of 153 sq miles populated by about 9 million industrious Han Chinese living and working together with 20% of China’s PhD holders, home to the world’s ninth tallest building and a city with a record of building one high rise a day and one boulevard every three.

Shopping district near the hotel.

True enough, all I had time for was to catch some sights of Shenzhen shopping district in one of the evening near the hotel, famous for it's cheap mobile phones on sale. Also had the opportunity to have a day trip to Dongguan on official duties.

Saturday, December 5, 2009

A week in Bandung

I am on a solo work assignment again, this time it is taking me to Bandung, Indonesia. It is Indonesia’s fourth largest city after Jakarta, Surabaya and Medan. Being located at a higher elevation, the climate in Bandung is cooler than most Indonesian cities with an average temperature of 23.6 °C throughout the year.
However, on this occasion the weather was far from ideal when I arrived in Bandung’s Hussein Sastranegara Airport, it was raining heavily and there was no aero bridge to speak of. We had to take a 30 meter walk from the tarmac to the terminal using umbrellas provided. The small arrival terminal was also not a big help to the situation, especially when there was another flight from Singapore that arrived a few minutes earlier, clearing immigration took some time, luggage collection was chaotic, do not expect to see luggage conveyor belts here, what you can see are people manually handling your bags to you. But I supposed the system do work, I got my luggage intact after stepping over a few persons toes and elbowing whoever is in my way. In just slightly more than an hour (the flight from KL to Bandung took 2 hours) I am able to clear all obstacles from tarmac to arrival hall and meet my host patiently waiting for me.
The route taken to my intended destination in the next few days for my work proves to be refreshing, crossing rice field and narrow village roads in the outskirts.

Meanwhile, the sheer density of people in the town here are overwhelming, you can literally feel the crowd everywhere. Traffic is haphazard but surprisingly I see many polite drivers here giving way when the need arise and with a smile too, never mind the other guy was travelling against traffic. Even more surprising was that I was able to see civilians and traffic policemen directing traffic together on the same spot of the road, most unusual and it doesn’t seem to cause any conflict.

Bechas and Horse carriage are a still a popular mode of transport here

On the first evening, I went to Jalan Riau, famous for their “factory outlets” where supposedly textile products direct from factory, with products that are rejected or over-produced and export quality items are sold. Quite a number of branded items are available here at reasonable prices. The ladies at home would have loved this place.

Jalan Riau where most of the "factory outlets" are located.

The food here is generally spicy, with many restaurants serving Nasi Padang, a local favorite consisting of many dishes of spicy curry beef, fried chicken, fish and vegetables served with rice, the unique practice here is that you are only billed on what is eaten, and dishes served but not touched are taken back.
Typical Nasi Padang spread
Restaurant located on a paddy field

Suroundings of the restaurant

Other interesting food I had was beef ribs in barbeque sauce called “konro” served together with a delicious soup. There was also an opportunity to do lunch in an interesting restaurant located on a paddy field serving, yes, you guessed right, Nasi Padang and satay.
Konro with soup
Followed by a lovely desert of shaved ice with banana fillings in sweet syrup called "Pisang Ijo"

Upmarket dining


Also had the opportunity to try out Nasi Timbel for lunch that comes with spicy barbeque chicken, fried bean curd, salted fish, rice rolled up in banana leaves and red hot explosive chili paste (sambal) on the side, guaranteed to light up your life at least during lunch.

Nasi Timbel

Of course, as in most of my travels in Asia, it is almost certain I will eventually be taken to a Chinese restaurant and this trip was no different.
For all homecoming trips from Indonesia the buying of Indonesian cakes has evolved to be somewhat mandatory, unfortunately the family’s favorite layer cakes, does not seem to be as popular here as in Medan and I ended up with some special Bandung cream puff and other pastries. But I am sure the items gotten from the “factory outlets” will more than compensate for the layer cakes.