Re: It's hot over here....
Posted: Mon Aug 20, 2012 3:50 am
Way too overgrown to prune, need a chainsawHM-PuFFNSTuFF wrote:This thread needs moron pruning.
Way too overgrown to prune, need a chainsawHM-PuFFNSTuFF wrote:This thread needs moron pruning.
This was you about ten years ago Randy, you're in no position to be calling anyone out on their age.Scourge wrote:Why would you need to be alerted for a Buddhist swastika, as opposed to a Nazi swastika? Critical thinking old man. Explaining all this to your Alzheimer's having old ass pretty much ruined it anyway. Why don't you go back to the nursing home and mind your own business.

Civets are cats... ne questions...?seremtan wrote:Is it that coffee that's been shat out by a monkey? Civet coffee? Expensive but apparently it's to die for
aye and aye. only place i've had better was at kurunda in oz, fucking love that stuff, will have to look it up and see if they're doing mail order yet. was made extra-special by the fact that most australian restaurant/cafe coffee (the places we went anyway) is like bloody dishwater.seremtan wrote:Is it that coffee that's been shat out by a monkey? Civet coffee? Expensive but apparently it's to die for
I'm not sure about that, but most Asian caffinated drinks are a must. I've had great Malay coffee before, but I want the fresh real deal (as opposed to made from beans that have been carried across the planet - there's a genuine Malay restaurant in Markham if anyone in Toronto is interested (Restauran Malay - I think near 16th street or somewhere north of the middle of nowhere). I believe Malay coffee isn't roasted beans but stir-fried in vats with butter. It's prepared brain-cell-killing strong.Ryoki wrote:PS order kopi in Malaysia
Nope, it's really opening up, the regime is loosening it's strictness. You can safely travel around i've been told, though apparently there's still a few large areas where tourists are not allowed to go to. The culture aspect is supposed to be one of the best in the region, stunning wats everywhere and so on. Food is excellent as well and the people generally friendlier than the Thai, which is saying something. We met two couples who'd been there for two, three weeks and they were both full of praise. What i found an exciting idea was the fact that it's been such a hermit state for so long, must be fascinating to travel around there and talk to folks.obsidian wrote:Burma? Isn't there a lot of political unrest in the country at the moment?
obsidian wrote:Just checking in to say that I haven't been crushed under a truck. I spent the morning riding through Georgetown (the old British colonial town of Penang) on a motorcycle. I'm used to going pretty fast on road bikes but I've never been on a motorcycle, this was a very different experience. I had to stay very alert and watch for other vehicles and pedestrians weaving around and spotting potholes.
It was a nice scenic ride, but unfortunately I couldn't take photos of it since I was already fully focused on not getting myself killed. Wish I brought my Contour camera. One thing I found interesting along my ride is that there is one street near Georgetown where they have a Muslim mosque, a Buddhist monestary, a Hindu temple and a Catholic church all on the same stretch.
The rest of the day, I spent out in the rural part of the city in the mountains and checked out a temple, Kek Lok Si. There for lunch, I had "Laksa" from a street vendor who is famous for serving the dish. Laksa is a rice noodle soup, spicy with lots of herbs, onions and fish, cooked into a thick broth. Following lunch, I climbed up the winding stairs that lead to the top of Kek Lok Si, both sides flanked with vendors selling miscellaneous trinkets and clothes.
(Photos pending)
P.S. I spent the last half hour trying to photograph two very elusive geckos that are hiding behind a painting that hangs in the living room of the place I'm staying at. They poke their heads out when I'm not looking and disappear as soon as I try to point my camera at them. Smart little buggers.