Sunday, August 8, 2010

Epi(b)log(ue)- The sea legs blog - last entry

The last 3 days of the trip were another blur of ports; Cadiz, Lisbon, and Vigo, then back across the Bay of Biscay and in to Southampton on a dull damp English morning.

Of the three, Cadiz was the stand-out place; a modern city but one in which you could still smell the salt, and feel the ghosts of Magellan, Drake and Columbus. Its old quarter, with narrow streets and Moorish tiled buildings retain much of the feel of an old port, while still having a modern city immediately adjacent.

Vigo on the other hand, was more like Leeds-on-sea than the Spanish version of Whitby that I expected. Much bigger a genuine provincial city.

Sailing out of Lisbon under the "Golden Gate Bridge in miniature" while playing Volleyball on the deck will stick in my mind, mainly due to the precision with which highest extreme of the ship fitted under the bridge by what looked like less than a metre to spare! and a carefully (mis)placed serve would have put the ball amongst the cars and trucks passing above!


Well, we've been back home now for just over a week, and the 14 day trip has begun to sink in, along with the return of reality. We had more fun than I ever expected, and the service, facilities and entertainment were first class.

Friday, July 30, 2010

“You’re in the mood for a dance; ….. and when you get the chance!!!.....- The Sea legs blog day 10

Day ten at sea was uneventful, really. Hot as hell and a day for hiding in the cooler parts of the ship; the gym and the coffee bars; watching the shows and generally chilling out.

I have to confess to a horrible realisation …….

Today I finally realised I was not going to make “Strictly” next year after a Cha Cha lesson from…

“…………Our resident Dance champions Olga and Dima……”

1,2,3 cha-cha, 1,2,3 cha-cha………….well it is a cruise so you just have to, don’t you?

I exchanged my sea legs for a pair of “Cuban knees” and got the basics of the steps but I don’t think I’ll be taking it up as a hobby…..

Turning back West- The Sea legs blog day 9

After the crush in Rome on Saturday, we set sail back West, and our next port of call was Cagliari on the Italian Island of Sardinia; quiet as a mouse on a Sunday morning. Just a few tourist shops open and locals lounging in cafes or heading to morning mass.

My lasting impression of Cagliari, sadly, is of a run-down town where every available vertical surface appears to be tagged with graffiti. What makes these people want to put their “art” on show on someone else’s property is just beyond me. Much of it is not actually “art” in the “Banksy” mode; kissing constables are acceptable to me as free public art if they are well drawn or say something.
I can live with that.
Tagging seems just so much scrawl in a language that escapes me, or just goes over my head. While not quite “Kevin 4 Sharon” as you might get in some of the more run down areas of England, it just seems as much pointless vandalism; an expression of frustration with a society where the majority already have far more than our grandparents ever dreamed of, and, at least in the European Union, many more opportunities to better themselves.

Cowering between the graffiti, Cagliari has a few nice touches; churches, cafes, little squares and statues to distract you, but we soon returned to the ship and left it behind. Sardinia’s mountainous inland is meant to be worth spending some time exploring, but that would have to be left for another trip.

Monday, July 26, 2010

Yes, I’m feeling, Glad (iator) all over! - The Sea legs blog day 8


Rome! The eternal city!!

Bl***y hot and busy if you ask me! Well we did arrive on a Saturday in high summer, so serves us right really…

Our shuttle bus deposited us outside St Peter’s square, and in the in the five hours we were there, we had plans to “do” The Spanish Steps, The Trevi fountains, Colluseum, Vatican Museum, Sistine Chapel and the Pantheon.

We didn’t count on the queues in the Vatican Museum

Fortunately we forked out 25 bucks each to get a “queue jumping pass” in to the Vatican Museum and sailed past the queue that by 11am was snaking round the Vatican walls and off in to the middle distance. Once inside and through the metal detectors, it was all Italian efficiency and organisation. J The guide did not have enough tickets, so we had to hang about until she found some more, but at least the audio guides worked. We had a map with numbers and buttons to press, but the first number, an Egyptian gallery was not to be found. Even at Orford castle in sleepy Suffolk, they could come up with the “neat” idea of marking the galleries with the same numbers as on the guide map, but not in Rome, oh no, just the Gallery names, in Italian on the walls and English on the map!

We decided rather than follow the numbered route; we’d just follow the crowds and push the relevant number when we found a gallery name we recognised.

There are corridors upon corridors of sculptures and treasures built up by Popes over the centuries. I wonder if that is what St Peter intended his successors to do with his church’s money? I doubt it, but I that said it was a vast and wonderful collection. As we approached the Sistine chapel the crowds got more and more dense, and in once in there (much smaller than I expected) you couldn’t see the floor and a sea of faces seemed to merge seamlessly with Michelangeo’s stunning ceiling artworks.

The excellent audio guide described the images of the Last Judgement in great detail; from St Bartholomew, at the feet of Christ, flayed alive and holding his skin, to St Catherine, broken on her wheel and St Sebastian, body pierced by arrows; the horrors of the end of days in all its gothic detail. While at the foot of the painting, the boatman took the dead over the Styx, and the tourists just below them milled around and chattered like more souls in torment.

It was powerful stuff, and three hours of our five gone, seemingly in a flash. Coffee then out in the sunshine again, the earlier rain showers having abated, and the pavements had steamed dry we dived in to the back streets of Rome with a pitifully ineffective map. Too long in the Vatican meant that we missed out the Spanish steps and the Colliseum, but we flew past the others, found a magnificent market, got lost and just made the bus with 2 minutes to spare.

I’m sure we’ll return and spend some quality time in this magnificent city. Trying to do it in 5 hours can only be a taster.

Saturday, July 24, 2010

Taking the Pisa and dodging the Tourist Police - The Sea legs blog day 7

Pisa and Florence today, on a 5 hour whistle stop tour. The one thing about cruising that could wear a bit thin is that you never really have enough time in port to appreciate the finer points. Most ports seem to be a long bus ride from the place of interest.

With only 30 minutes at Pisa, it was another James Burke – inspired itinerary:

Hike to rendezvous point
Drink Cappuccino

Take picture of your partner pretending to hold up the Leaning Tower

Drink Water (31 degrees in the shade)

Let partner take picture of you pretending to hold up the Leaning Tower

Buy Pisa Hat

Battle through crowds to Bus Park
Back on bus

Florence was slightly (but not much) more relaxed. In Florence you run the gauntlet of Africans selling dodgy goods. Dolce and Gabbana bags (or Dodgy and Kabanos as they say in Poland), and posters of the great works of art. You get dire warnings on the street that you as the purchaser can get fined for buying this stuff as well as the street hawkers. You really have to give these guys due credit though, they work for the few Euros they make, and it has to be better than scraping a living and dodging bullets and beardy religious police back in Somalia or Chad.

Vicki liked one of the posters so we started the bartering process.

“How much?”

“35 Euros!”

“(expletive deleted)

J & V begin to walk off…….He follows…. (got him on the hook)

“I can do you special price!”

“Oh Yeah?”

“20 Euro for two!"

“Give us a break ……….”

Walk off again… he’s still following us. It’s looking like a 5 euro poster to me…..

“15 Euro, two posters…..?”

“We only want one…… 5 Euros, no more!”

We get a look like we’ve just drowned his pet dog, then suddenly he realises he’s wandered too far away from his pitch and must have got the tip from his buddy, because he grabbed his posters and scarpered behind a colonnade.
So close to a deal I couldn’t see him giving up and sure enough, a few metres further on he popped out from behind another colonnade, poster ready wrapped in an elastic band with a resigned look on his face.

“Five Euros?”

“Five Euros…..”

I love bartering…..

Thursday, July 22, 2010

In Ken Bates’ back garden - The Sea legs blog day 6

Today we landed on the Cote D’Azur, the little seaside town of Villefranche sur mer, just down the road from Monaco, home of the grumpy, beardy Leeds United and pre-Abramowitz Chelsea, chairman This town is the main cruise port for Nice, but clearly they want the hoi-polloi from cruise liners to keep away from the posh bits. Trust the French not to have a cruise port big enough to dock cruise liners, so we queued for 45 minutes to get on a tender to take us ashore.

Hot enough to boil a monkey’s bum, but lovely all the same. After lunch we hopped on a train to Monaco, only 15 minutes away, and spent the afternoon in a harbourside cafĂ© and staring, open mouthed, at the Gazillion Euro yachts in the harbour. “Yacht” does not really do them justice; these are really miniature cruise liners. They have teams of lackeys cleaning, polishing, serving, and maintaining 24/7. They are the size of a respectable detached house and probably cost 100 times as much.

Playground of the rich and famous indeed…….

A scrum of Japanese metro proportions, missing only the uniformed “beaters,” got us on to the return train to Villefranche and back to the tender; mercifully no queues this time.

After dinner, which was enjoyed watching Monaco disappear in to the mist, we went to the now obligatory evening show. This evening, it was what Dad would have called “A Good Club Turn” from Dewsbury via Blackpool. He entertained a rapidly diminishing audience with a selection from Neil Diamond to Kurt Weil and finished with the inevitable “Amarillo.”
Sadly quite a few people walked out during his show; rude I thought, the guy had a good voice, probably as good as Neil Sedaka and certainly as good as Tony Christie, but, like Joni said in “Real Good for Free”

“They knew he’d never been on their TV, so they passed his music by”

I couldn’t help wondering that if he’d had just one good, original, song written for him and the right contacts, he might not have been getting off the cruise liner at Linorvo and flying back to Blackpool, but might be sitting on one of those yachts in Monaco harbour sipping champagne and staring back at us staring in.

The Wheel of Fortune,
goes spinning around.
Will the arrow point my way?
Will this be my day?

(Kay Starr)

It’s just another day, de de de de de do! The Sea legs blog day 5

Another day at sea today. Just chillin’ out and enjoying the facilities as we sail past the Balearics at a steady 21 knots up to next landfall at Villefranche-sur-mer.

Pulse rates above 140 again in the gym today. Either I’ll get fit again or drop dead…..

The Ice show was pretty spectacular, but the evening show was average. We managed to avoid the 70’s night…….. too close to reality for me…….

Did we really look that bad 30 years ago (Yes.)

Wednesday, July 21, 2010

Land Ahoy!! The Sea legs blog day 4

I was woken this morning by a blast on the fog horn at 0715. Out on the balcony the fog was like looking in to a wall of grey-white. Even the still-calm sea, nine decks below was in a grey haze. Every now and then, you could catch glimpses of the Spanish coast; points of hills drifted out of the mist then back in again.

Today it’s Gibraltar, a spit of Britain trapped between Spain and Africa, one of the last remaining specks of pink on that 1950s map I had at school, before the Empire was returned to its rightful owners to do with as they please….

First impressions of Gibraltar were not good; the stench from the harbour after three days at sea was bad. They say sailors can smell land before they can see it; this I now believe!

We walked in to a town centre, crowded with tourists and many shops had signs welcoming our cruise liner. Spanish, not English seemed to be the spoken language of choice here, but the shops and road signs were all in English. In fact you could have been in a small English town, with Marks, BHS and Next all prominent.

The queue for the Gondola up the Rock snaked round the corner, so we took a 25 Euro minibus tour instead. Good choice!

You remember James Burke the manic Tomorrow’s World presenter?

“Look at this, look at that, look at me!”

Well I think he planned the tour.

Eight of us bundled in to a minibus and John, our Gibraltarian driver took off up the precipitous road up the rock like Jason Button. We screeched up behind a queue of similar minibuses and were bundled out.

Gibraltar, British colony for 300 years…Official language English but we speak also Spanish and also our own dialect, Spanglish……(giggle)

“Over in distance you see Atlas mountains – Africa

“Ten minutes………………. you take photos..................... come back to bus”

We did as instructed then took off again up the road to the Upper Rock to come screeching to a halt behind another line of minibuses.

“Now.......we do famous Gibraltar caves…….. Discovered by Roman soldiers, equipped as hospital during WW2 ……. Too damp for wounds to heal, never got used…….

'Now concert hall, lots of lovely Stalagmites!!!

“15-20 minutes then I collect you by exit”

John’s description did not do these caves justice, they really were spectacular, the rock formations like gigantic organ pipes from floor to ceiling, and the main cavern like some gigantic Gaudi-Inspired Cathedral.

Out in to the blinding light and heat, and back in to the bus.

“Now we go see Barbary Apes”

Up behind another line of taxis and out in to the heat, and, you guessed it …

“Ten minutes………………. you take photos..................... come back to bus”

Well I have to say that the Barbary Apes are cute, sitting there with their babies, but I couldn’t help making the comparison with the Albanian beggars we saw all those years ago in Montenegro. They sit there with their beautiful sad faces looking up to you and staring; seemingly oblivious to tourists shoving cameras in their faces and cooing. These apes are as tame as those in a zoo and just as dependent for food on the British army (whose job it is to feed them) as their cousins at Whipsnade are on their keepers.

“Back on the Bus please!”

That was the end of our time on the top of the rock, and we hurtled down for our final stop, the 14th Century Moorish tower.

“Ten minutes!……………….you know the rest…!”

Back to the town, hand over the 50 bucks and out in to the shops again.

While we were up the Rock we missed all the fun in the High St.

Outside Swarovski Jewelers was a mass of yellow tape, Bobbies in pointed helmets and men in those blue paper suits, rubber gloves and boot covers that you see on “Waking the Dead” and similar cop shows.

CSI Gibraltar (yes it DID say that on the side of their van) were out in force.

We had missed an armed robbery…..damn! It would have been at least as much fun as the visit to the Moorish tower……..!

Tuesday, July 20, 2010

To boldly go - The Sea legs blog day 3

As expected, my sea legs were issued overnight and I’m beginning to feel at home on this floating hotel. Cruising down the West coast of Iberia we are now marking time until landfall on Tuesday. Vicki went to her second makeup seminar; “colour” this time, while I relaxed in the sunshine.

After lunch we checked out the cinema The new Star Trek movie passed a couple of hours, I’ve seen it before, but enjoyed it just as much the second time. After a sedentary couple of hours we hit the gym again for 45 minutes with the sweating hordes, followed by another 45 playing half-court basketball on deck. After a few moments we were joined by a slightly podgy young lad and his mates, to make up a game of three on two. Vicki immediately dropped in to “Teacher mode” and it became almost a coaching session for her two. By 6pm I was wilting in the sun, so we finished a close 20-18 game to Vicki’s team.

After supper we watched the show, this time a Beatles tribute band that had them dancing in the aisles!

Tomorrow, landfall and Gibraltar

Monday, July 19, 2010

Blow winds blow my bonny - oh! The Sea legs blog day 2

For the first time in 55 years, I really now do believe we live on a ball of water, held together by gravity and spinning in infinity. Looking out from the balcony a horizon line made up of the pale blue of the sky and the darker blue of the sea, reaches from each extreme of my vision. I can imagine it's actually curved down at the ends and if I was at a higher point I could see it. In fact I’ve convinced myself, sitting here that if I line up that blue/blue horizon line with the horizontal of the balcony rail, I can actually see that curvature of the horizon against the rail, but it’s probably just my varifocals.

As we sail South West it’s warming up. So much for the legendary Bay of Biscay storms; it’s flat calm. On the top deck at lunchtime the breeze blows warm, and the sky is azure blue. Teeming humanity lounges by the jogging track. A vast array of flesh, hair and cellulite, tattoos and piercings come at you from all angles, as the breeze blows you cool. Some are walking, some are jogging, but most are just sitting or lying in the sun, their day job a distant memory or their retired - ex salesman, ex teacher, ex manager lives extending out in front of them.

Getting in to the swing of things a little now, the food and service are what you’d expect from a decent 4-5 star hotel, the choice is wide and the quality is good. Today, inspired by yesterday’s “secrets of a flatter stomach” seminar, we hit the gym. 45 minutes of jogging, rowing and cycling was enough for the first day.

At dinner we are sharing a table with two couples from somewhere North of Peterborough and are looked after by a Turkish head waiter called Riza and his assistant, Moses. (I kid you not)

After dinner we, went to our first show, the sort of affair that you’d get at 6pm on a Saturday night on ITV. A slightly camp “Captain Jack Harkness” look-alike singer and dancer with a team that would have made Bruno from “Strictly” rave, and Len shout “Seven!” The show was based on Fairy tales and very well put together.

Ended the day looking at the moon setting over the water…….glad I brought my binoculars. We have another day’s cruising on Monday, then landfall in Gibraltar on Tuesday.

Beginning to “chill"…….I think I may be issued with my sea legs overnight!

Sunday, July 18, 2010

The Sea legs blog, Blog Day 1

Check in was a well organized friendly experience. No grumpies, just helpful people. This is a US-run ship after all and, say what you like about the Septics, they do know how to do customer service!

Once on board, it was all a bit overwhelming! The ship is the size of a large hotel, 15 decks and a quarter of a mile long. A crew compliment of 1400 and nearly 4000 passengers.

No sign of deck quoits or Kenneth Williams/Barbara Windsor style fitness classes on the poop deck yet, I’m pleased to say , and the ship’s surgeon DOES NOT look like James Robertson Justice……. ……Left hand down a bit……

The compulsory safety drill was run by a nice Italian-American girl with a voice that sounded if she’d been secretly sniffing Helium round the corner before she started the routine. We were lined up and registered at our muster stations and were shown how to don our lifejackets. The orchestra were briefed on what would be appropriate to play as we headed for the lifeboats, and the “How to crawl over a granny to get there first” drill was practiced.

A Mrs Patel (77) from Cleckheaton volunteered to be the designated granny for this trip.

So briefed, off to explore the ship! A main promenade, looking like a cross between a shopping mall and a Las Vegas casino, runs up the centre of the ship on deck 5. There you can buy designer goods, costume jewelry and expensive watches, or just chill in bars and coffee shops.

There is round the clock entertainment, pools, basketball, rock climbing ands ice skating, and even a surf pool. The expression “Butlins on steroids” springs to mind!

There’s a Fitness suite is full of top notch equipment and the usual collection of sweaty trendies in dodgy headbands and lycra shorts.

If that is all too much, we have our own private balcony where we can just sit and read and watch the waves go past at a smooth 18 knots. We are currently somewhere off Brittany heading across the Bay of Biscay; onwards round the Iberian peninsular to Gibraltar.

Today’s itinerary is a cosmetics workshop for Vicki, “Glamorous evening makeup” while I write this blog, then lunch. This will be followed by “Secrets to a Flatter stomach” in the fitness centre, (apparently this does not involve missing lunch) and tenpin bowling in the Pyramid lounge at 4pm……………

No sign of a Hawaiian bar yet, I’m pleased to say, but I am reliably informed that there is a “sexiest men’s legs competition” later but, as I’ve not been issued with my “sea legs” yet I will not be entering today.

Saturday, July 17, 2010

What are "sea legs" anyway?

I'm going to find out if I have them soon, as I'm all packed for our 30th Anniversary cruise round the Med, and ready to head for Southampton.

Cats are "doing porridge" and the car is checked out and ready to roll. Ahead for the next 3 days and nights is a sail across the stormy Bay of Biscay and round the Iberian peninsular to Gibraltar, a land I fully expect to be stuck in the 1960s and consist of odd pseudo-British accents, red telephone boxes and bobbies in pointed helmets..............

............................

Cynical 1960's Copper to "Teddy boy"

"Ere, son do your toes go to the end of those pointed shoes?"


Teddy boy,

No, but does your head go to the top of that pointed helmet?"

.......................................................

Oh yes, and the Barbary apes.....


Perhaps they'll fit us with sea legs on the quayside (hope it doesn't hurt!)

Sunday, June 6, 2010

Blood and Monsters

The contrast between the North and South banks of Loch Ness is quite startling. The North all tarmac, tourists, Hikers and Nessie Souvenirs, and the South, tranquil one track lanes, blue water and ferns. We arrived on the South bank early, after quickly losing the A9, diverting Southwest through Corriworrie and coming up Glen Kyttachy. This little gem lies between the 2000-ft peaks of Beinn Bhreac and Cairn na Saobhaidgh. Not Munroes, but stunning enough. The single track lane winds upwards north west through gorse and heather moorland before plunging downwards through the green of Strathnairn Forest.
South again to the Lochside at Foyers, we paused to look across to Castle Urquhart, hoping to catch a glimpse of a long neck or those famous serpent loops. No monsters, just the breeze ruffling the surface of the loch making a thousand shadows on this enigmatic stretch of water.

On to Inverness, a sold-out provincial town. Same bored-looking youths, poor men in expensive soccer shirts, streets mauled by Clarks, Marks and Macdonalds. The same items in the same sales at the same prices. Just the Caledonian Canal tells you that you are not in Guildford or Huddersfield. We got lunch and left. I was screaming for the green and purple.

Drumnadrochit - well what can I say, considering it had such an evocative name, it had a Nessie "multimedia experience" and no view of the Loch, so we headed into the traffic again, dodging the bikers and hikers, then, round full circle, back to the tranquillity of the South Bank.

If you fork right and leave the Loch bank to the North West, then follow the road North East towards Croy, cross the A9 and you eventually get to Culloden Moor. The site in 1746 of the very last battle fought in the British Isles. The second Jacobite rising of 1745 was a direct result of the Act of Union of 1707, which removed the Scottish Parliament.

“What force or guile could not subdue

Through many warlike ages
Is wrought now by a coward few
For hireling traitor's wages.
The English steel we could disdain
Secure in valour's station
But English gold has been our bane
Such a parcel o' rogues in a nation.”


(Robert Burns)

The "rogues" concerned were the members of the Scottish parliament who signed the Act of Union with England in 1707.
At Culloden, the Duke of Cumberland, and his lowland allies defeated the Jacobite rebels and their few French allies under Bonnie Prince Charlie.
This was not an England Scotland conflict as many like to believe, on this elevated bog, Scot fought Scot. The graves of the clans, marked by name, attest to this. Over 1200 Jacobites and 350 of the Dukes men were killed in a skirmish that lasted less than an hour. The traditional Highland charge that normally struck terror in the hearts of the foes, was slowed down by the exhaustion of the Highlanders after their long march back from Derby, and the peat bog, They were cut down by the grape shot of the Duke's Artillery. A flank counter attack and the day was won. The Duke ordered “No quarter” and they slaughtered the wounded and the dying, and continued their pursuit of Jacobite sympathisers throughout Scotland.

Many's the lad fought on that day
Well the claymore could wield
When the night came, silently lay
Dead on Culloden's field.

(Skye Boat Song)


As we stood overlooking “Cumberland’s killing field”, reading the details of the battle, and walking round looking at the signs showing the battle lines, the sky was grey and the wind was blowing. Not really cold or raining hard as on the 16th of April 1746, but you could imagine the cold chill that the Highlanders must have felt as they faced the Duke’s Artillery. I listened and thought, “No birdsong”. Was it a coincidence that I experienced the same at the death camp of Auschwitz-Birkenau, in Poland, at Alderley Edge in Cheshire (“the most evil site in England”) and here?
After Culloden, The highlands were never the same again, the teaching and speaking of Gaelic was banned, and the wearing of the Tartan was banned. Each of these “crimes” was punishable by death.

Reflections in the South China Sea.

(Another Blog from "way back", this time 1999)

Situated off the North East Coast of Singapore Pulau Ubin (Ubin Island) is a welcome escape from the tower blocks and air conditioning roar of down town Singapore. You get to it by "bum boat" from Changi Jetty, just a few miles from the notorious prison that the Japanese used with such brutality during the occupation. Bum boats, - "floating shacks" is the best way I can describe them, ply the short crossing to the Island for a dollar fifty Singapore (about 50p).
Landing at Pulau Ubin jetty is like stepping back 50 years. Except for the bicycle hirers, nothing seems to have changed since the Japanese surrendered in 1945. Bicycles have come to Singapore before of course, during that period of colonial arrogance, when the British surrounded Singapore harbour with naval guns and troops, ready for a sea-borne landing by the Imperial Army. The Japanese just got on their bikes, and cycled down the Malay Peninsular, over the causeway and in to Singapore. The British forces, I'm not sure whether through surprise or embarrassment, promptly surrendered and marched in to Changi Prison (presumably led by Alec Guinness and whistling "Colonel Bogey"). Watching the newsreels from that period, especially the one of the signing of the British surrender, you can see the look of disbelief in the Japanese officers' eyes that it was so easy. History probably tells us now that this extreme act of pragmatism by the British Officers was correct, but the few remaining men who suffered the deprivations and brutality of Changi and that terrible railroad may have a different perspective on the decision.
But back to 1999 and Pulau Ubin. You hire a bike now; the choice is from dodgy ones at $3 up to top range ones with suspension at $13. I went for a mid range one at $6.
Ubin is a patch of rain forest, a granite quarry, tropical beaches and a few villages. It is sanitised rain forest with tarmac tracks and road signs, really a "jungle theme park" but the jungle is real, and the villages and shacks you pass are real and inhabited by real people. The village of Pulau is a Vintage Japanese bike fan's dream. There are loads of rusting small bikes from the 70's 80s and 90s leaning against shacks, or driven by wizened little old men. The cafe owner told me that they've no licences, no insurance and are maintained to the lowest standards. Honda Monkeys, a Suzuki GP100 and the tattiest collection of C50s 70s and 90s I’ve seen in a long time. The bikes over here are like the girls. It’s hard to tell the age of most of them, and they would surely benefit from bringing home and caring for!
The cafe in Pulau Ubin exudes the constant wail of Chinese pop music. Sitting in the cafe is a balding Yorkhireman in shorts (writing this), a Malaysian girl in mountain bike gear emblazoned with adverts for Volvo, another Englishman of my age who's probably doing the same as me, escaping for a day, a couple of young Singaporeans on a day trip from the city, and waitress of indeterminate age with tired eyes. The owner is friendly enough, happy to chat with the customers, about nothing in particular.
Looking out between the buildings over the strait, you can see the tower blocks of Changi in the distance. Do the inhabitants of Pulau Ubin look out from their windows over at Singapore like the prisoners of Alcatraz looked out over to San Francisco? It was said that on quiet nights with the wind in the right direction they could hear the people at the beach parties, laughing. It was said to be the worst punishment of all. I don't think that this is the case here.
The big question with Singapore for me is “who are the prisoners". No one is rushing to leave, no one go hungry, no one begs in the street. The majority of Singaporeans are prosperous and happy, as a result of the "benign dictatorship" of Mr Lee Kwan Yu. The "miracle" from 1965 to today is something unique; the people are hard working and have a strict sense of hierarchy. I'm "Dr John" here "lesser mortals” respect the academic title in a way that makes me feel a little uncomfortable. With someone of “equal status", I'm just that guy from the UK, and with the senior men I am expected to be respectful and subordinate. I was told by our local manager that my former managing director made a serious misjudgement of the culture here, by "rolling his sleeves up" and doing work that was below someone of such high standing.
This attitude is probably one of the keys to the success in material terms of Singapore. A compliant workforce, no unemployment, strict almost draconian laws on littering, drugs and crime, and a ban on public speaking without a licence. One can't help thinking though, that maybe the whole thing is built on sand. They grow nothing, import everything, from water to consumer goods, have little land left to speak of so only build upwards. You think "they can't afford to fall out with their neighbours" and "a serious blockade and they'd be starving in 6 weeks". The fact is that they have a symbiotic relationship with their neighbours. They depend on each other; each is better of for the other, being there. One for money and the other for resources. The best example of this is with water. It is piped, untreated, over the causeway from Malaysia, after which it is treated and sold back to them as potable water.
It's this symbiosis that lets them live in this artificial paradise, this "Disneyland with death penalties" as the father of Cyberpunk fiction, William Gibson famously quoted a few years back.
I managed to grab 15 minutes at the Changi Prison museum on the way back to the hotel. There they have built a replica of the famous prison chapel built by the British soldiers held captive there for three years from 1942 to 1945. On the wall is a moving "pin board" where people can leave dedications, one (from an Australian family) just said "thank you for the freedom". Some leave names and addresses of the former inmates who may have lost contact. The lucky ones are all in their 70s and 80s now. The others died of cholera, starvation, or the shock of amputations due to jungle sores.
In the museum I found a little more detail about the fall of Singapore, and the lives of the poor souls that worked and died in that hellish place. It seems the British were totally unprepared for the Japanese attack by land. A much smaller force of crack Japanese jungle troops defeated the large British force, which had no air cover, and no civil defence force. Hardly a shot was fired, the naval guns pointed impotently in the wrong direction. This may explain the modern day Singaporeans insistence upon national service, and having a large army, navy and air force.
The contrast between Pulau Ubin and Singapore itself is stark indeed. Singapore is all glass skyscrapers, office blocks and old white stone colonial buildings. Air-conditioned malls contain the best of Western consumer goods and, designer clothes. The people are smart, streetwise, and prosperous, but seem to rush around like ants. On Ubin, the bike hirers, the rusting Hondas and wooden shacks tell of a more relaxed lifestyle.
You tell me, at the beginning of this 3rd Millennium, who are the lucky ones?

New York... pre 9/11

Written in January 2001, Before the twin towers came crashing down. (with quotes from Joni Mitchell)

"Woke up, it was a Chelsea Morning, and the first thing that I heard, was a song outside my window, and the traffic wrote the words........"

I landed in New York on Saturday night, the night of the second snowstorm of the winter. On Sunday I woke up to a Manhattan morning, looked out of my hotel window to a scene of New York yellow cabs in the snow.

".......yellow schools of taxi fishes........"

When I arrive in a town I like to walk some of it to get the layout. Then I feel comfortable. I arrived in New York looking over my shoulder every two minutes, looking for muggers in every doorway. Despite this, and 5 inches if snow, I still had to do it, so I set off up 8th Avenue to the South end of Central Park, past the Park-Lane affluent hotels with their liveried doormen. Then down 5th Avenue to Broadway and back over to 8th and the Olympic Diner for breakfast. By this time I was confident I wouldn't get mugged, so settled in to the diner for breakfast. I ordered scrambled eggs, toast, the inevitable hash browns, and coffee. All for $7. This place had the feel of the diners run by Greeks in Finsbury Park, London, the only thing that told you you were in New York were the 30s black and white photos of the city on the walls. Somehow New York looks good in black and white. Maybe this is because it was in its heyday in the twenties and thirties when black and white was the only choice. The proprietor was interested in my Psion, I told him a little about it and what I was writing. Like you might expect in the "Capital of Mammon", he seemed more interested in what it was worth that what it could do or what it contained. I lied about what it was worth; probably that New York paranoia again. Was someone listening on the next table and planning to mug me for it when I left? Would they assume that if I had a $500 pocket computer that I was worth turning over?

Fortified by the Olympic Diner Breakfast, I decided to have a real look round. No one mugged me as I left.

I walked much of mid town Manhattan that day, from the Flat iron Building in the south, I headed North. The morning was cold but the sun was shining out of an azure sky, not what I expected at all. I crossed Central Park from East to West, pausing to look at Wolman Rink.

".....There are 29 skaters on Wolman Rink circling in singles and in pairs"

Well there might have been when Joni walked by, but not today, just a few joggers and dog-walkers. On the West side I walked up as far as 96th Street.

While black and white gives it character, New York still looks as good in 3D colour. The snow lay deep in the ground, and armies of municipal workers were out in force clearing the sidewalks with large snow scrapers.

New York is the place if you're in to Art Deco. Some of the buildings are just stunning. Like the cathedral builders of old who built high to be closer to God, the Art Deco Architects built high not to be closer to God but because of the rocketing price of real estate. Art deco conjures up visions of evening parties by a moonlit ocean, attended by waif-like flappers in diamantĂ© skull caps and frilly mini dresses. They dance the night away with bright young things in black tie and tail-coats. While the Empire State is the tallest and most famous of the Art Deco cathedrals, for me it is dwarfed for sheer style and beauty by the Chrysler Building. I'd seen it on countless opening sequences to American cop shows and films. Its chevroned top section illuminated with neon against the Manhattan skyline, as the camera helicopter sweeps past, you know the one. But to see it in daylight from the street, reflecting the morning sun took my breath away. The building is a typical Art Deco tower with the classic stepped construction. The lower section, unremarkable apart from the lions that guard the four corners and look down on passers by. The second rectangular section takes you soaring above the street, but the top section is he crowning glory. Gently curving and sensually tapered it’s covered with reflective chevrons that make it shine like a multi-faceted diamond in the morning sun, sweeping upwards to a single stiletto-spike. This top section seemed to be on fire, on that bright January morning, reflecting the full glory of the sun. To me its a "must see" in New York. Unfortunately the interior is closed to the public, but a quiet word with the security man, and he'll let you photograph the foyer from the entrance. Here's where the Cathedral analogy continues, the architects have given the interior the decor to match the outside. It has a foyer the size of a tennis court. The whole of the interior has an opulent golden-brown glow, a contrast to the clinical black and silver of the Empire State. The roof of the entrance hall has a remarkable frieze of the building painted on it. Looking overhead you get the impression of looking at a hazy sepia photograph.

It’s a short walk from Grand Central Station, another deco monument, where you can nibble on a myriad of different fast foods and sip Cappuccino under gigantic chandeliers.

During my walk round Manhattan, I revelled in the street and place names. Straight out of a New York mythology: Macy's, Broadway, Bloomingdales, 42nd St, Times Square. They were all there, but just below the gloss, just a few blocks West from Times Square were places you wouldn't walk around on your own at night. Where the crack dealers swagger, and the sad flotsam of life drift around. New York stays together because of its neighbourhood system. Each has its on distinct and individual community. Chinese, Italian, Hispanic. I found myself wondering what had happened to the great "melting pot" that was supposed to be the USA. Later in my trip I found out that the neighbourhoods do not mix or integrate too much. Ethnic groups stay together and guard their neighbourhoods jealously. Moving in and out of these neighbourhoods are dangerous men in fast cars and heavy gold jewellery. Men who'd

".......eat their young alive, for a Jaguar in the drive"

Always accompanied by mean men in Foster Grants, they suck this place dry; they leave a slime trail of dead souls behind them as they ply their deadly trade. Good people keep away. They keep away because of the hopelessness of it all. It’s better than it was, New York, better than before "Zero Tolerance", and you can walk around at night but you'd better pick your neighbourhood carefully. New York is still a city of the hopeful and the hopeless in equal proportions. Immigrants still flood here to make a living, driving Yellow cabs, while

"....business men in button downs press in to conference rooms"