Kamis, 31 Juli 2014

Complete Guide to Exchange at NUS

This is a complete guide to a study exchange at the National University of Singapore. I had an amazing time during my four months in Singapore and highly recommend it! I will try to be as comprehensive as possible for this post but please comment below if there is any more information regarding exchange at NUS that you would like to know.

Photo with the NUS mascot
This is a long post, click the links below to jump to specific sections.

Application

Pre-Departure

                                                                

Application

  • Apply at your home university
Find out if NUS is an exchange partner of your home university. If they are partners and you fulfill exchange requirements then you can apply to NUS! Most exchange programs require applying through your home university. Now you just have to wait for that acceptance letter!
  • Get a student visa
Congratulations! Once you have been accepted into NUS you will get an email from them. Throughout the whole exchange process I never had any physical letters from NUS and all communication was by email. They will send you a detailed email telling you the next steps which includes applying for a Singapore student visa called the Student Pass (official website here).
  • Get your student number and password
You will be getting a lot of emails from NUS so be sure to check them! One of them will contain your student number and password. Save this in your phone because you will need this information as soon as you hit campus housing.
  • Course planning
You will have a country-specific advisor from the International Relations Office (IRO) in charge of your exchange. They are helpful and reply emails quite quickly. I had lots of help getting the most updated versions of the course (NUS calls them modules) PDFs. Search modules here. A website called nusmods.com made it very easy for me to search for modules, see the final exam date, and create a timetable.
  • Student housing
There are many housing options on campus that have different meal plan options. You can look through their housing website.

View from my dorm room

Pre-Departure

  • Sign up for tours
Remember I said you will be getting many emails from NUS? You will get lots from the IRO and Peer Advising, too. Don't ignore them! They contain information about Orientation activities, Exchange student welcome activities, tours and much more. The spots fill up very quickly so sign up as soon as you get the email. I thoroughly enjoyed the campus and city tours I signed up for and it's a great opportunity to meet other exchange students right after you land in Singapore.
  • Pack light!
Singapore is obviously very hot. It reaches about 29 to 30 Celsius daily so pack light clothing. However do pack some warm clothing like hoodies or cardigans. Many exchange students fell ill in the first weeks because they weren't used to the strong air conditioning inside the classrooms. As well, you don't know where you will be traveling to!

Dorms do not provide pillows, bed sheets or blankets so you may wish to bring those to have something to sleep on the first night. Bring a universal charger, preferably one that you can interchange into many country standards, because it will be very useful for travel. 

I suggest you to bring some souvenirs from your home country! You don't realize how the things you're used to back home may be special to the friends you meet from other countries. For example, I brought some pins of my home city to Singapore and gave them to friends I met in Singapore.
  • Get the information you need
  • IRO office
Personally I find the IRO website not user friendly with the huge block of texts but it does contain the majority of information you will need. Everything from registration needs to Singlish is on the website. Also read through the Exchange Student Guide PDF that they will have sent you by email.
    • Find out about Orientation Day and attend!
Orientation Day for exchange students is usually a couple days before the first day of classes so be sure to fly in early. It's not mandatory and it may sound boring but I found it informative. They gave out a booklet with all the information you will need with screenshots of NUS websites you will be using.
  • Print out all documents for Registration Day
I cannot stress this enough but print all your documents while you're still in your home country. There will be an email sent to you (and it's also in the student guide PDF) about the exact documents you will need to bring with you to Registration Day. NUS and Singapore are very strict on documents so make it easy on yourself to have them all. Some of the things you will need are visa information, photocopies of your passport, passport photos that adhere to Singapore regulations, etc.

On Exchange!

  • Orientation Day
Hooray you made it to Singapore! Enjoy Orientation Day meeting faculty, staff and other exchange students :)
  • Registration Day
The exact date and time your Registration Day is depends your country and the information will be given to you at Orientation Day and also via email. I got my NUS Matriculation Card (aka access to the pool, gym, 24 hour computer labs, student discounts, etc.) on Registration Day which completes both your registration to the university and also registration to Singapore as the last step of the visa application.
  • Welcome Party
The IRO will be organizing a Welcome Party with free food, entertainment and support for exchange students.
  • Getting into courses
Prior to arriving in Singapore I sent a list of 10 preferred modules of which I was given 5. You may choose 10 preferred modules per semester. There are two rounds of Module Add/Drop Exercises via the NG Module Registration System.

As exchange students you have to register for tutorials in person. Approximately a week or two after classes begin you will be given a specific date (again will be provided at Orientation) where you have to go to the offices of each of your courses and submit a tutorial application form. These tutorial spots are first come first serve, so go early! Some professors help coordinate tutorials and you just have to email your choices.
  • Setting up NUS accounts:
  • NUS Email
Important information from NUS, your residence, your faculty and your professors will be sent to your NUS email account. Login = nusstu\ [your student ID]. Password = [a provided password]. Your email address will be [student ID]@nus.edu.sg. Go to exchange.nus.edu.sg to sign in!
    • MyISIS
MyISIS stands for Integrated Student Information System found at myisis.nus.edu.sg. This is where you go to check your finances, your exam schedule and your exam results.
    • IVLE
IVLE stands for Integrated Virtual Learning Environment found at ivle.nus.edu.sg. You will likely be using IVLE heavily as it is where all your professors will be uploading lecture slides, encouraging the use of forums, giving class announcements and getting assignment submissions. The IVLE mobile app is available on iTunes and Google Play so you can get notifications via your smartphone if you don't want to bother with checking the website for announcements.
  • Shuttle buses
Before I came to NUS I did not know that they had an internal shuttle bus. Coming from a university that does not have one, I thought it was awesome! You can get from your residence to class in an air conditioned bus and minimal walking. There are buses A1, A2, B, C, D1, D2 and BTC. Most loop around campus and differ by routes and clockwise/counter clockwise. Find detailed information about the shuttle buses here. You can download a mobile app called NUS Next Bus on iTunes and Google Play to find out when the bus arrives.
  • Study resources at NUS
NUS has a lot of study space such as an entire Education Resource Centre at Utown. It boasts two 24 hour computer labs (Mac and PC) which means 24 hour printing! You can conveniently pay for printing with an EZ-Link (transit) card.

Studying at the 24 hour Starbucks
  • Explore the city
Highly recommend downloading a mobile app called MyTransport.SG to check the time of the next arriving bus. Once you're more familiar with bus stop names you can find out the time for the next bus so you don't have to wait in the humidity for so long! The nearest MRT stops are: Kent Ridge MRT from campus plus Buona Vista MRT, Dover MRT and Clementi MRT from Utown. Dover is walkable but all the other options are just a short bus ride away. They will take you to all the tourist attractions of Singapore!
  • Travel abroad
Sign up for the email newsletters of airlines like Jetstar and AirAsia to learn flight deals early! With the Student Pass you enter and leave Singapore like a local citizen. That means that you can cross the automated gates by scanning your passport (not your Student Pass card). You don't have to wait in line to get questioned by immigration like other foreigners!

Major Singapore landmarks in one photo: Marina Bay Sands, Gardens by the Bay, Singapore Flyer

Departure

  • Exams at NUS
Studying for exams at NUS is pretty intensive. Students stay overnight at study facilities (eg. sleep at the 24 hour computer labs) to keep their study spots and prolong studying. The normally abundant study spaces will be completely filled, especially the air conditioned ones. I suppose it may be normal to some but compared to my home university, I've never seen our library so crowded before. Go to MyISIS to find your exam locations. However, exam difficulty was approximately the same as my home university given that you do some studying.
  • Farewell party
IRO will organize a Farewell Party for exchange students. For ours there was a photobooth, talent performances by students and free food.


  • Exchange withdrawal
You've made it to the end of the post! Just a short note on exchange withdrawal. It wasn't something that I thought about when I embarked for Singapore but it's worth taking note of. You may not be used to living back in your home country after months here. You will be excited to share about your experiences while abroad but others may not share the same level of excitement because they were not the ones with the first hand experience. For me, this blog is the perfect outlet to share all things regarding this exchange (especially all the travels) and hopefully this will help some of you!

Sabtu, 31 Mei 2014

Genting Highlands: Getting there, renovations

Genting Highlands is under the same company, Resorts World, as Sentosa in Singapore. Genting used to be a popular destination among locals and tourists because the higher altitude makes the climate much more comfortable. It is breezy and not humid like in Kuala Lumpur. I use the past tense for "used to be popular" because it is undergoing major construction tearing down the outdoor theme park to re-build a new one with 20th Century Fox so tourism has been affected.

Genting Highlands
Getting to Genting Highlands
To get to Genting from Kuala Lumpur (KL), go to KL Sentral station to buy bus tickets. The ticket booth is a bit hard to find. It is on the second level so go up the escalator, turn left and walk straight. The booth should be on your right hand side. The bus takes you to the base of Genting and you have to take either a) a cable car or b) a free shuttle bus to the hotel area. When we went the cable car was down for its monthly maintenance so we bought the bus ticket excluding the cable car price. It cost RM8.60 for roundtrip from KL to Genting.

The ride from KL Sentral to Genting was 50 minutes in a comfortable air-conditioned and clean bus. The shuttle bus up to the hotel took about 20 minutes because it went slowly up the winding road.

KL Sentral; source: www.skyscrapercity.com
What to do at Genting
The old main highlight of Genting was the outdoor theme park but it was already closed and demolished since 2013. We stayed at the First World Hotel which is connected to the Indoor Theme Park. It is one of the largest hotels in the world with over 2000 rooms! The lobby was large with rows of chairs like at a bus terminal. The rooms are small but clean and had everything we needed except WiFi. That was a major downer that there was no WiFi in the room so we had to go to a restaurant to use it.

First World Hotel behind the theme park construction
Since there was no Outdoor Theme Park and it was raining outside (when we went) there were not much options left except to eat, walk around the First World Plaza, bowl, and look at the Indoor Theme Park. We did not go to SnowWorld because it did not interest us since I come from a country that snows. We also didn't go on any Indoor Theme Park rides because they were catered for kids and didn't gamble at the popular Genting Casino just because I don't gamble. But those are all available options.

Indoor Theme Park
There were a lot of dining options from food courts to restaurants at Genting. Prices were higher than in KL but affordable options are available. Bowling was inexpensive (RM3.60 per game during certain time) and pretty fun! First World Plaza is the shopping mall under the First World Hotel but there are only a limited number of shops.

Food places by the First World Plaza
There are shuttle buses that take you to other parts of Genting Highlands like the Chin Swee Temple (didn't go because it was raining) and Awana Hotel. However the shuttle bus times are not very frequent.

Shuttle bus schedule to Chin Swee Temple

Lastly...
Genting Highlands is very affordable to go to from KL now because hotel prices have dropped with the closing of the Outdoor Theme Park and buses are cheap. So it is worthwhile to go to but not for long periods. I was there for one full day and left the next morning. At the end of my full day I already did not know what to do because there is only so much entertainment in the indoor space. As well many things were not organized well at Genting and lacked the efficiency of another Resorts World place, Sentosa, that I was used to.

For example, the shuttle bus down to the base of the highlands to take the bus back to KL does not have a set schedule. When we asked the information desk, their reply was simply that we would have to wait in line, get on the bus, wait until the bus is full for the driver to start the vehicle. This vagueness is horrible for trying to get on the bus towards KL on time because we had already bought our tickets.

In the end we left the hotel 1.5 hours before the scheduled KL bus time to find the shuttle bus queue (which not all staff knew), queue for awhile (many tour groups ahead of us), and make the ride down. Leaving the hotel 1.5 hours beforehand for a normally 20 minute shuttle bus ride only left us with 5 minutes until the KL bus departed! This rushing could have been avoided if there was proper scheduling.

In general going to Genting can still be fun as long as you are aware of their organization problems!

Rabu, 28 Mei 2014

Public bus: Singapore to Johor Bahru (and beyond)

There is a very affordable method to take the public bus from Singapore to Johor Bahru (JB) for a day trip or to the Larkin Bus Terminal for buses to other parts of Malaysia. Bus fares bought in JB to parts of Malaysia are significantly cheaper than bus tickets purchased in Singapore. You can compare private bus company fares using this website (note: I've bought tickets on the site before, very useful).

I will discuss the costs, pros and cons of taking public buses versus private bus at the bottom of the post.

Jump to parts of this post:
Departing Singapore
Crossing the link to JB
Arriving in Malaysia
Larkin Bus Terminal
Cost
Time
Pros and Cons
                                              
Take the MRT to Kranji station and follow the crowd out of the exit to where the buses are (it'll be obvious!) Take bus 170 to Woodlands Checkpoint to exit the Singapore border. Bus 170 costs S$0.87 with the EZ-Link card and S$1.50 by cash.

Especially if you're going on a weekend, depart early. I was there at 7:30am and there was already a long queue of about 40 people that was continuously growing. Alight with everybody else at the Woodlands Checkpoint, have your passport ready and exit the Singapore border.

Bus 170; source: busesingapore.blogspot.com

Woodlands checkpoint; source: therealsingapore.com

Once your passport has been checked, exit the doors to the bus terminal outside. It will be hot and probably crowded. You can look for bus 170 to take you to the Johor Bahru checkpoint to enter the Malaysian border. In my case, I took the CW2 and paid RM2.60 which included the bus fare beyond the JB checkpoint to Larkin Bus Terminal.

Singapore to JB; source: freedomaires.wordpress.com
The bus will alight at the Johor Bahru checkpoint and just follow the crowd to have your passport checked again to enter Malaysia. Once that is done, walk down the wide corridor and down an escalator to find the bus terminal. We boarded the CW2 bus again since we already paid for the trip to the Larkin Bus Terminal. You can take other buses (they will be labeled!) to the centre of JB for shopping and the likes.

Johor Bahru checkpoint; source: sg.news.yahoo.com
There will be many private bus companies offering rides to many places in West Malaysia. But popular destinations like Malacca do get sold out quickly! It costs RM20 to bus from JB to Malacca compared to S$21 from Singapore to Malacca. Approximately S$1 = RM 2.6. You can read about my experience taking the bus from Singapore to Malacca here.

Larkin Bus Terminal; source: whattaworld.wordpress.com
Bus 170 S$0.87 + CW2 RM2.60 (S$1.00) = S$1.87

This trip can vary from 1.5 to 3 hours depending on traffic. My trip took 3 hours because I went on a public holiday.

If you're considering going to other parts of Malaysia via Larkin Bus Terminal at JB for the cheaper fares there are some pros and cons. The most evident pro is saving costs but you may be sacrificing or saving time.

The first time I went to Malaysia I took a bus from Singapore to Malacca. The bus dropped us off and picked us up at every checkpoint so we did not have to look for a public bus. It was convenient and we got to sit in an air-conditioned vehicle. However our entire trip from Singapore to Malacca was delayed by 2 hours because a few passengers were held up at the border (possibly due to passport problems?) so all the passengers on the bus had to wait for them. That resulted in arriving in Malacca late and cutting short our sightseeing.

The second time I went to Malaysia I took public transit to JB before buying a ticket to Kuala Lumpur. Cost: Public bus $1.87 + Private bus RM34.30 (S$13) = S$14.87 to travel from Singapore to Kuala Lumpur which is twice the distance of Singapore to Malacca (private bus S$21). 

This second time was a public holiday and very very crowded. At both the Singapore Woodlands checkpoint and the Malaysia Johor Bahru checkpoint we alighted the bus and followed the crowd to get to the checkpoint by foot when the bus was nearby but stuck in traffic. The walks were about 10 minutes but the ability to be mobile because we only took public transit is key. If I had purchased a private bus ticket I would be forced to wait for the vehicle because it would take me beyond the border.

Selasa, 27 Mei 2014

Bali 4-Day Itinerary: Day One

4 Day Itinerary in Bali

Read Day 1 here - Kuta Beach
Read Day 2 here - Full Day Island Tour
Read Day 3 and 4 here - Nusa Dua Beach

Kuta Beach, Bali
Day 1

Departing from Singapore we took a 7:15am flight to Denpasar-Bali. The flight was 2.5 hours long. We encountered our first scam in Bali at the airport so be careful!

Jetstar flight
Upon exiting the departure hall there will be many taxi drivers yelling "taxi! taxi!" at you and ushering you towards their taxis. We could tell that we couldn't just get on any taxi and negotiated a price before getting into the car with one driver but we made the mistake of getting into a taxi without a metre. Our hotel was only a 10 minute drive from the airport and we were charged Rupiah Rp 150,000 for a normally Rp 10,000 trip. Only take taxis with a metre, like the Blue Bird taxis!

We stayed at Eden Hotel for the duration of our trip and had a good experience there. The hotel is new and clean. There was staff cleaning the place all the time and more staff at the outdoor pool making drinks and food. We were able to easily exchange money at the hotel counter. Don't trust the many money exchange stalls saying they don't take commission because they will find another way to take a portion of your money!

Kuta Beach
After dropping off our things we walked around Kuta. The area is very touristy with crowds of foreigners and locals, many stalls and even more cars and motorbikes. Vendors were trying to sell you products or services constantly as you walk past them. The famous Kuta Beach was about a 15 minute walk from our hotel and to be honest I was quite disappointed.

The sand was dirty with pieces of cigarette butts and beer cans. The water was brown and murky. It was not anything like the images you see on the internet but that is what happens to places that have been overpopulated with tourists. 

After viewing the sunset at Kuta Beach we walked further to the newest mall called Beach Walk. The mall has clear western influence and were filled with more tourists than locals.

Dinner at Beach Walk mall
That is the end of a relaxing Day 1! A more eventful Day 2 followed with a full day tour of the island.

Read Day 1 here - Kuta Beach
Read Day 2 here - Full Day Island Tour
Read Day 3 and 4 here - Nusa Dua Beach

Bali 4-Day Itinerary: Day Two

4 Day Itinerary in Bali

Read Day 1 here - Kuta Beach
Read Day 2 here - Full Day Island Tour
Read Day 3 and 4 here - Nusa Dua Beach

Tanah Lot
Day 2

We joined a full day tour around the south of the island. We joined Bali Bagus Tours and all we had to do was email our information to the company before arriving and paid at the end of the tour (Rp 650,000 for one car). The owner Suta answered all our questions promptly via Whatsapp prior to arrival and his employee, Ketut picked us up on time at 11am at the hotel.

Since it was a private tour we had some flexibility in where we wanted to go and in what order. We visited many destinations that would've been quite impossible without a car since there is no public transit.

We visited Celuk village, a Batik clothing factory, a coffee plantation, the Ubud Money Forest, the Tegunungan waterfall, a temple at Mengwi, and the famous Tanah Lot.

Making Batik clothing
Coffee Plantation
The coffee plantation seemed to be a family business and the owner patiently showed us his garden of fruits, herbs, and coffee used to make his products. We got to sample many flavoured teas and coffees for free. Only the Luwak coffee required a small fee. The process of making the Luwak coffee needs the (rather angry) animal photographed below.

Animal for Luwak coffee

Sampling coffees and teas
Ubud Monkey Forest
The wild monkeys at the forest are all used to people and will not hesitate to come up to you if you have food! One sitting woman had a monkey climb on her head and try to remove the sunglasses and hat she was wearing so be mindful of your accessories from these playful creatures.

Ubud Monkey Forest
Tegenungan waterfall
Pagodas at Mengwi temple
Tanah Lot
The Tanah Lot was the highlight of this day tour and was the last stop. Tanah Lot means "land in the sea" because the temple is only accessible during low tide. When we were there the tide was already at shin height so we didn't walk to the temple to avoid getting our shoes wet. The scenery was very beautiful and I especially liked watching the sunset here. The only downside is that there are a lot of tourists.

Tanah Lot sunset
We were dropped off at our hotel by 8pm due to traffic and thoroughly enjoyed our day of sightseeing.

End of Day 2! Did jetskiing in Day 3.

Read Day 1 here - Kuta Beach
Read Day 2 here - Full Day Island Tour
Read Day 3 and 4 here - Nusa Dua Beach

Bali 4-Day Itinerary: Day Three and Four

4 Day Itinerary in Bali

Read Day 1 here - Kuta Beach
Read Day 2 here - Full Day Island Tour
Read Day 3 and 4 here - Nusa Dua Beach

Day 3
The plan was to spend a good portion of the day at Nusa Dua beach doing watersports. Taxi from our hotel to Nusa Dua cost Rp 90,000. We rented a jetski for 30 minutes (Rp 540,000) and had fun driving it ourselves until it started to rain very heavily at the end.

We already haggled down the jetski price and I'm not sure what the standard price is but it seems quite overpriced to me. Last year at Kenting, Taiwan I only spent NT500 (USD16) on jetskiing and an inflatable boat ride. Compared to Rp 540,000 (USD46) for only one activity.

Nusa Dua
The rain lasted for about 15-20 minutes but it was very heavy. Everyone playing watersports got out of the water and the beach was empty. Since the sand was already so wet we didn't even bother waiting for the rain to go away to tan there. So we headed back early. There were only a few photos from Day 3 since we were a) in the water jetskiing or b) in the rain.

Nusa Dua
Day 4
This day was only departure day. We took an afternoon flight back to Singapore. Overall this Bali trip was short and had a good mix of relaxing days and sightseeing days. If I were to go back I might do a volcano sunrise hike!

Read Day 1 here - Kuta Beach
Read Day 2 here - Full Day Island Tour
Read Day 3 and 4 here - Nusa Dua Beach

Rabu, 02 April 2014

Traveling in Quebec City: What to Do

My Explore/J'explore Program in Quebec

I spent 5 summer weeks in Quebec City for the My Explore French language program hence the posts are journal-style. Check out the activities in and around Quebec City!


Explore Program
Signing Up
Universit� Laval room
Registration Day

Activities
Cabane � Sucre (Sugar Shack - maple syrup)
Arbre-en-arbre Tree top climbing
White water rafting
Valcartier waterpark
St. Lawrence River boat cruise

Tourist Sites
Montcalm and Plains of Abraham
Quebec Parliament Building
Mus�e de la Civilisation
Old Port Market and Place Royale

Day trip from Quebec City
Bascilica of St. Anne and Cap Tourmente hike
Montmorency Falls

Food
Aux Anciens Canadiens in Old Quebec

Traveling in Taiwan: What to Do

Finally categorized my 60 posts on Taiwan into a useful list! I didn't put all 60 in here because some are frankly not about anything traveling related. Most of the posts are journal-style since I was keeping a log of my day to day activities in Taiwan but the trip itinerary posts are more structured. There is information about pricing and directions in the journal-style posts as well. Enjoy!


Trip Itineraries
About the TR Pass

Day Trips from Taipei
Taraoko Gorge and Hualien trip
Jiaoxi and Toucheng trip
Jioufen and Keelung trip

Wulai and Bitan trip
Taoyuan and Dasi Old Street trip

2-3 Day Trips
Taichung, Sun Moon Lake, Fengchia Night Market trip
Tainan, Anping, Kaohsiung trip
Seafood and beach in Kenting
Hsinchu trip and here

Entertainment and Activities
Red Pocket Singing
Taipei Zoo
Bihu Park, Miramar
Karaoke
Shrimp Fishing, Up Taipei 101 free

Buildings and Sites
Fort San Domingo, Chiang Kai Shek Memorial Hall
National Palace Museum
Sun Yat Sen Memorial, Red House
Presidential Building

Cultural and History
Bopiliao
Tea shop

Nature and Scenary
Taipei night view
Huajiang Wetlands
Yangmingshan and New Taipei City Hall

Shopping
Wu Fen Pu wholesale market

Night Markets
Shida Night Market
Gongguan Night Market
Shilin Night Market (bottom of post)
Guang Zhou Street (bottom of post)

Food
Taipei 101 Din Tai Fung
Ximending Modern Toilet Cafe
Dongmen Du Xiao Yue

Malaysia 5-Day Itinerary: Day Four and Five

5 Day Itinerary in Malaysia

Read Day 1 here - Malacca
Read Day 2 here - Kuala Lumpur
Read Day 3 here - Cameron Highlands
Read Day 4 and 5 here - Georgetown, Penang


Street art in Penang


Georgetown destinations Day 4 and 5

Day 4

We rode a Unititi Express bus (RM 28) to Penang and it was another mediocre experience. The 8am trip didn't leave until 8:30am because the bus driver didn't arrive to work on time and the bus had the same air conditioning problem as Day 3. Though he did drive fast and we arrived at the Komtar bus terminal by 1pm.

At the Komtar bus terminal there is a stop for the free shuttle bus that took us to Lebuh Geraja where our hostel is. Look for a sign with a big 9 on it.

We stayed at Couji Couzi in a double room with air conditioning and shared bathroom. The room and shower were pretty clean though the sink was not. However, within the first 5 minutes of arriving I got 4 mosquito bites on my leg. In addition, there was a window along the bottom of one wall that had no glass and was only covered by a curtain and wooden shutters with large gaps. Needless to say, that is where the mosquitoes kept entering all night. As well, the not enclosed window made the room noisy because the traffic sound from the street was not filtered at all.

After dropping our things off and armed with a map taken from the hostel, we proceeded to walk around to find street art. Most were located on Armenian street so we walked down that street to find street art while heading in the direction of the clan jetties.

Clan jetties



It was very hot and sunny in Georgetown so it is probably good to have a plan of where you want to walk before heading out. We got pretty tired from "aimless" wandering while looking for the street art without exact directions.

Street Art Slideshow


We took a break at Toh Soon Cafe which I've seen on TV before. It is located in a side alley of Lebuh Campbell. I got a kaya toast and ice Milo. The toast was burnt in fire and not in an electric toaster.


Toh Soon Cafe

In the evening we took the shuttle again to New Lane where there were many food stalls lined up like the night market. I tried a seafood char kway kok (RM 5), a guava juice (RM 2.5) and ais kacang (RM 4).

Day 5

We went back to Toh Soon for brunch because the dim sum place we wanted to go to was closed. Then we walked to the Eastern and Oriental hotel which had a beautiful sea view behind the building.


View behind Eastern and Oriental hotel

We were at the Cheong Fatt Tze Mansion by 1:30pm for the tour (RM 12). Cheong Fatt Tze is known as the first capitalist of China and was very rich but his mansion was dilapidated until the 1990s when an architect bought it and began repairments. The tour was an hour long and only went to a courtyard and two rooms but I enjoyed it because the tour guide was entertaining. His own mother used to live in the mansion when the 38 rooms were rented out after Cheong Fatt Tze died.



After the tour we walked to the ferry terminal area to see the view and to find more street art. The Brother and Sister on a Swing is my favourite!


Interactive street art

To get to the Penang Airport we took bus 401 in lane 5 at the Komtar bus terminal. It cost RM 2.70 and got us there in exactly an hour. There is no set schedule for the bus so you just have to wait at the terminal for the next one. You can also take 102 and 401E which all come in 20-30 minute intervals.

That's the end of our Malaysia trip!

Read Day 1 here - Malacca
Read Day 2 here - Kuala Lumpur
Read Day 3 here - Cameron Highlands
Read Day 4 and 5 here - Georgetown, Penang



























Malaysia 5-Day Itinerary: Day Three

5 Day Itinerary in Malaysia

Read Day 1 here - Malacca
Read Day 2 here - Kuala Lumpur
Read Day 3 here - Cameron Highlands
Read Day 4 and 5 here - Georgetown, Penang


Cameron Highlands tea plantation
Cameron Highlands destinations
Day 3

We went to Pudu Sentral for our 8:30am bus with Unititi Express to Cameron Highlands. Upon first sight of the bus it already made me nervous because on one side was a huge dent that was the size of a bed. The ride had inconsistent air conditioning which meant sometimes it got very warm and other times too cold and the bus was uncleaned. We finally arrived in Cameron Highlands at 12:30pm at the information centre in Tanah Rata.

Our lodging, Orchid Lodge was only a 5 minute walk behind the information centre. The temperature difference from KL was so welcoming since it was around 23 degrees Celsius here. Orchid Lodge was the most comfortable stay during my Malaysia trip. The place was clean, the manager was very hospitable and even the other guests were pleasant. The manager was cleaning parts of the flat at all times of the day when we saw him and he was always open to chat about where to go and what to see in Cameron Highlands. Highly recommend! He's going to open another place soon called Backpacker's Hostel so check that out if you see it on the internet.

It's not convenient to cover distances without a vehicle in CH since there is no public transport system. The manager helped us book a half-day tour (RM 25) and we were on the mini-van in the next hour!

The tour was a mini-van with a driver that took us to a rose centre, a butterfly farm, a honey farm, BOH tea plantation, and Big Red Strawberry Farm. It wasn't a tour where the driver would explain this destination and that, he only drove and answered questions when we had them. The original tour was supposed to go to a Buddhist temple but we wanted to visit the strawberry farm so we switched to that instead.


Rose centre

Absolutely loved the view at the tea plantation. We only had 40 minutes here but I wish that I could just sit and observe for the afternoon.


BOH tea plantation


Big Red Strawberry Farm

I've been to strawberry farms and picked strawberries before so the fruit portion wasn't that special although the display was very neat and cute. What I really wanted to try was the completely strawberry menu that they had! I got a strawberry juice and a strawberry pancake :)


At the end of the tour we requested to be dropped off at the Brinchang night market that was happening that weekend instead of at the hotel. The space between the stalls were crowded with people and there was a lot of food, produce, and souvenirs sold. I tried apam betal for the first time and loved it. We also bought back murtabak and goreng satong to eat at the lodge. The 6 minute taxi ride from Brinchang to Tanah Rata cost RM 10 though the manager told us it would probably cost RM 6-7.

End of Day 3!

Read Day 1 here - Malacca
Read Day 2 here - Kuala Lumpur
Read Day 3 here - Cameron Highlands
Read Day 4 and 5 here - Georgetown, Penang