Port Dickson Part 2

14 08 2008

Overall our trip to Port Dickson was a good one. Because of the impromptu decision there were no expectations and thus no disappointments. Here are some more pictures from the trip.

Sleepy Tan trying to bait his hook

Sleepy Tan trying to bait his hook

Aww did the little fish scare you boys?

Aww did the little fish scare you boys?

The spot the boys chose looked promising but it was already 3.30 p.m when we got to there. By 4 p.m the unusually bright sun was beating down and starting to affect us all very badly. Already I could see that some of us were starting to suffer from a mild sunstroke, even I was feeling its effects. You could see the glare coming off the water’s surface in the picture below. Everything behind Mark was over exposed. it was impossible to get a good picture or concentrate on anything. All Tan could think was to jump into the water to cool himself off but the thought of rocks under the surface stopped him from jumping in.

An Overheated Tzy Wen

An Overheated Tzy Wen

Mark and Tan would later get their swimming done at a public beach further down the road while Tzy Wen and I went off to take some photos. It was very obvious form the pictures Tzy Wen managed to take that I needed to “loosen up” a bit on my perspective of things. Tzy Wen found an interesting picture of story in a lot of things he saw while I saw nothing interesting to photograph.

Sunset at the public beach was awesome thanks partly to the haze over the island of Sumatra. These then were some of the last pictures I took of the day.

Tan at Sunset

Tan at Sunset

Pensive Mark

Pensive Mark

We finished a wonderful day in Port Dickson with a hearty meal at one of the many restaurants in the town of Lukut which is situated just north of Port Dickson. Officially 7 kilometres from Port Dickson, both towns seemed to have merged into one. We had steamed fish, buttered prawns and fried squid in batter with our rice. To Mark and Tan, if you’re reading this, just look at the link I provided to Lukut. it would seem that there is better fishing to be done here. Let’s plan another trip guys, to quote John Lennon, “Life is what happens when you’re busy making other plans”.

"Life is what happens when you're busy making other plans" - John Lennon





Port Dickson Fishing and Photography trip

11 08 2008

Last saturday Tzy Wen and I were playing around with our cameras and lenses when someone suggested a photography trip. “Let’s plan a photo outing”, “Ok, where?”, “How about PD? Then Mark and Tan could come along and do some fishing”, “Port Dickson? You serious?” , “Yup why not?”
And so we found ourselves driving down to Port Dickson early, very early, 5.45 a.m early, on Sunday morning. Legend has it that this is the earliest hour Tzy Wen has ever been seen awake. hahaha! Fishing rods, bait, hooks, water, cameras and lenses were all packed into the car and we were off. (more about the trip later once I have finished processing the pictures I took. Preview photos can be viewed at Tzy Wen’s blog)

Tanjung Tuan Light House

Tanjung Tuan Light House


The light and weather vane

The light and weather vane

Information board

Information board

We reached Port Dickson or PD just after sunrise and had some breakfast at a roadside stall. Our first stop was the lighthouse. The Tanjung Tuan Lighthouse is built on a promontory which is about 100 metres above sea level. It’s original name was Cape Rachado Light house which it took from the cape it stood on.

The walk up the road to the lighthouse could be quite challenging to those not used to hiking. But Tzy Wen somehow managed to summon inner strength to stop and straighten a tree that was about to topple over. Here he is taking a picture of the grateful tree. We found out from information board below the lighthouse that it was first commissioned in 1863, some 145 years ago! If you look carefully you will find that it still has an old style weather vane to tell the direction of the wind. The Lighthouse also houses a modern primary radar to detect ships using the Straits of Malacca.

The beach at the bottom of the promontory was very nice. Mark and Tan had already set up their rods and cast their lines when I got there. There was nobody else but us. I could have stayed there on that beach the whole day if I had brought a book and food.

The Rods

The Rods

I tried my hand at casting a line with a rod but failed miserably in my first few attempts. After half an hour I finally got the hang of it but I will need more practice if I decide to take up fishing. I realised later that I had not taken enough pictures of the beautiful beach. Sadly, there were rubbish strewn around in the treeline behind where we sat. Evidence that Malaysians do not really appreciate the gift of nature.

Ais Batu Campur time

Ais Batu Campur time

After about an hour of casting Mark and Tan ran out of patience and concluded that there were no fish around the cape that morning. I thought fishermen were patient people? Ok, nevermind. We spent the next half an hour taking some pictures, packed our stuff and walked back up to the lighthouse. Boy,was that even more tiring. We drove the car to the nearby public beach and treated ourselves to Ais Batu Campur, a favourite dessert with many Malaysians. have a look at the link I provided you and you can find out about the other Malaysian desserts. For bubur Chacha, I suggest you ask my new friend Yong Hua. I am betting he named his blog after his favourite local dessert.

looking for bait

looking for bait

Will this fool a fish?

Will this fool a fish?


lead wieghts

lead wieghts

To hook the Fisherman

To hook the Fisherman

After a quick lunch in town, we decided to try our luck at a beach behind the Shell Club north of PD town. We first went off to look for bait and ended up at this shop which sell all sorts of fishing equipment. The pictures above hardly do it justice. The were lots more equipment on display. After buying the bait and some floats we headed back to town and parked the car in the house of a friend. he then took us around the Shell clubhouse and onto the beach which was littered with rocks. After spending 10 minutes clambering among the rocks Mark and Tan found a suitable place to try their luck once again.

A Mark of pride, a parrot fish

A Mark of pride, a parrot fish

Mark caught the only fish of the day but in the end he decided to let it go. My friend told me that a good fisherman’s motto would be “To release anything that won’t be eaten”. There is already a drastic shortage of fish in the world’s oceans due to overfishing.

Abandoned projects

Abandoned projects

PD is a nice idyllic resort town which fills up with people on the weekends. On weekdays it is practically deserted and life goes back to it’s normal slow pace. Abandoned buildings from failed hotels and resort projects can still be found along the water front reminding people of the economic downturn of the late 90’s. It also reminds would be developers to think twice before investing in mega projects without doing proper research. (watch this space, I shall write more on our trip to PD soon)





We overtook a Lamborghini!

9 08 2008

Later that same Friday, my friend and I decided to go to an I.T mall near where I live so he picked me up from work. As we were driving out onto the main highway, my friend who drives a 2 litre sedan managed to overtake a genuine supercar! Not just any supercar, a Lamborghini Murcielago with a 6.5 litre V12 engine that pours out 631 bhp @ 8000rpm!

Wow, we're overtaking a supercar!
Wow, we’re overtaking a supercar!
Sheer driving pleasure?
Sheer driving pleasure?

Well, now my friend can say, ” I once came upon a Lamborghini on the road and overtook it”. hahaha! Look at what is written on the side of the flatbed truck that is carrying the obviously broken down supercar. I don’t think it comes close to describing what the owner’s feelings right now.





Durian Delivery

9 08 2008

I have around Aircraft for nearly 20 years now and still like to photograph them. Last friday, I happened to have my point and shoot camera with me when somebody came into the office and said, “Hey you guys I just bought some durians off this truck parked inside the hangar entrance, help yourselves.” Now that caught more than a few people by surprise. What is a truckload of durians doing in front of the aircraft? I guess stranger things have happened before but this is definitely a first.

Are those the components for the new system?

Are those the components for the new system?

Lets zoom in a little bit more

Lets zoom in a little bit more

These must be for the new missile avoidance system I heard of

These must be for the new missile avoidance system I heard of

By the time I got down to the floor the truck had gone but look what I found under one of the wings of the aircraft. later that day, the crew tucked in to these thorny fruits. I guess the guys were just being careful, these fruits have been known to encourage excessive production of methane gas so they made sure they were consumed in a flame free zone equipped with state of the art fire fighting system. hahaha!





Auto Graveyard ahead

7 08 2008

A few days ago an interesting article was published in the Star newspaper. I brought me back to dark days just after the last recession in 97′. Here below is the article reproduced in full.

Banks to ease financial burden of customers

By LESTER KONG

PETALING JAYA: Finance companies are resorting to restructuring car loan repayments to help ease the burden of customers with heavy financial commitments. At least three major banks will announce their hire-purchase loan restructuring plans soon.

A senior manager of a prominent local bank with a substantial volume of hire-purchase customers said that given the current economic scenario, where prices of fuel and food had increased, many customers would be burdened by the high repayment plans that they had signed previously.

Finance companies could not rule out that some customers might find it difficult to service their monthly instalments, he said.

“We expect that for next year there will be more repossession orders given, but it won’t be a drastic increase,” he said, adding that his company issued a monthly average of 2,500 repossession orders.

Most banks and finance companies will try to assist any customer whom they feel could fail to meet their monthly instalments.

The move is expected to bring cheer to thousands of hire-purchase customers, especially those paying high monthly instalments for their car loans.

A Perodua Kelisa owner, Jen Neoh, 29, welcomes an option to restructure her car loan, as it would ease her financial burden.

“I think it’s better to be in debt with a bank, rather than borrowing from friends, family or even loan sharks,” she said.

Neoh, who now pays almost RM400 for her monthly instalments, said she would be comfortable paying about RM200 instead.

A public relations manager in a large bank here said her bank was now very selective with new approvals for hire-purchase loans.

“And we have also started calling customers to help restructure their hire-purchase agreements to help them make ends meet,” she said.

Loan restructuring is commonly done by extending the account holder’s repayment period to lower the monthly instalment that needs to be paid.

“Many factors affect how much the refinancing would affect the new monthly repayment amount,” said a head of retail collection in Kuala Lumpur.

He said they included how much loan was taken in the first place and the customer’s financial status.

“But if they can’t pay, reduction is not a solution. They can always surrender their cars. But we will try to help them so that they won’t have to,” he said.

Federation of Consumer Associations adviser Datuk Hamdan Adnan said Bank Negara must step in and help consumers who have been threatened with having their vehicles repossessed.

“Banks always claim they are customer-friendly. But in reality, they exploit some customers,” he said.

If you only read the headlines or just gave the article a glance, you would think that things are not too bad and that the banks are helping people manage their finances by restructuring their car loans. But read the article again and pay careful attention to the 4th paragraph. A senior manager of A prominent bank (read as ONE), said his company issued a monthly average of 2500 repossession orders. Yes folks, TWO THOUSAND FIVE HUNDRED cars are being ordered repossessed by ONE bank. If the bank has a 30% success rate, that wpuld mean 750 owners lose the use of their cars every month. By years end, this one bank alone would have repossessed close to 4000 cars. He also says the numbers are set to increase next year. And what of the other financial institutions? How many are they repossessing now?

I still remember walking onto fields littered with repossessed cars, some had a few hundred cars lying rusting and baking in the open. A dead end for most of the cars that ended up there. An Auto Graveyard. I remember seeing cars hauled into such a lot while i was looking at the cars which were already resident in one particular graveyard. I could see briefcases and neckties still on the back seats of those cars. Most still contained personal effects of the owners and important looking documents. It’ll be interesting to see it happen all over again. Did you realise that automotive interest rates just shot up recently?

I hate to sound like I am taking advantage of someone else’s misery, but if you had cash and are in the market for a 2nd hand car, this would be a good opportunity to pick on up for a bargain. There is no way you could help the previous owners of these cars so why not make the best of it for yourself?





Fuel Enhancers

6 08 2008

A few weeks ago I wrote about a few medicine men selling magic magnets (Sunday car mart and the magic magnets). Today I shall write about some magic potions. It’s all about marketing isn’t it? And one of the golden rules of marketing strategy is to give your customers what they want….not necessarily what they need. What people want now is cheaper fuel but what they actually need is a more efficient car, say one that gives 20 kilometres to the litre of petrol instead of 10. But to most this is not possible and nobody is going to give you a new more efficient car. So what is the next best thing? Yup, you got it, fuel enhancement products either in the form of gadgets like the set of magnets I wrote about or petrochemical products that promises to enhance the fuel it is mixed with. People want to hear good news, to believe good stories so there are people who will give them good news and good stories…for a price. Do these fuel enhancement promises actually work? well, lets see. To this end I chose to start an experiment.

I myself generally do not buy into such gadgets until the technology is proven to me or having tested it out myself against known figures. So after being introduced by a friend and having heard the testimony from another 2 fellow engineers, I found myself buying 10 (yup, you read it right, TEN) bottles of Automax Fuel Enhancer.

Automax Fuel Enhancer

Automax Fuel Enhancer

But before I could test it out on my car, the gearbox decided to do a Simon and Garfunkel and started to “slip and sliding away”. Well, that will be a story for another day. But before the gearbox failed and after a recent engine rebuild (it’s an old car), the car managed to return 8 kilometres to every litre of fuel I poured in. Now that my car has a reconditioned gearbox, I will have to find out it’s new fuel economy without the use of the enhancer. I will return to this subject once I have figures to conclude if the product actually works. “But why 10 bottles” you may ask. AutoMax recommends a treatment of 1 millilitre ( 1 mL) for every 5 litres of petrol. So the 120 ML in 1 bottle should treat 600 litres of fuel, enough to find out if the product works.

With 10 bottles, I am looking for a few technically adept impassive friends to carry out the same experiment. I managed to give away half a bottle to a friend who promised to use it on his motorbike. He is of the opinion that fuel enhancers do not work but merely gives the user the feel good factor. In other words, something akin to a magic potion which soothes the soul but does nothing to cure the ailment. i hope he will come back with some figures I can use to prove or disprove the efficacy of this product. In the mean time, lets watch this video by Fifth Gear, a popular television program dedicated to automobiles. The team at Fifth Gear have conducted what they think is an empirical test of 4 products which promises to enhance fuel.

So you see, even in a country like the United Kingdom, where product guarantee can often be grounds for a civil suit, the are still products that do not actually deliver what is promised. After spending extra money on something to enhance your fuel, these fuel additives actually REDUCE power output of your car’s engine! Who in their right mind would do such a thing? Well, actually, in a few weeks time, I might have proven that I just paid to do just that . . . reduce the performance of my car. I do not have a spare engine sitting around my house nor do I have free access to a dynamometer but in the weeks to come I will try to present you my own “empirical” test of AutoMax. I am looking for a few good men to help me out in this. Anyone?





Eclipse of the Sun

1 08 2008

It’s happening today starting at about 6 p.m local Malaysian time. The eclipse of the sun is when the orbit of the earth’s moon takes it in between the earth and the sun. The result is this

Viewed from space or the dark side of the moon, the sun actually throws the shadow of the moon onto the much larger earth. A view to behold I am sure. But for now, the only people lucky enough to enjoy this view are the cosmonauts residing in the International Space Station. The rest of us who are earthbound must satisfy ourselves with views such as those you see above. If you happen to be in the path of “totality” you will be able to look directly at the moon and see the sun’s corona. Caution , looking at the sun at any other time except at “totality” can cause permanent damage to your eyes! We will not be able to experience totality in Malaysia but the good thing is that full eclipse (where is can be viewed) will take place at around 7 p.m Malaysian time, a time when the suns rays are not too intense. To those of you who wish to view this event, please bring along a pair of dark glasses. Or to those old timers like me who used to shoot film, the eclipse can be viewed through exposed film. I am planning to climb up a hill near my home to catch the partial eclipse. Hope I can get a few good pictures of the eclipse tonight. More on this later.

I got up to the hill at 6.30 p.m and by then the sun was already a little orangy colour. Parked my bike and got up to the highest point of the hill facing west. in the next hour or so, I was to change location some 4 times just to get a good view of the sun as it dove towards the horizon. So, did I get to see the eclipse? No such luck. In the end all I got for my effort were some nice, well decent sunset pictures.

Sunset

Sunset


Here are 3 of the better ones. I like the first one best with the strip of clouds just in front of the setting sun. My last location was just in front of one of the Hindu temples on Gasing Hill where I met some priest who were rather interested in what I was doing. I found out from one of them that from the Hindu Calender the eclipse would occur in this part of the world at about 7.20 p.m. That would put the sun just beyond the horizon.

According to the older priest the temple behind us would close during the event ( 7.20 till 8.40 p.m) because to the HIndu’s the eclipse is a bad omen. It is not surprising that many civilizations through history viewed this event with awe and fear, more often than not seeing it in a negative light. The ancient Chinese believed that a dragon had swallowed the sun and had to be scared away by the beating of drums. A famous writer, Isaac Asimov based one of his most iconic books on such an event. The story was called Nightfall and tells of a planet which belonged to a solar system of 6 stars thus was always bathed in sunlight. It’s inhabitants never experiencing darkness . . . until an unseen moon eclipses the only visible sun every 2049 years! Get hold of the book and give it a read, I promise you it won’t be a waste of time. The first time I read it was in my teens and I would still read it now if I come across the book again.

Solar eclipses happen on average every 18 months or so. The next solar eclipse is due to occur on the 22nd of July 2009. I hope nobody gets smart and beats a drum . . . I want to catch the dragon in it’s fiery act of swallowing the sun.





Leaked rehearsal of the Beijing Olympics 2008

1 08 2008

It really has been a while since I wrote. I was going to write about many things but a busy schedule at work has prevented me from collecting my thoughts. The Beijing Olympics which starts on the 8th of August 2008 ( 8.08.08 ) is already stirring a lot of controversies. Again politics at work when there should not have been.

Despite high security arrangements and asking the participants to sign a confidentiality agreement, a Korean Television company was able to get oone of it’s reporters into the Beijing National Stadium and film the rehearsal of the Beijing Olympics Opening Ceremony. When asked how they did it, the reporter merely said, ” We just went inside and nobody stopped us, so we started filming”. Just goes to show you that no security is “impenetrable”. A friend of mine managed to get into an event which hosted the Prime Minister and other VVIP’s by merely walking in through a service entrance of the Kuala Lumpur Convention Centre. And by the looks of the pictures he was able to take, the Prime Minister was easily within gunshot range!

To be honest, I was quite disappointed with what was shown by the news agency. I had expected it to be at least a half an hour long but instead they only showed a few clips totaling no more than 2 minutes. So I guess the surprise is not really spoiled, I am betting the opening ceremony will last at least 2 to 3 hours. I shall try to catch it on telly this weekend.