Ozzie

Ozzie

Saturday, 2 March 2013

Day 6 - Washing, Sorting, Shopping, Packing - Fri 1 Mar

Day 6 - Washing, Sorting, Shopping, Packing - Fri 1 Mar
Spent much of day securing the new top boxes to the roof racks, and sorting out all the items packed at last minute and brought over with us… we may end up splitting at the seams, but will be fortified with the knowledge that we can hold our own in the short to mid-term. It will be interesting to see what we decide could have been left at home after all…


Met up with Jon and Jude for farewell in spectacular Petronas Towers, and got our last technology tips. We all depart KL tomorrow morning - us south to Malacca; the younger, more adventurous Jon and Jude west to the National Park at Tanah Negara for a few days trek. In the morning we’ll be fully watered, fuelled and stocked ready for Global Trek to be in our own hands....

Day 5- Claiming Ozzie from Docks - Thur 28 Feb


Day 5- Claiming Ozzie from Docks - Thur 28 Feb
Showers again - same as on loading day. Washed in laundry before heading out (certainly cheaper than by-the-garment in Singapore eg $4 per undies!)
Tried out our gadgets and apps in taxi on way to Port Klang and Westport Container Terminal eg Pocket Earth with its downloaded maps, Garmin with its Malaysia map – fortunately all worked because we can’t remember the way back! 

Took two and half hours to check seal, open container, remove chocks, noodles and ratchets and remove front end of vehicle from container to drive out, install mirrors and aerials and try to blow up tyres (compressor didn't work- will need to be looked at later). Ozzie had moved just enough to rub the bullbar on the door, but no damage other than some lost paint; others both unmarked. Sun and humidity quickly dehydrated Cheryl and Guy (who additionally had to replace their tyres) – a scenario we had worked through in the Remote First Aid course we completed as part of our team risk management strategy before the trip. Still scary to see how easily it built up.
Breaking the customs seal
We had an external check of carnet details to vehicles and got back paperwork during this process, but noticed top of carnet not filled in and stamped.... had to wait for Customs to return from lunch because cannot exit Malaysia, or return paperwork to AA Australia for refund without it being properly completed. 
Had "stalker-talker"* who wanted to look inside the camper, but his boss took him off shouting and gesticulating to go back to work. (*GirlRob coined the phrase to describe one who circles the vehicle several times, cranes to look through windows, then sidles up and tries to catch your eye with a view to an invitation inside)



Needing food and more water, we parked and walked across the checkpoint in our visitor badges to the service station and cafe. Mr Zun finally arrived and we were free to pick up our passports, drive up to the barrier for a quick check of documents, then out to refuel (a relief with the tanks drained for the voyage). We were pleased we’d chosen a RHD country first up – some familiarity before encountering zippy traffic, and liberal interpretation of road rules. In spite of our lovely turn by turn Garmin we still got lost in the city - there are a confusing number of numbered Jalans and Hilirs once you leave the main roads.
The Bee escaping the docks
Parking was arranged in the alley beside Slumberland across the road from the hotel – without gates, hopefully the daily payment will ensure security. Yay- our package containing the walkie talkies arrived safely at the hotel (posted to ourselves because prohibited in Singapore but not in Malaysia). Dinner at Persian/Iranian/Halal restaurant across road was excellent – huge flat bread and babaganouj dip with a main of tender lamb with cinnamon rice. The (non-alcoholic) cocktail full of fresh fruit also served as dessert. Our plan to lose weight on unfamiliar food will have to begin when we leave the cities behind!  

Day 4 Feb - Train to Kuala Lumpur - Wed 27









Day 4 Feb - Train to Kuala Lumpur - Wed 27
Farewell Singapore - through Immigration/ Customs (and fingerprints), no bag check or questions before 6hr train trip commenced. The old clinker was certainly not flash - 1st class on train was a misnomer (old, cracked, faded) but air conditioning and foot-room soon made up for it. 
No room for Jon & Jude in First Class - so what do they use in 2nd class?

Planning session in dining car
Pristine environment disappeared in Malaysia; shanty towns, rubbish and rusted vehicles, although people dressed cleanly. First appearance of agricultural fields - small holdings with fruit trees, cows, chickens between plantations of palm oil, banana and cassava. Water in channels running brown from soil run-off from cleared land. Indian temple roofs covered with brightly painted gilt figures. 
Pleased to be upgraded to spacious suite in Ambassador Row, in an area populated by foreign embassies, an international school and comprehensively stocked ex-pat supermarket. 

Masterchef style meal at Romanz by its South African staff - lucky accidental find!
Late message to say paperwork has cleared customs and trucks can be unloaded tomorrow at10am. Yippee!!  Concierge has found a place to park trucks across the road in a lane-way (hopefully the fee will guarantee security)

Day 3 - Exploring Sentosa Island - 26 Feb


Day 3 - Exploring Sentosa Island - 26 Feb
Took the bubble boat past colourful Clarke Quay before catching train to Harbour Town and cable car to Sentosa Island. 
Clarke Quay



Stilt Village
Sat in the spinning top called Tiger Eye with 360 degree views of Singapore, across to Indonesia one direction and Malaysia in other. 
Merlion guarding entrance to city
Toured the world’s largest Aquarium. The Museum was excellent, brilliant coloured displays - textiles, trade, costumes. Enjoyed typhoon experience in Omni-Max theatre and wildlife in gardens. Ended up at a Persian Restaurant eating pistachio and saffron ice cream whilst watching a belly dancer. 
Snake Charmer



Day 2 - In Singapore – 25 Feb

Day 2 - In Singapore – 25 Feb
The Park Hotel Clarke Quay was a good choice because of proximity to vibrant boardwalk. We started with a hop on/off bus through city heart including Orchard Road with its gardens and colonial infrastructure. The Singapore Flyer was an excellent investment with its spectacular views – but Marina Bay Sands was more impressive from the ground up! Creative architects obviously thrive in Singapore. 
Gardens By the Bay
Marina Bay Sands
ArtScience Museum

It’s so clean everywhere, surely the cleanest city we'll see in Asia. Employment is high with workers visible in tourism, services and construction. We took the MRT (roomy, modern, immaculate) out to Woodlands Train Checkpoint to purchase tickets for Malaysia for Wednesday. Tasted Ya Kun, sweet egg bread, yum....
The Raffles 6
Met Aussie friends John and Celia for a Singapore Sling at Iconic Raffles Hotel and joined others eating peanuts and dropping shells onto the floor (apparently a tradition?) Finally starting to let the word "retirement" sink into the psyche....


Day 1 - Brisbane to Singapore - 24 Feb

Day 1 - Brisbane to Singapore - 24 Feb
Farewell events over, it was finally time to wave off children and grandson.
Tea Towels for the Boys

Bye little man
GirlRob failed Safe Travelling 101 when the kangaroo mascot attached to the zipper on her backpack got caught and pulled open the pocket! Customs couldn't have been easier both ends - walked straight through the Nothing to Declare gate in Singapore. Taxi driver was reassuring “Very safe, very safe, No gangsta, no gangsta”. 
We chose to go via Singapore in hopes of securing one more visa - in spite of encouraging phone calls to the contrary, the Ukraine requires a Letter of Invitation, more than three days, and strict adherence to the 30 days in advance policy – guess we’ll have to explore instead!



Loading Day - Feb 1 2013

Loading Day - Feb 1 2013 
Ozzie

After 5 years in conception, 12 months since we bought our camper truck, and 1 year of intensive planning - today saw the loading of Ozzie, our EarthCruiser (Mitsubishi Fuso Cantor), and home for the next eight months, into a shipping container bound for Singapore then Kuala Lumpur on Hanjin Port Adelaide sailing next Tuesday 5 Feb. 






Fortunately staff of Dionysius Transport, Port of Brisbane were amazingly accurate on forklifts, moving huge containers like Lego blocks. Fellow travellers Jon & Jude's Land Rover went in easily compared to Guy and Cheryl's taller and wider All Terrain Warrior – Guy changing two tyres to aged 16" ones, ready to discard on arrival in Malaysia. BoyRob lowered his tyre pressures, removed mirrors/aerial, backing without visuals. Everyone helped to push the rest of the way in. 



                                                                           

There was plenty of activity under vehicles to chock, nail, ratchet down -a sweaty claustrophobic job taking over 4 hours. We photographed container numbers as well as final seal, which won't be opened until customs in KL. All were amused at story of GirlRob shrinking and vacuum-sealing mounds of toilet paper the night before departure. Sunburned, but happy, we went home to cold champagne and no more jobs – very pleasant after months of preparation.