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the famous MerLion |
Singapore, first impressions: extremely clean & diverse.
The first thing I noticed was the cleanliness. We landed, picked up our
backpacks and headed to the MRT station to take the train to the city where we
were staying. The station was immaculate, the train we got on was air
conditioned and also clean. Second thing I noticed was the diversity. Many
different people from all over South East Asia, China, India and Europe. The
most used language here (that I am currently finding) is English, I am assuming
as that is the common language amongst all the residents. The first full day here we did so much, thanks to our lovely
host; Annina. We were fortunate enough to have friends who live in Singapore to
show us around. Just in one day alone we walked to the MerLion, went to the
Marina Bay Sands shopping Centre, Chinatown, Little India, the Gardens by the
Bay, and the Satay by the Bay Hawker market. It was great.
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in front of the Buddhist Temple in Chinatown |
In Chinatown we went to a hawker: a room with seats in the
middle and a ton of little kitchens surrounding it so you could choose what you
wanted. It was cooked fresh to order and then you would sit down to eat it. It’s
super cheap and delicious. Hawkers are very Singaporean (and can be found
throughout Malaysia, Singapore, & Brunei) and are on every corner. In
Chinatown, we also went to the Gold Tooth Buddhist Temple. This was pretty
awesome. I’ve been to a lot of Buddhist temples, however in this one, people were
actually inside praying during a service. They were chanting and praying, it
was quite special that they allowed the tourists walk through admiring the
beautiful temple while they were there. I quite enjoyed that moment as you
could really see their devotions. After that pleasant experience, we went next
door to the Hindu Temple, no one was inside there for prayer, but we still went
inside for a look. It was nice, but the Buddhist Temple was more impressive.
We ended our evening getting hawker food to go from Satay on
the Bay so we could go sit in the Bay Gardens to watch the light show on the big
trees. This amazed me. There was hardly anyone at this mini tourist attraction.
So far, this large man made park/garden areas along the bay was my favorite. It
is a huge, free, gorgeous outdoor park, yet it seemed that hardly anyone took
advantage of it. The trees that had the light show were ginormous, man made,
but beautiful. We met our friend Stefan (Annina’s husband) after he got off
work and enjoyed our hawker feast. Satay chicken and beef (as a vegetarian I
didn’t get to eat this, but thoroughly enjoyed the smell!) pohpia (sort of a vegetable,
egg, with peanut and chili sauce wrap), seafood crispy noodle, fried rice, Hong
Kong noodles and topped it all off with wine and beer. It was so great to see
friends and sit outside and relax to some amazing food and watch the light show
in the trees. We felt like we had the place to ourselves.
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the gardens by the bay |
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view from the ground on the gardens by the bay and the MBS at night |
We spent 4 full days in total in Singapore. We added a few
more sights on the last few days. Two fun places we went to were the two most
iconic hotels: Marina Bay Sands and the Raffles Hotel. The Raffles Hotel
contrasted to the modern MBS. It was very Colonial British, when we walked up
to it I could just picture it surrounded in the lush jungle many years ago. The
original “Singapore Sling” was created at the Long Bar here. We went up to have
a drink, but for $28 Singapore Dollars, we thought we would save our money for
the MBS later that evening. Again, I could never afford to stay at Raffles, but
it is quite iconic and a great piece of history for the city, it is definitely
worth a visit!
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the iconic Raffles Hotel |
We were very lucky on this trip, as we were also able to
meet up with one of my husbands’ old house mates as well, who has also decided
to move to Singapore. We met her on top of the Marina Bay Sands at the Club
Lounge. It was on a Wednesday, which is ladies night in Singapore, so once we
got up to the top I received a free voucher for a drink. Which was great as one
glass of wine would set you back $28 Singapore Dollars! (About $22-$23 USD
depending on the exchange rate). It was gorgeous at the top of the hotel, the
view overlooked the city and we got a sneak peak of their amazing infinity
pool. Our friends we were visiting have a roof top infinity pool on the top
floor of their apartments, so luckily we lounged there most days so I didn’t
feel too jealous of the hotel guests. As most people cannot afford to stay at
the MBS(as the locals call it), it is neat to go up to the bar for one drink to
see the pool and the view. As Singaporean residents seem to work hard all day,
the city really comes alive in the night; so heading up in the evening would be
a more lively experience.
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Annina and I on top of Marina Bay Sands |
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view from the top of MBS |
On our final full day everyone we met while in Singapore as
well as our friends decided to meet up on the East Coast before our overnight
bus to Kuala Lumpur. The beach on the
East Coast was blue and clean, you could see all the large planes coming in to
land at the airport (Jayda and Stefan loved this) as well as all the major
ships off the coast. It was pretty neat. The East Coast was also known for its
seafood, so we went to a hawker and ordered a TON of food. We had: black pepper
crab (amazing, SO GOOD), cereal prawns, sting ray, fried rice, fried carrot
cake (not a dessert, it’s a radish chopped and fried with egg, bean sprouts,
chili & salted radish), pohpia (again, yum and not entirely sure if that is
spelled correctly at all!), satay beef and pork, and of course it was all
swished down with some Tiger beer. It was a smorgousborg of delicious, cheap
food, shared with friends. It was the perfect way to end our trip in Singapore.
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the East Coast |
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our feast of pepper crab, stingray, satay, fried rice, popiah, and cereal prawn, topped off with Tiger Beer, yum! |
I quite enjoyed Singapore as it is a very interesting and diverse
city. It is very clean, so clean they don’t even allow chewing gum in the city.
You can bring it in on a flight, but you cannot buy it in Singapore. They don’t
want gum to be spit out making the city unclean. There is no eating or drinking
in the subways, no smoking signs everywhere, and the funniest bit is that there
are “no durian” signs in the subway as well; due to the extreme stench of this
fruit!
I also loved the irony of Singapore. I felt safe the entire
time, but didn’t see a single police officer. The city is very orderly and
clean, but near our hotel there were rows and rows of prostitutes. The city has
strict laws on eating and drinking in the subway, yet prostitution is legal. I
found this very amusing. It definitely added to my intrigue of the city.
The city has old areas with great architecture, but it is
also very modern with a huge city center for business. It is a bit of a sterile
city, therefore making it a great stop over destination as you can see and do
mostly everything in a couple of days. It is a huge shopping destination and
also quite expensive. Due to the cleanliness, diversity, sterility, and safety,
although it may be a somewhat quick tourist destination, it is a great place to
live. (Apparently as I cannot say from experience as I do not live there). Our
friends Annina and Stefan are extremely happy here and absolutely love it, the
same goes for Emma, my husband’s old house mate. For me, as a tourist, I would
imagine that I would have been bored after a few days, but I can see that living
in such a safe, and diverse city, would be fun as a permanent to semi-permanent
resident.
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the infinity pool at our friends apartment building |
There are things going on for the residents throughout the
year, easy transportation to work, and you have a ton of cheap airline carriers
that can take you to other destinations in South East Asia, Indonesia, and
Australia in only a couple hours. I am extremely happy for my friends and am
very glad I got to see a locals’ view of things. If it weren’t for their point
of view, I may have thought Singapore was a bit boring as I wouldn’t have had
their insight, knowledge, and great advice on what to do and see. Thanks Annina
and Stefan for being great hosts and I think that we definitely will be back
for a visit again!!
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