Sunday, 17 November 2013

NZ - Land of the Kiwis (25 Aug-31 Aug 2013)

Overdued post for my final trip as a student!!!
Solo travel
This trip was planned pretty last minute and tight, right after SIA accepted me as a Customer Affairs Manager, slotted in between ST Run in the Park and Army Half Marathon (which I was a pacer). I was scheduled to leave at 7pm on 25 August right after my competitive race and back 10pm Saturday night, which left me 5h to get home and get ready for AHM. Pretty rushed for Leon too as he had to drive 6h from Dunedin to Christchurch to pick me up and drive me to Dunedin and this holiday was in his midterm break.

Cute memory tree at T2!
This was actually my first time travelling ALONE, despite being a 23 year-old. It was quite exciting, I had no travelling companion and I was truly left to my own devices on the way to Christchurch. Whatever happened I had no one to blame except myself..Thank God nothing actually screwed up :) It was an expensive but quite comfortable flight - British Airways transit at Sydney and then a Quantas flight overnight on the 25 August. The flight was really comfortable, food was good and I actually watched a movie on the IFE - Nicholas Spark's Safe Haven, which was sweet.

Morning sky in Sydney
I was having mixed feelings seeing Leon - after not seeing him for almost 2 months and before that, our relationship was rather unstable as well. Nevertheless, I was excited to be in a foreign land on holiday (as usual!) and I was happy that I would not be alone on this trip.

Upon arrival, Leon was waiting for me with a bouquet of flowers, I could sense that he was really overjoyed to see me. It was a little awkward at first but it faded away and we were comfortably talking to each other. Then we embarked on our 6h drive back to Dunedin. Boy, it was really cold and I realised I was pretty much unprepared for the temperature because I packed light :O

The drive back was pretty scenic, the sun was setting, sun rays reflected on the rolling meadows and blue skies. Spotted cows, sheep and horses on the way as well. A reflection of a slow way of life totally different from the cities we Asians/Singaporeans are so used to. No wonder, people enjoy retiring in such a country.
Sunset at an isolated (freezing cold) coast

Cargo of sheep!

After a supermarket trip and a stop on an isolated coast on the way, we finally reached Dunedin, approximately 400km away from Christchurch, on the southern tip of South Island. The place he was staying at was 37A Leith Street, a stone's throw away from the Otago University that he was studying in.

Cosy huh?

That night after settling down in his quaint cosy house, we walked out to a nearby famous pizza joint Poppa's Pizza for dinner. He recommended that it was cheap so I was like ok, let's go then. It was quite old school, popular with students of the university and were also run by them (most shops were). We shared a seafood pizza, yummy and warm from the oven. It was pretty good, just a little overpriced (what isn't in NZ). The decor of the shop was quite interesting actually, with old posters of events organised by the university.
yumms..
Posters that decorated the wall
After dinner, we took a stroll around the neighbourhood and visited the supermarket (one of my favourite store because of all the yummy stuff). Some of the buildings at night were hauntingly beautiful. I wonder what lurks beneath... (One of the attractions in Dunedin was the ghost tours, which I was too frightened to go but I heard were pretty good)

Only doesn't look as scary with filter

See what I mean?

The next day, we woke up at 5.30am to try to catch sunrise at Mt Cargill (676m). What I did not realised that the drive up was pretty long, and I actually wanted to bike there (quite impossible). It was spectacular watching the dark sky become bright on top on a vantage point, and as if an invisible painter slowly streaks the skies pink, orange and blue, something you can only imagine in postcards. Spectacular. What is also different is that it is actually VERY COLD atop the mountain, and with the strong winds in Dunedin, the coldness seems magnified. I was FREEZING and I must say it wasn't easy taking photos because my hands were shaking and numbed.

Slowly rising

Love the effects!

Rolling down the slopes
After a magnificent sunrise, we drove back to take our bikes out for breakfast at the Good Earth Cafe near our place for a quaint special breakfast. He ordered blueberry bagel and latte (as per normal) and I got a cheese scone and espresso shot. YUM. It was hot and delicious although quite an expensive breakfast ($9 NZ) but it was worth the price. We left satiated and all ready for a bike ride to the beaches of Dunedin - St Clair's and St Kilda.
Cheese scone!

"still haven't woke up"

Store facade
We cycled past the Otago Railway Station, which was quite quaint and headed to St Clair's. It wasn't exactly a proper beach per say, more of seaside and pier. There were many gulls and pretty windy too, in fact, it was fun watching how the seagulls try to fly! St Clair's had a sign which pointed the distance and direction to the South Pole, which I found rather interesting. Next we cycled to St Kilda's, a distance away but also another beach, which was less 'visited'. We took off our shoes to walk on the smooth soft sand. Gosh, the water made the sand icy cold!
the railway station - design looks familiar to tokyo too!

St Clair's

still at St Clair's

St Kilda's - a bit on the wild side

captured a flying gull!

the sign i mentioned

empty beach!
After the beaches, we cycled back home and Leon drove us down to Otago Peninsula for afternoon's activities. It was rather scenic and we had a picnic lunch by the peninsula - sandwiches and fruits, made by me :)

Larnach Castle was next on our list. Although it was kind of costly ($28) for both the castle interior and grounds, it was worth it. We spent the afternoon exploring the only castle in New Zealand and despite it being small, I've never been to one before so I was pretty intrigued by even the idea of visiting one! It was built in 1871 by William Larnach of Scottish descent and I would think that it had certain features of Scottish castles. However, the family was embroiled in dispute after tragedy struck and the castle was privately sold off. The castle is rather well-maintained and the view of the sea was pretty :)


our picnic area

testing my camera

a gaggle of geese

#selca by the garden

Entrance of the castle


Rooftop view atop Larnach Castle
There was still some time after meeting a friendly Aussie man at the castle, whom we talked to for quite a while (beauty of travel to be able to form aquaintances), so we headed to Sandfly Bay to catch some sealion and maybe penguins aka hoihoi in Maori language (sadly we didn't). We met a huge flock of grazing sheep as well and they were quite amusing to chase. The sand dunes were HUGEEEE. I had to conquer my fear of heights to tread carefully down the sinking soft sand (and back up again>.<) in order to go down onto the beach but it was cool that I was rewarded with up-close-and-personal sessions with the sealions.
look at how low we went (the beach!)

having fun with capturing sheep



sealion! (only less than 5m away)
terribly high sand dunes :/
We concluded the day by heading over to Velvet Burger for 2-for-1 Tuesday deals (warning: huge burgers) and a stroll around the city centre. We also walked around the Otago University campus which was beautiful. Wished NUS was as scenic.


pink blossoms!and old architecture

doesn't look like a campus huh?

The next day, we got up early at about 5am to drive to Queenstown for our short ski vacation. It was a pretty cold drive..I was freezing in the car. So was Leon. I fell asleep most of the ride but at the later part, was awake to watch the sunrise :) And I must say, every sunrise and sunset in NZ is awesomeee and surreal!!Unfortunately, when we arrived at 9am, it starting drizzling and since we arrived too late for our skiing trip, (my quick thinking) we decided to shift skiing to the next day and luckily all our current plans had coupons that were flexible. Queenstown was nothing like what I imagined.It's practically in a valley (at least it feels like it..hahas) and all the buildings seems very flattened. Being a town for ski tourism, I didn't expect it to be so laidback and small.


Snapshot of queenstown

School kids having games
Our first attraction of Queenstown was the Skyline Gondola & Luge at Bob's Peak overlooking Lake Wakatipu. The attraction has various passes of different prices for the gondola and luge options. We took a gondola ticket and 4x luge. The view was stunning, by far the best and the luge was fun..a little scary and irritating because my eyes were so dry from the wind but nevertheless, good experience. There were 2 paths, basic and intermediate, so it's pretty friendly to scaredy-cats like me..hehes.

Thank goodness we reached the inn in time before the heavy downpour which carried on till dusk. Despite the wet weather, we decided to drop by Arrowtown, a small goldmining town near Queenstown. I wished it wasn't raining so I could explore the pretty and quaint place but the downpour didn't stop :( It's quite similar to Handoorf in Adelaide, and Kamakura in Tokyo, just much smaller, but I think more could be done to improve it.

Dreary weather..zzzz



After a walk around the town and visiting the old Chinese settlement, we returned to Queenstown and went to Steamers' Wharf with the intention for dinner. But too expensive so we headed to Fergburger, a must-try according to Baldwin :) I must say that the burgers are HUGE! But good choices they offer. We had the morning glory and it was quite delicious, especially in the cold weather.

Other interesting places to visit (and shop) would be CookieTime (a Famous-Amos-like shop) and The Remarkable Sweet Shop, which sells all kinds of sweets around the world that you can ever imagine, including rabbit candy!
Steamers' wharf

THe Remarkable Sweet Shop!!

We headed to the Icebar (paid about $13 for admission & drink) after dinner. It was an ice chamber where everything was made of ice, even our cups! Strangely, there isn't many people there and those who were there only stayed about 10min. We spent time playing table hockey and camwhoring at the photobooth..lols

We had some drinks coupon given by our hostel staff but I think we were too tired to barhop and after visiting the first bar for a free apple-cinnamon whisky, we headed back to sleep.

I must say, the dorm at Flaming Kiwi Backpackers was clean, neat and the beds were super comfortable :) It was indeed worth every cent, the bathroom was super duper clean and the lamp even provided some warmth when I was freezing my butt off. The dorm also had free entertainment, coffee/tea for the guests.
Ferburgers are HUGEEE
Icebar #everythingcool
making drinks
some great apple-cinnamon whisky
Drinks pass..sadly we were too tired to drink
We spent the second day of Queenstown practically skiing. But since that was much later in the day, we decided to go for a walk and headed to the lake. The morning chilly breeze was really refreshing and the sun rising view was really great. Thank God the weather was perfect for skiing, the sun prevented the mountains from being too chilly.

Next, we headed to the ski centre where the bus would pick us and send us to the Remarkables for a day of skiing! #exciteddd Anyways I felt that the skiing was well-organised in Queenstown because it is a skiing town and we only paid NZ120+ from the Queenstown ski website for 3hours of lessons for a basic skier. Skiing is NOT EASY but it totally tones all your muscle groups. At the end of the day I returned with a sore butt and quads. After much tumbling, crashing and screaming, my skiing improved and I daresay I can go down a kid's slope :) hahhahas..going down a slope is SCARYY..plus all the headwind..goshh..My worst accident was when I went down too fast and flew over a woman who had already have problems stopping..LOLS. but it has given me a badge of honour, a lump on my left leg which stayed till now -__-


Selca by the pretty lake..

sunrays reflecting off the mountain
never seen such snowcapped beauty - The Remarkables

Ski boots!
ski resort

one day..maybe..
We were pretty much exhausted from skiing but no choice, we had to return back home to Dunedin. Poor Leon had to drive us back in the evening and I actually slept most of the way. However, I must say that the evening scenery was really pretty :)

The last day spent was in Dunedin exploring what's left of the city. We woke up for a 8-10k hike up Signal Hill & run down Signal Hill to Dunedin Botanic Gardens and passed the cemetery. Pretty tiring run I must say..After the run, we spent some time making pancakes for breakfast! Cheap, hot and yummy :D After breakfast, we cycled down to Baldwin Street, the world's steepest street (and boy, was it terribly steep!).
Rewarding homemade pancake breakfast!!
Peak of Signal Hill

Hiking up Signal Hill is NO JOKE! 

#actcute
 After cycling back from Baldwin Street, we went to walk around the city centre, did some shopping and went to the Otago Museum. Like Adelaide, the museum was free and awfully cool! It has a living science/taxonomy gallery, maritime museum, ethnographic display, history...etc

Many fossils!
Then we headed to the Otago Art Gallery, which was pretty cool (and FOC)! The gallery had a mix of contemporary art, Asian art (Japanese, Buddhist) and many acquired paintings.
Hokusai's famous collection of the many images of Mt Fuji


Train Station

Pretty silhouette

Chinese gardens (not recommended because of high price)


We also wanted to head to the Settlers' Museum but too bad it closed :/ So we walked around the area near it.

Lastly we popped by the Cadbury Chocolate Factory just before it closed to get a peek at what was inside. The whole place was chocolate haven..Too bad we didn't have the time (and budget to go in for a visit) :/

Finally (and sadly), it was time to leave for Christchurch. We left at 1130pm from Dunedin for the long dark drive to the Christchurch airport. Leon was really sad to watch me go. I could see that in every way but I guess time really flies when you're having fun and everything has an end. My trip too..


yummy seafood meal onboard! 

Back to reality and warm sunny Singapore..

Sunday, 27 October 2013

Childhood Memories brought to life again with Disney

I was surfing youtube when I came across this Disney songs medley cover by Alex G and Peter Hollens. I did not know who are they initially but I thought that it looked interesting and whoa, I was surprised at the quality of the video and song! It was amazing how they combined Circle of Life (Lion King), A Whole New World (Aladdin), Colours of the Wind (Pocahontas), Under the Sea (The Little Mermaid), Beauty and the Beast and dressed in costumes. :) Brought back memories of how I loved Disney movies, songs and stories when I was growing up and on hindsight, it had really impacted me deeply because even as I'm listening to this medley now, it brings goosebumps.

My favourite Disney princess used to be Pocahontas & Mulan, though they were not exactly princesses, I felt they exude confidence and a wild streak which I saw in myself! Despite the stories always brought in a Prince Charming, which always made the story end 'happily ever after', I could feel a connectivity with the characters. In fact, I once dressed up as Pocahontas for some school dress-up competition! hahas..

A profile of Disney princesses on Thought Catalog :)



This was one funny article about Disney Prince Charmings.

I do hope they would do another set of medley of Disney songs! :D


After listening to that song, I thought of trying to listen to Disney songs sung in other language, just for fun and curiosity and this is what I managed to find:


Reflections (Mulan) sang by Coco Lee in Mandarin, Coco Lee is actually one of my favourite Chinese singers. Originally sung by Lea Salonga/Christina Aguilera. Below shows the Korean version by Lee So-jeong & there's another one officially sung by Lena Park.


Next up - Colours of the Wind, originally sung by Vanessa Williams but here in Chinese by Coco Lee, Cantonese by Amanda Li and Korean by 신동희 (Shin Dong-hui). I thought it was interesting how the Chinese version changed the flute in the introduction to the dizi (Chinese flute), added a nice touch to it.




A whole new world originally by Peabo Bryson & Regina Belle. Here in Korean, Nam Gyeong-ju & Lee Jeong-hwa sings the song. However, this time I feel that the english one is still the best.



Do you find any contrasts to the songs of different languages?
Pretty cool stuff there, I did enjoy the songs :) Goes to show that Disney movies are pretty universal!

Saturday, 12 October 2013

Just another packed weekend! :)

I'm always looking forward to the weekends now, especially when I'm working so I can sleep and rest more but strangely I'm always ending up more tired due to the hecticness of my weekends when it's back to work on Monday :O

Well, last weekend was spent in race preparation (trifactor run 5k) was on Sunday so I had to spend the Saturday resting but in the end, I could not bear to lock myself at home and decided to do a solo brick session at Sentosa (800m swim+ 5k easy run) just to get the blood pumping for Sunday's race. I won't say that the race on Sunday was "just another race". Although it was only a 5k (a distance which people don't exactly look up to nowadays with all the long distances and puke-inducing runs), it was an event important for me. I was out to win those Oakleys shades and make a comeback for 5k races, which I have not been doing since Singapore Aquathlon, I think! However, sadly, Denise Chia was present in my category and I knew at my current level, I was nowhere near to her standard so my only way was to stick as close as possible to her throughout. It was tough, she was going faster and faster and in the end the gap was 1min. Wasn't my PB but I guess it was the best for now - settled for a 2nd placing and got an Oakleys cap, Banana Boat sunblock, Cloth tube.. :/ Dennis, my aquathlon junior was 2nd too! :) Yays for NUS Aqua! I was glad to see familiar faces at the race too - Dwayne, Dennis and Jayanta, who made my event a lot more interesting.


me, dwayne and dennis


After my morning race, Debs gave me her slot for Splashdown! So I rushed to Woodlands after church and although I was late, I still managed to swim 7km in about 2h 40min, with many breaks, but just right to redeem the Arena towel, the most valuable item on the list. I must say it was an interesting experience, swimming with about 50people in the same lane. Going fast is a no-no, I really don't know how my teammates like Sherlynn, CP and Jon Ma were able to swim above 10k in 3h to place in 2nd and 3rd. Respect.

NUS AQUA peeps after the swim with 3 podium-finishers!!

#theregs


Well, that was last weekend. Now to this weekend: Basically, Saturday was so choked full with activities that my Sunday was spent recuperating :) But it was great, made up for my horrible Wednesday and Thursday. Thank God ..

First thing in the morning was a loop in Macritchie with the aqua team :)), after a long 200x7x2 at 40-42s the night before, my butt was pretty much SORE, though it wasn't half as bad as Sunday's Macritchie run. Its really cos of them I'm willing to sacrifise my mornings and its really worth it. Then we went for brunch (me, Debs, Chunnie, Kenley, Baris, Sara and Eden) at Thomson Plaza, followed by shopping and Fitness Expo visit. We headed to Chunkfest at the Promenatory and were a little disappointed that you had to pay for ice cream :( Lastly it was Nike training Run at AVALON :D

The pacers consisted mainly of the aqua people (Yinghao, Jon Tan, Aaron, me, Debs, Chunnie) and Jolene, Ruimei, Glenn, Ernest and Charmane. We had hiphop, pop and dance gear from Nike. However, I felt that it was weird running 7k  in those sort of clothes -__- Hopefully we can pull in more Aquathlon people..hahahas :D


Sunday, 29 September 2013

Family Staycation at Marina Bay Sands

I haven't blogged for a pretty long time..still lagging for my NZ trip update as well as several articles for RunSociety (something on Holiday Running, Power of the Mind, Woes of the Working People) gosh.. work must be really tiring me out :/

Anyways had a staycation (having a vacation in your home country) thanks to my dad's company family day - we got to stay at MBS, which I've never been before, except Ku De Ta on a free Wednesday night, despite it being opened eons ago and that at least half of Singapore has already been there, done that. Well, I must say that it was indeed still an eye-opener for me and unless it's  paid for, I will never spend to step foot into that needlessly extravagant place ( though I admit that its a revenue-generator for Singapore and provides countless of jobs).

WELCOME TO THE LIFE OF THE RICH AND FAMOUS.

Don't kill me but I'm sure many people aspire to be rich, me too, but for various reasons. And MBS is one of them - more of an analogy - to be able to flaunt their wealth materially for others to envy. I was glad to be able to sleep in a comforatbly huge hotel room with everything provided for, take a dip in the famous infinity pool 57 storeys atop MBS, eat an international buffet meal that costs $60/person but I won't pay that much to be able to enjoy it again. One day in my life is enough - why? I get bored and I was bored.

Please don't misunderstand me but my intention merely to say that in my opinion, I would only use money to enable me to see the world, experience different cultures and interesting moments and not on paying to sleep comfortably in a hotel, swimming in a pool that overlooks a skyline and taking photos to upload and rouse people's jealousy. Hahas.. which I also realised is what my sister, Rachel, loves to do. Each to her own, I guess...

I'm not too sure if my perception will change if I'm older but I'm inclined to believe that it is in my principles rather than an age thing. Previously, I was telling my colleagues about what we touched on in Sociology of Tourism that older people do tend to prefer a different type of tour/holiday compared to teenagers - bogged down by work on normal days and the hectic lifestyle of a working person, older people shift their preferences to a slow chill relaxing holiday tour to slow their pace of life down, as compared to teens, who prefer activities like backpacking to see the world.

Ok, enough mentioned about my critique of wealth and back to family day. Dad, Mum, Esther and I went to the 2 domes at the Gardens By the Bay. I've been to the Cloud Forest once with Leon but not the Flower Dome. The flowers were really pretty, reminded me of my travels overseas! Other than that highlight, the day was pretty dull and passed really quickly and I realised that I haven't actually done anything much the whole day except eat at RISE at MBS and walking around the gardens. hahahas..no more staycations for me!
Buffet Spread at RISE
The Sister and I :D

Look at the variety

Sushi round!


They even have cheese!
Ice cream selection I made!

Desserts!!

Awfully sinful!




Spoilt for choice!








Mommy!!

Doing the heart, acting cute

My sis is really cute



Toeshot 1

Attempt to take a poolshot