Fun things in Penang
Due to staff shortage?
The way they do business brought me back to Shanghai 20 years ago
Do you want to bring fragrance home?
Don't chase the moving bus!
McDonald's VIP Drive-thru - this is very popular there, do we need one in Austin?
Sorry uncle - my station is NOT for you!
Mind your step?
As it says!
Wedding gown exhibition, how colorful!
Wildlife monkeys in Penang botanic garden.
More monkeys
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Showing posts with label Penang. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Penang. Show all posts
Wednesday, May 23, 2012
Penang Malaysia - Dr Sun Yet Sen's base
I am Chinese, so I'm glad I did not miss visiting Dr Sun Yat-Sen's (founding father of the new China) Penang base. This is the house where Dr Sun planned a historic uprising of the China Revolution of 1911.
from: http://www.sunyatsenpenang.com
Built around 1880 as a residential townhouse, the building is a very fine example of a Straits Settlements merchant’s home. Unusually long at over 130 feet (40 metres) it retains many of its original features – an intimate courtyard garden, a handsome timber staircase, geometric floor tiles, and large beams spanning lime plaster walls. The interior displays original blackwood Straits Chinese furniture and ornately carved wooden screens. The old-fashioned Nyonya kitchen preserves the original firewood stove and kitchen utensils. Movie "Road to Dawn" was shot in this house.
In 1910 Sun Yat Sen (1866–1925) moved the Southeast Asian headquarters of the Tongmenghui party to Penang because he found renewed support among the Overseas Chinese here for the overthrow of China’s Qing dynasty. In the same year, when Sun Yat Sen lived in Penang with his family for over four months, the house at 120 Armenian Street was where:
Front door
Living room
Book shelf
Secret conference room - oh boy, I already forgot the furniture details that the staff was explaining.
Safety box - Dr Sun put all the important documents and funds that he raised for revolution there
100 year old kitchen
Kitchen cabinet
All kinds of baskets - I guess they used these for grocery shopping at the market
Chinese words 存心济世, which means "save the world." Dr Sun was trained as a medical doctor, but later he found the whole country was sick, so he decided to become a politician to save China.
Dr Sun planned uprisings 10 times, failed 9 times, and succeeded the last time.
The 10th uprising plan statement - they would fight until death
China's leader Mr Hu Jintao was here
Poker cards - the story of Dr Sun's uprising planning
My thoughts:
I was pretty moved after I visited this museum. If not for Dr Sun and his leadership, determination to save China, and perseverance, our country would not have stepped out of the opium world of the Qing dynasty. We would not have our current new China, not to mention Taiwan. From the historic facts, Dr Sun was not someone who just wanted to become another emperor of China. He introduced old Chinese thoughts about democracy. His philosophy "Three Principles of the People" injected strong medicine to old China. The Xinhai revolution, which was led by Dr Sun, became the turning point of new China.
from: http://www.sunyatsenpenang.com
Built around 1880 as a residential townhouse, the building is a very fine example of a Straits Settlements merchant’s home. Unusually long at over 130 feet (40 metres) it retains many of its original features – an intimate courtyard garden, a handsome timber staircase, geometric floor tiles, and large beams spanning lime plaster walls. The interior displays original blackwood Straits Chinese furniture and ornately carved wooden screens. The old-fashioned Nyonya kitchen preserves the original firewood stove and kitchen utensils. Movie "Road to Dawn" was shot in this house.
In 1910 Sun Yat Sen (1866–1925) moved the Southeast Asian headquarters of the Tongmenghui party to Penang because he found renewed support among the Overseas Chinese here for the overthrow of China’s Qing dynasty. In the same year, when Sun Yat Sen lived in Penang with his family for over four months, the house at 120 Armenian Street was where:
- The Penang Philomatic Union – a reading club – was based, providing a cover for Sun’s political party.
- The world’s oldest Chinese newspaper Kwong Wah Yit Poh was founded by Sun Yat Sen in 1910.
- Sun Yat Sen convened the celebrated Penang Conference and delivered his famous speech to plan the Huanghuagang Uprising, an important milestone leading to the Chinese revolution of 1911.
Front door
Living room
Book shelf
Secret conference room - oh boy, I already forgot the furniture details that the staff was explaining.
Chinese chair
Safety box - Dr Sun put all the important documents and funds that he raised for revolution there
Patio - this reminds me of my grandma's old house's patio.
Toilet - which is connected to the kitchen, it is kind of weird. This reminds me of our old public toilet in Shanghai.
Kitchen cabinet
All kinds of baskets - I guess they used these for grocery shopping at the market
Chinese words 存心济世, which means "save the world." Dr Sun was trained as a medical doctor, but later he found the whole country was sick, so he decided to become a politician to save China.
Dr Sun planned uprisings 10 times, failed 9 times, and succeeded the last time.
The 10th uprising plan statement - they would fight until death
China's leader Mr Hu Jintao was here
Poker cards - the story of Dr Sun's uprising planning
Books about Dr Sun
My thoughts:
I was pretty moved after I visited this museum. If not for Dr Sun and his leadership, determination to save China, and perseverance, our country would not have stepped out of the opium world of the Qing dynasty. We would not have our current new China, not to mention Taiwan. From the historic facts, Dr Sun was not someone who just wanted to become another emperor of China. He introduced old Chinese thoughts about democracy. His philosophy "Three Principles of the People" injected strong medicine to old China. The Xinhai revolution, which was led by Dr Sun, became the turning point of new China.
Penang Malaysia - beach?
I admit I am a spoiled kid. I have been to many beautiful beaches, including Yalong Bay in Sanya, Hainan, Sandy Bay in Exmouth, Western Australia, and Aruba. In my view, a great beach should have crystal clear water, a long white sand walkway, complete nearby facilities, and of course good eating places as well. Honestly I am not quite impressed by beaches I have visited in Miami Florida area and San Diego area (to be fair, I have not done a comprehensive tour of either of those cities' beaches, and we had bad weather in San Diego on my only visit there, but still...if you've been to the three beaches I mention above, you'll probably know what I mean). I think the water is almost unbearable in Galveston and Port Aransas off the Texas coast (unfortunately, the closest beaches to me living in Austin). In Canada, Wasaga Beach and North Bay (both north of Toronto) are just so so, and the water at Stanley Park (Vancouver) is too cold. As you can see, I have very high standard toward beaches. If it is not good enough, I'd rather stay at home and play in the pool.
Beach in Penang
Yeng Keng Hotel is in the city center, and there are no beaches in walking distance. I checked Lonely Planet, Monkey Beach looks good. We decided to check it out.
Transportation: after talking to the front desk, we found it was pretty cheap to take taxi to Monkey Beach, about 40 ringgit (US$13.33). So here we go, Monkey Beach. We actually only got as far as Batu Ferringhi, and found it was a public beach. Other than couple of small resturants, we found nothing. The Shangri-La and other locally-run resorts were right on the beach, but only hotel guests can use their facilities. Once we hit the beach, people started approaching us for business, selling everything from massages to parasailing rides. We had an offer to get a boat to Monkey Beach (being told it was only accessible by boat), but that it would cost 350 ringgit (US$116.67) for the round trip boat fare. Our perception of relaxing on the beach is very simple: reading, daydreams, drink and swim.
We ended up turning down all commercial offers, putting our towels on Batu Ferringhi were we were and starting our rest. The quality of the sand is not bad, a bit yellow, a bit white. The water is pretty good, it is blue, but not clear enough. Keep in mind, my benchmark is very high.
P.S. Poor Steve, he got sunburn! It was quite painful for him for a couple of days. Well, I guess he needs to put more sunscreen next time.
P.P.S. I do not regret that we did not stay in the Shangri-La. Shangri-La is a resort hotel, and quite isolated from the "real world" of Penang. The purpose of visiting Malaysia is to get to know local life here, not stay in a glass tank resort. If we had stayed in Shangri-La, I probably would not have learned as much about Penang as I did.
Beach in Penang
Yeng Keng Hotel is in the city center, and there are no beaches in walking distance. I checked Lonely Planet, Monkey Beach looks good. We decided to check it out.
Transportation: after talking to the front desk, we found it was pretty cheap to take taxi to Monkey Beach, about 40 ringgit (US$13.33). So here we go, Monkey Beach. We actually only got as far as Batu Ferringhi, and found it was a public beach. Other than couple of small resturants, we found nothing. The Shangri-La and other locally-run resorts were right on the beach, but only hotel guests can use their facilities. Once we hit the beach, people started approaching us for business, selling everything from massages to parasailing rides. We had an offer to get a boat to Monkey Beach (being told it was only accessible by boat), but that it would cost 350 ringgit (US$116.67) for the round trip boat fare. Our perception of relaxing on the beach is very simple: reading, daydreams, drink and swim.
We ended up turning down all commercial offers, putting our towels on Batu Ferringhi were we were and starting our rest. The quality of the sand is not bad, a bit yellow, a bit white. The water is pretty good, it is blue, but not clear enough. Keep in mind, my benchmark is very high.
We met two tourists from Holland, and they shared a lot of info with us. For example, we learned we could take a public bus to the beach, it is very convenient (running every five minutes), and only cost 2.7 ringit (about US$0.90). It was also them who mentioned Kapitan Restaurant from my last post. And of course, we did our own due diligence.
I guess because we were not resort guests, Batu Ferringhi was not attractive to us. We found nothing attractive to eat, no shade and no shower. After playing in the water a couple of times, we decided to go home. Just as those people from Holland said, the bus was really easy.
P.P.S. I do not regret that we did not stay in the Shangri-La. Shangri-La is a resort hotel, and quite isolated from the "real world" of Penang. The purpose of visiting Malaysia is to get to know local life here, not stay in a glass tank resort. If we had stayed in Shangri-La, I probably would not have learned as much about Penang as I did.
Labels:
beach,
emerging markets,
Malaysia,
Penang,
travel
Penang Malaysia - food!
I love food!
Yeng Keng Hotel's location is awesome. There are many places to eat in the nearby area. Before we left for Penang, many of our friends told us hawker food there is very nice.
Heh,heh, let me show you what we had:
Fried fish head noodle soup
Fujian noodle
Purple juice - freshly squeezed dragon fruit juice
She is making Chao Ke Tiao for me!
The best Hainan Chicken Rice I've ever had!! The chicken is juicy, tender yet not oily. The sauce is spicy yet does not burn. The rice boasts flavor of coconut and chicken. The boss also added a couple pieces of roasted chicken for me to try. The roasted chicken was just as delicious as the Hainan chicken!
Grass juice: Steve did not like it. I think it was fine. Just as its name, it has fresh and grassy taste.
I watched a bunch of travel food shows, and many of them mentioned this curry fish head and I always wanted to try. However, my stomach could not take any more.
Indian food:Kapitan Restaurant : Fish and Vegetable Biryani
Indian dessert. I guess it is super sweet. I did not have room to taste it. - well I guess I don't regret not having it.
Penang Malaysia - hotel and city street view
Speaking of Malaysia, I have never put this country high on the list of places that I want to go. 10 years ago, I went to Kuala Lumpur on business for a week. That city did not leave me much impression. I just remembered that I stayed in a very nice place - Nikko Hotel, and ate papaya every day and I lost some weight by the end of the trip. Nikko Hotel is very close to the Twin Towers. Every evening, I would walk to shop in the mall at the Twin Towers , in fact, there was nothing for me to buy. I remembered there was one decent department store named Parkson. I also remembered that we went to a beach and did team building there, the beach was gray and yellow. From that trip, all I remembered was the Twin Towers, the rest was chaos.
But my husband had a good impression of Malaysia, he went to Tioman Island one time.
In Steve's memory, Malaysia is a beautiful country with delicious food and low price. So, you see, we have very different views about Malaysia.
In recent years, I have read in the magazines, with only $100,000 initial investment, one can immigrate to Malaysia. Malaysia is so close to Singapore, but the investment immirgration baseline is huge, we have been very curious. This time when we decided to visit Asia, my husband proposed to go to Penang to have a look. I saw the Penang location on the map, thinking it is very close to the beach. I agreed without thinking too much.
Air tickets
Our trip to Asia covered various countries and regions and its span is relatively large, we have chosen a professional ticket agent Air Treks in San Francisco to set the whole ticket.
Hotel
We went on Trip Advisor, and saw two highest ranked hotels in Penang, one is Shangri-La, which is a resort hotel right on the beach, cost $350 per night. The other is Yeng Keng Hotel, ranked #1 on Trip Advisor, and cost only $99 per night. My husband asked where I want to stay, as frugal as I am, my first reaction was I want to stay in Yeng Keng Hotel.
After we reached our destination, I found Yeng Keng Hotel has a Chinese name (燕京旅社), is a 20-room restored heritage boutique hotel located in one of the oldest surviving and intact 19th century buildings at the heart of the UNESCO World Heritage City of George Town, Penang. Like many of the other buildings in the neighbourhood, it was originally built in the mid 1800's as a private residence. In 1897 trustees of a Cantonese Club bought the building, later donating it to the trustees of the Straits Chinese Building Association in 1939. The building was later leased to Yeng Keng Hotel.
Outside
Inside
Penang is a multicultural city, it has some western style, the flavor of India, the impact of Chinese, but also contains some modern architecture.
Hindu temple
Muslim temple
Chinese house
But my husband had a good impression of Malaysia, he went to Tioman Island one time.
In Steve's memory, Malaysia is a beautiful country with delicious food and low price. So, you see, we have very different views about Malaysia.
In recent years, I have read in the magazines, with only $100,000 initial investment, one can immigrate to Malaysia. Malaysia is so close to Singapore, but the investment immirgration baseline is huge, we have been very curious. This time when we decided to visit Asia, my husband proposed to go to Penang to have a look. I saw the Penang location on the map, thinking it is very close to the beach. I agreed without thinking too much.
Our trip to Asia covered various countries and regions and its span is relatively large, we have chosen a professional ticket agent Air Treks in San Francisco to set the whole ticket.
Hotel
We went on Trip Advisor, and saw two highest ranked hotels in Penang, one is Shangri-La, which is a resort hotel right on the beach, cost $350 per night. The other is Yeng Keng Hotel, ranked #1 on Trip Advisor, and cost only $99 per night. My husband asked where I want to stay, as frugal as I am, my first reaction was I want to stay in Yeng Keng Hotel.
After we reached our destination, I found Yeng Keng Hotel has a Chinese name (燕京旅社), is a 20-room restored heritage boutique hotel located in one of the oldest surviving and intact 19th century buildings at the heart of the UNESCO World Heritage City of George Town, Penang. Like many of the other buildings in the neighbourhood, it was originally built in the mid 1800's as a private residence. In 1897 trustees of a Cantonese Club bought the building, later donating it to the trustees of the Straits Chinese Building Association in 1939. The building was later leased to Yeng Keng Hotel.
Outside
Inside
Penang is called Pulau Pinang in Malay, this is because the early planted betel nut trees derived from this name on the island. August 11, 1786, representatives of the British East India Company, Captain Francis Light, obtained the Penang Island and named it as the Prince of Wales Island , and named its land as George Town, and later became the capital of Penang. Penang thus become the first British colony in the Far East trade freeport.
Street view
Little India
Hindu temple
Muslim temple
Chinese house
Colonial style building
Modern oceanwalk
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