Showing posts with label Puduraya Bus Station. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Puduraya Bus Station. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 19, 2011

Challenging KL Days – Sri Ganesar Temple, Puduraya Station and DVD Raids



My last few days in KL have become challenging in terms of finding new places and activities to partake or discover. I have become too accustomed to the city; it really felt like second home. The McDonald’s store (near Mydin) that was being renovated before I flew to India has already reopened. I had to spend a few times at several internet cafes: at the Ambassador Hotel’s 2nd floor (3 ringgit per hour – open 24 hours), at a browsing shop called Kafe Internet in Chinatown (flanked by a 7-11 and a KFC, which has become my browsing shop of choice), a shop along Jalan Alor (cheaper at 2.50 ringgit, but god-awful speed) and at the 8th floor of Berjaya Times Square (with a hefty 5 ringgit per hour).

NEW HENTIAN PUDURAYA

It was such a thrill to find the renovated Puduraya Bus Station (Hentian Puduraya) almost completed, with escalators, gleaming glass panels and bright lights, and a spanking brassy façade. At night, they light up the still-closed side entrance lobby and it looks like the entrance of a hotel. I was told that the station reopens within the month, but thats what they said when I was here last July 2010.







There were still things I needed to do like the requisite shopping of gifts and my DVD hunt (one of my favorite activities during these travels). The 3rd floor shop at the Berjaya Times Square has already been closed by the frequent raids of the Optical Media authorities so majority of the titles I bought were originals from a nameless shop found also at the 3rd floor. I have been a customer of this DVD shop since 4 years ago every time I am in KL. They have a good selection of Japanese titles, but none else in terms of world cinema.

SUNGEI WANG SHOPPING AND DVD RAIDS

I went to Plaza Low Yat (KL’s largest IT Lifestyle mall) and checked out every floor, but nothing interested me, so I hopped to Sungei Wang (mall) where I was able to buy stuff for the family.

DVD stalls and shops in Sungei Wang sell both original and pirated discs mainly because the pirated titles aren’t exactly available for commercial release – so there’s no competition of commerce. The system here (as far as I can remember) is, you choose from an album of DVD titles, while they list down your choices (these are in codes like “W-067”, “J-742”). Once you have all of your choices, they will call these from somewhere, ask for a deposit (I was asked 50 ringgit deposit) then come back after 30 minutes to check out if the titles are indeed available, then pay for the balance.

SEQUESTERED

Ninety percent of the time, this 30 minutes will stretch on for 45 minutes to 1 hour so do not bet on getting them earlier. From my choices of 30 titles (at 8 ringgit each), only 15 were available. I eventually left Sungei Wang with a lighter wallet and a huge smile on my face. I have to mention though that while picking out my titles, someone alerted them and they scampered like ants, hiding the albums into cabinets and hidden shelves. I was sequestered into the backroom while I finished choosing. Sounds familiar. DVD raids (for pirated discs) have finally reached KL.

I do advocate buying original discs, but the commercial titles leave so much to be desired. Truth is, majority of the titles that I got had no original equivalent in commercial shops so I do not understand these raids. If they don’t want people to buy pirated discs, provide these world titles in official commercial shops where cineastes can buy them!



Plaza Low Yat for all your IT needs.



Newly renovated McDonald's near Mydin and Chinatown (there's another branch beside Jalan Petaling which has busted AC's)



Hotel Swiss Garden - one of the few new buildings along Jalan Pudu.


Kafe Internet Internet Cafe - sounds redundant, doesn't it?


Tung Shin Hospital

SRI GANESAR TEMPLE

That afternoon, it rained in KL; the first tears from the sky in a long time, so everyone was in high spirits. Nothing brings a smile on the face than a little fall of rain. After the gentle downpour, I discovered a surprise. I took a walk along Jalan Pudu until I reached 7-11, and discovered that there’s a Hindu Temple at the back of 7-11, at a road parallel to Pudu and rightfully called Jalan Pudu Lama. This Hindu temple was a welcome sight, but seemed misplaced.

Hindu temples are a rare sight in Malaysia. This was called Sri Ganesar Temple. I stood there for a while to observe the goings on. Food were being distributed and a tout (with his hotel brochures) stood beside me saying, “Food is free, you can go in and join them”. I smiled. I must have looked famished or penniless? Haha.

There were Hindu priests draped in typical South Indian longyi (lungi). Devotees were carrying coconut shells, lighting them up like candles, while praying or saying their intentions, before violently breaking them and mashing them in a concrete container (this was a common Hindu practice which I haven’t “studied” yet). It felt intrusive to go in so I just stood outside observing. I peeped through a hole from the side and looked further.

I have visited KL for so often and never knew such temple existed just a hundred meters or less from my hotel. I couldn’t believe it! The road beside the temple was sinewy and sloped uphill. Another discovery was that just at the back of Jalan Pudu was actually a hill; a quiet community far removed from the hustle of the backpacking urban jungle. There were guest houses (I saw a small guest house with some 20 tourists sitting outside) and big deserted houses that eventually led me to Tung Shin Hospital just a couple of blocks from my hotel.


Jalan Pudu a few hours after its first rain in a long time.


Sri Ganesar Temple at the back of Jalan Pudu's 7-11.


They take a coconut shell with them and light it like a candle while praying. After this, they violently throw them down a concrete (with all the intentions of breaking the shell).



Update on Coconut-breaking Ceremony:

This practice is done by the Kaumaras, who regard Murugan as the Supreme Being, and is one of the sects of the Hindu faith, practiced by the Tamils. The other worshiped beings are: Ganesa, Shiva, Vishnu, Sun and Shakthi. The Hindus believe that the coconut is one of the purest form of offerings one can offer to God, and has thus several symbolisms much like the lotus flower.

The coarsely knit outer fibers of the coconut represent the jealousy, greed, lust, selfishness and other vices of man, which must be broken up and removed if one is to penetrate and reach the white inner purity and thereafter taste the sweet untouched nectar of spiritual purity and bliss. Thus the symbolic "breaking of the coconut shell".

Having been offered to God by way of prayer, the coconut is then eaten by Hindus as blessed food or prasadh in the belief that it has now received divine vibrations from God and will therefore give us good health and prosperity.

Colorful garlands being sold just outside the temple.


Sri Ganesar Temple's inner sanctum. This is a stolen shot from the outside, thus the absence of flash (and a motion-sensitive photo).






DVD STASH AND TIPS ON AVOIDING CUSTOM INQUISITION

The number of my DVD titles have radically been depleted, but I felt there were very few worthy titles to purchase. Compare this with another long haul trip two years ago when I even crossed borders carrying about 60 DVDs which was a huge risk in itself.

If you’re from Mars and hasn’t been made aware yet, DVDs, VCDs and music CDs have become “regulated items” much like pain narcotics and sedatives. You cannot just buy them in a foreign country and not declare at the customs. My suggestion is: never handcarry them in your plane. Check them in along with your baggage, remove them from their DVD cases, place them in a DVD album and separate the covers and you will be spared from an intrusive and unnecessary inquisition. (My brother, bull headed as he is sometimes, got questioned once for carrying Vietnamese DVDs in his hand carried bag.) Also, it is better to keep the receipts, just to show them that these titles are for personal use only. (When you’re carrying 50 titles or so, that excuse won't hold water.)

ENVIABLE COLLECTION

For this trip, I was actually smug with my purchases. By countries alone, the list is enviable: one from Taiwan, 3 titles from Poland (which is a surprise since there is almost no audience for such films among mainstream Asian film goers), 1 from Portugal, Michael Haneke’s Oscar winning “The White Ribbon” from Germany (Oscar Best Foreign Language Film); a new film by one of my all-time favorite directors Francois Ozon called “The Refuge” from France; another French film starring Juliette Binoche called “Certified Copy” directed by another of my all-time favorite film masters, Iranian film maker Abbas Kiarostami; even Polish film master Andrej Wajda has a film (“Zemza: The Revenge”); a gay-themed Chinese film called “Spring Fever”; a Malaysian film called “Aku Masih Darah” which tackles religion and the new generation of Muslims (partly filmed in dreamy Cameron Highlands); a film that recollects the Chittagong revolution against the oppressive Pakistani regime called “Khelein Hum Jee Jaan Sey” starring Indian superstar Abhishek Bachnan; a giggle-worthy Indian romcom called “I Hate Luv Storys” starring the charming pair of Sonam Kapoor and Amir Khan; another favorite film maker, Sanjay Leela Bhansali’s ”Guzaarish” (he directed “Sawariya”, “Black” and the modern classic “Devdas”); one Mexican (which tackles abduction and incest); one Korean; one Japanese; several Chinese films and a flick called “Miral” that tackles terrorism and the Arab-Israeli conflict, starring – hold your breathFrieda Pinto (cinematic heroine of “Slumdog Millionaire”).

Now tell me I was wrong on being smug.

This is the Eye in the Sky!















When it started raining, I was walking along Jalan Bukit Bintang on my way back to my hotel. I saw a hop on-hop off bus and a poster of Korean superstar "Rain" who was going to have a concert. Justin Bieber follows in a few weeks. Filipino-American Superstar Bruno Mars ("Just The Way You Are") was also in town fresh from his concerts in Manila and Cebu.






Thursday, April 9, 2009

Backpack Accommodation in KL part 3 – Hotel Hibiscus City

A busker at the festive Bukit Bintang.

Kuala Lumpur is notorious for some of the worst accommodations for the scrimping backpacker. Compared to its neighbors from the Indochina route, KL’s budget lounges and guesthouses are gag reflex-stimulating and cringe-inducing. Consider this. From my last entry into KL, and having just arrived from a paranoid India, I decided to try out a new place along Jalan Pudu (where Puduraya Bus Station is). The rows of buildings just across the station are a smattering of guesthouses. I went up to check out a room from one of these guesthouses. 

As I turned the knob to open the door, what greeted me was a dim room with a musty smell. Hmm… Sheets looked clean, but then you can never be sure when there’s not enough illumination. Fan was working. I just wanted to steal a few winks so I can rest up and recharge. I badly needed some sleep. I sat at the corner of the bed and my gaze was transfixed at the pillow. Hunched down, pupils accommodated, then I jumped from my seat. I saw what could be the biggest booger-sized bug roaming, crawling away on the pillow. And I haven’t even checked out what’s under the sheets. This was about 10 millimeter big! Friggin! Gathered my bag and hastily returned the room keys at the check-in counter. Definitely, no thanks!

Nearby, I saw
Hotel Hibiscus City with an addendum written under – a budget hotel”! Photos on tarpaulin were promising. Through its elevator, I made my way into the 3rd floor hotel lobby. I think I have inquired here before last year, but there was no vacancy. Luckily, this time I got lucky! I like this place coz it is just across Puduraya, and there’s a metro (monorail) at the back of the same station. Bukit Bintang is just 200 meters away. Beside its entrance, is a 24-hour restaurant – the Maulana Food Court. Quite convenient for those with several out-of-the city itineraries. If you are into walking like myself, Petaling Street (KL’s Chinatown) and the Central Market are all within walking distance. Restaurants, Watson’s, mini-malls are within the vicinity. Even the Main Post Office is just at the back of the Central Market!

Once again, the only available room was a double bed. AC room, with draw curtains, very clean/new glazed tiles, 2 medium sized beds with very clean sheets – and the absence of creepy crawlies! Did I say that a
KFC is nearby?




My room at the Hotel Hibiscus. Two beds all mine and a new AC!


What’s the catch? There is no attached bathroom within their rooms, which is quite tricky. I love my bathrooms – clean dry ones without leaky faucets ! But hey, why don’t I check out the common bathrooms. They can't be that bad, can they? There were about 8 of them for anyone to use – small sized shower-cum-toilets with sliding fold-doors. At any given time, there are several unoccupied bathrooms, that's for sure! My only complaint is – I found it hard to flush any of these dump-seats! I had to manually hold a cut hose towards the inodoro (bowl) and wait for 3-5 minutes before every debris cleared out! Ewwww! – as my 6 year old Paulinian niece would say! But I was really really tired! So after clearing my bowels and freshening up, I went into a very relaxing sleep that made me lose a good part of daylight! The bed was very comfortable, and AC was new and working overtime! I pulled the curtain string to open and I had a magnificent view of the east-bound Pudu Street. Except for the dodgy toilet, this was a great place!

How much? A very affordable
60 malaysian ringgit ($16.60 or PhP798)! Beside the counter is a common room with sofas and 2 units of desk top computers for your online needs at 1 ringgit an hour ($0.28). The annoying thing about this is the way they collect payments, which is on a daily basis. I insisted on getting a receipt of my payment on the first day and the lady at the counter felt lazy to issue me one – which is a big no-no! Every idiot knows that if he pays, he should get a receipt to protect himself from some unscrupulous people. The very next day, I offered to pay early in the morning coz I was gonna go out of town, but this same idiotic girl said, “Later!” Meanwhile, do I wait until she found the time to accept my payment which she might actually need for her salary? Unbelievable! And it’s not as though she was busy with other customers! So – took off and went my way! Upon my arrival in the evening, guess what? They were beating on my door – asking me for my payment! Kung hindi ba naman anak ng… Morons! I mustered all my resolve not to make a scene, but I was obviously annoyed!

Except for that incident and their dodgy toilets, Hotel Hibiscus would be an acceptable place to stay for the budget conscious wanderlusts!




The usually unmanned entrance. Lobby is through an elevator at the 3rd floor.


Walking home from Bukit Bintang, I passed this side street where there's a nice view of the colorful KL Tower, 2nd tallest structure of the country after the Petronas!



Maulana Food Court, Malay gastronomic delight - and bottles worth of chili paste. This restaurant is open 24 hours, and stands beside Hotel Hibiscus City. From its corner, there is a paper vendor where you can buy your English dailies, like the Sunday Star at 1.50 ringgit ($0.40 or PhP20)!




Masjid Jamek, a majestic white mosque just a stop away from monorails' station Imbi (above and below).





Merdeka Square area at night! Notice the Hibiscus lanterns at the top of the lamp posts.


Bukit Bintang! Just cross this street (Jalan Ismael) to check out the posh Lot 10 Mall. Walk further for the bright lights of the Bintang Walk. Just further ahead is KL's biggest mall, the Pavilion!



As an afterthought, it would seem that the Hibisbus is Malaysia’s national flower. Well it is! Locally called Bunga Raya, Hibiscus Rosa Sinensis, is also common in its neighboring countries, including in the Philippines where it is called “Gumamela”. Variants of the said flower are also the official flower of the state of Hawaii and South Korea. This is the reason why this flower is honored with a park all its own at the Lake Gardens. Moreover, lanterns that illuminate the city, especially the Merdeka Square, are shaped like the hibiscus.



This is the
Eye in the Sky!


For more accommodation options, please check out these 2 posts:




More Accommodations in KL here (follow the succeeding posts here for different hotels):

http://eye-in-the-blue-sky.blogspot.com/2012/09/le-apple-boutique-hotel-accommodations.html











Wednesday, December 3, 2008

Landslides and Ticket Troubles en route Cameron Highlands




It was a folly to plan out a visit to the Cameron Highlands, a tea-planting resort village at the northernmost tip of the Pahang state of Malaysia. But it wasn't completely careless. I thought I had the right information. I was carrying with me some print outs of a Wikitravel article which said that it only takes 1 1/2 hours to get there, even an hour if you take this so-and-so route. Confident of my knowledge about malaysia's transportation system, it was "go".

I proceeded to the Puduraya Station, and within 30 minutes, I was on a bus along with several other backpackers. I was probably the single soul planning for a day-out, expecting to be back in KL before midnight.

As it happens, there had been rains in the region the last few days. The winding mountain roads of Cameron Highlands were fettered with landslides and the ride was agonizingly slow. Our 350-pound driver drove so slow - I was seated at his back - at 40-50 kph, and everysooften, he would stop somewhere and EAT! The whole ride stretched for hours until I realized it was going to be almost triple the amount of time I expected to get there.

Upon arrival, I hastened to get a return ticket, only to be told that all the transportation services headed back to KL have been cancelled for the day - EXCEPT the bus I took. BUT it was already fully booked! What was I to do? I wasn't ready to stay there overnight! I was just told to sit and wait with no guarantees for a ride. The bus was to leave at 4:30PM leaving me little time to gallivant the area. I resorted to the most basic maneuvers - begging! I had to literally beg the fat lady by the counter to just let me on the bus - I was ready to brave standing up the whole ride through. Finally, she looked at me intently - as if charmed by my smile - hehe - and finally relented. She pulled a bunch of tickets from under her table, then sold me one - at 23 RM (x14 = PhP).

The ride going to Tanah Rata, the main town was dazzling. You didn't even have to take local transport to see the famous tea plantations - it was on the road and stretches for kilometers of well maintained roads! Closest to heaven on earth! I remember seeing this same sight in the commercial blurbs of Jericho Rosales-Carmen Soo telenovela "Kahit Isang Saglit" (Just For A Moment).

My heart-pounding experience to get to the foggy, cool and picture-perfect Cameron Highlands was all worth the trouble.




Wednesday, April 16, 2008

Putrajaya - Thoughts on a Visit


KLIA Express



Getting There

Unlike most travelers who prefer everything set and arranged for them by someone else (a travel agent, a tour guide), I prefer preparing for a trip myself. In fact, the most memorable trips for me are the ones that I anxiously organized myself; the ones where I handpicked the dates, the itinerary; slaved over infos on hotels, or city districts as to where I’m spending the night, etc.

I am a wanderlust, guilelessly enamored by “the process” of getting there, more than being there itself.


Such was the case with this new city called Putrajaya. Hmmm… sounds like Puduraya (KL’s main bus terminal). What makes Putrajaya unique is the fact that it is a “planned city” – now Malaysia ’s administrative capital, which means that this specially-constructed city houses most of the government offices: finance, immigration, justice, trade and industry, education, etc. This was set up to decongest Kuala Lumpur .


Trains 101

From Bukit Bintang in KL, I took the KLIA Express, the express train (top speed: 176 km/hour) that goes straight to the international airport (unlike the more commercial trains, this has only 4-5 stops), much like Shanghai’s Maglev Train (the first commercial high-speed magnetic-levitation line in the world, that runs 430 km/hour from Pudong to Puxi); much like the Virgin Intercity trains from London to Scotland; the TGV of France and the AVE of Spain. ( Japan ’s Bullet Train runs 260 km/hour.)

(Side note: I learned upon my return that taking the local aircon buses is almost as easy and absolutely cheaper. But distance has to be considered: the international airport is some 75 kms away from KL’s city center.)

Upon arrival in Putrajaya, the station beckons like a detached and standoffish welcoming party: huge, modern, and almost deserted. It was almost eerie. Taking the escalator to the groundlevel, there waited a well-planned bus service that can take you where you wanna go around the area.


A Bridge Too Far

What struck me about Putrajaya is the amazing Seri Wawasan Bridge that signals your arrival at the central area. Putrajaya is cradled by a river. It has 7 major bridges to cross, Seri Wawasan Bridge being the most beautiful. Now here is a hearsay that I am prone to believe. My taxi driver “educated” me that not a few years back, Billionaire Bill Gates wanted to share his “loot” in Asia , thus he just had to pick a country to invest in. Despite great reps on language-accessibility and the business/educational acumen of Pinoys, Gates was wary of the alarming rep the Philippines has on “corruption”. (I don’t quite understand why it has become a Filipino politician’s inherent perception that they are entitled to enrich themselves through these million-dollar infrastructure projects.) And If I were a billionaire throwing my money elsewhere, I would make sure that THAT money won’t end in the slimy hands and grimy pockets of a “few good men”. Thus he set his sight elsewhere, investing millions behind 2 new “planned” cities: Putrajaya and Cyberjaya.

Putrajaya is about 80% finished; Cyberjaya, which becomes the center of the cyber commerce, is still in its toddler’s stage, with just 30% completed. Had Gates invested in the Philippines, his hard-earned millions would have ended in overpriced street lamps, mediocre construction materials and middling highways. Hello, Cebu Convention Center ! Hello, Macapagal Highway ! (The world’s most expensive highway.) Sad case, but oh so true!

Footnotes

Being a very new city , there are but a few literatures available about Putrajaya. In fact, most travel guides that I’ve read only has Putra and Cyber as footnotes. It was a visit I HAD to do. There’s no shopping to be had (at least not in central Putrajaya), although the Alamanda Mall stands in the suburban vicinity. There are empty condo units all over the surrounding vicinity – much like London ’s council houses or a much-improved BLISS settlement area! It’s a go-see and walk-about experience – and the whole expanse is amazing! The main street is laid with bricks, and everything is wide, tall, spacious, clean; geometrically planned. Along the main avenue, you can sit by the bench and watch the river… or from the distant block, the King’s resting palace looming large with gracious copulas.

To think that Putrajaya wasn’t even in my original itinerary!

P.S.

Spent a lot texting friends while there. It’s just that there are a lot of “dead-time” when you are traveling alone – while you’re waiting for your bus or train, or having a meal by your lonesome. The cellphone becomes a steady and comforting companion. And not quite cheap too. LOL. I Have since learned to "control" myself.

During my last Halong Bay visit, I met a very smart Malaysian lady (an accountant) who travels a lot – and reads a lot too. I asked her about the Bill Gates connection. Though she wouldn’t deny Gates’ money on the construction of the 2 new cities, she does not believe that Putra is the billionaire’s brainchild at all.





Putrajaya's Train station.



Seri Wawasan Bridge















Squirting fountains right along Putrajaya Boulevard


The very pink Putra Mosque.


Putrajaya Development Authority.


Unoccupied high rise residences.


Putrajaya at night.