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Travel Quotes: April 2021

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"Wherever in the World I travel to, The Moon is my constant companion, Whenever I look up at the night sky, I see the same Moon that accompany me in all my journeys."  -  Timothy Tan, author of this blog - tankstraveltales Street Vendors, Hoi An, Quang Nam Province, Vietnam (2018)

Cambodia, Angkor Thom - Smiling Stone Faces

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Visiting sites of ancient and past civilisations is a fascinating journey into the history of humankind. From these sites and the artefacts found there, we gained insights into how people of the past lived and worked.  In the ancient ruins of Angkor Thom, I came face-to-face, literally, with hundreds of smiling stone faces. Said by some to represent the bodhisattva of compassion Avalokitesvara (or Lokesvara), the 216 stone faces engraved onto the towers of Bayon stood smiling serenely, as they had for more than 700 years, silent witness to the history of humankind. Bayon was built as the Buddhist temple of the Khmer at Angkor Thom. Located near present-day Siem Reap, Angkor Thom was the capital of King Jayavarman VII.  Infused with both historical and mythological wonder, Angkor Thom is one of the most visited sites for visitors to Siem Reap. And when one mentions Angkor Thom, the images of Bayon will undoubtedly flashed through the minds of almost everyone who had visited this ancient

Bucket List: Long Drive on Country Roads

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Australia, Western Australia, Great Northern Highway I lived in a city state that measures approximately 50km from east to west and 17km from north to south. There are thus no country roads to speak of where I could drive and  drive to enjoy the pleasures of solitude. The longest drive that is geographically near to my city is the neighbouring country of Malaysia where the North-South Highway stretches from the southern state of Johor to the northern state of Kedah, a distance of about 772km. I often embarked on long drives along this route to travel from Singapore to Ipoh (capital city of the Malaysian state of Perak). The distance each way is about 550km (as measured by my car's distance tracker). But the North-South Highway is a relatively busy stretch of road and while the route passed by large swathes of palm tree plantations, this is definitely no country road by my personal definition. The opportunity for me to drive on a lonely country road finally arrived when I visited We

Travel Quotes: March 2021

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  "So, this is the place! The crowds,  coming, going, meeting, parting; Friends, strangers, known, unknown. - Translated from poem by  Semimaru (Japanese poet of the early Heian Period, name as recorded in the Ogura Hyakunin Isshu ) Circle of Stones, Kamitsushimamachikin, Tsushima, Nagasaki Prefecture, Japan (2019)

Singapore, Mount Faber - Going Local

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When international leisure travel is not possible, the next best thing is to go local. To travel locally and enjoy the local sights and sounds that we do not normally indulge ourselves in. As a wrapped up to my rather pathetic travel calendar for 2020, I embarked on a local cable car ride on New Year's eve. This was my own small way to mark the end of 2020 and to celebrate the arrival of 2021.  That this was actually my first time taking a cable car in Singapore was quite surprising to myself. While I had taken countless cable car rides while overseas, I had not actually rode in a cable car in my home city! Well, that was then. I had since clocked my first local cable car ride and was pleasantly surprised by the beautiful night view as the cable car took me from its starting station at Mount Faber to the resort island of Sentosa and back. The drizzling rain made the ride a cosy one and I loved the natural effects of the rain on my photographs.  Where else next? Local attractions, I

Travel Bits: March 2021

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Sorting out my travel memorabilia ....... As international travel remains curtailed, I decided that it was time to take a weekend to sort out and clear up my study which now also serves as my home office while the new normal of "working from home" (a.k.a. WFH) continues into its second year. Being someone who cherishes a neat and tidy environment, I naturally have all my books, documents and other stuff neatly arranged and displayed on the shelves lining the walls of the small room which is my study. However, with WFH taking its toll on the daily-in-use home office, stuff naturally got built up after 15 months of working from home daily, 7 days a week. The result was small piles of documents, books, magazines, work materials, letters, memos, notes and online purchases stacking up first, at the corners and then the corners-of-the-corners as space around the small room quickly ran out. That was when I decided a day of area-cleaning had become necessary. As I got around sorting

Bucket List: Sailing across the Baltic Sea

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Finland & Estonia, Gulf of Finland, Baltic Sea The ocean has more often than not, invoked a sense of romance (travel-wise) for me. And for someone who was born and grew up in a part of the world near the equator and in South-East Asia, the northern seas of Europe are often seen as exotic and exciting. Thus, when I was planning a trip to Finland for spring of 2017, I just could not resist including a short sailing trip across the Baltic Sea, just for that personal vanity of checking off another item on my travel bucket list. Besides the bucket list tick, of course I did get to visit Estonia as well and walked on the famed cobblestone streets of Tallinn's Old Town, another item on my bucket list! To be honest, I did not actually get to sail right across a large swathe of the Baltic Sea, but only that tiny fraction from Helsinki to Tallinn across the Gulf of Finland to be be exact. But because the Gulf of Finland is technically classified as the easternmost part of the Baltic Sea,