Monday, 27 October 2014

Port Dickson and ayam curry for breakfast

September 2014

Following our stint in cyberspace, we moved into the house staff accommodation in time for the new school year.  Being a new build, there is a snagging list as long as your arm.  As long as two arms, if I'm honest.



Furniture arrived in drips and drabs.  As did the water in the shower.  Small things made such a difference.  The arrival of a coffee table was an achievement.  The arrival of a couple of wardrobes was amazing.


Being on site has as many advantages as disadvantages.  It is clean and new - bye bye Bangkok headboard - and you have your own space to begin to make your home.  Also you can rock out of bed at 8am and be teaching at 830am, if you so desired. Or, like me, if you leave your laptop charger in your classroom, no need to fret as it's a less than five minute stroll from your house.

But there are disadvantages too.  We are in a small and new township called Bandar Enstek, with little shops near by, in the middle of nowhere.  Without a car it is difficult.  We need to rely on public transport and the local bus stop is miles away, so it's down to the use of a Teksi. But there aren't that many here.

In Malaysia they have this great system of booking a cab through your smart phone.  myteksi allows you to put in your location by GPS and your desired destination and cabs in your vicinity bid for your fare.  You then get an offer and you accept the price up front.  It's amazing.... but only in the big towns and cities... not in Bandar Enstek!

Luckily a local man, Mr Richard, came to our rescue.  The friend of a friend of a friend of a colleague, he has become our life line to nip to KLIA2 Jaya Grocer or Nilai for shopping at Tesco.

As typical of  the massive supermarket Tesco, they cover a range of basics we can buy in the UK so that keeps us all happy.  From HP Sauce or Marmite to Tesco Finest granola or Weetabix, most needs are covered.   Most importantly, they have a non-halal section selling bacon, wine and beer. A slab of 24 x 330ml cans of Guinness is 202RM (£50.50) or Tiger Beer at 175RM (£35) if we are feeling flushed.   Wine ranges from 50RM to 200RM (divide it by 5) a bottle - my favourite at 54.99RM (£11) is the Yaldara Estates Shiraz.  Although, with the festive season coming around soon, I've currently got my eye on a bottle of Baileys for Christmas at 130RM for 70cl - yes £26!

Apart from Tesco, it's not as if we have many places to go.  We eat in the Dining Hall with the boarders and are on duty every other evening, so it's not like we can just swan off for a meal with family and friends at Shaftsbury Square at will, as we did when living in Cyberspace.  We also work until 3-5pm Saturday and on a Sunday rota.  At best we might get a Saturday 5pm till Sunday 9pm 24 hours off.

24 hours off site - we tried that once.  Back at the end of September, when I was fit to throw the towel in, we decided with 48 hours notice that we needed an overnight away.   Little did we know it would be more stressful than staying here.

The local beach and coastal town of Port Dickson seemed the best place away for 24hrs. It is only 30 mins away (just not on a Saturday evening as our journey took 90mins in the weekend traffic).

We booked into a hotel on the outskirts of town. The Paradise Spa Hotel.  Typical of here the hotel was not paradise nor did it have a spa.   Before you ask, yes, I did read Trip Advisor.  Yes, I did know all of this before I booked.... but I wanted to escape and all the better hotels were booked at short notice.

The hotel was lovely and clean and a family room was a two-bedroomed suite with TVs, ensuite each, a small fridge (unclean and not cold) and very limited wi-fi connection.  The roof top swimming pool was lovely and the view was as good as it gets for this area.

We asked the reception staff to book us a taxi into the main town area as we wanted to eat at the El-Cactus Mexican restaurant which had been recommended to us.  The receptionist had other ideas.  She refused.  Yes - point blank refused.  She told us the chef was very good and would cook our meal.  Talk about being press-ganged into it.  We were tired, and didn't have the energy to argue.  We were pleasantly surprised.  We had four steak and chips - cooked beautifully - with a lovely black peppercorn sauce.  Well done chef!






However, our favourite was breakfast.  It was a buffet with something for everyone.   I had the noodles, rice and ayam (chicken) curry.  It was delicious!

Before we knew it, it was time for home and school.  24 hours had flown by and we were no further relaxed but had tried curry for breakfast - magic!








Sunday, 19 October 2014

Leaving the UK


Wow... where have the last two months gone?  I can't believe that we have had parties, packed up our home, moved continent, enrolled in a new school and have already had a short school holiday break. It's been amazing yet exhausting.

August 2014

To add to the whirlwind of emotions, the daughter also dyed her hair: just to stress me out further.  It looked amazing when it was bright pink, but I kept thinking about the uniform policy and would begin to breakout into a cold sweat.




The journey to Manchester Airport was less stress thanks to our very good friend, Caroline.  She drove us to the airport, to make sure we got on the plane... maybe she thought the only way they would ever win at the pub quiz again was to ensure I couldn't join them!

The family also turned up to see us off.  Again, I think this was to ensure we didn't change our mind.



We arrived at Departures with plenty of time to spare - or so we thought - but then we had to tackle airport security.


I never realised that lipstick and a small tub of lip gloss are classified as a liquid... how inept of me to not read the paperwork properly.  We were too concerned with weighing the baggage to ensure that we each only had 30kg of luggage - wow all of our needed possessions in 120kg - that I failed to realise the lipstick rule.



As we had swapped and changed around possession from one bag to another, we had the odd rogue lipstick or lipgloss in three of the four hand luggage. Along with the normal queue, this delayed us in security for over fifty minutes.  Its so embarrassing for your bag to go through the machine again and again and again.  I was beginning to panic that I wouldn't have time to buy my duty free.


Travelling to a dry-ish country (or very very expensive booze) would not be pleasant without a bottle of gin from duty free.   Eventually, we were through, in duty free (gin, make-up and Marc Jacob's Daisy) and walking to the gate... not long now and we would be arriving in our new home.   





With a brief stop in Dubai - wow the heat sure hits you as you leave the plane - we had soon travelled 6,600 miles from the UK to MY and had arrived in KL.

After a good night's sleep we were soon put to work:


Reception

Yes - we have an actual office here.  We have our own desks (no hot seating), a photocopier / printer and a terrific view.



And before we knew it the next few weeks, of living in Cyberview Apartments, surrounded by friends and colleagues, and setting up the school, flew by.  


Cyberview Hotel

Ben and Jack

The lovely Miss Katie x

The offending headboard: would have been more suited to a Bangkok whore house.