Singapore

Ahhh…Singapore…home of polite people, calm traffic and clean toilets. Never are your charms so appreciated as when people arrive after four weeks in India. We felt like we were treading water a bit in India, so when we arrive in Singapore we hit the sightseeing and we hit it hard.

On our first day, we had to hit one of the many (many, many) shopping malls for a few bits and pieces. Mr Beet was thrilled and a little bit emotional when he spotted…a Nando’s. Singapore just gets better and better.

Mild Boy

In the afternoon we went to Singapore Zoo. Long-term readers of this blog will know that I got a little bit obsessed when they had those Elephant Parade statues up in London a couple of summers ago. I totally geeked out and combed the entire city photographing all 250+ elephants. There was nothing but elephants on this blog for weeks. You can imagine my delight when I arrived at the zoo and discovered that Singapore is having its own Elephant Parade at the moment and there were lots of elephant statues dotted not only around the zoo but all over Singapore. We had arrived at the zoo only about two hours before closing so there followed a Supermarket-Sweep-like dash around the place trying to find all the elephant statues, and to see all the real-life animals as well.

My first Singaporean elephant – I will do a separate post for these rather than bore you with them all now.

Rainforest Zoo-phant

Kangaroo with joey

Kangaroo with joey

Baby orang-utan getting hauled up by its mum and not too happy about it

I wanna play...

Sloth

Sloth

Mr Beet and me with a ring-tailed lemur

Col and Lol and ring-tailed lemur

Flying fox

Flying fox

Next door to the zoo is the Night Safari; basically another zoo where you get to see the animals at night.  It’s very cleverly done with low-lighting and some animals like the big cats are much more active at night than during the day.  Plus there was a cool fireshow thing at the start. 

Fire breathers at night safari

More photos of the zoo and night safari are on Mr Beet’s flickr page.

The next day was a Saturday, aka parkrun day, so we headed to Fort Canning Park for a few laps and there were some more elephant statues here as well.  Fort Canning is where the British army was based in the Second World War and where the decision to surrender to the Japanese was made.  They’ve turned the military bunkers into a little museum called the Battle Box, where animatronic generals re-enact the last few days of British rule. 

For our second museum of the day, we went to the National Museum.  It’s a big, beautiful building but really empty – we had some trouble actually finding any exhibitions.  Not only did they have the usual history of Singapore exhibition, but there was also an exhibition of paintings on loan from the Musee d’Orsay including Cezanne’s The Card Players and Van Gogh’s Starry Night.  Then we hit the Singapore Art Museum, which is all modern art and we particularly liked an exhibition of the finalists of some pan-Asian competition including a set of photographs of Cambodian “bomb ponds” – ponds that have formed in the craters left by American bombers during the Vietnam War. 

Singapore is very compact and we had no plans to do a walking tour of the sights, but we just seemed to drift from one interesting-looking building to another without too much effort.  We wandered from the Art Museum to Raffles Hotel;

Col in front of Raffles

Then to the Esplanade, a crazy-looking building that is home to a theatre and arts complex. 

The Esplanade

Then along the waterfront, where we got some shots of the business district skyline and of the Marina Bay Sands Towers – the only buildings I’ve ever seen with a ship on the top.

Singapore's business district

Marina Bay Sands Towers reflected

Then we loop round to see the Merlion (the symbol of Singapore) up close. 

Merlion

We stroll along Clarke Quay – a trendy bar area where we find an English pub selling pints of bitter.  Despite the exorbitant price, Mr Beet has to have one as he has not had bitter in five months.  He is quite pleased by his pint of Old Specked Hen.

Col finds a pint of bitter in Asia and is moderately pleased

Then we head into Chinatown, which is getting ready for Chinese New Year (of the Dragon) with lots of lights, lanterns, stalls selling brightly-coloured tat and about a billion people.

Chinatown gets ready for New Year

That’s enough for day two, we decide to get out of the crowds a bit on day three and hopefully get some training in for climbing Mt Kinabalu by doing a hike. However, the travel guide makes the route sound a lot more strenuous than it really is; it’s more of a stroll than a hike. Still, it’s a pleasant route that takes us along a network of parks from Kent Ridge Park, through the horticultural gardens, over a couple of tree-top walkways and up to a place called Mt Faber which has a cable car taking people over to one of the smaller islands.

Forest Walk

Cable cars

More photos of Singapore on Mr Beet’s flickr page. 

NYC

So here’s what BeetMum, BeetBro and I got up to in New York last week:

Central Park

This was my absolutely favourite bit of New York.  It’s enormous and it’s really easy to get lost in because of all the trees so it feels properly wild and like a real escape from the city.

We did the obligatory horse drawn carriage ride, and the driver told us where all the celebrities lived (we didn’t ask).  And we went out in a rowing boat on the lake and spotted the terrapins.  There’s also a zoo which is quite small but has a very good tropical house.  There were loads of brides wandering about getting photos taken as well, it was like one of those Moonie mass weddings.

Some autumnul foliage – Americans seem obsessed with this.  They have a leaf forecast with the weather forecast.

Madison Square Garden

I had booked tickets to the ice hockey.  We spent quite a while trying to track down a giant foam finger that I had promised to bring back for Mr Beet.  This was my first ice hockey game and I really enjoyed it.  It’s easy to follow and very fast.  The players show immense skill in moving the puck up and down the rink, which then all seems to go out the window when they get near the goal and it just disintegrates into an undignified scuffle with everyone piling in.

It’s a pretty rough game: bodily slamming a player from the opposing team into the wall without any attempt to go for the puck seems to be a favoured tactic, rather than something that is in any way frowned upon.  And there were a couple of scuffles that broke out – I think we would have been disappointed if there hadn’t been.

I always had the impression that Americans were dead keen on sports, but the crowd were really quiet.  They kept flashing up signs on the big scoreboard trying to encourage the fans to sing and make noise, but to no avail.  Also, there seemed to be a lot of other things going on to distract you from the actual ice hockey – loud music, quizzes on the big screen, people in the crowd winning prizes every couple of minutes.  It’s almost as if they were catering to a crowd that they didn’t really expect to be interested in the main event.

Empire State Building / Rockerfeller Center

We went up to the Top of the Rock by day, to get views Central Park and the skyline including the Empire State.  Then we did the Empire State by night and the lights just stretch on and on.  It was chilly up there but worth it, especially as it was designed by the Daleks.

Bus Tour

BeetMum and I took a bus tour.  I’ve done them in London and Paris and think that they are a good way to get an overview of the city and work out how it all fits together, so I’m a fan.  The spiel from the tour guides was pretty informative too – luckily they did not confine themselves to celebrity residences and actually told us a bit about the city.

We did three tours over two days – Downtown (Empire State, Flatiron, Greenwich Village, Soho, Chinatown), Uptown (Central Park, Harlem) and Brooklyn (good views of the Brooklyn Bridge and Manhattan, a look round the more residential part of New York and a stop for pizza).

Statue of Liberty / Ellis Island

We queued for about 2 hours to get the Ferry over to the Statue (which is cool, but actually would probably have been just as good to see it from the free Staten Island Ferry) and then Ellis Island – which has a museum about the immigrants that laid it on a bit thick.  I find I’m less likely to be moved or impressed by something if I’m constantly being told how incredibly moving and impressive it is.  I probably should have just turned off the overly earnest audio tour.

Broadway Shows

BeetBro queued up at the half-price ticket booth in Times Square to get us some tickets to some shows.  We plumped for West Side Story and the Addams Family.  Because we really, really like finger-clicking.

West Side Story had a young cast and was a pretty straight performance with no updating from the original.  The one change was that the Puerto Ricans (some of whom looked distinctly pasty – surely it couldn’t have been that hard to cast Hispanic actors, or at least break out the fake tan) sang and spoke their parts in Spanglish.  So my ten-year-old A-level Spanish came in handy.  I guess that was supposed to make it more authentic, but if you’re portraying gang violence via the medium of ballet, then I think that authenticity is probably the least of your concerns.

The Addams family was much more fun.  Nathan Lane was Gomez and Bebe Neuwirth (Lilith from Cheers and Frasier) was Morticia.  Cheers was about 25 years ago, so she must be in her 50s (*Google tells me she is 51*) and she was incredibly glamorous.  The songs weren’t very memorable, but it was an old-fashioned farce with really slick and funny performances.

Metropolitan Museum

BeetMum was not keen on too much museum action, but we did spend a day in the Metropolitan.  It was incredible, you could easily spend weeks there.  We only did about half the first floor, taking in the Greek and Roman section, Africa and Oceania, Modern Art, Art Deco Design and the Armoury.  Fantastic – even BeetMum loved it.