Posts Tagged ‘Travel’

5 Continents in P6 Pt. 5: Germany, New York

Sunday, February 10th, 2013

After having spent a few days in Germany, mostly for me to sort out stuff related to my South African visa application, we started on a last trip before we are going to start working again in March: we went to the US East Coast with a short detour to Canada -thereby ticking off the fourth continent within a month.
The first stop (after some delays on our flight due to snowy weather in Europe) was New York. Given that I had never been to the US before, what better city could there have been to start the trip than New York? We were able to stay at the apartment of a friend of J’s, conveniently located in midtown Manhattan. New York was even colder than Germany, but since it is so much further south, the days were much longer, which was great for sightseeing.

In the six days we spent in New York, we did a lot of things – this city really provides endless opportunities! We did some of the obvious touristy things such as going to the top of the Empire State Building (really, really freezing cold there in the cold January wind with temperatures of about -10 centigrade!) , a cruise to the Statue of Liberty (unfortunately both Liberty Island and the neighboring Ellis Island which features a supposedly very interesting immigration museum have been closed since Hurricane Sandy wreaked havoc there), the 9/11 memorial (very impressive, with two square black pools in the locations of the twin towers), and visiting the Guggenheim museum (just missing the end of a big Picasso exhibition, so that half the museum was closed to set up the next show). We also did a lot of shopping, both for clothes and for gadgets (I got an iPad mini, while J opted for the less expensive option, a Nexus 7).

Most of the time, however, we spent walking around the city, checking out different areas and neighborhoods – and I must say, in NYC this is really a worthwhile activity. From the glamour and blinking lights of Broadway and Times Square to the luxurious storefronts of Fifth Avenue; from busy Wall Street to hip(ster) Williamsburg; from huge Central Park to the elevated Highline Park, which has been built on a former railroad viaduct and leads through abandoned and refurbished industrial buildings; from walking through Chinatown feeling like a colder version of Hong Kong to hearing people everywhere speak with so strong American accents that I wouldn’t know anymore how to exaggerate them.

All in all, I was very impressed by the city – so many things to see, do, and experience! It was interesting, however, how man things already felt familiar because I had seen them in movies or on TV – you get the feeling that you’re in one – if not the – cultural center of the world!

Some pictures follow.

5 Continents in P6 Pt. 4: Germany

Sunday, January 27th, 2013

Germany for me was more of a working visit than anything else, since there were a lot of this that I had to sort out – I had to get a new passport, buy things including some furniture for South Africa, ship things down there, apply for my South African visa (after having collected all the required documents for that), and move the remaining stuff out of the attic of my previous apartment in Hamburg. Between all of that, however, I also managed to introduce J to my family and also catch up with my former band mates. Also, we went to a concert in Berlin, which was very nice even though Julia Fischer, who was supposed to play the violin, couldn’t make it, being replaced by Taiwanese-Australian violinist hotshot Ray Chen (which was also nice, but not quite what we had expected also in terms of the pieces he played).

In the end, I managed to get all the things done in about two weeks, and we then left on our last “holiday” trip before we will start working again: we flew to the US east coast.

5 Continents in P6 Pt. 3: Myanmar

Sunday, January 27th, 2013

After having visited J’s family in Perth, we went to Myanmar. While I had already been there before coming to Singapore, she had not and wanted to go, and we figured that we probably wouldn’t come back to South East Asia very soon again. Moreover, I had gathered the impression on my visit there that the country was changing and opening up to the world and to tourism rapidly, and that soon it would not be very different anymore from Laos or Cambodia, who are quite overrun with tourists in some places and therefore have lost a lot of authenticity. As it turns out, however, we were already almost too late to prevent that – when we arrived in Yangon after a short stopover on Singapore’s Changi airport (where we also had to surrender our Singapore student passes), we realized that there was barely any accommodation available in Yangon, and the rooms we could find had gone up in price twofold or threefold since I had been there – which meant that in comparison to other countries in the region, they now were horribly overpriced. At lest the taxi driver that took us to the city was very friendly and helpful, calling up multiple guest houses for us to find a place to stay and stopping at a travel agent for about an hour until we had sorted out domestic flights for the week that we were going to stay in Myanmar. The first evening, we walked around Yangon a bit and visited the famous Shwedagon Pagoda – which with all its gold and the lots and lots of small temples around it hasn’t lost its fascination even on the second visit.

Since we had not had much sleep the night before (we spent the night between 3am and 9am on the airport) and we had to get up at 4:30 the next morning to catch a domestic flight, we went to bed early – which meant that for the first time probably since I was 8 or so, I missed New Year’s – but there was probably not a lot I missed anyway, since Yangon is not a party city and New Year’s is nt a big deal for the Burmese anyway.

The next day, we flew early in the morning to Bagan, the most important tourist destination in Myanmar. This plain which is filled with more than 4000 temples rivals the Cambodian temples of Angkor, and has the advantage of having a bit less of a Las Vegas feeling. After having checked into a very nice hotel on the banks of the Ayeryawaddy river, we rented a horse cart including driver for the day to take us around the temples. Especially since there are so many temples, I ahead not seen nearly all of them when I was there the last time, so it was also very nice for me to see some more of this amazing cultural heritage. Especially nice was the sunset that we watched from one of the smaller temples that are less crowded (some of the bigger ones get really packed around sunset). The next morning, we got up at 6 to also catch the sunrise. It was a bit difficult to find our way around in the area of Old Bagan where our hotel was to find a temple that we could climb on to watch the sunrise, but eventually we found one, just in time to see the temple-filled plain bathed in the colors of dawn.

Later that day, we already had to fly out of Bagan to get to Inle lake, the second must-see destination in Myanmar. We again had trouble finding accommodation, and ended up in a big, Chinese-run hotel that wasn’t exactly cheap, but at least reasonably clean and provided good breakfast. We also arranged for a boat tour on the next day, which we requested to leave really early in the morning so that we could witness sunrise on the water. This turned out to be a ally great idea – especially the first few hours on the lake were amazing, with the mist of the night slowly clearing and the shapes of the hills surrounding the lake slowly becoming distinguishable from the water of the lake and the sky. Also, the fishermen of the lake, who have very flat boats and a strange, one-legged rowing technique, provided for good photo opportunities. We also visited a market and multiple handicrafts shops in villages on the lake, as well as the jumping-cat monastery (where the cats are no longer jumping, since the old monks that used to teach the cats have died). However, since we had gotten up so early, we got tired around lunchtime and went back to Nyaungshwe, the main tourist town north of the lake where our hotel was located.

The next day, we had a flight back to Yangon – and it turned out that we had been extremely luck with our schedule, since it was really foggy that day and you couldn’t see more than maybe 10 meters. While that meant that our flight got delayed by more than an hour, it wold have been much worse if we had tried to go on the boat tour that day – we wouldn’t have seen anything on the lake!
Since we had two days to spare, we rather spontaneously decided to go to the Golden Rock, which is an important pilgrimage site a few hours southeast of Yangon. The Golden Rock is an oddly balancing boulder on top of a mountain, which countless pilgrims have attached gold leafs to, so that it is now completely golden. From the descriptions in the guide book, it sounded like a nice place to see, and the hotel we got in Kinpun, which is the “base camp” for excursions to the Golden Rock and located in the valley below, was certainly the nicest and best value-for-money one on the whole Stay in Myanmar. The actual trip up the mountain, however, was quite an experience. We had decided to go up early at 6:00am to avoid the pilgrim masses as much as possible. It turned out, however, that all the pilgrims had thought the same, and so we ended up with hundreds of Burmese pilgrims at the “station” from which trucks carry the people up the mountain. These trucks basically have an open platform in the back, onto which about 35 people can squeeze. With so many people waiting for the trucks, boarding them was a nightmare. As soon as the trucks started pulling into the station, people ran up and tried to climb on, or literally threw their grandmas up on the truck. It wasn’t pretty. After two groups of trucks had come and gone, we somehow managed to get on one so that we could be taken up the mountain. The truck was full and crowded, and the trip up took about an hour (including a lot of waiting time about halfway when the trucks had to let trucks going downhill pass, since the mountain roads were too narrow for two trucks next to each other). When we had finally arrived on top of the mountain, we had hoped for it to be a bit less crowded there – but that was not the case. In addition to all the people that had come up with or before us, there were lots and lots of people who had spent the night on the mountain – just lying under makeshift tents at the side of the road. From everyone’s waste (no dustbins anywhere) the place was really filthy – and you had to walk barefoot, since it is a Buddhist sanctuary after all! All of this meant that we had enough quite quickly – we took a picture of the rock and then headed downhill again. It was again difficult to get on a truck, since people kept pointing us to different trucks (no one speaking any English of course), but eventually we made it, and spent the rest of the afternoon just relaxing in our hotel room.

The next day, we went back to Yangon. Leaving Kinpun, we realized that all the pilgrims were leaving too – we had probably just managed to come there at the worst possible time – it was a long weekend for the Burmese!

The following day, we left Myanmar for Germany – out of South East Asia, out of the warmth into the European winter!

Some pictures follow.

5 Continents in P6 Pt. 2: Perth

Sunday, January 27th, 2013

After having checked out of our Singapore apartment on 26 December, J and I went to visit her family in Perth. Since it was the middle of the Australian summer, it was hot as hell there – around 40 degrees in the daytime. At least it wasn’t as humid as in Singapore anymore!
Over the course of the four days we were there, we had a belated Christmas dinner with J’s family (more aunties and uncles!), met some of J’s friends, went to the beach, and drove down south to Dunsborough and Margaret River, where we visited a few more beaches and went wine tasting at a vineyard.

The most amazing and most important thing of the four days though was that we visited a wildlife park that had all of the Australian animals like kangaroos, wallabies, emus etc. – and I got to hold and cuddle a koala! It was indeed quite furry and was eating eucalyptus all the time that was constantly being replenished by some caretaker – and whenever she came with a new bunch of eucalyptus branches, the koala on my arm greedily turned to her and reached for the new food. It was definitely quite an experience!

On December 30, we left Australia for Myanmar.

Some pictures follow.

5 Continents in P6 Pt. 1: KL and Singapore

Sunday, January 27th, 2013

The day after graduation, we went to Kuala Lumpur to visit some of J’s family. We went there for just a few days and didn’t really do anything except eating, meeting her extended family (lots of aunties and uncles) and hanging out.
After that, we came back to Singapore and spend Christmas Eve and Christmas Day there. Most of our fellow students had already gone home, but a few were still there so that we could spend some more time with them. On Christmas Eve, we had a very nice traditional Polish Christmas dinner hosted by a German/Polish classmate of ours with her husband, who also had her family visiting and invited us and two other students. We had a very nice time together, and it was again quite sad to have to say goodbye to some of our friends that evening.
The next day was our last full day in Singapore before checking out of our apartment and leaving for Australia. Since we had two bottles of champagne in our fridge from various occasions, we decided to invite a few of the remaining people over for a champagne breakfast. They brought some food and another bottle of champagne, and we hung out half of the day, talked and drank champagne – a very lazy and nice way to end our time in Singapore. After having parted for the afternoon, our three guests came back in the evening to have some dinner – and thus ended our time in Singapore.

Grad Trip to Sri Lanka (12 – 17 December)

Tuesday, December 18th, 2012

Two days after the last class of the MBA, we left for Grad Trip. Traditionally, every INSEAD promotion goes for one last trip before graduating. My promotion went to Sri Lanka, and more than 300 of the 500-odd students of the promotion actually came (which is really impressive especially since Sri Lanka is not exactly around the corner from Fontainebleau).

The two of us went to spent two nights in Galle Fort first, before joining the others in the beach resort town of Beruwala. Galle Fort is an old fort, built mainly by the Dutch from the 17th century onwards, and used to administrate their colonies. It is quite well preserved and has been classified as UNESCO world heritage. Especially in contrast to the bustling Sri Lankan city outside the Fort gates, the insides of it are very peaceful and quiet. It is quite nice to walk around the outer ramparts, which are surrounded by the Indian ocean, and that sport a (British-built) lighthouse on their outermost tip. In addition to the many gem stores (that we did not really visit other than to go to our guesthouse, which was run by a gem store owner), there were also lots of nice restaurants with really good food.

After two nights in Galle we went up  by train to Beruwala, where most of the other students had already convened. We did not stay at the hotel where most of the other students were, but next doors in a different hotel (where funnily enough most of the couples stayed). However, we joined the others at their hotel to hang out, talk, and party every day. It was quite an interesting experience: never before have I been on a trip with that many people – and even regular INSEAD parties never had that many participants.

In the end, it was a bit sad to say goodbye to some people who are graduating only in Fontainebleau and who I will not see again very soon. For those that are graduating in Singapore, this moment of saying goodbyes will come tomorrow after the graduation ceremony…

Koh Lipe, Halong Bay (24 October – 1 November)

Saturday, December 8th, 2012

Neither of us had classes for the first few weeks of P5, and since we also didn’t have a room in Singapore until 1 November, we decided to travel for a bit before settling in in Singapore again. So we went to Koh Lipe, an island way down south on the western coast of Thailand, and Halong Bay, which is in Vietnam close to Hanoi. I had been to both places before already, but J had not been and I liked both of the places, so we went together.

Koh Lipe is simply one of the most relaxing beach islands I have ever been to. It is located close to the Malaysian border, a bit north of the Malaysian island of Langkawi, and it is really tiny. You can easily walk along all the main beaches within a few hours. Most of the accommodation is located along the beaches, and in the center of the island there are lots of restaurants and small shops. We were there a bit before the official beginning of the season, which meant that some of the places were still closed. Still, it was surprisingly hard to find a place to sleep, since we hadn’t booked anything in advanced. We ended up with a really basic (non air-conditioned) bungalow, but it was dirt cheap: Around 7.50 € for the room per night.

When we had relaxed on the island for a few days, we flew all across mainland Southeast Asia to Hanoi, spent half a day in the city and then set off to Halong Bay. Halong Bay, located approximately three hours from Hanoi, is a UNESCO world heritage site, revered for its myriad steep limestone islands and islets. We spent two nights on one of the many junks that sail the bay – curiously, when I had last been there around two years ago, the boats were all brown, in the meantime they had all been painted white. The trip to Halong Bay was fantastic – we did some nice excursions to islands and did some kayaking as well as swimming, and the junk we were on was a really nice one.

From Halong Bay, we went back to Hanoi and then flew straight back to Singapore, just in time to check into our newly rented room for the last period of the MBA.

 

Porto (16 to 21 October)

Friday, November 9th, 2012

Over the P4-P5 break (from 16 to 21 October), we went to Porto. I had not been in Portugal since I went there with my family when I was six years old, and I had heard a lot of good things, so I was quite excited about the trip. And even though we had quite some rain the first two days, all in all it was a very nice holiday.

Thanks to consultant hotel bonus points, we stayed in a fancy hotel, which was quite conveniently located 350 meters from one of Porto’s metro stops (on the day we arrived, it was pouring and we were completely soaked by the time we got to the hotel… the 350m felt much longer than they did on the next day without rain). We spent most of our time walking around the city, tasting Port Wine in Vila Nova de Gaia, which is on the opposite shore of the Duouro River and houses a multitude of Port wineries, and taking a boat tour on the river. The atmosphere and scenery of Porto is amazing. The old town features lots of narrow, steep streets, which in comparison to many other old towns in Europe seems much more alive with “regular” people and less of a museum. Also interesting is the contrast between renovated, beautifully decorated small shops and restaurants on one hand, and many abandoned or completely run-down buildings on the other hand (even though many of these buildings have a beautiful architecture, lots of Art Nouveau and regionally typical tile-covered facades).

The Port wineries in Vila Nova de Gaia were also really worth a visit. The first one we visited was Ramos Pinto, named after its founder and a relatively young Port winery (established in 1880). The tour through the museum comprised not only a visit to the cellars in which the Port is stored in barrels while aging, but also to a small museum which displayed especially lots of the marketing material used by the company especially in its early years – they had to be quite creative since they had to prove themselves against the established Port companies. The second Port winery we visited was an older one, so the tour was less about interesting marketing and more about the history and theory of Port wine. After our visit to the second winery, we took a boat tour on river Duoro, which took us upstream a bit and then down the river to where it enters the Atlantic ocean. When we reached the ocean, the sun was just setting – a very beautiful sight!

Another highlight of the visit was the food – we had quite some interesting dishes. Most notable was the local sandwich specialty – one could call it the mother of all meat sandwiches: The Francesinha. It is basically different types of bacon, ham, sausage and beef between two buns, covered with lots of cheese and swimming in beer gravy… Delicious, but certainly not something to be eaten every day! The next day, we opted for vegetarian food instead to counterbalance all the grease in our blood…

Some pictures follow.

Malaga (4 to 8 October)

Wednesday, October 24th, 2012

From 4 to 8 October, we went to see my brother in Malaga – he is currently doing a three-months exchange to the local university as part of his PhD program in Berlin. On the way there, we stopped in Madrid for half a day – I had never been there before and so it was a great opportunity to visit the Spanish capital. I really liked it – other than it being much warmer than in Fontainebleau, it also had a very nice atmosphere. In addition, we got to visit two art museums for free: The Caixa Forum (which is small, has changing exhibitions, and is always free) and the Prado (which has the best collection of classical art in Madrid, and is free for the last two hours every day).

Malaga itself also turned out to be really nice. A couple of classmates we had spoken to before our trip had said that the city itself wasn’t that interesting, but in fact the old town is quite picturesque with marble streets, and an unfinished cathedral (one of the towers is not as high as the other one).

Unfortunately, I got sick for one and a half days and needed to go to the hospital to get medication, but thankfully we had enough time to still do some trips into the countryside on the weekend. On Saturday, we went to Cómpeta, a nice white village in the hills to the east of Malaga. On Sunday, we ventured westwards and took a round trip to Zahara de la Sierra, Ronda and back.

Zahara de la Sierra is an impressive town, overshadowed by a fortress towering upon a rocky mountaintop. From the city, you have great view on the surrounding scenery including a big artificial lake. The town itself is also very nice, with white houses and pretty little streets and squares.

Ronda is a town dominated by a high bridge over the El Tajo canyon, which splits the city into two and runs next to one of the central squares. This square and canyon have supposedly been the basis for a vivid description of the execution of fascists in the Spanish Civil War in Earnest Hemingway’s For Whom The Bell Tolls, which coincidentally I had just read over the summer – making for an interesting comparison of the actual setup with the imagination I had formed while reading the book.

Some pictures follow.

Belgium Trip (14-16 September)

Tuesday, October 23rd, 2012

Over the weekend of 14 to 16 September, I went to Belgium. The trip was organized by three Belgian classmates and was an awesome experience – as comprehensive as you could get over the two days, with lots of interesting activities, but never to stressful.

The trip started on Friday evening after people had finished the last classes. A bus picked us (~45 students) up at INSEAD in Fontainebleau and took us to Namur in Wallonia, where we arrived late at night. We still went out after arriving, since the Fête de Wallonie was in full swing in the city – plenty of opportunity to try local beers and Peket, which is a local spirit that is served in various fruit flavors.

On the next morning, after the last participants had managed to lift themselves out of their beds, we went on to Brussels. There, we got a guided tour of an hour through the Magritte Museum, which opened three years ago and is revered as one of the best museums in Belgium. Afterwards, we did a short walking tour through Brussels and had lunch at de Nordzee/Mer du Nord, which is an awesome outdoor seafood restaurant (more of a food stall to be honest, but with excellent food).

Then, we went further into Flanders and visited the Timmermans brewery close to Brussels. We got a tour of the brewery and got to taste some of the beers they make there. Their beers are of the Lambic type and therefore quite sour, but can be processed further to produce the fruity Kriek, or double-fermented Gueuze.

Thereafter, we went on to Bruges. We had dinner at a local restaurant, enjoying lots and lots of the Belgian staple dish mussels with fries – a rather unusual combination, but quite a feast! The evening we spent visiting some local bars (and checking out more Belgian beers).

Sunday morning was free of any fixed activities, so I (like many other students) spent the time walking around the city and checking out the historic buildings. Bruges is indeed a pretty city, and the weather was quite nice so it was a really nice way to spend a Sunday morning. In the afternoon, we had a boat tour through the Bruges canals, and then visited another brewery in the city, namely the De Halve Maan brewery, which brews ales. Given that the brewing process and the beers themselves were quite different from the first brewery, the tour was also enjoyable (and we had a very nice view over the city from the brewery roof). After the brewery, we went back to Fontainebleau by bus.

All in all, the weekend was fantastic, especially thanks to the great organization by my classmates. Some pictures follow.

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