September 2nd, 2009
I like taking night time tours, so when I heard about the one the Johannesburg Zoo (http://www.jhbzoo.org.za/) offers and the Mystery Ghost bus tour , I just had to sign up for them. My husband doesn’t understand my fascination with doing things at night, so he stayed back at our room in one of the Johannesburg boutique hotels while I went and enjoyed the night life.
The Johannesburg Zoo ferried me around to peer at the glowing scorpions, the red pandas, raccoons, the genets and of course, the big beautiful cats. The lions stared at us intently, like they were sizing us up for a late night snack. I also got to roast marshmallows over a huge blazing bonfire and drink some hot tea after the tour. I found out that I could’ve book for a safe sleep over in the zoo, but I would’ve needed my own tent and gear and provide my own meal. Which I couldn’t have done anyway.
The next night, still without my husband, I went on the Mystery Ghost bus tour, and no, the bus isn’t haunted. We got to explore the Braamfontien Cemetery where De Melker’s spirit still hangs around, and then we went to the 7th ward of the Transvall Children’s Hospital, also where De Melker is known to linger about. I didn’t see anything or feel anything. But was glad to go find our second ghost, Bubbles Schroder, she was a prostitute who was murdered in 1949 under mysterious circumstances. Her killer was never found and it’s believed her spirit haunts several houses n Sandton. There too, I didn’t see anything or feel anything, but I wasn’t the only one. At least, I got to hang around fellow ghost hunters. That was fun, better than being with my humdrum husband.
Tags: boutique, hotels, Johannesburg
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April 13th, 2009
Lee Hsien Loong is becoming to modern Malaysian society, much in the way that Plato became to ancient thinkers of Rome and modern thinkers today, a prince, a philosophical prince. His intelligence has never been questioned. His father was the previous Singapore Prime Minister, so from an early age he was groomed to take over that position. And one anonymous Singaporean shopkeeper stated that what was once the father’s ambition, the son has now achieved. The story reads as a Shakespearean play. Educated at Harvard and Cambridge, he follows much of the Confucian philosophies that so guided his father during his term as prime minister. What the country is expecting is a radical shift in governmental leadership, born out of a system of traditional beliefs.
The director of Asia Economic Forecasting, David Cohen, remarked that while many find the succession a bit…questionable…no one would ever doubt his competency to lead this country. Citizens of Singapore are well aware of the cultural restrictions they live within, and are also aware that while Lee is modern and forward thinking, his is still a man that has been involved for years, in the oppressive governmental control, as first a cabinet minister and then the Deputy Prime Minister. Singapore has had the reputation in many foreign countries over the years as, quite frankly, a somewhat intense place to visit. Gum chewing was outlawed until very recently. A more congenial and welcoming manner would benefit all aspects of business for this country, from the corner Singapore boutique hotel, to the petrol stations to the opera.
Many aspects of Singapore are censored. In the past, the media kept hidden certain circumstances while exposing those issues that were permitted in being exposed. One such set of stories showed the softer side of Lee. One that his advisers have insisted upon, not just for the cameras, but in reality. Lee insists on taken the changes slowly. He is meanwhile supporting moves forward in technology,logistics and matters of social change.
Tags: boutique, hotel, Singapore
Posted in Society, Travel | No Comments »