Asia

Asian Hoidays and Trips

Asia has plenty to offer to the traveller. Great scenery, different and interesting cultures and great people.

I recently visited Philippines and China.

Manila is not so great

Manila is not a very nice place to visit due to polution, traffic and possible violence to foreigners. However, it does hold a charm and a feel for those who call it home.

I feel that Philippines has more to offer once you step out of the Manila/Quezon City precinct into the country side - nice beaches, nice friendly people great tropical weather and nice panoramas.

Chinese Tour - 5 Days

I went on a tour mid 2005 of China - Shanghai and Beijing:

Day 1 - Photos
Day 2 - Photos
Day 3 - Photos
Day 4 - Photos
Day 5 - Photos

China | »

Fundraising for Gawad Kalinga

I'm running the Sydney City2Surf (a 14km fun run) this year on Sunday, August 12th and I'm fundraising for my favourite charity Gawad Kalinga. Gawad Kalinga is all about addressing the issue of poverty by providing housing, services and building communities in Philippines, Papua New Guinea, Indonesia, Cambodia, East Timor, India and South Africa. You can donate some money to the charity by credit card or paypal. Or you can pledge some money by just getting in contact with me.

You can find more information about Gawad Kalinga at this new blog I set up.

GKYGAT 2007 - Done

Gawad Kalinga Youth Great Adventure Tour (GKYGAT) is officially over. View the photos of the GKYGAT 2007. The Tour was good. The People were great. The 50km bike ride, Christmas caroling, chocolate drives and the ACE4GK were all worth it. Woohoo!

Sydney Spring Cycle - Cycle for GKYGAT!

Sydney Spring Cycle - Cycle for GKYGAT!

As you would or would not know - I am going to participate in the GKYGAT in early 2007. What is the GKYGAT? Well all can be answered in my previous post... I'm going to be participating in the Sydney Spring Cycle this Sunday. The Spring Cycle is a 50km bike ride (its not a race) from North Sydney to Sydney Olympic Park in Homebush. That's my Giant 840 Mountain Bike (MTB) in the photo above which would hopefully make the 50km to Homebush. You can find the map of the event from here. I'm looking for sponsors to support me in raising funds for my mission trip. Here is what my sponsorship form says:

"Participants of the Gawad Kalinga Youth Great Adventure Tour (GKYGAT) would like your support in raising funds for their mission trip in January 2007. GKYGAT is a program run by GK Youth that allows young people to build houses for the homeless and poverty-stricken people in the Philippines and Papua New Guinea."

"Our goal is to raise $2000 in 25 days by gaining YOUR monetary support as we participate in the Sydney Spring Cycle on October 22 2006."

Gawad Kalinga

I thinking of going to the Philippines (yes, again...) next January/February with the GKYAT (GK - see below for more details; Y = Youth; GAT = Great Adventure Tour). A $200 deposit is due at the end of this month (30th October) and I've already committed myself to selling fundraising chocolates and to get sponsored on the Sydney Spring Cycle. So I guess I'm committed aren't I?

Gawad Kalinga (GK) , translated in English means "to give care," and it is an alternative solution to the blatant problem of poverty not just in the Philippines but the world. Its approach is integrated, holistic and sustainable – a concrete action plan to rebuild this nation by harnessing the best of the Filipino – our faith and our patriotism.

What started barely five years ago in the Philippines as a simple but daring initiative by Couples for Christ has now become a growing multi-sectoral partnership driven by a vision of a new Philippines with NO MORE SLUMS. Together with its partners, Gawad Kalinga is now in the process of transforming poverty-stricken areas, many of them now empowered to further improve their quality of life! And the heart-work of GK volunteers is evident in the beautiful colors of the GK homes that have been built for and with the poorest of the poor Filipino families nationwide.

Qantas QF20: Pilot Security

Qantas pilots delayed QF20 flight from Manila to Sydney via Brisbane the other day. How? They refused to remove their shoes for a security check at Manila's Ninoy Aquino International Airport (NAIA). The Australian pilots reportedly had argued with airport officials that they were being mistreated. The plane carrying 200 passengers left 70 minutes late after the two pilots yielded for the security check.

Security at the airport has been stepped up since the discovery of the plot to bomb planes flying from Britain to the US. In the last week, a local newspaper had reported that a security consultant was able to smuggle in C-4 explosives attached to the soles of hs shoes on a flight bound for southern Philippines. The consultant also claimed to have put together a bomb inside the plane's toilet. Were the Qantas pilots in the right for refusing security checks? Who gives? I think they should have submitted and they made such a big fuss for nothing, wasting 200 people's time. So what does that amount to? 200 people * 70 minutes is 14,000 minutes which is a total of 9.72 days of lost time for these people. ARGH!

Qantas Business Class

I was fortunate enough to be able to catch Business Class on Qantas on the way back home from Manila to Sydney. Want to know what people in Business class eat? Let me tell you that these people get fed pretty well. I remember flying Economy on the way to Manila and I was still hungry after the lunch service. On the other hand, eating in Business left me satisfied from the great tasting food but somewhat bloated by the end of the flight. I had the Cod Fillet with Mustard Crust. I would like to commend the Qantas flight attendants - they provide excellent service.

Max's Restaurant

Max's restaurants have been an institution in Manila in the past 60 years. They are known for their chicken. Sad to say, ever since they have expanded rapidly, franchising out their concept all over the Philippines - their chickens never do taste the same as the good old days.

Max's Spring Chicken

Max's Spring Chicken is still up to scratch. Even though their taste have somewhat degraded even since their massive expansion via franchising. What's a spring chicken I hear you ask? It's basically a young chicken (I think). Beside the chicken are kamote chips. They only serve a stingy four pieces of those chips! Cheapos!

ShoeMart Scam Artists

I must've looked like an easy target for one of those ShoeMart (SM) scam artists to approach me (and my cousin). She came out of nowhere, clutching a handbag, looking very normal. She asked us if we were going to buy anything and if we want to exchange our cash for a gift cheque. This seemed odd, so we politely declined. At the counter thse was a notice to customers (the above photo): "Please say NO to strangers exchanging SM Gift Cheques with your cash." I guess they have some sort of scam going on where they would give you bogus SM gift certificates and offer you a little more than what you exchanged in cash. Be warned.

Max's Restaurant Receipt

I know you can barely read the picture above but it’s a receipt from Max's restaurant. We fed three people for P693.16 (pesos) which is around AUD$18. If you were in Australia, you would only have fed two people (complete with drinks) in a food court with $18. But Philippine standard-wise, P693 is expensive for a meal. I noticed that the further you got away from Manila, the cheaper the food became. If you want to feed a van-full of people, say about 15, take them to the province and you can get them a great meal for less than AUD$60. Complete with desert and alcohol...

Carriage Just For Women and Kids

What a neat idea. They have a carriage just for female, elderly, children, & disabled passengers in Manila, Philippines. I guess because the carriages in the MRT (Mass Rail Transit) get so packed like sardines, it is probably wise to have a system like this to prevent and groping incidents and the like...

Manilians Are Technologically Disabled

Manilians (aka people who live Manila) are technologically disabled. Take this case in point: The lines were long - super long, something like 30 or 40 people deep time 3 lines waiting to purchase a ticket for the train. There were two ticket machines located on either end. Guess who first lined up, realised there was no one waiting at the ticket machines, bought a ticket and passed all those who were waiting - leaving them speechless (they saw me, I noticed, I saw their expressions too). Yes me! I could not believe that out of all those people had no change for a simple machine. The machine only had a few buttons – compared to our 100+ button ticket machine in Sydney. My case in point: Manilians are technologically disabled.