Showing posts with label sunday scans. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sunday scans. Show all posts

Sunday, January 8, 2012

Sunday Scans/Scenic Sunday: Vehicle in Sarawak.



I have been on Facebook and just this week, I found 2 classmates when i was in Senior High school, Form 6 as it is called over in Sarawak. What a joy to be connected again.

I shall be featuring some of the photos of things that were in Borneo when I was growing up. Some of the things may not be there anymore.

This vehicle is powered by human beings. I can't use this for my Save the World meme because I don't know if this is extinct.




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http://scenicsunday.blogspot.com/

http://sundayscans.blogspot.com/

Al http://alsphotographyblog.blogspot.com/.

Saturday, December 10, 2011

Sunday bridge, Auckland Harbor Bridge.



Today many of the Auckland public took the first opportunity to cycle over
the Auckland Harbour bridge with approval from the Transport Agency, which was overwhelmed by an illegal crossing by about 2000 cyclists and walkers in 2009 pushing for their own pathway. The wind over the bridge is too strong to make cycling safe. At times the bridge had to be closed to motorcyclist.
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Today 160 Metrolink and North Star buses lined up their vehicles along the motorway north of the bridge from 1am to form a 2.3km protective wall for the cyclists. This was to protect the cyclist so they don't get blown over into the sea.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/nz/news/article.cfm?c_id=1&objectid=10772279

They will line up from the Pt Erin Swimming Pool for a 15km excursion over the bridge, then up and down the Northern Busway from about 7am, an hour after the start of a 110km race of members of a heavier duty "lycra" cycling brigade.

Then from 8am, it will be the turn of children to take part in shorter 8km or 2km rides with their families along sections of the busway from Smales Farm, where there will also be entertainment and cycling education activities until midday.

An entry price of $10 will entitle them to a certificate and tee-shirt each, and has been reduced since the event was first mooted.

But the registration fee for the 110km race remains at $110, and the 15km bridge and busway jaunt will cost participants $15 each.

Other participants in the cycling events will include Auckland Mayor Len Brown, triathletes Hamish Carter and Debbie Tanner, and a goodly turnout from the cast of television soap opera Shortland Street.

The agency has given approval for up to 9000 cyclists to cross the bridge, but organiser Callum McNair believes many potential participants have been pre-occupied with other events such as the Rugby World Cup and the election.

Even so, he hopes his events can survive as regular fixtures on Auckland's community calendar, and that momentum will grow once people become more familiar with them.

"Being a year one event, there are a lot of people unsure of what we are about," he told the Weekend Herald.

"Are we a hard-arsed cycling organisation, are we a community cycling group, and really we've got to put the rubber on the road and show people we are actually both."

"Then I think people will get it, but seeing is believing with these things."

A number of cyclists will wear slogans of the Getacross Campaign, which wants a shared pathway across the bridge, a goal which he and the tandem riders support as a way of fulfilling Mr Brown's aspiration to turn Auckland into "the world's most liveable city."

"Certainly cycling plays a part in that," Mr McNair said.

But he paid tribute to the Transport Agency for approving the events, and to the drivers of 160 Metrolink and North Star buses who will line up their vehicles along the motorway north of the bridge from 1am tomorrow to form a 2.3km protective wall for the cyclists.

That will keep motor traffic away from the cyclists, who will reach the busway from the bridge's eastern or seaward clip-on lanes

Watching the cyclists reminded me of a daring bike ride I made in 1974. I rehashed this to my friend Jenny Yaw Peng who was then a student at Kai Chung School. Her dad had a bicycle shop.

I normally returned to my parents' town during the weekend. Somehow, 3 male students aged 14 persuaded me to ride with them to the bush. I taught them English and they were the naughtiest kids in the class. They told me that they would take me to a stream where we could swim. I was 19, and was fun loving.

I didn't pack a picnic lunch, and all I remembered was riding and riding and riding. Then we got off the main road into a narrow track. It must have been more than 10 miles each way.

When I got back, I saw Jenny's dad Mr. Chew. He must have seen my sun burnt face and asked where I had been. He shook his face and said, I could at least have asked his bicycle repairing apprentice Ah Li to check over my bike. What if I got a puncture. I never thought of that. Whew!!!!

Later, I told my colleague. He said I was crazy to trust those students, because at that time, it was during the height of the communist insurgence. The soldiers could have mistaken me to be a Communist and shot me right there and then.

I have forgotten these 3 boys, and it would be fun if I see them again. The students are planning for a reunion. I wonder if they would be there.

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http://bayphoto.blogspot.com/


http://scenicsunday.blogspot.com/



http://sundayscans.blogspot.com/

Al http://alsphotographyblog.blogspot.com/.

Saturday, November 26, 2011

Sunday Scans: memory lane in 1974






Sports played a big part in Kai Chung School. That year, due to my shouting with Lynn Wong/Leng, A La Man Da, we won. This was Miss Chieng, she was my best girl friend when I was teaching there.

One year, there was a funeral in Sibu, Mr Pau and I accomapanied the students by motor launch aka a big boat. After the funeral, we were treated to an eating house, not exactly a five star restaurant. But to the students from small town Binatang, Sibu was a big place. I recall Mr. Pau telling one girl who had gastric that she wasn't to eat the bigger strands Bee Hoon, but she ate any way. Mr Pau sighed. Mr. Pau has since passed away. I will always remember Mr. Pau.

Then I arranged with my Aunt to visit See Hua Daily news paper. They not only printed the newspaper, they also made plastic bags. I was most impressed how the sacks of whistish granules of rice like plastic could be made into transparent sheets of plastic,

Another of my bucket list.





http://sundayscans.blogspot.com/

Al http://alsphotographyblog.blogspot.com/.

Saturday, July 2, 2011

scenic sunday/sunday scans: old school photos


http://sundayscans.blogspot.com/

Al http://alsphotographyblog.blogspot.com/.


href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgi2XkufkdHGp017N2tHQsdsx5mM29Q7jud5MJ6GdYVDN6F_hyphenhyphenufOXR2rQQuf_EJLGb0KPFAxNtGXT3yUFKNZN3wACEqpeaBdOEh-jU07whL3KtTyRRyKxg3YVaTQEyffYWe8ojoqFB9PpL/s1600-h/scenic+sunday.jpg">
http://scenicsunday.blogspot.com/

The year was 1974, when I became a young teacher at 19, in a small town of Binatang, now known as Bintangor. I went to teach after my High School, and it was fun as a young enthusiastic teacher at Kai Chung School. I got to know a Chew Family and recently they found me on Facebook and we reconnected and found other old friends as well.

Today, many decades had passed, some of my current students ask me how old I am, and say," You are even older than my Nana." I tell them, "then you show me respect because I am older than your Nana."

This blog is for an old colleague J.

Saturday, May 21, 2011

Scenic Sunday/Sunday scans: Living in Singapore


http://sundayscans.blogspot.com/

Al http://alsphotographyblog.blogspot.com/.


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http://scenicsunday.blogspot.com/

When I was living on the campus of NTU in Singapore, we lived on a cleared jungle. There were bees and they often nested on our balcony. These handsome men had to make scaffolding to spray toxic fumes. It didn't really work as the bees kept coming.

I told my friends, it gave me an excuse to have macho men visiting me. The photos don't show that we are 4 storeys up.

Saturday, May 7, 2011

Sunday Scans:Pineapple


http://sundayscans.blogspot.com/

Al http://alsphotographyblog.blogspot.com/.

This pineapple is the icon of Sarikei Town in Borneo. My dad worked there for some years before he retired.

Sunday, April 24, 2011

sunday scans: Glacier

http://sundayscans.blogspot.com/

Al http://alsphotographyblog.blogspot.com/.




In the summer of year 2000, we went to the Fox and Franz Josef Glaciers. Fox was a bigger glacier, but nearer to the road. Everyone went but as Sam was three, I didn't go too near to the terminus.

The next morning, D and Sam decided to stay in the car while we went to Franz Josef Glacier. It seemed like walking miles and miles in the rain and narrow rocky path. We saw tiny icebergs flowing down the stream. We saw waterfalls. We got very wet.

When we reached the terminus, I was all geared up and I became a dare devil. Both Gand I went to have a photo shoot of touching the glacier. Later I told this to my girl friends and my Australia friend told me off. This, she said could be the very time when the ice breaks.

I was very lucky I was saved by the skin of my teeth. So I have deleted the photo. Here are some taken at Fox and Franz Josef. Yesterdays news gave me a close warning. It could have been me and the heading, "Mum and teen aged daughter......"

Brothers crushed by ice named, glacier search postponed
Updated 9:40AM Friday Jan 09, 2009



He said people visiting areas like the Fox and Franz Josef Glaciers needed to respect safety barriers and notices.

Both the Fox and Franz Josef Glaciers were advancing and had vertical, or in places overhanging, terminal faces.

These were extremely dangerous places to be and were continually subjected to unpredictable rock and ice falls, he said.

Mr Jewell said the glacier's face was an unstable and unsafe place to be at the best of times.

It had frequent collapses which sent large blocks of ice flowing downstream.

Recent warm weather had made the glacier even more unstable.

"The present condition of the terminal face is quite steep," he said.

"We have got warm temperatures ... and obviously we have got frequent ice collapses, but we have had a good sized one [yesterday]."

His company was operating guided tours on the ice throughout yesterday, but none near the glacier face when the accident occurred.

DoC procedures

DoC area manager Jo Macpherson said a lot of people were in the valley yesterday, and it was a member of the public who raised the alarm about the ice collapse.

Conservation Minister Tim Groser said it was a "tragedy of almost unimaginable proportions (for the parents) to lose both sons in one tragedy".

Mr Groser was at Fox Glacier but was staying out of the way of the operational staff conducting the search.

"There are extensive safety procedures in place, these are reviewed annually, there's also been independent assessment of these procedures.

"We're dealing with a situation that is a highly dangerous and dynamic natural environment involving rock, ice and rivers."

The procedures were last reviewed in August last year.

He said the facts of the latest incident would be reviewed by the Department of Conservation (DOC), police and probably the coroner.

There will always be risk, but also "some responsibility on the part of these individuals who go into these areas".

Tourist injured in 2007

The last glacier incident involving injury to a tourist occurred in February 2007, when a man standing beside an ice cave at the face of the Franz Josef Glacier, also on the West Coast, was struck by falling debris when the roof collapsed.

DoC said that year that almost one third of the 600,000 visitors to the West Coast glaciers ignored warning signs and entered danger zones.

In October 2000, a 30-year-old Thai tourist was severely injured when she crossed a safety barrier and was crushed by an icefall.

Asked yesterday if people were continuing to flout the rules, Mr Jewell said: "Unfortunately, yes.

"People don't seem to realise the risk they are putting themselves in.

"They are inexperienced people and they are on holiday and maybe their guard is down. They just don't understand the potential for something to happen. A lot of people just like to touch the ice, which is a pretty crazy thing to do."

Sunday, April 17, 2011

Sunday scans: Science Centre Singapore



http://sundayscans.blogspot.com/

Al http://alsphotographyblog.blogspot.com/.


The Science Centre in Singapore was a favourite place when my kids were young. The admission was cheap, and there were plenty of hands on activites. The place was cooled by the air con. Sometimes I went outside to their garden.

This shell of a helicopter was a hit with the kids, especially with boys.