Tuesday, February 11, 2020

Broke Free from the Marina - Kinda


 We've finally broken free from our home away from home in Puteri Habour Marina, Malaysia.

After returning from the US, we'd gotten pretty comfortable there. It's easy and cheap to get around with a Grab (Asian version of Uber/Lyft). This is the only marina we'e been in his entire trip that we actually used the air conditioner. It is pretty brutally hot here.

Got a few boat projects completed, The most important was getting the fridge working again. After a few false starts I managed to get a 13kg (30lb) canister of R134a refrigerant. That's enough to refill our refrigerator/freezer compressor about 19 times, but it was the only size I could find. Now she's humming along and bringing the cooling plate nicely down to 6*F.

We are a cruising boat, not a marina queen so it was definitely time to for us to start moving again. It is always difficult when you have to say good bye to old and new friends. We managed to hang out with Carrie and Owen and family, old sailor friends from Washington who are now living here, while we were here. Last time we saw them was in La Paz, Mexico in 2011. They teach at the Raffles American School here. And we also spent a lot of time and a few beers with Heather and Steve off the British boat Foo. No doubt we'll catch back up somewhere.


After passing under the Second Link bridge in the photo at the top we were back in the busy shipping lanes and ship anchorage off Singapore. Each of the green triangles above is a large ship. The ones with red lines pointing off them are traveling in the Malacca Strait shipping lanes. The ones with no line off them are at anchor, some waiting to load, some to unload and many just waiting for orders on where to go next.

After two days of motoring up the Malacca Straits with night stops at Pulau Pisar and Pulau Besar we arrived at Port Dickson and Admiral Marina. This is the part where we kinda broke free from the marina, as we are back in one now. We decided to stop here for awhile because it is within about an hour drive from the historic town of Malacca (or Melacca or Malaka or Melaka) and the capital city Kuala Lumpur.

We took a usd$25 Grab for the hour+ drive into the old part of Malacca. This is the area of old Dutch architecture and Chinese shops.
We hit a few museums and old family homes. This is the entry way to the baba and nyonya home. The downtown house for a wealthy plantation owner in the late 1800's. Interesting two story house to walk through although picture taking was allowed inside. The home is still used by the extended family multiple times a year to honor the family ancestors.

A blind kid making some marvelous music on a local string instrument.

The city is divided by the Malacca River with nice walks along its edge.

The rivers edge has nice tourist walks, but you do have to be a little careful who you step in front of.

Here is the view from the towns hilltop looking out over the Malacca Straits. This is the view that the local Malays would have seen as the Chinese, Portuguese, Dutch, British and Japanese invaded over the centuries. There's a good history museum that takes you through each of the occupations: Melaka History and Ethnography Museum.

Tomorrow we are off to stay in Kuala Lumpur, or as the locals call it KL, for a few days.

Paul

2 comments:

  1. good job on the refrigeration. We certainly remember the heat - so hard to get up the motivation to do strenuous projects. We enjoyed Malacca and KL, but were on day trips on a bus hired by the marina manager at Admiral Marina when we went through there with the Malaysian Rally. You are getting a more indepth tour. Enjoy!

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  2. Good to see Geogia underway again. It should get a little cooler further north. Safe sailing. Sadiqi

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