Friday, 30 January 2026

Day 27 Disembarkation, Park Nine Hotel, Suvarnabhumi (Bangkok), Thailand

A quick little update to let you know we did self-assist from the ship.  This is the choice one can choose if willing to carry your own luggage when you disembark.  We all managed very well using the wheels on our luggage and carrying everything on our own.  We like to choose this option, rather than packing up our bags and putting it out in the hallways by 8 pm the night before we disembark, to be collected and moved off the ship by staff.  If the ship moves your luggage for you, you have to exit the ship at specific assigned times depending on your flights. 

We felt like pros when we disembarked because we had pre-ordered a taxi (van) to be available for our group of four.  That comfortable 1.5 hour ride to the Park Nine Hotel, Suvarnabhumi cost $95 US (the same cost as it was to go to the airport).  The hotel is closely situated to the airport and offers a free shuttle service to the airport.  We have a shuttle booked to take us from the hotel to the airport at 4 am tomorrow morning (for our 8 am flight).

 

As we arrived at the hotel about 10 am and our rooms were not ready, they kindly checked us in, stored our bags and offered us access to the beautiful pool until check-in time at 2 PM  The three women walked across the street to Robinson’s department store in the mall and had lots of fun shopping.  We discovered a Food Hall upstairs where they served ‘street’ food in a very sanitized way, for extremely affordable prices.  I ordered a seafood Sukiyaki soup for 65 Baht ($3 CAD), pictured below, and I ordered a delicious chocolate waffle (that was warm!) for 40 cents! 

 



We walked back to the hotel about 1 pm and our rooms were ready.  The girls changed and went for a swim and J came out of the pool after having relaxed there for 3 hours.

 




Jessica, J and I had a visit in our room and a game of Five Crowns while Lynn had a little nap.

If you ever need a hotel near the airport in Bangkok – choose the Park Nine Hotel, Suvarnabhumi.  It is amazing and costs about $135 CAD.

 

For supper we went to the restaurant on the premises called Eat Drink Love.  They prepared GF food for Jessica and we all thought our dishes were very tasty.

 


One last visit by the pool after dinner.

We said goodnight and goodbye to Jessica and Lynn as we will be flying out tomorrow, one day before they leave.

 

All being well, we will return home back to Canada after three flights.  Thanks for following along on this journey.  Writing the blog keeps me accountable to record what we did each day and when I read it in the future, it helps me recall exactly what we did in the cities we visited.  Farewell Asia!  Looking forward to seeing many of you back home!

Thursday, 29 January 2026

Day 26 Laem Chabang, Pattaya, Thailand

Today we have a full day the port of Laem Chabang, the port for Bangkok.  We will disembark the ship tomorrow as it marks the end of this cruise.   We know from experience the drive to Bangkok can take nearly three hours so we chose to visit Pattaya, a one hour drive from this port, instead.

We first tried to call a Grab taxi – once it appeared in the system as a Toyota Yaris – I knew that was way too small to fit three of us in the back seat, so I cancelled the Yaris.  We chose to take a bus shuttle directly from the port.  That round trip cost us $14 US each.  We caught the 8:40 am shuttle and had the choice of return times of noon, 2, 4 or 6 pm.  As we exited the pier area, it became apparent we would have to walk several kilometres to meet the Grab because they are not allowed in the secure area.  So thank heavens we cancelled it right away.  Other taxis were available to book for the whole day to take you to a bunch of sights – but that didn’t appeal to us today.

 

We got dropped off at Mike’s Shopping Mall and walked to see some sights.  We walked on “Walking Street” and felt we should have done more research because this seemed like a seedy section of town – just one block off the beach.  The women all said “Let’s get off this street!”  And so we did.  We found the Bali Hal Pier, where there was also a tourist information booth.

 

 

We caught a Grab taxi to the Pattaya Floating Market.  That was a destination that made me think of Venice.  A person pays 200 Baht entrance (about $10 CAD).  The entrance ticket they try to push on you is by boat – a row boat (800 Baht/person) or a motor boat (950 Baht/person), so we were glad to figure out walking was an option.  We shopped and ate a teeny tiny bit.  Jessica and I had Corn on the cob.  Lynn had a pad thai that she shared with J (both reported it to be bland).  Food was cooked on primitive kind of cooking centres on boats – so we were happy to limit our food consumption.

 


 


Note the colourful 'flowers' in the foreground.  They are made of pop bottles and painted - and found all throughout the Pattaya Floating Market.



We then took another Grab back to Mike’s Shopping mall – now 30 minutes away from where we were.  We walked through a clothing store with lots of options and good prices.  I didn’t bite.

 

Our shuttle bus back to the port was about 50 minutes.  J had bought a King mango that he cut on board and it was delicious!


We had our final supper.  Packing took up an hour or so in the evening.  Tomorrow we disembark.


We are in good health and I am ever so appreciative that we can travel to these destinations I have only ever read about.  I recognize we are very privileged to travel as we do, acutely aware of our good fortune and filled with gratitude to have been able to share these memory building moments with Lynn and Jessica.  :)



Wednesday, 28 January 2026

Day 25 Ko Samui, Thailand

Today we were on tender group 7 to leave the ship and go ashore at Nathon Pier in Ko Samui.  We had loose plans to catch an Asian Uber (called Grab) to a beach, have a beach day and seek out Thai massages.

 

We set our sights on Choeng Mon Beach.  The distance was about 25 km, but it takes about an hour to drive there.  We paid 750 Baht (About $35 CAD) each way.  Our driver Tu had a Honda CR-V with great, appreciated, air conditioning. Choeng Mon Beach is popular and has a number of resorts that have built access directly to the beach, but there is a public right of way to get there too.

 

J had visited this beach last time we visited Ko Samui (while I was at the Elephant Sanctuary) so he knew exactly where to go.

 

 

We chose a nice shady spot in front of Young Massage.  We got our lounge chairs for free because we all chose to have a one hour massage here.  Jessica and Lynn went first.  Lynn chose a deep massage, Jessica chose a foot massage (but they gave her a head and neck massage too!). One-hour massages cost 400 Baht (about $20 CAD).

 

J and I called my Mom and our youngest son by Facetime from the beach while we were watching our valuables.  Oh the marvels of technology around the world!  They got to see the beautiful blue water and white sand with palm trees.

 

We switched spots and J and I went for a massage – that proved just how tights and sore all my muscles are!  J chose a back and shoulders massage so his masseuse walked on his back – for about 20 minutes!

 

 

After our massage we went inside the Samui Honey Cottages Beach Resort washrooms and changed into clean dry clothes.  Jessica would consider staying at a resort like this for a few weeks long term in the winter season!

 


 

We called back our driver Tu to pick us up at 1:40 pm and he was there waiting for us with his lovely clean car, with air conditioning.  Locals remind us that this is winter – and cold in their opinions.  30 C is not cold too us!

 

J and Lynn had a lovely tender view returning to the ship.

 

We went for lunch, cleaned up with a shower then returned for supper at 5 PM.  We were pleased to be seated in Dan’s section tonight so we gave him a tip for all the wonderful service.  I also sought out Richelle and gave her a tip for being so kind to us for the these past two cruises.

 

Tonight is the WildCards Production show and worth seeing – so we wanted to be in the theatre by 6:40 pm to see the start of it.  Tonight the show didn’t start at 6:45 pm, but at 6:52 pm – still before the scheduled 7 pm.  It is the best entertainment that the NCL Sun has to offer so we enjoyed the high energy singing and dancing.  One of the female singers was absent tonight, so I have to assume she was sick.  The lead female singer was doing double duty filling in for some of her colleagues songs.  

 

As with last cruise, at the completion of the show, they brought up a number of staff onto the stage representing each of the different departments.  The crowd clapped and cheered and gave lots of thanks.  We were pleased to see our room attendant Manju and her colleague who works in our fourth floor hall, AJ, both on stage.  We smiled at them, waved and then high fived with them as we left the theatre.  That was fun!

 

Tuesday, 27 January 2026

Day 24 Sihanoukville, Cambodia

Today’s excursion through the ship was to visit Ream National Park in Sihanoukville (See-HAN’-uk-vil), Cambodia.

We had our usual early start (6 am wakeup, 6:45 breakfast, 7:45 am meeting in the Stardust Theatre) and boarded our bus to our destination about 8:30 am.  Our guide, Ray, spoke excellent English and shared all kinds of information about Cambodia.  I took notes on my phone and ordinarily would double check the information (on Google or with English signs) before sharing on my blog, but sadly my Asia e-sim card doesn’t seem to work in Cambodia and I am down to 18 minutes of internet coverage with the ship.  So I will share unvetted information today!

 

Cambodia has the Riel for currency (which we could not purchase in advance in Canada).  I now know why – 80% of the currency exchanged in Cambodia is the US dollar. Only 20% of workers get paid in Riels.   $1 US is equivalent to 4,000 Riel. Cambodia has a population of 17 million people and 2 million of them work in the textile industry (the ladies were happy to support that textile industry at the end of the day by buying a selection of silk scarves!)

 

Sihanoukville was built in 1955.  That was the year the King decided to build a deep sea port (where we docked).  Because Cambodia is a developing country, you can buy land first and build on it later.

 

Our first stop was at the Statue of Love, built in 2022. The statue height was 21 m tall with another 6 m for the pedestal.

 

Our second stop was at the God Shiva Statue with his wife Parvati by his side

 

 

We then headed to Ream National Park, established in 1993, the year Cambodia got their independence back. 

 

We got to walk to the boat launch area through some beautiful beach scenery.

 




 

We boarded a little motor equipped with one captain and seated just the four of us!

 

 

We floated down the river amongst the mangroves for about 25 minutes.  J saw one kingfisher and one yellow bird.  No other wildlife was spotted!

 

We arrived at a shelter made of palm fronds, where we disembarked.  We then walked along a boardwalk for about 15 minutes where the bus picked us up.

 

On our drive back to the ship, we stopped at a Giant Tree, which was thought to be 2,000 years old.  It didn’t look as big as the Sitka Spruce on Vancouver Island – so we didn’t bother to pose for a picture with it!

 

Once back at the ship, we were delighted to see a couple of little stalls at the ship where they were selling souvenirs.  The silk scarves were attractive and well priced!

 

We played Five Crowns in the Spinnaker Lounge after dinner (Deck 12 Forward) and appreciated the “Jazz Meets Latin with Sun Showband” instrumental music being performed in the background.  After our two games, Jessica had a hankering for some ice cream so we went to the buffet on Deck 11.  In addition to ice cream, J and Lynn shared a crepe and they all shared some freshly carved roast lamb!  Pass!  No thanks.

 

It was a fun evening!  We learned that going to pick up tender tickets 20 minutes after they started distributing them, meant we collected tickets for tender number 7 in Ko Samui tomorrow!!

 

Just three more nights on the ship and our cruise will be done.  It has been lovely.

Monday, 26 January 2026

Day 23 At Sea

One of the challenges of preparing for four weeks at sea is being aware of what electrical plugs are available on your ship.  J dismissed my concerns about this and said – they always have 110 Volt plugs (typical North American plugs) on ships.  My spidey senses were working overtime when I chose to buy an international adaptor the night before we flew to Asia. I knew the adaptor would be helpful when we Taiwan and Thailand at the start and end of the trip where we would be staying in hotels.  What I didn’t appreciate was how essential the international travel adaptor would be on the ship.

 

On the Norwegian Sun we have one 110 volt plug at the desk in the room and two 220 volt plugs.  Beside the bed you can also find two USB – A plugs – now the old style of USB’s which most iPhones don’t use anymore.  Phones in the last few years have been moving to the smaller, universal USB-C plugs.  There is a convertible plug from 110 to 220 V in the bathroom for razors that we never use. For the record we are in an Oceanview room, but the same electrical plug configuration seems to be the same in the verandah staterooms.

 

This is the PlugBug 120 international adaptor made by twelve south and purchased at my local Apple store – it has four USB-C ports.  Three are constantly in use (one for my computer, one for my anker charger that chargers my phone and my watch overnight and one for my recently purchased power bank).  J uses the one North American plug for his phone charger.  If I hadn’t purchased the adaptor – charging electronic devices would have been much more stressful.  I could have brought my very inexpensive extension cord that could have saved grief too!

 

The Norwegian Sun is an older ship that is slated to be sold off in 2027.  I don’t recall the same limitations for electrical plugs on the Norwegian Prima when we sailed it in 2023.  So if you are going on a cruise in the future, you might want to try to investigate what kinds of plug ins exist on the ship on which you are sailing, so that you are prepared!

 

On this hot day at sea, J, Jessica and I all went for a walk around the ship on Deck 6 for fresh air and exercise.  We followed it up with trivia in the Bliss Lounge at 9:15 am.  J was too modest to say we deserved the win with only 17 answers, because we had seen the questions on the last cruise, but on the last cruise we only got 9 correct!  The next best team got 16 questions correct!

 

The bridge players had a game in the library at 10 am.  I went up on deck 11 to enjoy the warmth and drink a hot chocolate.  Many others were using all the pool deck chairs today – and deck chair saving was in full force!

 

Then I had a lovely face/audio call with our oldest son JG and showed him the Thai silk shirt we bought for him.  It will coordinate perfectly with an outfit he has planned for a wedding in March!  Mother’s intuition!

 

After lunch we went to the room and we both promptly had a nap – and then J struggled with getting our Thailand Digital Arrival card updated.  It has been a challenge – because you need to identify all the countries you visited in the past 14 days (and that has been a lot for us).  You have to know abbreviations for all the countries (that are not necessarily intuitive) – and the drop-down menus on the website were not working – so the process took him a patient hour to complete Thai Arrival cards for both of us.

 

The four of us played Five Crowns in the library at 4 pm.  We then had our second specialty restaurant meal of this cruise at Los Lobos, the Mexican restaurant.  Jessica got GF corn tortillas, which she was craving yesterday. I loved the guacamole, made tableside.  J’s favourite part was probably the decaf coffee he ordered at the end which turned out to have tequila and kahlua in it!  Best coffee of the cruise!  I am not sure what Lynn liked best – but we were all glad to eat here!


Lynn retired to their room while J, Jessica and I had one more quick game of Five Crowns.

 

Tomorrow we have our one and only stop in Cambodia – so we headed back to the room to make sure we were organized for the early morning once again.

Sunday, 25 January 2026

Day 22 Cam Ranh, Vietnam

We awoke at 6:15 am to find we were pulling into port and the Holland America Westerdam was already docked in Cam Ranh, Vietnam.  Usually, the Norwegian Sun is the only ship in port so seeing a HAL ship was a surprise. 

 

Cam Ranh was a deep port and as such acted as a military operations base during the Vietnam war.  As we disembarked from the ship around 7:30 am, we hopped on a bus that drove us for about 30 minutes through a military operations zone to Cara World – a resort on the beach.  The area has a stretch of 5 or 6 km that is beautiful white sand beach.

 

Here we disembarked the ship shuttle bus and quickly found a taxi driver to take us to Nha Trang, another 45 minute drive to see some sights we had researched.  Ping was our driver and we believe he understood some English, but he had to use google translate to ensure he communicated critical information to us.

 

 

We drove into the city and experienced the chaos of being surrounded by motorcycles and few law-abiding drivers.  Our first stop was Long Son Pagoda, founded in the late-19th century.  J, Lynn and I climbed the 152 stone steps leading to the giant white Buddha seated on a lotus blossom.  We were rewarded with bright blue skies when we reached the top!

 


 

After that, we made a stop at Ponargar Cham Tower.  This tower complex called ‘Thap Ba’ was built between the 8th and 13th Century.  Currently 4 temples and 10 pillars of a mandapa (pillared meditation hall) remain.  What is interesting about the Cham people is that property is passed down through women, not men!

 

We then tried unsuccessfully to stop at what we think was a church – but we weren’t allowed inside because a service was going on (it was a Sunday morning).  Our driver, Ping, asked us if we wanted to eat rick or seafood – and we said yes seafood.

 

He dropped us off at Hai San Bo Ke, Xom Con 79, a very interesting seafood restaurant.  We picked out our seafood (8 shrimp and 2 crabs) and they took it away and prepared it!

 


The shrimp we chose to eat.



The shrimp fully cooked and presented at our table!

 

The tables we sat at were comically small, like for a kindergarten class!  The food was delicious.

 

After that, our driver took us to Dam market – where clearly busloads from our ship were being dropped off. Lynn bought a beautiful bamboo dress that she wore at supper tonight.  I bought a few little things, and Jessica bought toothpaste!

 

After our shopping, Ping took us back to the shuttle bus – another 45 minute drive back.  When we returned to where the ship’s shuttles were, we paid our driver, with a combination of Vietnam Dong and US dollars.  It worked out to about $45 CAD apiece for the custom taxi cab today.  We added in a tip and felt that was an excellent value.  We would have paid about $89 apiece US for something similar (without the lunch stop) and been on a huge bus to do something similar through the ship.

 

We were able to walk a few hundred metres to go to the beautiful white sand beach.  J had bought some local fruit – rabutan and a mangosteen – that we ate on the beach and were delicious!  J walked in the water – where the surf was strong.  We were all surprised to see the beautiful white sand beach was littered with plastic garbage.

 

 

We then caught a shuttle back to the ship and again enjoyed the stellar views.

 

Once cleaned up back at the ship, we all met for a sailaway view on Deck 12 up front in the Spinnaker Lounge to see the beautiful views as we pulled away from the dock.

 

Lunch in the Four Seasons dining room was its usual stellar affair.  I will be ready for bed as soon as this post is done!  A great day in Vietnam!

Saturday, 24 January 2026

Day 21 At Sea, Not Ho Chi Min :(

Not much to report on this unplanned day at sea.  We had wonderful service in the dining rooms for all three meals.  Lynn and Jessica again reiterated how happy they were to be served in the dining room, rather than joining the congested areas of the buffet to eat our meals.

J and I played trivia and were only 3 questions off winning (which isn’t saying much because the winners got 10 out of 20 right!)  The bridge players then played bridge this morning.  I watched a formula one movie with Brad Pitt – and I unpacked my overnight bag which had been packed for our original plan to stay at a hotel in Ho Chi Min.

 

We had a lovely table in the Seven Seas for lunch – a four person table right by the window with our favourite serving team Sarah and husband Dan – so I used the QR code available at each table to praise them to the cruise line.  So hopefully the right people see the review.

 


 

It was another rough day at sea as they had sea sickness bags available at all the stairwells.  Lynn keeps taking medication for sea sickness and it is working so that is a win!

 



And the pool was netted off.  It had been cloudy in the morning but the sun did break through in the afternoon and the pool got a little busier.

 

I am down to one stem of flowers in my pringles chip containers turned vase.  Those flowers purchased in Taipei 3 weeks ago have served us well.

 

After dinner, we played a game of Five Crowns in the library.  There was a table full of Portuguese teens that were playing Monopoly in the room too.  There was so much delightful laughter in the room that Lynn had to turn down her hearing aids!  Those kids were fun to be around!

 


We have our modified plan to visit our new port in Vietnam tomorrow morning.  Sorry Kate that we didn’t get to come see you in your amazing city today and tomorrow!

Friday, 23 January 2026

Day 20 At Sea


Today was a welcome sea day where we could do exactly as we pleased.
  Jessica, J and I all played a game of trivia.  Together we scored a respectable 15 (but the leader was being generous in allowing 4 points for one question!)  After that, the bridge players met with their fourth in the library for a few hands of bridge for two hours. 

 

I tried to walk the deck – but deck 6 was closed due to high winds and deck 12 had portions closed off.  For safety the staff didn’t put out deck chairs on the upper level.  Instead, people just laid on towels directly on deck 12.  You can see from the picture below, deck 11 is much more sheltered, so there were chairs being used all around the pool.

 


One of the good things about NCL is that they control the distribution of their pool towels (you provide your room number when you sign out a towel or return it) so people don’t use them to save extra pool loungers.  And usually, you can find a pool lounger anytime you want!

 

I went to talk to Guest Services to advise them that we would be staying in a hotel on the night we were in port near Ho Chi Min.  That is our plan for tomorrow as it is an overnight port.  More on that later.

 

Lunch in the dining room pleased Jessica especially, because she was able to have a GF cheeseburger!

 

After lunch the bridge players had another game and I went back to the room and fell asleep watching tennis!  It is surprising that I fell asleep, and equally surprising that we get coverage of the Australian Open!  Sport 24 is offered as one of the satellite channels on the ship so a person can watch games quite clearly. (Most of the five TV channels get poor reception).

 

I then sorted out clothes to go to the laundry to get me through till the end of the trip.  I also packed a carryon bag to overnight in the city of Ho Chi Min and to go on a cycle tour the next morning.  We plan to meet J and Jessica’s niece in Ho Chi Min for dinner and stay at a hotel with a rooftop pool!  The following morning we have a cycle tour booked to see the city, then return back to the ship by the all aboard call.

 

The four of us ate dinner at Cagney’s, the Specialty steak house on the ship.  It was delicious.  I chose the small filet mignon, while the others all had the prime rib.  My meal was delicious – the best I have had on the ship.  And Cagney’s steak house was the busiest specialty dining room we have seen on the ship.

 

The Captain came on for an announcement during supper – which is highly unusual.  I knew to listen carefully.  And the Captain delivered what we considered to be disappointing news.  The Norwegian Sun will not be docking in Phu My port (near Ho Chi Min) tomorrow as planned.  They couldn’t secure a berth to dock the ship due to all the shipping traffic.  So our two day plans for Ho Chi Min just evaporated.  We will instead be going to the port of Cam Ranh, Vietnam.


I logged into my ship’s wifi to try to see where Cam Ranh was located and what a visitor could do there.  It appears to be about a five hour drive northeast of Ho Chi Min.  It is supposed to offer 5 km of beaches.

 

The General Manager said he would be in the Atrium to answer questions so Jessica and I went to the Atrium on deck 5 with our questions.  I didn’t expect Norwegian to cover the cost of our hotel and bike trip we had booked – as they were independent of the ship (and the GM confirmed they won’t cover that).  I did hope they would offer more minutes of wifi because Jessica had to reach out to the hotel (difficult when you cannot phone), our niece and the bike tour company to cancel everything we had booked in Ho Chi Min.  We expect we will lose about $660 for the two hotel rooms and $270 for the bike tour which have all been paid by Jessica.  Maybe somebody from those companies will acknowledge that the cancellation was beyond our control and reimburse us, but I won’t hold my breath.  That is one of the risks when you book excursions outside of the cruise line.

 

Jessica asked the GM how far the port was from the city – and he said he didn’t know – they have never docked there.  She also asked if the excursion desk is going to offer excursions – and he said nothing has been arranged yet because it is now evening hours and none of the companies are open.

 

So kudos to the officers for making themselves available to answer questions, but I feel even less satisfied with the answers than I did after my google search about Cam Ranh, Vietnam.

 

We then all went to Jessica and Lynn’s room to investigate our options and cancel everything.  We came up with the decision that we will see what the ship offers for excursions when they open tomorrow (Cam Ranh will be a single day stop the following day).  If nothing appeals to us, we will get off the ship and hire a taxi to take us to the local sites.

 

Tomorrow will now be a Day at Sea, rather than Day 1 of 2 in Ho Chi Min.  We are even more disappointed that we didn’t choose to go ashore when we were here on our last cruise (Day 9 Phu My, Vietnam of my blog) – because that visit was only one day – and we had planned to visit it for two days on this cruise.  Sigh.  We are still on vacation where somebody else cooks our wonderful meals and cleans our rooms, so there is much for which we can be thankful, but we may not get to see Ho Chi Min in our lifetime.

Thursday, 22 January 2026

Day 19 Port Klang (Kuala Lumpur), Malaysia

An early start for today’s tour had us meeting in the Stardust Theatre at 7 am.  We had paid for an excursion through the ship to Kuala Lumpur (referred to as KL).  The drive into the city took 1 hour and 45 minutes, during rush hour and the ride home took about 1 hour.

 

Our guide, Nicole, on the bus prepared us well.  She had maps for every two people onboard.  She had prewritten her phone number on it for emergencies in getting back to the bus by 1:45 pm.  She also had circled six different areas on the maps and described sites to see in each of those sections.  The Petronas Twin Towers is probably the highlight of KL that many people go see.

 

We took a more local approach having Jessica as a tour guide.  We were dropped off at Sungei Wang Plaza (known for knock off electronics).  Our guide had suggested traffic was very bad and perhaps not a good time to call for a grab taxi.  So we elected to walk to the MRT – the underground train system.  We paid cash (1.60 Ringit or 50 cents CAD) for the MRT to travel two stops to the Central Market. 

 

 

We walked around to a few textile shops and bought a couple of things.

 

We then chose to call for a Grab taxi to get to the Butterfly Park.  Our Grab cost us 10 Ringit ($3.33 CAD) to travel about 10 minutes.  We then paid to enter the Butterfly Park, which was covered by netting to keep the butterflies contained.

 


 

We had planned to go to the Orchid Park but found it wasn’t across the street but one kilometre away, so we felt the time was too tight so we opted to call a Grab to get back to the zone where we could eat lunch at The Pavillion.  Another successful Grab trip – costing less than 14 Ringit (less than $5 CAD).  If you are travelling to Asia – you must get the Grab app (the Asian equivalent to Uber).  It is efficient and inexpensive!


The Pavillion has a large food court on the lower level.  We chose to eat at Madam Kwan’s because it had Laksa and Tea Tarek.  Jessica had to confirm it was gluten free for her and certain dishes were.  I ordered Curry Laksa and  tea tarek – that is kind of like an Asian chai latte, that was a real treat.  J ordered Char Kway Teow, one of the most epic noodle dishes in the world from the streets of Malaysia, which was a specialty of the restaurant.  We shared everything (including the chicken satay appetizer that Jessica bought).

 


We then went to a grocery store to buy Boh tea which is grown in the Cameron Highlands in Malaysia.  Then we walked past the Chinese New year decorations in the mall and in the street to get back to our meeting point! 



We got back with 7 minutes to spare – so of course we had to race inside the mall for a little last minute shopping!

 


One couple was really late for the bus – like 25 minutes – and they nearly pulled away without them.  They were close to having to get a taxi back to the port at a much higher price!

 

Tonight we will have dinner and enjoy the Motor City Moves production show.  Tomorrow we have a day at sea, which will be appreciated after four busy days in port!  What a wonderful opportunity to see Asia!

Wednesday, 21 January 2026

Day 18 Penang, Malaysia

Today we were able to rely on Jessica’s history having lived in Malaysia and previously visited Penang! We confidently walked off the ship and bypassed all the folks selling tours by taxi and went on a walking tour instead.  We used paper maps that were handed out for free at the pier – and when necessary, we pulled up google maps on our phones.

In 2021, George Town was designated a Unesco World Heritage Site for “Creating public spaces through the revitalisation of backlanes in the World Heritage City of George Town”.  One of the cool things we discovered was metal sculptures on walls of buildings all throughout the back lanes during our walk.

 

Sculpture 28:  Duck was in a narrow alley.  The sculpture marks an area where formerly poultry was sold.  

 

Our goal was to get to the Blue Mansion for our 11 AM English tour.  We arrived with 1 hour and 40 minutes to spare – so we ventured off to explore more.  

 

 

We bought 4 tiny bananas here as a fruit snack to tide us over till lunch.

 

We also found a shop that sold Indonesian clothing for really reasonable prices so I bought a cool ¾ sleeve cotton top for 39 Ringit ($13 CAD).  I would have bought elephant pants too (and looked like an elephant in them too!) but they didn’t make them big enough!!!

 

Our tour was officially held at the Cheong Fatt Tze Mansion (or The Blue Mansion) and told much of the history of the man who built the home. The Man Cheong Fatt Tze was also known as Zhang Bishi 1840-1916.  He has been called China’s Last mandarin and 1st Capitalist.  Referred to as ‘Rockefeller of the East’ by the New York Times, Cheong’s death was marked by flags being ordered to be flown at half mast by the British and the Dutch in the East.

 

When he died in 1916, the mansion was left to his 7th wife (said to be his favourite of 8!) and was to remain in the family’s hands until their youngest son, age 2 at the time, died.  The mansion came on the market in 1990.  The son’s wife couldn’t afford the upkeep of the home, so she rented it out as a rooming house.  It was in a severe state of dilapidation as it housed the Cheongs as well as 34 illegal squatter families. Conservation laws were non-existent, developers were hovering.  The current owners purchased the Mansion with the sole intention of conducting a Grad 1 restoration exercise of international best-practice standards.

 


 


An unexpected learning was to hear that one of the final scenes of Crazy Rich Asians was filmed in the main foyer of the Blue Mansion.  In case you have watched the movie, it is the scene where the main character plays Mahjong against her boyfriend’s unwelcoming mother and teaches her an emotional life lesson!

 

After the tour, we walked back to one of the Malaysian restaurants we had seen and ordered lunch.  It was a tasty lunch with many flavours of lemongrass and aromatic herbs like cilantro.  After lunch we started walking back the two km to the ship and it was dripping hot by that time.

 

 

I was glad we started back when we did – because I was overheating.  J took a picture of Jessica and I and described us as two ‘hot’ women – and not hot in a good way!  Ha ha!

 

Once back at the ship around 3 pm, we went straight upstairs for an ice cream!  A little clean up and down time in our rooms was welcome.

 

Jessica and Lynn had a specialty dinner tonight and we all met for a game of 5 Crowns in the library.  We have an early meeting time of 7 am tomorrow morning – so I best get this blog posted! 

Tuesday, 20 January 2026

Day 17 Langkawi, Malaysia

Today we had booked an excursion with the ship on a mangrove boat excursion at the Kilim Karst Geoforest Park.

We did the usual – gathered in the Stardust Theatre to meet with the rest of the group, then exited off the ship and moved to a waiting bus.  In today’s case, the bus was an 800 metre walk away.  But we had this beautiful view to look at as we were walking!

 

 

It was quite humid and about 30 C today, so air conditioning in the bus was appreciated.  After a 40 minute drive we arrived at our destination.  We divided into two boats that each held 18 people.  Our group of four made sure to stay together.

 

We first went a minute down the river to get to to the Kelawar Cave Geosite. The geosite is located within the Kilim Karst Geoforest Park in the east of Langkawi.  This cave is located in an isolated limestone hill in the mangroves.  The layer of this cave represents the ancient sea level about 5,000 years ago.

 

We saw plenty of sleeping bats (and a few awake ones flying) as well as stalagmites and stalactites.

 


We learned a tremendous amount of interesting information about mangroves.  Of course, mangroves grow in brackish water (a mix of salt and freshwater).  In 2004 when Indonesia had a devastating tsunami (that killed 150,000 people), Langkawi was the second hardest island hit.  Part of what saved Langkawi was the existence of the island of Sumatra.  Then on the island of Langkawi the 5 or 6 kilometres of mangroves along the shoreline, acted as a barrier taking the force of about 90% of the tsunami wave.

 



 

We then went on a boat ride at higher speeds where we went to an eagle nesting area.

 

We saw white bellied sea eagles that were impressive.  It was exciting to see Bromony Kites too.

 

 

We went out to the ocean entrance to the park and had this amazing opportunity for a selfie!

 

 

We stopped at a floating fish ‘farm’ which showed examples of various fish – including sea bass, red snapper, flounder and horseshoe crab.

 

It was an excellent day seeing the beautiful sights of Malaysia!

 

Once the boat tour was done we headed back to the bus for the drive back to port.  We did a little shopping before returning to the ship.

 

After lunch on the ship, the others played a game of bridge and I returned to the room to clean myself up and organize a few things.  Our delicious supper was followed by a game of Five Crowns!

 

Tomorrow we are in Penang, Malaysia – so breakfast at 7 am awaits!