rascott.com - news, views, travel and an occasional blog
 

Welcome to rascott.com.

This is a personal site that reflects my interests in news, current affairs, aviation and travel.

email me at robert@rascott.com

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Information:
Met Office Volcano watch

World Time Clock
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Journalism:

Nationsonline.org
Project Syndicate
Amnesty International
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Daylife.com - news

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Regional Info:

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Travel:
Circle of Asia

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Smart Travel Asia
Finance:
FinanceAsia

Aviation:
Amadeus (airline schedules)
Airliners - aviation forum

Thailand Info
thailand.com
learningthai.com
sawadee.com

bangkok a-z
Back in the UK:

Newton Ferrers

Government:

The "new" White House

Photography
Denis Olivier - black and white

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Lin Ping live panda tv

EarthCam

The opinions expressed on these pages are entirely personal unless they are credited; you may not agree with all, or anything, that I write. So please use the feedback page to respond, comment or berate me.                                 

Georgetown, Penang October 2003

Its not Macdonalds!

Penang Road

Penang Road

Classy

Street life

Exotic dentistry

Multi cultural Penang

More classy accommodation

5 star - but an unusual name

No comment

3 cars for each condo - that explains the traffic jams !

A little of old Penang

For Queen Victoria's diamond jubilee

By the old docks

Street life

Temples for everyone

Outside the temple

Food stalls everywhere

I stayed here 19 years ago

My accommodation has improved

Exotic Georgetown. There probably is no more multicultural city in the whole of Asia. The largest city on Penang Island, Georgetown (pop. 251,000) is a blend of cultures. The diverse Chinese, Indian and Malay population will fit anyone's image of an exotic South Asian seaport. The town is best seen by foot, in part because taxis are so hard to find,  exploring all the interesting little streets, or by bicycle rickshaw. Diners can enjoy a wide selection of good food at the local restaurants -- everything from Malaysian satays to Chinese stir-fry.

The city's most famous landmark is the Eastern and Oriental Hotel (the "E&O"). Set on the waterfront, the recently restored E&O was built in 1855 by the Sarkie brothers of Raffles (Singapore) and Strand (Rangoon) fame. Take the funicular railway up Penang Hill for the excellent view (there's also a small cafe, hotel and Hindu temple on top). Visit some of the city's other sights in the British colonial part of town: St. George's Church, Ft. Cornwallis and the Clock Tower (built in honor of Queen Victoria's Diamond Jubilee). You can also drive or walk along the waterfront, Gurney Drive, to see the beautiful houses built in the 1800s. Stop in the modern Gurney Hotel or Gurney Plaza to cool down.

Since my last visit, which admittedly was 19 years ago, an airport has been built and a bridge to peninsular Malaysia. The bridge has changed the city beyond recognition. The population has probably tripled in the last 19 years; there are highways, traffic jams, high rise buildings, and substantial new towns across the island.

Yet Georgetown still feels like a small city. Sadly the old docks area is very run down.

Taxis are elusive ! Meters are rare; they are not that expensive; its just frustrating !