Sunday, August 24, 2014

Singapore then Canada

OK, so I'm very late with my final Singapore posting.  What can I say, I've been busy!  So my five weeks in Singapore was very good.  I managed to collect sufficient data from my observations at the various captive and non-captive wildlife tourism settings which of course was my reason for being in Singapore.
I ended up catching a nasty cold virus the second last week I was there which really knocked me around well and good...I don't think it was the flu, just one of those nasty viruses that give you sore throat, runny/blocked nose, horrible productive cough and saps all your energy.  By the end of the five days my bed and my room and I came to the end of our reasonably friendly relationship...well I suspect that the bed and bedroom didn't have any position on me, but I did of them.  The sheet and doona cover must have had a high polyester component because they just didn't feel soft against my skin...I had been able to tolerate this while not sick but the sickness accentuated my discomfort and so my last week or so on the bed was awful.  The pillows were way too thick as well...but otherwise I'm not complaining, of course.
Once I began to have an appetite again it took me several days before I could stomach anything remotely spicy - which made things rather difficult to find a reasonable meal around where I lived, but I managed.
Some highlights of my stay were camping on Pulau Ubin, a small island off the coast of Sinagpore where my mate Kumzy and I hired mountain bikes and cycled around and across the island....though being hauled out of our tent under torchlight by three police men at around 9.30 at night to check our ID was a little disconcerting - particularly as I had no ID.  But they seemed happy with me writing my Australia address on a piece of paper, so the incident didn't end in tears - or an overnighter in a gaol cell. What else? I visited a frog farm; I visited the (Barely) Live Tortoise and Turtle Museum - this was not a highlight - indeed a lowlight. At least a thousand tortoises and turtles most of which were not kept anywhere near at a standard that they should have been kept.  Very sad indeed.  And the place had something close to 40 pig nosed turtles which is incredible! I suspect there would be nowhere else in the world which has that many individuals of that species (they occur in NT and in southern New Guinea - which is how these would have ended up in Sinagpore....smuggles out of New Guinea.  Apparently hatchlings were a popular aquarium pet in Singapore in the 60s and 70s and so these guys represent the animals that managed to survive and grow into adults...and of course way too big to house properly in an aquarium I  someone's flat....although having said that, each of these was confined to a three foot aquarium with about 4-6 inches of water depth....each turtle however was about 30-40cm long.
But easily the professional highlight was giving a talk at the Zoo to Zoo, Night Safari and River Safari staff about the findings of my research.  An hour talk stretched into 90 minutes and at the end of the talk several senior staff (including the head of 'zoology') wanted me to repeat the talk to the senior executive.  There was some talk of me coming back later in the year to do this.  Then the education staff who missed my talk invited me to meet with them on my last day at the zoo and again we met for about 75 minutes. It was a lovely feeling to see how there was such a practical application of my research to zoo educative practice.  So I was happy with that.
My last two days I spent in the city - doing some last minute research - like dangling my feet into a fish spa and having so-called 'Dr Fish' scrape off my dead skin cells - and also visiting a frog farm. I also visited the Kranji War Cemetary at the very extreme north of the island to locate the name of my great uncle who had died during WW1 on the wall of fallen soldiers.  My cousin Jackie had asked me to do this and I am so very glad she did.
So after five weeks and observing almost 10 000 visitors at the various wildlife parks, I packed my bag for the last time and caught a taxi to the airport to head off to Canada.

2 comments:

David Once of Newcastle said...

You certainly packed in some experiences in Singapore, Kevin. Very good that your talk to the Zoo folk went down so well - your students should appreciate you just as much! That place you've been staying at in Canada reminds me of The Shining!

Mutterings from Maryville said...

lol yes it is rather Shining like! I'm glad you still read the blog, Reader!