Archive for March, 2009

 

Bumboats – 10. March, 2009

Bumboat

They say the must thing to do before you die is to take a Star Ferry ride in Hong Kong. I would also recommend Ubin bumboats to the list. These wooden boats are made to last a lifetime. The craftsmen making them are no more and good timbers are increasing hard to find. Ask any foreign tourist, he will tell you the experience is different compared to going in a fibreglass or steel hull boat. You know you are going for an adventure. The bumboats define Ubin for what it is for many of us. A rustic getaway where our cares and work stress are cast away.

wooden hull bumboat

The term possibly derives from the Dutch boomboat, a broad-beamed fishing boat, it first appears in England in 1685 under which scavenging boats attending ships in the Thames were employed to remove ‘filth’ from ships, and also to carry vegetables for sale on board (further links).

No bumboats are built alike. I would stand at the stern feeling the fresh air and getting great angles for snapshots. The paints are all weather worn making them ideal subjects.

Unlike bumboats seen at Singapore river, no decorative ‘eyes’ are painted on their bows.
Bumboat with painted eyes

jetskiBumboat Ride

Still there are folks who write to the press and complain about them being ‘accidents’ waiting for happen. What isn’t then? Your fancy new car is also a deadly projectile. Boats do sink but these bumboats aren’t exactly submarines. With human factor, even modern boats like Ms Estonia took down 852 lives. They clamor for ‘modern’ ferry service like the one that stopped plying to Sentosa. Who wants to wait for hourly scheduled service needed to fill up such unwieldy boats. Those familiar with Kusu islands remember the snaking queues waiting for ferries.

After ferrying thousands and thousands of passengers, these MPA annually certified boats have no mishaps for the last 10 years. Maintain water vigilance, if need be leave your babies and toddlers with your in-laws and come to Ubin to recapture your childhood as adults. Ubin cannot be redeveloped for everyone without destroying its character which many people find so charming. It cannot be remade like another sterile chinatown or non-starters like Tang village or Haw Par amusement park. Nor does it need expensive life support like Sentosa island. In Ubin, school kids get genuine chance to enjoy outdoors fun and camping in an island with a safe home shore without burning a large hole in their parents’ pockets.

Picture below. Ex-member of parliament Ho Kah Leong painting Ubin fast disappearing scenes (year 2000)..

Ho Kah Leong

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Malay Cemetery – 9. March, 2009

In the not so distant past Pulau Ubin is inhabited with more than 1,000 residents, many of who were Boyanese (or Baweanese) from Indonesia. Chek Jawa were so named because of their Javanese origins. It is common to have family grave plots although there are larger Chinese and Muslim cemetery plots in Ubin. Thankfully, the authorities are leaving them untouched to keep the island’s historical roots intact.

Family grave of an adult and children buried together at Chek Jawa.
family graveplot

There is another less traveled cycling trail on the way to Chek Jawa which leads to the only mosque in Pulau Ubin. Unfortunately it is demolished along with other houses nearby.

Old Ubin mosque (photo taken in 1999)
Old Ubin mosque

What is left now is a cemetery plot. Its hidden in the upper slopes and the only clue to its presence is a trail seemingly going nowhere.

The location is shown here
GoogleEarth
GoogleMaps

The cemetery is probably of interest to local paranormal interest groups fascinated by such stuff. It has been around since 1950s from the inscription below
Its a serene place and well worth exploring.

Inscription

There are several well preserved wells. The water is sweet, which is what mariners refers to water from natural sources, or what others refer as still spring water. Try a sip.

Click here for a panorama view. (Warning – large file download)
(more…)

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