Posts Tagged ‘ghosts and spirits’

 

Ghost Month in Ubin

Chinese street opera
Teochew street opera troupe from Bangkok performance on 14 Aug 2011. The troupe regularly performed at Ubin during 7th Month Festivals.

Chinese people consider 7th lunar month (July 31 to Aug 28, 2011) as time where hell gates are open for hungry ghosts to roam the earth. Since there are many hits this month for Ubin ghost stories and where in Pulau Ubin they are most prevalent, I might as well share mine.

The ghost most commonly heard is usually the lady in white at Noordin beach. It is likely people are repeating urban legends heard since they were kids. For Ubin villagers it is often the ghost that cause them to walk in circles. Heard this when I was a kid too, the ghost will feed lost children with delicious food like chicken thighs but are actually grasshopper legs. The usual remedy is to pull down your pants and waving it over your head as doing so will remove the spell cast by the ghost.

Asian children may be preoccupied with ghosts, but for western kids, its fairy tales with themes of being eaten like Big Red Riding Hood and Hansel and Gretel. Stories which psychoanalysts believe is a way young children cope and confront their own problems and inner conflicts.

In our case, the strange encounter happened while we are picking durians on 9 July 2011. Earlier we caught a distinctive scent of freshly dropped durian a metre or two away near an abandoned house but were puzzled as we just couldn’t find that elusive durian despite repeat searches. For a moment we thought a ghost has us tricked. Later as we doze in our camp nearby, we woke up to find ourselves in pitch darkness despite having our candles lighted. Pulau Ubin is never completely dark at night, even on moonless nights you can still discern the sky and dim outlines of tree shadows and path ahead. For a moment I thought I have gone totally blind until my vision was completely restored a minute later to my relief. Didn’t know we have the same experience until my friend asked if there was a blackout last night.

Although there are no full moon eclipse that night, there is probably some scientific reason for this. For now I am filing it as ghost encounter where we were placed under its spell.

Chinese people believe its bad luck to encounter ghosts. Its must be very bad luck for me indeed. A few days later I met with a traffic accident which landed me in hospital for nearly a week with broken ribs but fortunately no permanent injury.

Jangan Shortfilm is a local Indie production about a group of paranormal enthusiasts who went for a night trip of exploring a haunted place. Their filming on location near our camp at Pulau Ubin makes an interesting night for us. Filming was completed on the eve of Ghost month and their first installment is on Youtube. Congratulations to DslrIndieFilm and its enthusiastic film crew.

Jangan ShortFilm

Here is one my sister told me. She still remembered all the story details despite watching the movie more than 40 years ago.

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Durian season

Durian season 2010
The durians in Ubin are dropping at its peak. It will be all over in a week or so. We camped overnight determined not to miss out. The durian trees nearby are known to have the best tasting durians.

Unlike commercially harvested durians, Ubin durians are harvested from the jungle floor as the ripe ones drop, sometimes from a great height, its spiky skin strong enough to absorb any hard landing.

We can only hear muffled thuds so its not easy to locate durians by sound. The first step is shine our flashlights at the tree to check where the durians are hanging in numbers, this will give us an idea where to look as they roll hidden in the bushes. Still, they are easy to miss, you need a keen nose to catch a slightest whiff, so we would not consume any durians until the hunt is over in order to preserve maximum sense of smell.

Durian night hunt

Picture of durian tree. Click to zoom in.
Tree full of durians

Suddenly a durian dove straight towards us. There is no time to react, it shatters right between us with a loud thump. The durian exploded inches from my feet, bounced and spikes into my friend’s calf, drawing blood. We have been lucky, it could have smash our faces as we looked up. The durian was already rotting. Durians get watery and some rot on the branches from too much rains.

The durian that nearly hit us.
durian

The rains also brought in mosquitoes in huge numbers, we covered ourselves with expensive spray repellents and planted no less than 10 mosquito coils around our camp area, having run out of egg cartons to burn.

Although the harvest is plentiful, we were contented with 7 durians. Other diligent groups got more. There are small shelters built under the trees, keeping the occupants dry and safe from falling durians. Others use electric bikes, criss-crossing the island revisiting each durian grove.
Updated: 10 July 2010

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Took leave. Camped overnight for the past 2 weekends. We heard that Ubin durians are beginning to fall and were excited. Unfortunately we were too early. There were unriped durians on the grounds with teeth marks. Like us humans, monkeys are also excited and plucked the durians too early before they ripen. We sheepishly accepted durians from Mr. Lim, a Ubin villager staying at Marman “Orchid farm”.

We were again unsuccessful on the second week. There were durians pickers camped under the trees. One sat motionless for hours, coming into life on sounds of durians dropping. They would race towards the spot where they heard the durians drop. These people must have heard tales of thousands of dollars earned picking free durians. There is a family of 10 brothers earning $10,000 picking free durians or $1,000 for each brother. Small sums for many but there are lots of poor folks in Singapore.

We only managed to get one before they came running over. During to the rainy season and the cooler weather this year, the durians were watery and bland, quickly fermenting within space of several hours, unlike the previous seasons where they tasted a lot better.

It looks like we have to go to remote parts of Ubin for our durian hunt.
Updated: July 01, 2010.
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Durian seasons come to Ubin twice a year. The major one lasts a few weeks and no one knows the exact dates. The first sign is the abundance of durian flowers, indicating the season is about to due in a few months.
Some durians will fall earlier but these are usually premature durians. Fully ripened durians will fall a few weeks later and lasting for about 6 weeks. Other tropical fruits also ripen at the same time including rambutans, mangosteens, dukus and langsat.

Ubin durians are a treat. In the midst of the hot season, the durians are expected to be more fragrant too They are your organic varieties having been left abandoned by islanders who resettled a long time ago. Being older varieties without the benefits of modern cultivating techniques, Ubin durians are tough to open with flavors that vary from tree to tree. Use gloves and a “durian knife” to pry open.

During durian season, entire families would converge heedless of snakes that may hide in the bushes. Ubin villagers usually wear “phua chu kang” boots to protect themselves while gathering durians. Some even use umbrellas to protect themselves from falling durians.

Q. Why durians drop at night
Durians drop during the day too, although more at night. From the same tree, its durians will drop over several weeks, but sometimes they hang tantalizingly for weeks and are suddenly gone in a week or so. Once ripen, the frequency seems to in favor when temperatures dip or rise quickly when night come or when dawn breaks. Strong gusts of wind will also bring about unexpected bonus. Which is why picking durians is a waiting but rewarding game.

As durians usually drop at night, there are brave ones who stake out at cemeteries waiting for the loud thuds of durians falling. You need a trained eye plus a strong flashlight to find them as they roll into shrubs and bushes.

Update: 19 June 2010.
Durians are beginning to fall and we were excited for a night of adventure and durian hunting. Have bought a couple of new flashlights to try out including my favorite lights. They include:

Zebralights H60 Headlamp 18650 Flood.
HDS CR123a Ra Clicky ExecutiveTM Flashlight (General purpose)
Quark CR123x² Turbo (For throw)

I am bringing LED lights for its weight, excellent run-times, super brightness, and good color rendition. Qualities that are essential for durian searching.


If you intend to find some. Just follow your nose and look for them on the forest floor. Sometimes you hear a lucky thump of durians which has just fallen. Make sure you rent a bicycle with basket, like this lucky couple did. You also need repellents to deter mosquitoes from feasting on you.

Durians on bicycle basket

Don’t congratulate yourselves too soon if you find durians on the floor. They are probably bad if they are discolored and smell a bit off, Those with bites marks are from frustrated monkeys who cannot get through the though shell.

Unseen, the wild boars are waiting too. During the night, they would push the durians against the forest floor with their tough snouts until the durians split open like flower petals. By morning only empty husks remained. Many ‘ghosts encounters’ were results of mistaking these pigs or islanders trying to scare people away from collecting durians.

Although durian gathering can be fun, there are ‘geylang types’ from mainland Singapore who act as if the trees are theirs. They would intimidate others including Ubin villagers who come near, loudly proclaiming their ‘ownership’. Its not true of course.
First post
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Durians

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Ghost Month

August happens to be 7th month in Chinese Lunar Calendar. It is believed that hell gates opened up and hungry ghosts are everywhere. Visitor levels to Pulau Ubin would drop during this period as people prefer safety by staying indoors. For us, August is as good time as any to tour Ubin by night.

Ubin’s hell guards (黑白无常). Their job is to catch ghosts and send them back to hell. Link warning. Scary pictures.

Hell Guards

We hoped to make a spirit themed walk to Bukit Puaka area, a place considered by Ubin islanders as being haunted. Residents tell stories of being lost even in broad daylight in places they were familiar since childhood.

Despite being skeptics, we are hoping to be caught up in the same paranormal phenomenon. But this time with high tech tools to help us. My GPS is logging the location of every step we made. Its recording will show if we have been walking in circles or taken to Mars by alien probes.

We are also armed with the latest flashlights. This time with RA clicky high CRI LED lights fitted with longer lasting 17670 batteries. The lights also enable us to take better colored photographs. I also brought a Thrunite 300 lumen P60 style XP-G R5 3 mode drop-in. This drop in allows me to use Surefire 6P heads with forward clicky, fitted on Solarforce 18650 tube. They would be our high tech amulets against ghosts.

The walk was leisurely while taking nature photographs along the way.

Located 100 meters away from Malay Kampong, this bamboo clump was inhabited with interesting creatures including including a scorpion, slugs and insects that crowd and move together.

scorpion

slug

crowding insects

Spooky stories about banana trees have been passed from kids to another for generations. When I was little, I was told that the the banana flower is where the banana ghost hides during the day. If you tie it with string the ghost will grant you any wishes to free herself.

Banana flower

The village provision shop was still open late into the night. We soon found ourselves engaging in swapping ghosts stories. The one told about Noordin famous white ghost with a baby on her arms is most frightening. Another is sightings of a blue colored giant mountain spirit walking the hills of Bukit Puaka. And that was way before the movie Avatar came out.

ben-stiller-navi-oscar-2010

Time passed, we decided to postpone our ghost trail after allowing ourselves to be spooked, discretion being the better part of valor.

We went to Ubin jetty. Fish were biting and this angler landed a snapper.

snapper

On the way back we heard mewling high up the trees. It turns out to be a rarely seen spotted wood-owl. It’s a juvenile bird calling for its parent. Adult wood owls emits a loud and eerie frightening sound which is commonly heard at Malay kampong area.

spotty wood owl

Pictures above are all taken illuminated with RA high CRI clicky flashlights by photographer Andy Ho using a high iso Nikon D3s camera.

Have you personally seen or felt the presence of a ghost before?

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Ghosts and spirits

Ubin islanders have ghost stories to tell. They tell stories how they got themselves lost at places they have been many times before. There is supposedly a ghost who cause people to walk in circles for hours.

Campers at Noordin Beach claimed to have seen a screaming banshee dressed in white. Sounds very much like white herons flapping about at night. But then again one spirit medium says it was an unavenged ghost.

I haven’t met any ghosts or spirits yet. Perhaps they have accepted me in their midst and decided not to frighten me. On the other hand the vibes are so strong that I don’t think I would dare ever camp or explore alone in the dark. Carrying several flashlights is reassuring. You know its time to run when all flashlights fail at the same time.

The closest encounter I experienced was at Bukit Puaka area when my friend did not respond to us when we are just metres away in broad daylight. A minute later we were puzzled when he asked us how we ‘came here’. The lost sensation he felt was so eerie that he swore he met a ghost and will never go back there again. The puzzling event is even more mysterious when it was collaborated by another Ubin villager who related the same experience.

Once during a durian hunt at Kekek quarry near Thai temple, a friend of mine found himself covered with fetid odors that he is convinced that the entrails holding Pontianak might be following him. He made prayers for protection, rang temple bell in the middle of the night and slept clutching a large knife.

The stories should not stop one from exploring Ubin. Like wildlife, the spirits hide themselves when there visitors around. Its at the magic hour from 8pm to 10pm when ley lines opens up when one felt or see spirits in certain mysterious parts of Ubin.

A lady felled off her bicycle and died nearby. Happened in Mar 2011.
warning signs

This hut in Ubin used by the dreaded kempeitai police during the Japanese occupation. SPI mediums claimed they saw spirits cowering in fear. The islanders were sad to see it demolished by land office.

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