Saturday, 30 March 2019

Western Europe: Spring - March/April 2019

This is a down memory lane trip. No new country to add to the World Countdown unfortunately. If only the trip covers Liechtenstein or Luxembourg then I can add one or two more countries to the list. Alas, that is not so. Never mind. Good excuse to go visit Europe again in the future :P

My first trip to Western Europe covering all these countries was back in 2004. We went there during the early spring as well. Fifteen years ago! How time flies. If I'm not mistaken, that trip was the first time I touched snow. We did not experience snowing but there are some leftover snow on the ground and Mount Titlis was never without snow I think even tough the snow was more like ice. So hard! We had a great time taking photos with tulips as well but my first encounter with tulips was not in the Netherlands but in Beijing, China.

My mom always wanted to repeat this tour so this year seemed as good a time as any. This time round we followed Via Vacation. What I like about this tour company is they provided full board tour with halal meals. Not all our meals will be at hotels or restaurants and most of our dinners will be packed dinner but so long as they are hot delicious meals, I have no problem. Will write a review later after I'm back at home.

 

The tour price is RM7.2k per person inclusive of tipping but exclude travel insurance. We already have annual travel insurance so that is not an issue. But if you don't, the travel insurance will cost you an extra RM80 per person. This trip is 10 days 8 nights covering 6 countries. We will spend our nights at 3 star hotels in Paris, Antwerp, Amsterdam and Zurich. Hotels in London and Frankfurt will be 4 stars. Our tour group size is 33 inclusive of 1 tour leader from Via Vacation.

The itinerary is as follows:
30 March 2019  Kuala Lumpur - Muscat - London
31 March 2019  London - Windsor - Bicester Village - London
1 April 2019       London - Paris
2 April 2019       Paris
3 April 2019       Paris - Brussels - Antwerp
4 April 2019       Antwerp - Zaanse Schans - Giethoorn - Amsterdam
5 April 2019       Amsterdam - Cologne - Frankfurt
6 April 2019       Frankfurt - Titisee - Rhinefalls - Zurich
7 April 2019       Zurich - Engleberg - Mt Titlis - Lucerne - Zurich
8 April 2019       Muscat - Kuala Lumpur 

We will be flying via Oman Air so there will be a short transit in Muscat. The timing also coincides with the Brexit deadline. Since the deal is almost sure not to be concluded by the deadline, I hope there will not be any demonstration or strike on April's Fool Day. We are scheduled to visit London city centre and and later take a Eurostar to Paris at 7 pm on that day.

I will upload the videos and photos as and when possible during the trip. You can find them here: https://instagram.com/mkhasha.n.travels

Hashtags specific for this trip:
#mks2019WesternEurope #mks2019England #mks2019France #mks2019Belgium #mks2019Netherlands #mks2019Germany #mks2019Switzerland

My 360 photos will be loaded here whenever I am ready. Gonna take awhile though :P
https://instagram.com/mkhasha.n.photography

My World Countdown:
No new countries to add unfortunately!

Njoy !!

POST MORTEM (updated 17 April 2019)

I am making a great effort to write this post mortem early to justify the purchase of my bluetooth keyboard :P

Tour Company: Easy to deal with. All done online via Whatsapp and online banking. I like that they gave us each Sambal Che Nor  which they distributed at the airport. Very useful product to eat with all the packed food given to us throughout the trip. Daily bottled water was also given generously.

Itinerary: The original itinerary was good, if only they adhered to it. I think I will have to introduce a new sub section to list down all the deviations from the original itinerary. I found out that for Muslim tour companies in Malaysia, it is a norm rather than an exception to deviate from what was promised in the itinerary.

Deviations From The Itinerary: There are two types of deviations. The first one was a deviation from the original itinerary that was used to entice people to join this tour to a new revised one which was distributed the day before we start the tour. Needless to say the revised itinerary is less sexy than the original :P The second deviation will be what actually happened versus the revised itinerary.

When I came back from the tour and first did the audit I honestly did not expect it to be so many. Frankly I am quite shocked when confronted with the fact.

ORIGINAL VERSUS REVISED ITINERARY:
1. We were supposed to drive through the tunnel from London to Paris but at the last minute they changed it to Eurostar. This is actually a loss loss situation for both the company and the participants. Loss to the company because Eurostar tickets are so expensive and a loss to the participants because they have to push their heavy  luggage from the bus to the station vice versa
for quite a long distance. They also have to hoist all their big luggage through the scanner and later carry it on board the train. Since this tour is made up of mostly senior citizens, I am fairly thankful that nobody were injured during the process. By the time we reached the Paris hotel (almost midnight), everybody was so tired.

2. Due to the change mentioned above, we were required to stay in Paris for two nights instead of one night in Paris and the other in Brussels. Some people may say that staying is Paris is better than staying in Brussels but this one tiny detail will have a bad repercussion to our tour in Amsterdam.

3. We were supposed to have a seafood dinner at Volendam. Volendam is a Dutch town on the Markermeer Lake, northwest of Amsterdam. It's known for its colourful wooden houses and the old fishing boats in its harbour, which is lined with seafood vendors. This was omitted in the revised itinerary.

4. Lunch at Panorama Restaurant on Mount Titlis was changed to an Indian fast food joint in Engleberg instead. What a downgrade!

REVISED ITINERARY VERSUS ACTUAL:
1. In the itinerary it was mentioned that we will be having fish & chips lunch at Bicester Village. In anticipation of that I brought some chilli sauce from home. We ended up eating Lebanese Kebab. When asked, the tour leader said he cannot find fish & chips in Bicester. I thought fish & chips are to the Brits like nasi lemak to us Malaysians? If you cannot deliver a simple promise like this, why on earth did you bother to put it at all in the itinerary? It makes me wonder, did the tour leader actually read the itinerary?

2. Shopping at La Valle was in the itinerary but was conveniently forgotten by the organiser.

3. We did not go to Trocadero Square for a nice photo opportunity with the Eiffel Tower but instead brought to a place with a construction in progress for a picture with Eiffel Tower.

4. Paris Mosque was omitted. Hours were given instead to shop at Champ Elysees and for some participants to go to Hard Rock Cafe Paris.

5. We were given such a short time at Zaans Schaans. Initially the time allocated was only 1 hour for us to have our lunch AND visit the place. After a major objection, we were given 1 hour to visit the place. No time was allocated to visit the Bakery Museum, Clog Workshop and Cheese Factory as per the itinerary.

6.  In the itinerary there was a visit to Giethoorn, a mostly car-free village known for its boat-filled waterways, footpaths, bicycle trails and centuries old thatched roof house. There was no Amsterdam city tour scheduled. Since we are going to stay overnight in Amsterdam, it was more convenient logistic wise to visit Amsterdam instead of going to Giethoorn and come back. The tour leader then convinced the majority to forego the visit to Giethoorn and instead to spend 3 hours in Amsterdam city for shopping at Primark and Hard Rock Cafe Amsterdam.

7. We did not do any visit in Frankfurt even though in the itinerary there was a visit to Romerberg Square. We just went to Frankfurt to sleep at an outskirts hotel.

8. We were not brought to visit a cuckoo clock making demonstration at Titisee Lake.

9. In Lucerne, we did not make any visit to the Lion Monument or the Chapel Bridge. No explanation was given by the tour guide. The tour leader was more interested to bring the group for souvenirs shopping.

Shocking right? I think this is the first time that I encountered so many deviations in a trip!

Airlines: We flew via Oman Air. From Kuala Lumpur to Muscat the seating arrangement was 2-4-2 which was superb. The flight from Muscat to London the seating arrangement was 3-3. It was terrible and the flight was full so there was no chance of getting a better seats. Our flights home were a lot better. Both the planes from Zurich to Muscat and Muscat to Kuala Lumpur had 2-4-2 seating arrangements. The inflight meals and entertainments were average. I like the hot snacks that they served instead of the cold sandwiches that was previously a norm.

Tour Leader: Our tour leader name is Saiful. A capable and experienced person but not very helpful. He will just watch my 70 yo mom struggling with her bag and will not assist unless asked to assist. He is also the only tour leader in my two decades of travel that ensured the participants get to go to all the Hard Rock Cafes in all the cities that we visited during the trip sometimes at the expense of scheduled places of interest. Note: HRC is not in the itinerary.

Due to the bad organisation between the tour leader and the tour guide, we ended up having to pay each RM45 (€10) for a small box of nasi lemak in Amsterdam. The reason why the order cannot be cancelled? The seller already bought the ingredients. I found that a bit silly, don't tell me we are the seller's only customers?

I personally feel that he failed to deliver his main job description as the agent of Via Vacation by the numbers of deviation from the itinerary.

Local Tour Guide: Our guide name is Rosie. She is a very attractive lady from Bulgaria. We found out later that she just finished a Morocco, Portugal & Spain trip with another group of Via Vacation which was a disaster, so by the time she came to us I think her tank was already half empty.

She was friendly but not helpful and on occasion a bit impatient. But I was quite happy that she made an effort to bring me personally to see the infamous Red Light district of Amsterdam. Nothing so exciting there unfortunately. There were even school kids doing a walk around :P How mundane!

She obviously did not read the itinerary if judged on how many places she didn't bring us. Perhaps she thought this group was only interested in shopping thus there is no need to deliver what was written in the itinerary.

I am particularly unhappy with the 30 minutes allocated to visit Keukenhof (from actual entry time). I personally think it is borderline crazy and very inconsiderate behaviour. We came thousands of miles away, pay expensive entrance ticket and were given half an hour to see the huge garden. Don't say that we didn't have enough time because we were later given 3 hours to shop in Amsterdam!

Bus: We had two buses during this trip. One in London and the other in mainland Europe. Both buses were of good quality, clean and comfortable.

Bus Driver: We had three bus drivers. Two in London and one main driver for the rest of the trip. Our drivers in London were both polite and nice. Our main driver, George was quite grumpy. He keeps on warning us not to eat in the bus.

Similar case with Rosie, he was the driver of the disastrous Morocco, Portugal & Spain trip thus I can understand that he must be very tired, having driven thousands of miles before joining us.

Hotels: Hotels provided were superb. All except Paris were of a good size. Well done!

Hotel Breakfasts: Some were good, some were very good buffet breakfasts. The service in some countries were very good and friendly but in France and Germany they tend to ignore the diners.

Lunches:  First and foremost I want to commend Via Vacation for offering a full board trip for their Western Europe tour. They could be the only Muslim tour company that did that in Malaysia. Well done! Keep up the good work!

Having said that, Via must do more to manage their customers' expectation. They must inform beforehand that almost all lunches and dinners are packed meals.

Prior to the trip, we were told by the tour leader that we will be having lunches at the restaurants and only dinners will be packed. The reality was of eight lunches, only three were in a restaurant. Of three, only two were proper lunch.  The other one was in an Indian fast food joint where we had a plain vegan fried rice served with plastic cutlery.

Since most of the tour members were senior citizen, Via must ensure that there is a proper place to eat the packed lunches. Expecting the seniors to eat at an open garden or while standing at carpark is not acceptable. More so if the weather is cold.

Another thing is to ensure the type and quality of the packed food. It must be easy to eat and relatively hot. Baguette sandwich is not suitable because it is so hard and the seniors found it troublesome to eat in public.

Dinners: The packed dinners were mostly good except for the one in Amsterdam. The ground operator bought both lunch and dinner at the same restaurant. Instead of sending our dinner later at the hotel, the restaurant sent all the packed food during lunch hour. So by dinner time the food was cold, hard and stale. I think most of us threw them away since it was inedible.

Timing of the dinner can be improved on our third night. Our train to Paris from London was at 7 pm. We arrived at our hotel in Paris around midnight. I suspect most of us had our dinner at 1 am that day. It surely felt like sahur :P By right the packed dinner should be given in London prior to boarding the train, then we can eat our dinner on the train since all our seats are with tables.

Rapport With Fellow Travellers: Relatively good. Some took a bit longer to warm up but overall all were quite friendly. Most loved to shop. They were willing to spend hundreds in taxi fare just so they can shop at Hard Rock Cafe. Frankly in my two decades of travel, I never met a group like this :P

Timing: Perfect timing if you love snow in spring like I do. We had a great time at Mount Titlis playing with soft snow. We also managed to experience cherry blossom in Paris. I love that the weather is cold even when the sun is shining. Love the long daylight hours too.

Overall: The package was value for money. If they adhere to the itinerary and pay a little bit more attention to the timing and quality of the packed meals, then it will be perfect. Despite everything, I did have a great time :)

Tuesday, 1 January 2019

Middle East: Winter - January 2019

Happy New Year everyone! May our coming years be better than the previous ones. May we stay happy, healthy and humble always. This is the first time that I marked a new year with a journey to the countries that I've never been before. Err.. not quite right, I've been to Egypt so the statement is mostly right I guess since I've never been to Jordan, Palestine nor Israel. Three out of four :P I am super excited and frankly a bit anxious as well since that region is not well known for its peaceful existence.

I am so looking forward to visit Petra and its surrounding orangey rocks. The Dead Sea may not be the best time to visit in the winter though. No dipping and floating in the sea I suppose unless you wish to be a popsicle :P Al Aqsa Mosque and the Mount Temple are the historical treasure and a sacred place of three Abrahamic religions, a must visit. The Pyramids of Giza are an architectural wonder and it would be great if it snows lightly when we are there. Wishful thinking? A girl can only wish :P I am also looking forward to visiting Alexandria again. Alexandria, if managed well can be a nice resort city of the Mediterranean Sea.


This trip is organised by SelamatBercuti.com. Yes I did give them a not so flattering review when I went with them to the Southern Europe a few months ago but I will give them another chance just because their itinerary is more comprehensive compared to other tour companies. Let's hope they will not let us down this time round.

This trip costs RM7590 per person. If you are a senior citizen (55 years above) you will get a discount of RM100. I always wonder about this price discrimination policy. Everybody should get the senior citizen price, the company is simply making extra profit out of the younger travellers. This is unfortunately a normal practice by Muslim companies in Malaysia. It should be made illegal because it is so unIslamic. Quran clearly prohibits dual pricing. Ironic?

This tour is for 10 days and 8 nights, full board and the hotels are all 3 stars. Truthfully I am a bit worried of the 3 stars status most especially when applied to Middle Eastern hotels. Europe's 3 stars are mostly acceptable but Middle East? Let's just see how it will turn out shall we? Hope for the best, prepare for the worst :P

Our itinerary are as follows:
1 January 2019    Kuala Lumpur - Muscat - Amman
2 January 2019    Amman - Petra - Dead Sea - Amman
3 January 2019    Amman - Jericho - Jerusalem
4 January 2019    Jerusalem
5 January 2019    Jerusalem - Hebron - Jerusalem
6 January 2019    Jerusalem - Taba - Mount Sinai
7 January 2019    Mount Sinai - Suez - Cairo
8 January 2019    Cairo - Alexandria - Cairo
9 January 2019    Cairo
10 January 2019  Cairo - Muscat - Kuala Lumpur

This is going to be my first time flying via Oman Air. I noticed that a lot of tour companies started using this airline only recently. They must offer a very competitive price out of Malaysia. So let's hope the airline is as good as Qatar Airways.

I will upload the videos and photos as and when possible during the trip. You can find them here:
https://instagram.com/mkhasha.n.travels

Hashtags specific for this trip:
#mks2019MiddleEast #mks2019Oman #mks2019Jordan #mks2019Palestine #mks2019Israel #mks2019Egypt

My 360 photos will be loaded here whenever I am ready. Gonna take awhile though :P
https://instagram.com/mkhasha.n.photography

My World Countdown:
Oman#64 Jordan#65 Israel#66 Palestine#67

My mom's would be #53-56

Njoy !!

P.S Maybe I shouldn't count Oman but then again I do "reached" the country even though just at the airport :P Good reason to properly visit the country later right?

POST MORTEM (updated 27 February 2019)

Sorry it took me awhile to do a post mortem for this trip. Too lazy to switch on my laptop to write the review. I am currently writing this on my tablet using my newly bought bluetooth keyboard and touch pen. Hopefully with these new gadgets, future post mortem write-ups will be more timely :P

Tour Company: Easy to deal with. The write up of information and reminders prior to departure was very well done. The timing of the creation of WhatsApp group (around one month before departure) for this trip was also good, not too early nor too late.

For this tour they provided us with a daily bottled water each. In Egypt, they even gave us two bottles a day. I suspect this was due to the generosity of our tour leader. Hopefully he will not be in trouble with the company :P

Itinerary: The itinerary was good. We flew into Amman and go back via Cairo. There were no backtrack. The combination of the countries was also a good synergy.

The decision to use Oman Air was a good one because we arrived late in the afternoon and immediately checked into the hotel to rest after a long journey. The sightseeing only started the next day after a good night sleep. On the last day we took a late flight out of Egypt, which enabled us to cram another full day of visits and shopping before flying home.

If I want to gripe, maybe the trip to Alexandria should be done on the last day and then we took the flight out of Alexandria instead of Cairo to go home. As it is people were quite tired after the long journey from Mount Sinai to Cairo the day before and having to start very early in the morning for the day trip to Alexandria the next day. To/fro journey from Cairo to Alexandria took 6+ hours. A waste of precious tour time.

Another thing to improve is in the interest of time, the journey to the Treasury in Petra should be made by horse or horse carriage (to be included in the tour price). The journey back to the main entrance via horse or horse carriage will be optional (own pocket) since walking back to the main entrance is an experience not to be missed. There are so many nice spots to take excellent photos along the way!

Airlines: Our first time flying via Oman Air. The plane to/fro Kuala Lumpur was comfortable with 2-4-2 seating arrangement which is the most efficient for a long haul flight. The plane to/fro Muscat was small with seating arrangement 3-3. So uncomfortable. Inflight meals were just acceptable. No vanity pack either. The flights were all on time with short transits in Muscat.

Tour Leader: Our Malaysian tour leader Azlan was very good. He has the right temperament to be in the service industry; calm, polite, patient,  humble and helpful. I am particularly happy with his treatment of my 70 year old mother.

I love the surprise dinner at the Hard Rock Cafe in Cairo that he managed to pull off just before we fly home. Very smart move because Malaysians love to shop at HRC, so why not hit two birds with one stone? Furthermore, by that time we can no longer stomach the local food, so burger and fries were very much welcomed.

What I don't like is he loves to take candid photos of the group! Less candid and more structured photos are better I think. Why waste storage space for pictures that people ended up deleting anyway? :P

Local Tour Guide: This trip is quite unique because we had three dedicated tour guides. The first one was a Jordanian named Firaz. This guy is so cheerful. He can speak Indonesian so his commentary was bilingual, English and Indonesian. I wish he would stick to English only because I can't really understand his Indonesian :P

Our second tour guide is Mahmoud, he is a Jordanian by birth but since he migrated to Jerusalem back in the 60s, his citizenship and resident status are complicated. He can freely go to Israel, Palestine and Jordan but cannot vote in any of those countries. This guy's English is superb. He took his job as a guide seriously with long explanation at every place we visited. Unfortunately he was also a bit moody. He was quite cheerful on our last day with him though.

Our last guide was an Egyptian. His name is Hanawi. I can't really understand his English but overall I think he was ok. In Egypt we also had a company representative, Yusuf who made sure that we passed through the immigration without any problem at the point of entrance and exit. Egypt somehow reminded me of the joke "how many people do you need to change a light bulb?". Probably because they have so many people that they needed to create the extra bureaucratic steps just so they have jobs for them. Even the Israel immigration was not as troublesome!

Bus: My first experience having to use five separate buses in one tour. The first bus in Jordan was too small that all our luggage cannot fit into the luggage compartment thus the desperate need for the second bus. The second bus was used to bring us from Amman to the Jordan/Israel crossing at the King Hussein (Allenby) Bridge TerminalThe third bus was for our tour in Palestine and Israel. The fourth bus was not in the picture if not for the third bus' battery died on us on the day we were to leave Israel to go to Egypt. The fifth bus was for our trip in Egypt. Luckily for us the fifth bus was very new and comfortable. Can't say the same for the other buses though.

Bus Driver: All the bus drivers were not friendly. Not very helpful either. Luckily for us they practised safe driving :) In Egypt, during the long journey from Taba to Cairo, our bus had two drivers and one armed security officer. I think Egypt is the only country that I have visited who required an armed security officer inside the bus. In 2007, when we visited Abu Simbel, we had an army convoy escorting us but no army personnel inside the bus.

Hotels: For this trip, we stayed at four hotels. Only one hotel in Amman was acceptable, the rest were terrible. The hotel in Jerusalem was so small and dated. The bathroom was mouldy.

The hotel in Saint Catherine (Mount Sinai) was dated, without WiFi and offered only one propaganda channel in a cubic shaped TV. All that were tolerable since we arrived late at night and left early the next morning. The unforgivable thing was the room was without heater and no thick blanket either. It was crazy cold!

I thought the hotel in Saint Catherine was the worst since it was a small town with little hotel choices, who would have thought that the hotel in Cairo was much worse? You would think that Cairo being the capital had better 3* hotel choices. Obviously not. The hotel that we stayed in had a good sized room and bathroom but it was quite dirty. The main lift was also smelly. The cleaners obviously did not do their job well. In fact one cleaner instead of doing his job, was busy knocking on the guest's door asking for tips.

This hotel's bedsheets are the worst in my two decades of travels. It was so shabby that I honestly wonder what were they thinking? The sheets were so not smooth (I don't even know how to explain in English. Malay has a better vocabulary; kusam, lusuh, berbulu) that I think my rags at home are of better quality than their bedsheets. Egypt really need to buck up. Their hospitality industry sucks!

Hotel Breakfasts: The breakfast buffets were mostly acceptable. There were odd dish here and there that were surprisingly tasty. Service was good especially in Jerusalem. The chef cum waiter was very attentive. The exception was our last breakfast in Cairo. They actually ran out of plates and cups! And there were not even one waiter in sight to remedy the situation. The dishes were also chipped and some not even washed properly.

Lunches: We had almost all the lunches at the local restaurants. The food was plentiful and quite good. We had only one lunch at the hotel, in Jerusalem. It was after Friday prayer, so the Chef cooked for us maqluba, a Palestinian specialty.

My favourite was our last lunch in Cairo. The restaurant served us ample strawberries for desserts. They were so sweet. I ate one plateful of them. Super delicious!

My least favourite lunch was in Alexandria. The soup was not edible, the bananas were bruised, the fish was served cold and the prawn still have its tentacles. Shameful when people have no pride in their work. Go check the picture in my instagram if you're in doubt. #mksHolidayFood

Dinners: Dinners were mostly at the hotel except for two in Cairo. The dinner buffets at the hotel were acceptable. The Chef of the hotel in Jerusalem was so nice that he cooked for us fried chicken and french fries when we requested something different than the usual Middle Eastern fare. Too bad the fried chicken were a bit overcooked but it was the thoughts that count right? Very much appreciated :)

Dinner at the Sunz Restaurant in Cairo was the worst. The main fare were not that bad I think but frankly by that time I ate just so I'm not hungry but the desserts were terrible. The cakes were stale and the fruits were not served fresh. Luckily nobody ended up with stomachache due to eating questionable quality of raw fruits and vegetables.

The best dinner was at the Cairo Hard Rock Cafe, just before we flew home. After more than a week of Middle Eastern style of cooking, was it any wonder we appreciated the simple meal of burgers and fries? :P

Rapport With Fellow Travellers: This group took a bit of time to warm up with each other. We didn't immediately click on the first day unlike my previous Southern Europe trip. But after a few days we were more familiar and comfortable to make silly jokes in the bus and tease each other :P

Timing: January is a good month to make a trip to this region. The temperature was very pleasant. Not hot and not so cold either. Only in Mount Sinai it was a bit cold at night and early morning but by mid morning the temperature was back to pleasant. I was hoping for snow, obviously that wish did not come true :P I thought the Dead Sea would be super cold. Surprisingly the water was quite warm, so you can actually dip yourself in the Dead Sea in January.

Overall: I think this is one of the most interesting trips that I've taken throughout all my travels. I like the experience of going through the suspenseful Israeli immigration. The border crossing between the Israel and Egypt in Taba is also different than going into Egypt via Cairo International Airport.

The itinerary prepared by SelamatBercuti.com was the reason why I decided to join them again despite the not so good experience during the Southern Europe trip. Major fault was they didn't bring us to Masjid Omar despite being listed in the itinerary. I don't know why most of Muslim tour companies that I've joined are quite lackadaisical about delivering what they promised in the itinerary.

I personally think that SelamatBercuti.com have the potential to be an excellent tour company if only they make more effort to the quality of hotels and food provided during the trip AND most importantly to train their tour leaders to ensure that all the places of interest mentioned in the itinerary are covered during the trip. If it cannot be covered due to unforeseen circumstances, the fact must be made known to the participants during the trip.

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Bye for now. Until my next post :)