Category Archives: General

Top 10 ghost towns around the world

TRAVELLERS seeking a quiet place need look no further than the numerous abandoned towns around the world.  Travel review website IgoUgo.com (http:www.igougo.com) has compiled a list of the top 10 ghost towns around the world based on recommendations from its readers.

1. Kolmanskop, Namibia. You’ll need to stop in nearby Luderitz for a permit to enter this former mining town in the Namib desert – a holdover from the days when Kolmanskop was a free-for-all for diamond hunters. The town had its heyday in the 1920s but was abandoned in 1956. It has since been partly restored.

2. Fatehpur Sikri, India. Built by Emperor Akbar to be the most beautiful city in the world, it was widely thought this goal was achieved – until people realised the city lacked access to water. It was abandoned as the capital of the Mughal Empire after just 10 years and is today a perfectly preserved 16th-century town.

3. Oatman, US. Of all the Arizona ghost towns, quirky Oatman has to be among IgoUgo members’ favourite. Here, wild burros roam the streets and US$60,000 bills decorate the walls of the local hotel, where, incidentally, Clark Gable and Carol Lombard spent their wedding night. Continue reading

All for supermarkets

MY MOTHER-IN-LAW constantly exalts the variety and freshness of seafood and vegetables in wet markets. She always tells me not to do my weekly grocery shopping at Sheng Siong. Recently, I decided to visit the wet market in Bedok North Street 1 she frequents.

I found a fish stall that indeed stocked many varieties of seafood and had freshness to boast about. The vendor was serving three customers who were there before me, so I waited patiently for him to attend to me. In the meantime, more customers came. When the first three customers were gone, the vendor attended to the customers who had come after me. I signalled to him a couple of times that I was next, but each time he turned round to tell me to wait.

Perhaps those were his regular customers. Perhaps my voice was not loud or forceful enough. Whatever the reasons, after 20 minutes of unnecessary waiting, I decided to walk away and vowed never to patronise his stall again.

This is just one reason why I do not shop in wet markets. Another is that it is difficult to buy small portions of food. It is almost impossible to buy 20 cents’ worth of chilli padi or 200g of prawns in a wet market.

I do not lament the demise of wet markets in Singapore. I will continue to do my marketing in supermarkets. Being able to shop in cool comfort, getting everything under one roof, and not being glared at when I say I want only two tomatoes, more than compensates for slightly higher prices and slightly less ‘freshness’ of the seafood.

Betty Ho (Ms)

Source : Straits Times – 31 Oct 2009