Wednesday, April 13, 2011

Passage down Malacca Straits

Wow, what a fascinating, awesome (sometimes tiring, sometimes anxious) journey! There was no end to the learning we had in this 11 day adventure…

Langkawi was our point of departure, from where we had a short hop to Pulau (which is Malay for Island; abbreviated to P) Daya Bunting: our previous most-southerly stop in Malaysia. A calm overnight anchorage at a beautiful spot looking onto these steep slopes, heavily-treed with a rich diversity of foliage, rested us for an early start to our full-day sail to P. Penang.
Let it be said that the word “sail” did not really come into it much for the whole way to Singapore; apart from some squalls that brought strong but fleeting winds and rain (see later), there was not much wind for sailing, and the engines worked overtime. However, Rolf remarks (when Irene gets really frustrated) that the QE2 also “sets sail”; however, her engines were deep in the bowels of the ship and hence QE2 purred… Ketoro does NOT purr when motoring: she rattles and roars, compared with the sublime sounds of sea and wind when actually sailing!

Georgetown, Penang: what a wonderful place to stay for 2 nights!

Tying up at the marina in the heart of the old city, we needed only walk a few hundred metres before finding China Town, Little India, the extensive old colonial areas, the Chinese clan jetties…

The history

But first, a short history of the west coast of Peninsular Malaysia, because these areas boast the most fascinating cities and exhibit the (apparently) peaceful co-existence of so many cultures, which originate from centuries of changes of influence and power. The Malays on the peninsula came under the control of various SE Asian empires for many centuries, then in 1403 a Sumatran Hindu Prince (read: pirate in hiding) settled in the fishing village of Melaka (Malay spelling) and established it as a strategic port and city-state of great importance which drew traders from east and west, using it also as a place to wait for the change in monsoon seasons (to time their passages back home under the right wind conditions).

When Siam became threatening, the Chinese arrived, promised the protection of the Ming Emperor and thereby got their foot in the door, thus also extending Melaka’s influence through the rest of the peninsula. Interestingly, this gave rise to the fascinating culture of the Peranakan people, or Baba-Nyonya: born through the marriage of a man from the Chinese mainland (Baba) to a local Malay woman (Nyonya).

The population of Melaka became predominantly Chinese, followed in numbers by Indians then Malay. With Melaka becoming so wealthy and powerful, a glitter appeared in the eyes of the Europeans: first came the Portuguese (1511) whose ships defeated the local defenders and their war elephants, sending the Sultan fleeing south to Johor: thus Johor became the Malay centre and Melaka became a centre of European power. The Dutch threw the Portuguese out in the next century, and the British took their turn the following. Melaka however, poorly managed and developed by its colonial masters, declined in importance when the British made Penang their naval and trading base. Melaka was parcelled up and passed back to the Dutch from the British East India Company, then back to the British Straits Settlements portfolio…. and so on!

The Japanese took control in WWII...( a travel guide describes their “lightning dash” down the peninsula, while picture displays in the really great Penang Museum state “Two modern (Malay) warships rushed to Singapore with their canons facing South but the Japanese came from the North by bicycle”, giving this photo…)

The Chinese resisted Japanese domination fiercely, the Malays less so, bringing about polarisation of the communities and a troubled population when the British got Malaya back at the end of the war. Ultimately, Malaya got its independence in 1957 and the Federation of Malaysia was formed in 1963, with Singapore departing in 1965.

Penang

Now back to Georgetown… the fascination of the city lies in the contrasts between the different areas in which the different cultures live and work. The architecture, decoration, sounds, lighting, smells of each area are food for the senses and simply walking the streets and peering into small shops, workshops and restaurants and seeing how the inhabitants run their days is stimulating. Turn a corner and you will see the beautiful grand imposing colonial buildings and at the end, a street of tiny Chinese shop-houses, introducing yet another area.

Walk into elaborate, highly ornate and decorated colourful Buddhist temples (China town) and Hindu temples (Little India) to observe places of worship that are active and vibrant, with no animosity towards onlookers who fortunately keep their distance (and do not intrude their cameras, although photographs are generally allowed). Some of the joss-sticks (called Dragon Joss Sticks here) are huge, as seen below!

Come from the street into pristine, simple, cool tiled, beautiful mosques and you will be given a robe and encouraged to walk around the courtyard and outer passages, frequently while prayers take place inside. In unfortunate contrast St George’s Anglican Church was locked when we arrived.
The city has a plethora of local food houses and we did our best to sample it all: Malay, Indian, Nyonya, Chinese... here with traditional presentation of an Indian curry meal on banana leaf.
Rolf’s presentation of his “No MSG” card, in local language, is generally successful as they will find something for him to eat; except at “The Green Oasis” which said cheers, they could give us no ‘MSG free’ food at all! The city also has outdoor cafes to appeal to all tourists and it was easy to get around with hop on-off bus and trishaws.

Our rather frail trishaw driver was very happy to oblige every time we wanted to stop, so he could mop his brow and catch his breath; he was very informative and a bonus to have as guide, taking us through the Clan Jetties. An important part of the old Georgetown waterfront, there are seven jetties, each belonging to a Chinese clan. No longer able to get enough fish to sustain themselves, the homes on the jetties are now used as bases for shops or trades, but the clans still maintain their coherence.

Leaving Penang, we passed under Penang Bridge, with an air draft of 28m. Even though you know that it allows plenty of space for your yacht to pass safely, you still hold your breath and look upwards with trepidation while passing underneath.... it all looks so close! Rolf gives the thumbs-up here…
Thus commenced three days and two nights of sailing before our next break: a trip that passed well, with one interesting incident... in no hurry as we did not want to reach the channel entering busy Port Klang until dawn, we drifted slowly in the black night. Pitch dark, silent, slowly moving forward, we became aware of the small lights (one red, one green) of two small boats stationary to starboard, just off the main shipping channel. It took us 30 minutes to near them, at which time the green light moved off into the lane silently, slowly, but made no effort to proceed, while the small red flashing light remained dark and still in position; when we were a fair distance further down, the green light returned in stealth and discussion / negotiation was clearly resumed... the deal settled, the lights went their separate ways. Trying to make sense of things in a black night on a black sea, when the only reference points you have for interpretation are pinprick lights moving silently around… stimulates the imagination!

Port Dickson and Melaka

Admiral Marina near Port Dickson was home for four nights and used as a base for the boat while we went the two hours overland to Melaka. Another treat!!

Staying in Hotel Puri, in Chinatown, again we were centrally placed to get everywhere in the lovely old town precincts. However, we capitulated on our normal price limit for our accommodation: the hotel was originally the home of one of the richest founding Peranakan gentlemen in the city so offered a picture of Chinese, Dutch, Portuguese influences in its architecture and furnishing - far more than “just the basics” we usually seek.... at twice the price! However we felt for only one night we would tolerate the $55 payment.

A trip to Melaka is essential in a visit to Malaysia, as is seeing Georgetown, so we are incredibly privileged to have enjoyed both cities. Melaka was similar in many ways to Georgetown, and a delight to walk, look, eat. Our only “local-eating” disaster came here, however: at a cute Nyonya food place they could only offer three dishes, and only one without MSG: Rolf’s plateful of tofu in some indefinable sauce was definitely not to his taste, and we resorted to a Snickers coffee in an over-priced western cafe to console him!
Melaka is perhaps more tourist focussed even than Georgetown, but the great buildings from the Dutch era and the long Chinese streets on the opposite bank of the Melaka River give a good picture of life-back-then, while the Baba-Nyonya heritage of the Straits Chinese is wonderful to explore. Tiny-fronted homes and shops (pay less tax, which is calculated on street frontage) stretch back sometimes a hundred metres; exploring the shelves of joss sticks, mah-jong and board games, antiques, crafts, kites, art works, dusty treasures reveals amazing and sometimes unexpected items, like the shelves of tiny shoes for bound ladies feet.

The trishaws that abound in the tourist area are basically bicycles with two-seater sidecars or two-seater ‘front of bike’. The owners evidently believe that these contraptions are a prop for their talents as decorators as they are completely over the top with every conceivable plastic flower, brightly coloured plastic bauble and car stereos.

Alongside the busy, noisy walking street (Jonker Street) is Harmony Street: a peaceful haven and wonderful to stroll along, from the Moorthi Temple, to the Mosque, to the Chinese Temple of Buddhism, Taoism and Confucianism. The Tao God of Seafarers here will hopefully be of help to Ketoro.
In Melaka, we met up with friends from SA! In an amazing coincidence, Peter and Tracy were with boys from Kearsney College School who were on a hockey tour, and we managed to time our trip down the Straits to overlap with their day in Melaka. The short time together had to take place in a shopping mall where the boys were shopping for groceries for a local orphanage, but it was a wonderful hour.

Returning to Admiral Marina near Port Dickson, we rested a day (i.e. do laundry, install lock-washers on the adjusting brackets for the engine water-pump drive belts, take on water, wash boat, check weather and mail, plan the passage including accounting for the strong tidal currents (2 knots) and ports / anchorages of refuge in emergency, etc) before setting off on the last leg down the Straits, spending another day and night on the water....

The sailing… Malacca Straits

The Malacca Straits carry an enormous volume of shipping – with Singapore and the East at the southern end and the Indian Ocean leading to Europe and the Med at the northern end. The bottom two hundred nautical miles of the Malacca Strait is narrow – only 20 to 30 miles in places; and the shipping is controlled within a formal Vessel Traffic Separation Scheme. This involves funnelling all the traffic into two lanes, each about 2 – 3 miles wide and separated by about a mile.
Our instruments include electronic chartplotter, autopilot, radar and AIS (a system whereby all large ships (should) continuously transmit their course and speed information to a receiver on your boat and which displays this on your radar and chart display). In fact our system also transmits our own course and speed data to these ships – and their ever alert and courteous crew. We also enjoy the redundancy of two engines in addition to the flappy bits. In good conditions driving a boat through this traffic is a little like playing a computer game where you simply keep the boat icon (you) on the chartplotter from crashing into any radar targets (pink on the screen) or AIS targets (triangles), or the sticky out bits of land! What can be seen here is that the bulk of the ships here were in the channel waiting to enter one of the smaller harbours.
In practice little plastic things like Ketoro in fact do not sail within the strict traffic lanes of the Vessel Traffic Separation zone. You tag along near the outside edge of the traffic lane trying to derive the benefit of the coherent traffic that exists within the lanes and hoping that the local fishing fleets and their bloody nets and traps do not encroach here. On the southbound passage to Singapore this means you skirt the edge of the northbound traffic because going alongside the south bound lane involves multiple crossing of these lanes and is too close to the dodgy Sumatra coast, where the fishing boats double as pirates in the off season. Crossing the VTS lanes is not smart as the controllers tend to shout at you over the radio and the traffic lanes are only a few miles wide and are literally teeming with behemoths, some over 350 metres long and 60 metres wide and weighing in at a couple of hundred thousand tons, going at 15 to 20 knots and up to three abreast – and wanting to overtake! Overtaking is usually accompanied by a polite radio request to the guy ahead to move over a little, but sometimes appears to involve a little gamesmanship and jostling; and this with monsters that take several miles to turn and a day to bring to a stop.
The fun part is therefore at night as you skirt the lane and its oncoming traffic of juggernauts; you try very hard not to cross the little lines on the chart – like colouring in when we were children!

The real fun part is of course that all the ships that do not qualify for passage within the Vessel Traffic Separation System are all in the same informal and congested “skirting area” trying for the same benefits. This traffic generally does not carry AIS equipment. In the case of the smugglers that cross to and from Sumatra, they are in fast wooden boats (no radar reflection from the wood) and without lights. They must have remarkable instincts, because you only see them when they materialise as dark shapes a couple of hundred metres away. Other ships that should carry AIS dodge the system by travelling in this same zone, as evidenced by a tanker that caused Irene a start when she looked behind and saw the red-and-green (meaning the ship was being seen bow-on) 2 miles behind us and bearing down on us at twice our speed; whereas that skipper should have altered course to overtake us the unwritten rule seems to be that the little guys must move, so after using spotlights in a vain attempt to get their attention / alert them to our presence, we changed course fairly radically.

The real, real fun is reserved for those occasions (day or night) when horizontal wind-driven rain obliterates all normal vision. Notwithstanding what you see in movies, commercial radar becomes completely useless during heavy rain as the adjustment necessary to turn out rain clutter also takes out the ship targets! You know that there is traffic out there as you saw it visually and on radar before the storm hit and you also know they do not carry AIS because they did not come up on that system. You now hope like hell that you might see their lights before you collide and that they do not start swerving around but simply open the gaps using basic collision avoidance rules. This of course is sheer folly because you know very well that most have not received any training and their observed antics in the past have proved that they have no knowledge of such collision avoidance regulations.

When this happened to us during a short squall of heavy rain, we had just identified the three steaming lights signifying an oncoming tug with an over 200m long tow line.
The tugs in this area tow vast barges of what appears to be sand or some such material – vast mountains of it; and stuff that does not reflect radar waves! Fortunately this ended well and a text book port-to-port passing in the night occurred, albeit a little closer than intended (even then, in the driving rain we only saw his lights when we were alongside each other). An entire day of such rain with zero visibility and no useful radar and such heavy traffic densities must be an absolute nightmare! (We think back to our crossing to the Maldives, where this nightmare presented itself near Sumatra, and we had no AIS...) Added to this is the very heavy lightning for which the Malacca Straits area is notorious and the ever present danger of a lightning strike taking out all your instruments – beyond nightmare.

Our rule is that after every anxious moment that is successfully negotiated, Rolf is allowed a celebratory Snickers chocolate bar. He has an insatiable appetite and vast capacity for chocolate but during those couple of hours of rain almost suffered a first ever chocolate headache!

The traffic density in the Malacca Straits is the stuff of legend and we regularly tracked more than 70 vessels at a time in the lanes (i.e. within the range of the VHF radio used by the AIS). However the screen looks like a rash when you approach Singapore with all the ships that are anchored in the roadstead around the two ports here – Singapore itself and Johor Bahru on the Malaysian side. We did not scroll the list of ships in range at the time but others who have, reported over 400 targets on the system. However this disciplined and regulated commercial traffic is not a problem as they are well equipped and generally appear reasonably crewed.
We timed our arrival to be after sunrise on the third day of passage and negotiating our way through the, mostly, anchored ships was easy and crossing the major channels leading into the port itself also not a problem once we worked out the rhythm of the traffic in the channel. We just exercised patience and allowed those deemed as “boss” to go ahead: this fellow (with his associated pilot boat) was waited on!
Then followed a short trip up Johor Straits, passing under the causeway bridge between Malaysia and Singapore.
Berthing at Puteri Harbour on Johor Bahru in Malaysia was a doddle and it was nice to be able to relax again. Which is what we are doing… until tomorrow, when we leave for the UK and a much-anticipated visit with children… yay!

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