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Monday, 17 February 2025

175 CYCLE TOURING MALAYSIA (7)

 THE LONG GREEN THREAD: 

CYCLING MALAYSIA’S QUIET HEART



1 January 2025 –11 January 2025
693 Kilometres – 11 Days


PHOTOS

PDF 

FLIP-BOOK

 VOICEOVER



CHAPTER 1 – THE COAST CALLS 


In the border town of Padang Besar, the first morning of the year arrived bright and clear. it was the kind of morning that makes you believe anything is possible. I woke with a single, stubborn intention: Langkawi. I hadn’t set foot on the island in years, and the idea of returning tugged at me with the force of nostalgia and curiosity combined. So, I packed up, tightened the straps on my panniers, and rolled out into a new country and a new year.

The road to Kuala Perlis unfurled like a glossy travel brochure—blue sky, shimmering paddies, and a breeze that felt like a blessing. The distance was short only forty‑odd kilometres, but every one of them felt like a gift. I hummed along to my music, the rhythm syncing with the steady turning of my wheels.

Then I reached the ferry terminal.

The queue of vehicles waiting to board stretched into the horizon like a scene from a dystopian film. Cars, vans, trucks—an endless metallic serpent inching toward the sea. Still, I parked my bike and marched to the ticket office, only to be met with a surprise: customs clearance required for bicycles. I blinked at the official, half expecting him to laugh and say he was joking. But no. Langkawi, it seemed, had rules.

I weighed the hassle against the joy of the ride I was already having. The decision was easy. I turned my handlebars south and let the coast guide me toward Alor Setar instead.

The road hugged the shoreline, the ocean glittering to my right while rice paddies stretched out in luminous green to my left. Swiftlet houses punctuated the fields like odd, windowless monoliths. The light was soft and golden, the kind that makes even the ordinary look cinematic. I felt suspended between sea and land, between the year I’d left behind and the one just beginning.

I reached Alor Setar after 100 kilometres, sun-soaked, salt-crusted, and utterly content. I checked into the Comfort Motel, a place that has probably looked exactly the same since the 1970s. Fifty ringgit bought me a ground-floor room, air‑conditioning, a shower, and the warm welcome of the elderly owners—who, if I’m honest, are probably younger than I am. I wheeled my wagon straight into the room and felt instantly at home.

Malaysia’s official language is Bahasa Malaysia, but with its multicultural tapestry, you hear everything from Tamil to Hokkien to English. My own Bahasa is mostly learned from road signs—functional, slightly comical, and just enough to get me into trouble.

As night settled over Alor Setar, I felt the familiar thrill of being back on the road: the freedom, the uncertainty, the small joys that accumulate like beads on a string. Day one of the new year had not gone according to plan, but it had delivered something better—a reminder that detours often hold the real magic.

 

CHAPTER 2: PENANG AND HISTORIC GEORGE TOWN

 

Morning in Alor Setar arrived warm and bright, the kind of tropical light that seems to rise fully formed rather than gradually waking. Before leaving town, I couldn’t resist one last look at the Zahir Mosque. Its Moorish domes floated above the city like something lifted from a dream—white, elegant, impossibly serene. I snapped a photo, knowing full well that no picture ever captures the way a place makes you feel.

Then I pedalled out of town and immediately found myself on a quiet canal path threading through rice fields. The sun, only 5.5 degrees north of the equator, wasted no time asserting itself. Within minutes, I was drenched in sweat, but it didn’t matter. The world around me was lush and alive—villages tucked among palms, women in burkas selling homemade snacks, the smell of frying dough drifting across the road. I felt like the luckiest person alive, gliding through a landscape that seemed to open itself just for me.

Malaysia’s countryside has a way of sneaking up on you. One moment you’re cycling past a simple wooden house, the next you’re staring at distant hills draped in green, the sky a perfect, impossible blue. I hummed along to my music, the rhythm of the road settling into my bones.

At Tanjong Dawai, I boarded a small ferry to cross the wide Merbok River. The fee was steep for such a short hop, but it saved me a long detour on a busy road. Besides, there’s something magical about crossing water with your bicycle—like being granted passage into a slightly different version of the world.

The day stretched on in a series of small, beautiful moments: stopping to take photos, pausing to admire the light on the paddies, watching clouds gather and drift apart. By the time I reached Butterworth, the sun was low and the new ferry terminal felt like a maze designed by someone who had never actually taken a ferry. Eventually, ticket in hand, I rolled my bike aboard and let the boat carry me across to Penang.

 

George Town felt like a homecoming. I headed straight to Hotel Noble, a place that has seen decades of travellers and still offers the cheapest beds in town. I barely dropped my panniers before hunger drove me back out the door toward the famous food stalls. After a full day of cycling on nothing but snacks, the first bite felt like salvation.

From the ferry, Penang had looked modern—high‑rises, glass, steel. But a short walk to the ATM revealed the truth: George Town is a living museum, a UNESCO World Heritage Site layered with centuries of trade, migration, and monsoon‑driven waiting. Ships once lingered here for months, trapped by the winds, and in that waiting they created a cultural stew that still simmers today.

The heat was blistering, so I didn’t explore much. Instead, I wandered down to the Clan Jetties—wooden villages built over the water, each belonging to a single Chinese clan. The planks creaked under my feet, and the houses stood on stilts like quiet sentinels of another era.

Later, I met Connie Chew, a friend I’d known online for nearly a decade but had never met in person. Social media is strange that way—it connects people who might never cross paths otherwise. Connie, a fermentation specialist with a mind full of bubbling cultures and microbial magic, arrived with her son Mark, who kindly drove us around Penang in search of its famous delicacies.

Iced coffee mixed with tea—something I never imagined could taste good—turned out to be divine. Coconut roti melted on my tongue. We talked, laughed, shared stories of travel and life. It felt like meeting old friends rather than new ones.

By the time I returned to my room, full and content, I felt deeply grateful—for the road, for the people it brings into my life, for the way travel keeps expanding the edges of my world.

 

CHAPTER 3 – ROADS OF RICE AND RAIN

 

I left Penang late, rolling onto the ferry at ten o’clock with the kind of reluctant farewell you give a place that has fed you well, sheltered you kindly, and reminded you that the world is full of unexpected friendships. The crossing to the mainland was short, but it felt like a small rite of passage — a gentle push back into the rhythm of the road.

What I expected to be a straightforward ride quickly became a day of improvisation. Malaysia’s development is astonishing, but it also means that quiet backroads are disappearing, swallowed by highways and toll roads that cyclists are not welcome on. I zigzagged through neighbourhoods, industrial edges, and half‑finished roads, trying to avoid the roar of traffic. Every time I thought I’d found a peaceful route, it dead‑ended into a construction site or a toll plaza.

Eventually, I surrendered to the coastline, and the world softened again. A narrow road traced the edge of the sea, the air thick with salt and the smell of drying nets. Villages appeared like small exhalations — a cluster of houses, a shop selling cold drinks, a cat sleeping in the shade. The road was quiet, almost meditative, and I felt myself settle back into the steady rhythm of pedalling.

By mid‑afternoon, the sky darkened with the kind of tropical warning that needs no translation. I checked my map and realised the nearest affordable accommodation was still far off. The only hotel within reach was expensive, and the thought of cycling forty more kilometres to Taiping made my legs protest. So I turned inland, back toward the main road, hoping for something more reasonable.

The hotel I found was indeed cheaper, but it came with a long list of rules — a full page of what not to do, printed in stern lettering. It was clearly a Muslim‑only establishment, or at least one that preferred it that way. Still, it had a bed, a shower, and a roof that would keep the rain out. After a day of chasing quiet roads, that was enough.

I lay in bed listening to the call to prayer drift through the humid evening, mingling with the hum of traffic on the highway. It wasn’t the most memorable stop, but travel isn’t made only of highlights. Some days are simply stepping stones — necessary, unglamorous, and part of the long thread that ties a journey together.

Tomorrow, I told myself, would bring new roads, new landscapes, and perhaps a little magic again.

 

Malaysia’s one‑hour time difference had been playing tricks on my body since I crossed the border. I kept staying awake until one in the morning, convinced it was still early, and then waking to a world that remained stubbornly dark until well past seven‑thirty. If it weren’t for the muffled sounds of other guests stirring, I might have slept straight through the morning.

When I finally opened my eyes, rain drummed softly on the roof — not a storm, just a steady, unhurried drizzle. I lay there for a moment, listening to it, feeling that familiar tug between reluctance and resolve. Eventually, resolve won. I packed my panniers, wiped the moisture off my saddle, and rolled out into a world washed clean.

As the rain eased, the morning revealed itself in layers: mist rising from the rice fields, water pooled in the paddies like mirrors, egrets standing motionless as if carved from bone. The air smelled of wet earth and new beginnings. It was one of those mornings that makes you grateful for the simple act of moving through a landscape under your own power.

The ride to Taiping was short but beautiful. Away from the highways, Malaysia becomes a different country — quieter, softer, more intimate. Villages appeared like small pauses in the green, each with its own rhythm: a man sweeping his porch, a woman hanging laundry, children splashing barefoot in puddles. Life unfolding in its unhurried way.

By late morning, I rolled into Taiping, a town whose name means “everlasting peace.” It felt fitting. I had documents waiting that needed printing and signing, so I decided to stay the night. Unfortunately, my accommodation choice turned out to be a mistake. OYO, in its infinite mystery, had delivered a room that felt like it had given up on life sometime in the early 2000s. The mattress sagged, the walls were tired, and the air smelled faintly of damp resignation.

I told myself it was only for one night.

Still, the day had been good — a gentle ride, a fresh morning, a reminder that even short distances can hold their own quiet magic. As evening settled over Taiping, I felt the familiar mix of restlessness and contentment that comes with long‑term travel. Tomorrow would bring new roads, new challenges, and perhaps a little more of that Malaysian green that had already begun to seep into my bones.

 

CHAPTER 4: THROUGH THE PALM OIL KINGDOM

 

I woke before dawn, unsure whether it was the lumpy mattress, the lingering time‑zone confusion, or simply my body deciding it had had enough of OYO hospitality. Outside, the world was still dark — winter in theory, though Malaysia never truly feels like winter. The sun wouldn’t rise until nearly half past seven, so I lingered, letting the morning unfold slowly.

By the time I finally rolled out of Taiping, it was almost nine. The air was cool, the light soft, and the road ahead felt wide open. Not much happened in the early hours — just me, the bike, and a long ribbon of tarmac threading through the countryside. It was a proper road, a secondary one, but busy enough with trucks to keep me alert. Their engines growled past in waves, the wind of their passing tugging at my panniers.

The landscape shifted as I rode. Dense oil palm plantations rose around me, their fronds arching overhead like dark green cathedral ceilings. Beneath them, ferns and mosses thrived in the filtered light, creating a layered world of greens. It was beautiful in its own way — not wild, but lush, orderly, and humming with life.

I didn’t stop much. There wasn’t much to stop for. No temples tucked into hillsides, no unexpected villages, no scenic detours. Just the steady rhythm of pedalling, the hum of tyres on asphalt, and the occasional monkey darting across the road like a mischievous thought.

As I approached Lumut, the landscape shifted again. The Sungai Munjung appeared — a wide, calm inlet reaching in from the Strait of Malacca. The road crossed it on a long bridge, and suddenly the world was full of trucks again. Lumut Port and its industrial sprawl stretched along the water, a hive of warehouses, cranes, and cargo. It wasn’t pretty, but it was alive with purpose.

Yet even here, nature insisted on having the last word. A vast mangrove forest spread out along the inlet, its roots rising like knotted sculptures from the mud. Mangroves are easy to overlook, but they are quiet heroes — protectors of coastlines, nurseries for fish, and some of the most efficient carbon‑capturing ecosystems on the planet. I often forget how extraordinary they are until I’m standing beside them, watching the tide breathe in and out through their tangled roots.

By the time I reached Lumut proper, I was tired in that satisfying, full‑body way that comes from a long day of steady riding. It hadn’t been a dramatic day, but it had been honest — a day of movement, of landscapes shifting slowly, of the quiet interior of Malaysia revealing itself one kilometre at a time.

Tomorrow, I knew, would be longer. But for now, I let the day settle into my bones, grateful for the road, the mangroves, and the simple fact of arriving.

The morning in Lumut began on a narrow country road, the kind that feels like it was laid down just for cyclists and wandering souls. One lane, quiet, almost shy. The world was still waking up — a few birds calling from the trees, a distant motorbike, the soft rustle of palm fronds shifting in the early breeze. It felt like the kind of road that invites you to breathe deeper, pedal slower, and pay attention.

Once I reached the coast, I stopped at a small roadside stall to refill my water bottles. The vendor handed me a triangular packet of nasi lemak wrapped in brown paper — rice, peanuts, a boiled egg, sambal, and those tiny anchovies that Malaysians adore. I spent an absurd amount of time trying to scoop out the miniature fish, each no longer than a fingernail. It was a comical battle, but the food was delicious, eaten while watching fishermen on a boat coax a school of fish toward their net. Or at least, that’s what I assumed they were doing. The choreography of it was beautiful — men, sea, and movement in quiet synchrony.

Malaysia’s climate doesn’t believe in seasons. It believes in rain — generous, unpredictable, and ever‑present. The country receives anywhere from 1000 to 2500 millimetres of rainfall a year, and some regions even more. The sky can turn from blue to bruised in minutes, and today was no exception. Much of the day unfolded under shifting clouds, the air thick with the promise of rain.

I cycled through vast rice fields and endless oil palm plantations. Malaysia is the world’s second‑largest producer of palm oil, after Indonesia, and the scale of it is staggering. Row upon row of palms stretched into the distance, their trunks dark and straight, their crowns heavy with fruit. It’s a landscape that is both beautiful and unsettling — lush, orderly, and undeniably altered by human hands.

Toward the end of the day, I crossed the Perak River — Sungai Perak — a wide, dignified sweep of water that seemed to carry centuries of stories. It is the second‑longest river in Peninsular Malaysia, beginning near the Thai border and winding its way south. Crossing it felt like stepping into a new chapter of the country.

By the time I reached Sungai Besar, 120 kilometres later, I was tired in that deep, satisfying way that comes from a long day of honest effort. My legs ached, my clothes were damp with sweat and humidity, and my mind felt pleasantly quiet. There’s a particular kind of peace that comes after 121 kilometres — a peace earned kilometre by kilometre, breath by breath.

As night settled over the town, I felt grateful for the road, for the fishermen, for the tiny anchovies I had battled at breakfast, and for the way Malaysia kept revealing itself — not in grand gestures, but in small, steady offerings.

 

My day in Sungai Besar began with the familiar comfort of roti canai — warm, flaky, impossibly soft, served with a small bowl of curry that tasted like sunshine and spice. I ate it at a roadside stall where the air smelled of frying dough and woodsmoke, and where the vendor greeted me with the kind of effortless kindness that seems woven into the fabric of rural Malaysia. It was the perfect start to a short, easy day.

I set off along quiet roads that threaded through rice fields ready for harvest. The paddies glowed gold in the morning light, their colours shifting with every passing cloud. Farmers moved slowly through the fields, bent silhouettes against the shimmering landscape. The air was warm but gentle, and the kilometres slipped by almost without effort.

Kuala Selangor arrived earlier than expected — a small, unhurried town perched at the edge of history. After checking into my room, I wandered up Bukit Melawati, the hill that once served as the stronghold of the Selangor Sultanate. The climb was short but steep, and at the top I found cannons, stone foundations, and a troop of monkeys who clearly believed the hill belonged to them.

The wind carried the scent of the sea, and the view stretched across the river and mangroves. It was hard to imagine the battles that once raged here — the Dutch invasion of 1784, the sultan’s remarkable recapture of the fort, the shifting tides of power. Now the hill was quiet, the cannons sun‑bleached, the monkeys lounging like bored sentries.

I lingered there for a while, letting the history settle around me. Travel has a way of collapsing time — one moment you’re sweating up a hill, the next you’re standing in the echo of centuries.

Back in town, the afternoon unfolded slowly. I wandered, I rested, I watched the world drift by. It was a gentle day, a necessary pause between longer rides. A day of roti canai, golden fields, and a hill full of stories.

 

 

CHAPTER 5: TOWARD THE CAPITAL

 

Kuala Selangor Puchong, Kuala Lumpur (77 km)

I woke feeling anything but bright-eyed and bushy-tailed. Something was off — a heaviness in my limbs, a fog behind my eyes — and finding a tick in my bed did nothing to improve my mood. I must have picked it up during my wander through the little nature park the day before. I flicked it away with a shudder and hoped I wouldn’t end up with tick‑bite fever. The road would tell.

Riding into a major city is rarely pleasant, and Kuala Lumpur was no exception. I tried to stay on minor roads, but they were narrow, busy, and full of trucks that seemed determined to pass as close as possible. The air grew thicker, the traffic louder, the landscape more industrial. It was one of those days when cycling feels less like freedom and more like survival.

But then — relief. The kind that arrives all at once.

I reached Puchong and rolled into the familiar orbit of my friend Peter, a WarmShowers host I’ve known for a decade. I expected a couch or a spare mattress. Instead, he handed me the keys to a lovely little flatlet — my own space, clean and quiet, with a fridge stocked with beer. I could have hugged him. After days of cheap hotels, lumpy beds, and the creeping suspicion that something was wrong with my health, the flatlet felt like a sanctuary.

The next day, I did almost nothing. I let myself sink into the comfort of the room, the cool air, the stillness. The bite — or what I thought was a bite — had grown into a large, red, blistering patch under my arm. It spread across my chest and back, angry and insistent. I didn’t feel sick, exactly, but I was lethargic, drained. Something wasn’t right.

Still, I stayed put, waiting for documents that needed to be verified at the embassy. The road could wait. My body, clearly, needed a pause.

There’s a particular kind of gratitude that comes when you’re vulnerable on the road — when you’re far from home, not feeling your best, and someone offers you a place to rest without hesitation. Peter’s flatlet became that place. A small island of comfort in the sprawling chaos of Kuala Lumpur.

Tomorrow, I told myself, I would figure out the rash, the documents, the next steps. But for now, I let the day be what it was: a pause, a breath, a moment of stillness in the long, unpredictable rhythm of travel.

 

CHAPTER 6: ILLNESS, KINDNESS AND BUREAUCRACY

 

Rest Days in Puchong

The next morning unfolded slowly, the way mornings do when your body is tired and your spirit is grateful for stillness. I had planned to fly to India soon, and there were things to prepare — documents to sort, logistics to arrange — but for the moment, I let myself move gently through the day.

Peter, ever the generous host, handed me a bike box as casually as if he were passing me a cup of tea. His kindness seemed endless, woven into every gesture. Later, we walked to a nearby food court for breakfast, where I discovered kari laksa — fragrant, spicy, comforting. It became my instant favourite, the kind of dish that feels like a warm hand on your back.

In the afternoon, Gan arrived — Peter’s friend, and another familiar face from the strange, sprawling world of social media. We’d followed each other’s journeys for years, two cyclists orbiting the globe in our own ways. Meeting in person felt natural, as if we were simply continuing a conversation that had begun long ago. We shared beers, stories, and the easy camaraderie that only fellow travellers truly understand.

The following morning, I allowed myself the luxury of sleeping in. Saras — a woman I’d met five years earlier in Kuala Selangor — was coming to visit. She arrived with her warm smile and gentle presence, and we went out for lunch together. I felt a flicker of embarrassment as I realised I hadn’t paid for a single meal since arriving at Peter’s. Hospitality in Malaysia is not a performance; it’s a way of being. Still, I felt the tug of wanting to give something back.

Peter had plans to go camping at Sungai Sendat in Ulu Yam, so I spent the night at Saras’s home to celebrate the start of Pongal, the harvest festival. In her kitchen, she prepared traditional sour and sweet rice, the aromas filling the house with warmth and memory. Then she dressed me in a salwar kameez, elegant and bright, and we made our way to the temple. The air was thick with incense, chanting, and the soft murmur of devotion. It felt like stepping into a different rhythm of life — slower, deeper, anchored in tradition.

But beneath the beauty of the day, something darker was unfolding. The “bite” under my arm had spread across my chest and back, a red, blistering map of pain. I decided it was time to see a doctor before heading into the hills for camping.

The diagnosis surprised me: not a bite at all, but shingles. Shingles! As if the universe had decided I needed a plot twist. I stared at the doctor, half amused, half horrified. The road gives, and the road takes — sometimes in the form of a virus you didn’t ask for.

Peter picked us up around ten, and we drove to Sungai Sendat. Despite the diagnosis, the day was lovely. Peter prepared a feast, the weather held, and the forest wrapped around us like a green cathedral. For a few hours, I forgot the burning under my skin.

But returning to Peter’s, the pain surged. Shingles is a cruel companion — sharp, electric, relentless. I went back to the clinic, collected antiviral tablets and cream, and stocked up on painkillers with the determination of someone preparing for battle. If the virus wanted a fight, I was ready.

Back at the flatlet, I lay down, exhausted but strangely grateful. Travel isn’t just about landscapes and kilometres; it’s about the people who catch you when you falter, the kitchens where you’re fed, the rooms where you heal, the festivals you’re invited into. These days in Puchong were not glamorous, but they were deeply human — a reminder that journeys are made not only on the road, but in the quiet spaces between.

 

By mid‑January, my days in Puchong had settled into a strange rhythm — part recovery, part logistics, part waiting for the universe to cooperate. The shingles burned beneath my skin like a secret fire, but the antiviral tablets were beginning to take the edge off. I moved slowly, carefully, as if my body were made of thin glass.

Then, at last, the documents I’d been waiting for arrived.

I gathered my papers, tucked them into a folder, and ventured into the city centre. Kuala Lumpur’s heat wrapped around me like a heavy shawl, and the traffic roared in every direction. Embassies always feel like portals — places where your life is temporarily reduced to signatures, stamps, and the whims of officials who hold your fate in their hands.

When I finally returned to Peter’s, exhausted but hopeful, I discovered the most crucial document hadn’t been signed at all. A missing signature — one small stroke of a pen — had undone an entire day.

I stared at the page, feeling the kind of frustration that sits low in the stomach. Travel teaches patience, but it doesn’t make you immune to irritation. I would have to do it all again.

As if to underline the point, my attempts to withdraw money were declined — three times. Each time, the ATM insisted the transaction had failed, yet the money still vanished from my account. I stood there in the fluorescent glow of the machine, feeling a mix of disbelief and resignation. The road gives, the road takes, and sometimes the road simply laughs at you.

Thankfully, Peter was there — steady, generous, unflustered. It’s humbling, the way kindness appears exactly when you need it most.

The next days passed in a haze of rest and low‑grade pain. The shingles spread across my chest and back like a map drawn in fire. I stocked up on two different types of painkillers, determined to wage war on the virus. Some moments were manageable; others were sharp enough to steal my breath.

Travel isn’t always about landscapes and adventure. Sometimes it’s about paperwork, painkillers, and the quiet determination to keep going. These days in Puchong were not glamorous, but they were necessary — a reminder that journeys are stitched together from all kinds of moments, not just the beautiful ones.

 

 

CHAPTER 7 - The Second Embassy Visit and the Locked Bank Account

 

By the time the 20th rolled around, I felt like I had become a regular fixture in the embassy’s waiting room — a weary traveller orbiting the slow, indifferent machinery of officialdom. But this time, I walked in with a quiet determination. I had rehearsed my explanations, organised my documents, and steeled myself for whatever bureaucratic obstacle might appear next.

To my surprise, the process went smoothly. Papers were stamped, signatures were checked, and the official nodded with the solemnity of someone granting passage to another chapter of my life. I walked out into the bright Kuala Lumpur sun feeling lighter, as if a knot that had been tightening for days had finally loosened.

But the universe, ever fond of balance, had another test waiting.

My visit to the bank — the one I hoped would resolve the frozen account and the vanished ATM withdrawals — dissolved into a polite but immovable wall. After explaining the situation, after waiting, after being transferred from one counter to another, the verdict was delivered with the calm finality of a judge:

There was nothing they could do.

If I wanted my account unlocked, I would need to visit a Bangkok Bank branch in Thailand.

I stared at the teller, half amused, half exasperated. The solution to a Malaysian banking problem lay across a border, in another country entirely. Travel has a way of turning even the simplest tasks into international quests.

I stepped back out into the heat, the city buzzing around me, and let the news settle. It wasn’t the answer I wanted, but it was an answer. And at least Thailand was already on my horizon.

Back in Puchong, Peter greeted me with the same steady kindness he had shown since the moment I arrived. His home had become a refuge — a place where I could rest, heal, and gather myself before the next stretch of road. The shingles still burned beneath my skin, but the antivirals were slowly winning the battle. I moved more easily now, breathed more freely.

That evening, I sat in the quiet of the flatlet, the hum of the fan filling the room, and felt a strange mixture of frustration and gratitude. Bureaucracy had tested my patience, my body had tested my resilience, and yet — I was still moving forward. Still on the road. Still held up by the kindness of people who had no obligation to help me, yet did so without hesitation.

Travel isn’t just about landscapes and kilometres. It’s about these moments — the ones that challenge you, humble you, and remind you that the journey is as much internal as it is external.

Thailand awaited. A bank awaited. A new chapter awaited.

And I was ready to meet them all.

 

 

CHAPTER 8  —Leaving Malaysia, Arriving in Thailand

 

My flight to Bangkok wasn’t until noon, but I woke early, the way travellers do when a transition is coming. I packed my panniers with the familiar ritual of someone who has done it a thousand times: roll, fold, tuck, tighten. The bicycle and panniers stayed behind at Peter’s — another kindness added to the long list he’d given me.

The flight to Bangkok was uneventful, the kind of short hop where everyone sits politely, avoiding eye contact, silently negotiating elbow space. I stared out the window at the clouds, feeling that familiar mix of excitement and melancholy that comes with leaving a place that has held you — even imperfectly.

Just before reaching my little “emergency bunker,” I ran into my neighbours, Peet and Charmy. They greeted me with the easy friendliness that seems to come naturally to long-term expats, and before I knew it, we were sharing a few beers. The conversation flowed, the laughter came easily, and by the time I stumbled home, I felt the pleasant fuzziness of arrival.

I took two painkillers before bed — to ease the shingles — and slept like a stone.

 

Morning arrived with a sense of purpose. First on the agenda: the bank. I walked there early, determined to finally resolve the card issue that had shadowed me since Kuala Lumpur.

The process took most of the morning — forms, signatures, polite smiles, the usual dance of bureaucracy — but eventually, I walked out with a new bank card in hand. A small victory, but a satisfying one.

Back in my room, I tried to log in to the banking app and couldn’t. Locked out again. I stared at my phone, half laughing, half groaning. Some problems, it seems, refuse to resolve themselves neatly.

I decided to leave it for the next morning. Even this, I reminded myself, will end.

The afternoon drifted by quietly. After weeks of movement, illness, paperwork, and uncertainty, the stillness felt like a balm. I let myself rest, knowing the road — and the next chapter — would unfold soon enough.

Wednesday, 1 January 2025

174 CYCLE TOURING THAILAND (23)

  

CYCLE TOURING THAILAND (23)

 


PDF

PHOTOS 

MAP

FLIP-BOOK

VOICEOVER


Temples and Tailwinds: A Journey from Cambodia to Malaysia


Prologue

A journey never begins with movement. It begins with a quiet shift inside — a restlessness, a loosening, a whisper that says go.

I didn’t set out to reinvent myself. I set out because the road steadies me, because solitude sharpens me, because the world feels more honest at the speed of a bicycle. There is a kind of faith in leaving alone — trusting that the road will hold you, that strangers will be kind, that your body will carry you farther than your doubts allow.

So I began, not with certainty, but with willingness.

Not with a destination, but with the simple desire to move.

 

The Border Where Rain Becomes a Country

Morning in Koh Kong held me the way a soft hand lingers on a shoulder — gently, insistently, as if asking me to stay. The room was too comfortable, the air too forgiving, and every small task stretched into a kind of slow ritual. But the bags were packed, and momentum — even reluctant momentum — has its own gravity. I strolled to the money exchange, watching the last of my Cambodian riel transform into Thai baht, the way one life quietly becomes another.

The border was only ten kilometres away, but borders are never measured in distance. They are measured in waiting rooms, in fluorescent lights, in the slow shuffle of passports across counters. By the time I stepped out of the immigration office, it was past noon, and the heat pressed down like a hand on my back. Ninety kilometres to Trat suddenly felt like a sentence rather than a plan.

The road rose and fell in long, patient waves. My legs refused to cooperate, as if they too resented the idea of leaving Cambodia behind. Still, I pushed on — partly out of stubbornness, partly because the road itself was beautiful, a ribbon of smooth tarmac threading through green hills and quiet villages. I told myself I’d stop at a roadside motel, but my mind drifted, and when I looked up again, Trat was only thirty kilometres away. Daydreaming has its uses.

Fifteen kilometres from town, the sky shifted. A man on the roadside called out, half-teasing, “Rain is coming!” And then it did — not as a drizzle, but as a curtain. The world blurred into streaks of grey. Darkness arrived early. I cycled on, soaked and slightly delirious, the rain drumming against my cap like a warning I was too far in to heed.

By the time I reached Trat, I had to walk the bike through flooded streets, shoes squelching, hair plastered to my face. Guesthouses were shuttered, lights dimmed, and the town had already surrendered to night. I knocked on a closed door more out of hope than expectation.

A man opened it — kind eyes, a towel in hand — and ushered a drenched farang and her bicycle inside. Seven dollars for a room. Seven dollars for salvation. I could have kissed the floor.

I peeled off wet clothes, listened to the storm soften into a distant hiss, and lay on the thin mattress with the kind of gratitude that feels like prayer.

 

Temples That Remember What I Forget

I left Trat with the faint heaviness of déjà vu, the kind that settles in the chest when the road ahead is one you’ve ridden too many times. I wasn’t in the mood for cycling, but the weather was gentle, and seventy kilometres felt like a distance I could negotiate with.

The route slipped through old hamlets where wooden houses leaned into the years, and temples rose quietly from the landscape — gold-tipped, patient, older than anything I could name. These country lanes always soothe me; they hold history without insisting on it.

By the time the first raindrops touched my arms, I was already entering Chanthaburi. I ducked into the Muangchan Hotel, grateful for a ground-floor room and the small mercy of not hauling panniers upstairs.

Later, I wandered the night market — a theatre of smoke, colour, and voices — though vegetarian food was elusive. Still, the market fed me in its own way: the scent of charcoal, the hum of conversation, the soft glow of lanterns warming the dusk.

Back in my room, the rain returned, tapping at the window like a reminder. The temples I’d passed lingered in my mind — their stillness, their endurance. They seemed to remember something I had forgotten: that even familiar roads can feel new when you let yourself be quiet inside them.

 

The Road That Knows Me Too Well

I woke with a familiar reluctance, the kind that settles in when a road has been ridden too many times. Thailand stretched ahead of me like a chapter I’d already underlined, dog-eared, and read aloud. I wasn’t eager to return to Pattaya, nor to the administrative chore of extending my visa, but the practicalities of long travel have their own gravity. So I set off, even if my spirit lagged behind.

The road to Rayong was long — 115 kilometres of déjà vu — but the weather was kind, and the traffic light enough to let my mind drift. I’ve cycled this stretch so often that the landscape feels like an old acquaintance: not unwelcome, but incapable of surprise. Still, the rhythm of pedalling has its own quiet mercy. Even a familiar road can soften the edges of a restless mind.

By late afternoon, Rayong appeared, its outskirts rising like a memory I hadn’t asked to revisit. I rode straight to Rich Grant Guesthouse, the cheapest place in town and one of the few constants in my endlessly shifting life. The owner recognised me immediately — a small, amused smile, a discount offered without ceremony. I suppose there’s comfort in being known, even in a place you never meant to return to.

The washing machines hummed in the courtyard, a domestic soundtrack to a transient life. I showered, stretched my legs, and let the day fall away. Nothing remarkable had happened, yet the simple act of arriving felt like a quiet victory in itself.

 

Dust, Keys, and the Familiar Weight of Return

I left Rayong with the kind of determination that isn’t born of enthusiasm but of inevitability. The coastal road, usually my companion, didn’t call to me this time. I took the main road instead — a straight, unromantic line toward a place I knew too well.

The kilometres slipped by in a kind of trance. I barely stopped, barely ate, barely allowed myself to feel anything beyond the steady churn of pedals beneath me. Hunger arrived late, sharp and insistent, but by then Jomtien was already rising ahead of me like a memory I hadn’t asked to revisit.

I found my key only after rummaging through pockets and panniers, surprised at how easily one can forget the small anchors of a life left behind. The room greeted me exactly as I had abandoned it months before — everything in its place, except for the thin film of dust that had settled like a quiet accusation. I didn’t mind. Dust is just time made visible.

A shower washed the road from my skin. Coffee steadied me. A cold beer softened the edges of the day. While hanging laundry on the balcony, I heard my name float up from the street — Leo and Sammy, heading to the Corner Bar. Their voices were a reminder that even in places I return to reluctantly, there are threads of familiarity that tug me back into the world.

I joined them for a drink, the evening unfolding with the easy rhythm of old routines. Nothing extraordinary happened, yet the simple act of sitting among friends felt like a small, necessary exhale.

Some arrivals feel triumphant. Some feel like homecomings. And some — like this one — feel like stepping back into a room you never fully left.

 

A Quiet Day Beside a Restless Sea

I did almost nothing, and somehow that felt like both a luxury and a confession. I watched the robot vacuum trace its slow, determined path across the floor. It swept. It mopped. I walked to the day market for eggs and potatoes — the simplest of provisions for the simplest of meals. A steamer for the eggs, a microwave for the potato. Life reduced to its most functional form.

By late afternoon, I wandered to the beach. The sea was calm, the sand warm beneath me, the horizon a soft blur. I sat there, restless for no good reason, scolding myself gently for the ingratitude of it. Eight weeks, three countries, 3,371 kilometres — a circle drawn in sweat and wonder — and still my mind fidgeted like a child.

But gratitude has its own quiet tide. It comes in slowly, then all at once. Sitting there, watching the light shift across the water, I felt it settle in me again — the privilege of movement, the privilege of return, the privilege of being able to choose the next road.

Tomorrow, I will leave again. Today, I let the sea remind me how to be still.

 

The Pump That Delayed a Departure

Jomtien had a way of softening time. Days slipped past like warm tidewater, dissolving into one another until I could no longer tell preparation from procrastination. The beach murmured its steady lullaby, the markets breathed their evening perfume of frying garlic and charcoal smoke, and my bicycle — newly serviced, gleaming with fresh cogs and chain — waited like a horse at the gate.

But the pump, absurdly, betrayed me.

I reached for it that morning with the casual confidence of someone who believes the universe is mostly cooperative. Instead, it lay limp and useless in my hands, a small failure that felt disproportionately personal. My panniers were already packed, lined up by the door like obedient soldiers, and yet I was grounded by a single broken tool.

The local bike shop offered sympathy but no solution. They promised to check a warehouse, a phrase that sounded suspiciously like a gentle dismissal. So I ordered a pump online and resigned myself to living out of my panniers for a few more days — a strange limbo, half‑departed, half‑rooted.

I told myself I would leave on the ninth, pump or no pump. A vow made not to the road, but to my own restless spirit. Adventure, after all, rarely waits for perfect conditions.

 

Tailwinds and the First Hint of South

The pump arrived early, as if embarrassed by the fuss it had caused. I repacked my panniers with the urgency of someone afraid the universe might change its mind. Then I rolled out of Jomtien, the familiar streets slipping behind me like a skin I no longer needed.

The rural roads south of the city were gentle, winding through farmland where the air smelled of earth and green things. The freedom of movement returned quickly — that lightness in the chest, that quiet hum beneath the ribs. But fitness, I discovered, is a fickle companion. Even seventy kilometres felt longer than memory suggested.

Bang Saen greeted me with sunbathers and weekend crowds, the beach alive with colour and noise. Prices had doubled, inflated by demand, but I found a modest twelve-dollar room — ground floor, easy access, a mattress long past its prime. Comfort is relative on the road; convenience often wins.

I slept lightly, listening to the muffled sounds of holidaymakers drifting through the night, already feeling the pull of the next day’s ride.

 

A Road Suspended Over the Sea

Morning arrived grey, and the wind‑brushed, the kind of sky that makes you hesitate at the door. I left late, reluctant but determined, and soon found myself on a road built over the ocean — a narrow ribbon of concrete suspended above shifting water. For twenty kilometres, the world felt pared down to sea, sky, and the steady rhythm of my wheels.

Then the spell broke.

The highway swallowed me, its lanes wide and impatient. Construction sites narrowed the shoulders, trucks exhaled hot diesel breath, and the city’s sprawl began its slow, inevitable creep. Rounding the northern tip of the Gulf of Thailand is never pleasant; Bangkok stretches its influence like a tide, swallowing villages, fields, and silence.

By the time I reached Samut Prakan, I had no desire to continue. Budget rooms were scarce, so I surrendered to a pricier option, grateful simply to stop moving.

Hunger hit me with sudden ferocity. I nearly accosted a fellow guest returning from the market, begging directions. The market itself was a riot of abundance — fruit piled like jewels, steaming pots, skewers sizzling over open flames. I returned to my room with far more food than one person could reasonably eat, a small feast earned by endurance.

Outside, the city pulsed. Inside, I let exhaustion settle into my bones.

 

Floodplains Where Water Teaches Patience

To escape the chaos of Rama 2 Road, I took a ferry across the Chao Phraya — a crossing made possible only by the kindness of strangers who helped lift my bicycle aboard. On the far bank, the world softened again. I zig-zagged through narrow paths, detoured to a dolphin‑watching point where no dolphins appeared, and drifted through wetlands alive with birds.

This region is a vast floodplain, a place shaped not by land but by water. Canals thread through salt farms and fishing villages, and the people here live with the rhythm of tides and monsoons, accepting the inevitability of floods the way others accept seasons. It felt ancient, practical, and strangely serene.

By the time I reached Samut Songkhram, eighty-odd kilometres later, the Bangkok sprawl had finally loosened its grip. I checked into a room, my nose running, my body tired. The next day, I rested, letting the quiet seep back into me.

 

Bird Roads and the Long Breath of the Gulf

I woke with a surprising lightness, as if the rest day had rinsed something clean inside me. Maybe it was the food — Samut Songkhram’s night market is a kind of edible cathedral — or maybe it was simply the relief of having escaped Bangkok’s sprawl. Either way, my legs felt willing again.

A short ferry ride carried me across the river, and suddenly the world softened into rural quiet. The road slipped beneath the Rama 2 freeway, then opened into a landscape of mangroves and salt farms, the air sharp with brine. I detoured briefly to look for the swimming monkeys, but the trees were empty, the water still. Some creatures appear only when they choose to.

For once, I met another woman cyclist — a rarity on these roads. She was from the UK, escaping winter, riding south with the same quiet determination I recognised in myself. We chatted briefly, then drifted apart, each settling into our own rhythm.

A stiff tailwind pushed me along the Gulf, past Phetchaburi, past the vast salt flats shimmering like mirrors. These wetlands are a highway for migrating birds, and I scanned the horizon for the tiny spoon-billed sandpiper, that elusive slip of a creature. But the sky was empty today, the birds already elsewhere.

Most of the way unfolded on cycle paths or dedicated lanes — a rare luxury in Southeast Asia — and by mid-afternoon, I rolled into Cha‑Am. Hunger arrived before curiosity, so I didn’t wait for the night market. A street vendor fed me quickly and without ceremony, the way the road often does.

The day had been easy, almost generous. Sometimes the Gulf breathes with you. Sometimes it carries you farther than you expect.

 

A Tent Between Wind and the Whispering Sea

The road south from Cha‑Am is one of my favourites — a long, quiet ribbon that clings to the coastline, offering glimpses of sea and sky that feel almost too beautiful to be real. Add a tailwind, and the whole world seems to tilt in your favour.

I flew through Hua Hin without stopping, the city blurring into colour and noise. The cycle path carried me for a while, then I veered toward Pranburi, where the landscape softened into coconut groves and quiet villages. By the time I reached Sam Roi Yot, the limestone mountains rose like ancient guardians, their silhouettes jagged against the sky.

Ninety kilometres in, I entered Khao Sam Roi Yot National Park and headed straight for the Sam Phraya Beach campsite. The wind was sharp at first, tugging at the tent, but it soon calmed into a steady whisper. The ants, however, were relentless — tiny, determined creatures that drove me three kilometres to a shop in search of a deterrent. Esther would have laughed at my battle with the “wee buggers.”

As evening settled, I walked the deserted beach, the sand cool beneath my feet. I realised, with a kind of quiet astonishment, how little I needed: food, water, a tent, a sleeping mat, clean ablutions. The essentials of a life pared down to its bones.

The restaurant stayed open just long enough to serve me a bowl of fried rice. I ate it slowly, listening to the sea breathing in the dark.

Some nights remind you that simplicity is not deprivation.

It is freedom.

 

Rain, Refuge, and the Warmth of Strangers

I woke to a soft drizzle, the kind that whispers rather than warns. I packed quickly, hoping to outrun the weather, but the drizzle thickened into something heavier. Rain has a way of insisting on its own pace.

I pushed hard toward Prachuap, grateful that it was only fifty kilometres away. By the time I reached Maggie’s Homestay, I was damp, tired, and ready to stop. Maggie’s is one of those rare places where the welcome feels immediate — warm, unpretentious, familiar.

UK-John had been there for over a year. USA-Mike had drifted in from Indonesia and seemed to have rooted himself comfortably. Darren, the Australian surfer, lived in Sumatra but was passing through. The place felt like a crossroads of wandering souls, each carrying their own stories, each content to share them over tea or beer.

I paid for two nights, did my laundry, and surrendered to the easy companionship of strangers who, for a moment, felt like friends. The next day, I did nothing — absolutely nothing — except talk. I hadn’t spoken that much in months. It felt indulgent, almost decadent, to let words spill so freely.

Some stops are practical. Some become small sanctuaries. This one was both.

 

Waves, Wind, and the Cyclist Who Would Not Pass

I nearly stayed another day at Maggie’s. The place had that gravitational pull certain refuges possess — a softness, a warmth, a sense that time could stretch indefinitely without consequence. Everyone else seemed to be extending their stay, drifting deeper into the comfort of familiar faces and easy conversation. But the wind was still blowing from the northeast, and tailwinds are not to be wasted. I left before I could talk myself out of it.

The sea was wilder than the day before. Waves hurled themselves over the promenade, spilling onto the road in white, frothing sheets. I veered inland, choosing safety over spectacle, though the ocean’s roar followed me for kilometres.

With the wind at my back, the kilometres unfurled effortlessly. The road curved toward a small national park, forcing me briefly onto the highway — wide shoulder, light traffic, a corridor of asphalt that felt almost gentle. A local cyclist caught up to me, exchanged a few words, then drifted ahead. But he didn’t stay ahead. He waited. And waited again. His presence lingered too close, too attentive, unsettling in a way I couldn’t quite name.

I turned into the national park to give him space. When I rejoined the road, he was still there. I stopped to let him pass; he slowed. His backward glances tightened something in my chest. Instinct is a quiet, insistent thing. I listened to it. I returned to the highway and stayed there until the turnoff to Bang Krut.

In Bang Krut, I found a patch of shade and drank water while chatting with a friendly Canadian — the kind of easy, fleeting encounter that restores your faith in strangers. Then I continued south, the wind still pushing, the sea still restless.

By the time I reached Bang Saphan, a hundred kilometres down the coast, I was ready to stop. I had hoped to camp in the national park, but a fallen tree had crushed tents the night before, and the campsite was closed. So I settled for a room in town — four walls, a bed, a door that locked. After the strange tension of the day, it felt like enough.

Some days, the road gives you beauty. Some days it gives you a warning.

Today, it gave me both.

 

The Royal Road and the Quiet Work of Waiting

I left late, unhurried, letting the morning stretch itself out before me. The tailwind was still there, steady and loyal, and the Royal Coastal Road unfolded like a long exhale. This stretch of Thailand is a kind of quiet paradise — coconut groves, fishing villages painted in sun-bleached colours, Buddha statues watching over the road with serene indifference.

I drifted between the main route and smaller rural lanes, following whatever path felt most alive. The wind carried me across wide rivers and past boats pulled onto shore like sleeping animals. The world felt generous, open, uncomplicated.

After about 110 kilometres, I reached Wua Laen Beach and found a simple hut for 350 baht — the kind of place where time slows, and the sea becomes your only clock. I stayed two days, tending to small tasks, letting the wind and waves do their quiet work on my mind.

Eventually, practicality nudged me onward. I moved into Chumphon town, where errands awaited — documents to sign, a retainer to replace, logistics that tethered me briefly to the ordinary world. I booked a room for a few days, then a few more. The dentist worked slowly; the city moved at its own pace.

There isn’t much to do in Chumphon except wander the night market or take a motorbike taxi to the Lotus mall.

Waiting is its own kind of journey.

Sometimes the road pauses so you can catch up to yourself.

 

Banana Groves and the Sea’s Unfinished Anger

I left Chumphon without the retainer I’d been waiting for. No message, no update. Irritation simmered beneath the surface, but the road — as it often does — softened it.

The tailwind returned, steady and warm. I drifted through banana groves, coconut plantations, and oil palm fields, the landscape shifting between inland quiet and sudden glimpses of the sea. The ocean was still angry from the storm — waves heaving, debris scattered across the sand like the aftermath of an argument.

After eighty kilometres, I reached Fisherman’s Bungalows, perched right on the beach. My hut was small, rickety, almost fragile in the face of the wind, but its imperfection felt honest. I bought snacks from a nearby shop and sat on the veranda, watching the waves hurl themselves at the shore.

The sea was restless, unfinished, full of its own wild language. I listened until the light faded.

 

A Christmas Ride into the Ordinary City

I left late, easing my bicycle out of the cramped little bungalow as if coaxing a reluctant animal from its shelter. The storm had passed, but its breath still lingered in the air — a faint salt‑sharpness, a restless undertow in the waves. The road, however, was gentle. Another superb day along this stretch of coast, where the world feels wide and uncomplicated.

Cycle touring rarely gets better than this: a tailwind at your back, the sea appearing and disappearing beside you like a companion with its own moods, the road unspooling in long, forgiving lines. I stopped often, not out of fatigue but out of wonder — small pauses to let the landscape settle into me.

By the time I reached Surat Thani, the sun was already low, the light turning the city gold at the edges. One hundred and twenty‑three kilometres behind me, I rolled straight to My Place Hotel, hoping for one of their budget rooms. They were all taken. I paid more than I wanted to, unwilling to drag my panniers up four flights of stairs elsewhere. Sometimes practicality wins over thrift.

The next day unfolded slowly. Surat Thani is a typical Thai city — modern and traditional in the same breath. I wandered its streets, watching fishmongers, rice sellers, and vendors of temple paraphernalia coexist in a kind of effortless choreography. Christmas passed without ceremony, absorbed into the ordinary rhythm of the place.

Some cities dazzle.

Some cities overwhelm. Surat Thani simply lets you be.

 

Valentine on the Road to Somewhere Else

I considered following the coast, but the wind was unsettled, the sky undecided. Inland felt easier — a main road, a wide shoulder, a tailwind that made the kilometres glide beneath me. It wasn’t the most interesting route, but sometimes ease is its own kind of beauty.

The day’s gift arrived in the form of Valentine, a young Russian cyclist heading toward Kuala Lumpur to catch a flight to India. We rode side by side for a while, talking in the easy, unguarded way travellers often do — two strangers sharing a road, a pace, a moment in time. Then our paths diverged, as they always do.

Rain began shortly after we parted. I reached Tha Sala just as the sky opened fully, and when I saw a ten-dollar room along the main road, I didn’t hesitate. The rain hammered the roof, the air smelled of wet earth and diesel, and I felt grateful for the simple shelter.

Some encounters last only a few kilometres. But they stay with you longer than you expect.

 

Shadow Puppets in a Rain-Washed Town

I left under a grey sky, the kind that promises rain without committing to it. The ride was comfortable despite the intermittent downpours — warm rain, soft rain, the kind that feels more like a presence than a nuisance.

Valentine had warned me of heavy storms in the forecast, and though the rain never became truly fierce, it was enough to convince me to stop early in Nakhon Si Thammarat. Perhaps I overreacted. Perhaps I simply needed a pause.

The town offered little in the way of spectacle, but I wandered anyway — along the remnants of the old city wall, past the white City Pillar Shrine, through Sanam Na Muang Park. The air smelled of wet stone and frangipani.

Nakhon Si Thammarat is known for its shadow puppets, and at last I learned the meaning of the black statues with red fingers I’d seen along the road. Characters from an ancient performance tradition, their gestures frozen mid‑story. I also discovered that folk medicine still thrives here — herbs, roots, rituals passed down quietly through generations.

Rain or shine, I knew I would move on the next day.
But the town left a small imprint, like a thumb pressed into soft clay.

 

Wind Turbines Turning the Sky

I left Nakhon Si Thammarat under a sky still bruised from the previous day’s rain. The air was cool, washed clean, carrying the faint scent of wet earth and coconut husk. The road slipped quickly into familiar terrain — long stretches of coconut palm plantations, their fronds swaying like slow metronomes marking the rhythm of the morning.

Despite the lingering drizzle, the ride felt easy. The landscape opened and closed around me, alternating between quiet inland lanes and sudden glimpses of the sea. When the coastline finally revealed itself fully, the wind turbines appeared — enormous white giants turning with a kind of solemn grace. Their blades carved slow arcs through the sky, each rotation a reminder of how small and temporary we are in the face of such engineered stillness.

The wind wasn’t as generous as on previous days, but the road remained kind. By midday, the clouds thinned, and the light softened into something almost tender. I rode through it quietly, letting the kilometres pass without urgency.

Around four o’clock, the weather shifted again — a darkening at the edges, a heaviness in the air. I stopped at the Cheewaport Resort; a cluster of bungalows tucked along a sandy track beside the ocean. The price was higher than I wanted, but the sky was threatening, and my body was ready to stop.

The bungalow was spacious, clean, unexpectedly comfortable. When the owner offered to send someone to the shop for snacks and beer, I agreed without hesitation. My rubber arm, as always, bent easily.

I sat on the veranda as the evening gathered, listening to the sea mutter to itself. The wind turbines turned slowly in the distance, steady and unbothered, as if they alone understood the language of the sky.

Some days are defined by effort. Some by beauty. And some — like this one — by the quiet machinery of the world turning around you.

 

History Written in Salt and Stone

The wind was already awake when I set out, stirring the sea into a restless churn. I considered following the coastal road, but the crosswind was sharp, almost spiteful, so I turned inland toward the main road — a more sheltered, if less poetic, choice.

I didn’t stop often. Not out of haste, but because the weather pressed against me like a hand urging me forward. Still, the landscape offered its own quiet revelations. Temples appeared along the roadside — old, weathered, their walls holding centuries of stories. Further on, the remains of an ancient city emerged, stones half‑claimed by moss and time. Then a Dutch cemetery, unexpected and strangely moving, a reminder of how many nations have passed through this region in search of something — spices, trade, power, belonging.

As I neared Songkhla, I found a small ferry crossing the mouth of the lake. It saved me ten or fifteen kilometres of highway, but more than that, it offered a moment of stillness — the bicycle resting beside me, the water dark and wide, the wind briefly softened.

Songkhla welcomed me with its old town — narrow streets, colourful facades, a sense of history that felt both lived‑in and lovingly preserved. I checked into an affordable hotel without bothering to search for anything cheaper. The location was perfect, and I was tired of the day’s negotiations with weather and wind.

I wandered the old city, surrounded by Thai tourists with cameras slung around their necks. I felt like the only foreigner in the crowd, a quiet observer drifting through their holiday snapshots. Songkhla’s history stretches back to the 10th century, its roots intertwined with trade routes that reached as far as Quanzhou. You can feel that depth in the stones, in the air, in the way the city holds itself.

Later, I took a motorbike taxi to the mall — always a slightly terrifying experience — and found it bustling with families preparing for the New Year. Hijab‑wearing women pushed trolleys overflowing with food, and I felt a sudden, vivid memory of Malay kitchens in Cape Town, the scent of samosas and spice drifting through the air.

I was close to Malaysia now. Close enough to taste it.

 

Crossing Into a New Year and a New Country

I left Songkhla beneath a high, bright sun, the kind that makes the world feel sharper at the edges. The old town slipped behind me in a blur of colour — murals, narrow lanes, the soft echo of yesterday’s footsteps — and soon I was riding along the shores of Lake Songkhla, the water wide and unmoving, as if holding its breath.

Hat Yai rose ahead, busy and sprawling, but I skirted its edges, choosing quieter secondary roads that threaded through villages and fields. The air smelled of rice husk and damp earth. I had planned to stop near the border, to cross in the morning with a clear head and rested legs. But plans, I’ve learned, are fragile things. They dissolve the moment the road whispers otherwise.

And today, the road whispered.

Before I knew it, I was at the immigration complex, a maze of signs and counters and half-understood instructions. I bought travel insurance for the next two months — a bureaucratic ritual that felt oddly ceremonial, like lighting a candle before entering a temple. Then I was stamped out of Thailand, stamped into Malaysia, and just like that, a line on a map became a shift in the air.

The differences announced themselves immediately. Buddhist temples gave way to mosques, their domes rising like quiet moons above the rooftops. Women moved through the streets in flowing hijabs, their steps purposeful, their presence serene. The food stalls overflowed with abundance, but vegetarian options were scarce, and beer was nowhere in sight — at least not openly. Eventually, I found a shopkeeper willing to sell it from under the counter, a small act of hospitality wrapped in secrecy.

The Malaysian ringgit felt heavier in my hand than the Thai baht — stronger, more deliberate. Prices reflected that. But the village itself was gentle, unhurried, a soft landing after the long pull south.

It was already past four when I settled into a room for the night. New Year’s Eve. No fireworks, no crowds, no celebration — just the quiet satisfaction of having crossed another border, another threshold. I thought of Cape Town kitchens, of Malay samosas and the warm, familiar scent of spice drifting through the air. The world is wide, but its flavours travel with us.

Outside, the evening deepened. Inside, I felt the subtle shift of a year turning — not with noise, but with a kind of inward clarity.

Some crossings are loud. Some are triumphant. This one was quiet, steady, and entirely mine.

 

Epilogue

Crossing into Malaysia felt less like an ending and more like an exhale — a soft shift in light, language, and rhythm. Journeys rarely end at borders; they end in the body, in the subtle ways distance rearranges you.

I didn’t feel changed immediately. Change moves like a tide beneath the surface. But I felt a widening, a readiness, a sense that the road ahead — whatever shape it took — would meet me where I was.

The road didn’t end here.

It simply changed its name. 2025.