Please utilise this space to search this blog

Showing posts with label Kuala Lumpur. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kuala Lumpur. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 31, 2025

Kuala Lumpur (Malaysia) - The 5843

Kuala Lumpur (Malaysia)

29 December 2025 - 02 January 2026

The 5,843 days between the last time that I’d celebrated New Year’s Eve at the Traders Hotel in Kuala Lumpur, to now returning to enjoy a second experience, had seen my life transition in express fashion, through a variety of phases. This period of my life had certainly been coloured by a vast amount of change, from getting married at (day 2708), to starting a family (day 3343), to moving to a new city and country (day 1992) , and also, the ache of having loved ones pass away (day 1718 & day 1759). The rate of change had for me been unparalleled. Within those 5,843 days, day 1 of the commencement of this cycle was an evening spent with my great friend, Jet Frichot.


Traders Hotel - KLCC - Kuala Lumpur - Malaysia

The view from our living room - Traders Hotel - KLCC - Kuala Lumpur - Malaysia


The view from our bedroom - Traders Hotel - KLCC - Kuala Lumpur - Malaysia

Back towards the end of 2009, we had spent a week or two travelling Vietnam, predominantly Hanoi & Da Nang,  and at its conclusion we were on our way back home to Sydney via an end-of-year stop in KL. This stop was meant to serve both as punctuation mark for the year being finalised and also set of ellipses for the year ahead.

The New Year celebration of 2009–10 was spent at the Skybar of the Traders Hotel in KLCC, a prime location whose vantage point to the Petronas Towers was the best you could get in the city. With that said, not knowing exactly where the fireworks display would take place, our best judgment and intuition indicated that the Petronas Towers, an iconic symbol of Malaysia, would more than likely serve as the backdrop for the celebratory psychedelics… and, of course, we were right > https://www.youtube.com/watch?reload=9&v=apZcYaHSerw.

It’s amazing to me that still after 15 years, this video is available on YouTube.

In that time and space, I could have never imagined that at some point I’d be returning to the same location to celebrate a New Year’s Eve with my wife and my son, although… and I say this truthfully, there have been many times in situations such as this, where in the midst of the post-celebration lull, that my mind has projected forward in my loneliness-inspired introspection and I lived in the hopeful thought, that maybe one day I’ll do this with my wife and kid(s). In all honesty, I can’t say that at some point after 1:00 a.m. on New Year's Day, 2010, I didn’t think that—it was only 5,842 days ago.

The spectacular Petronas Towers - Traders Hotel - KLCC - Kuala Lumpur - Malaysia

A complimentary bottle of Malbec & chocolates on arrival - Traders Hotel - KLCC - Kuala Lumpur - Malaysia

Arriving at the Traders Hotel after a long drive from Ipoh, there was a small sense of completing a full circle, and also a sense of amazement that somewhere in time, within this common space, the same person  would experience an event framed by a structure, but that my internal energy was now resonating significantly differently. And yet, across that chasm of time there may very well have been a connection. One version of me reflecting on another time, remembering a feeling of melancholy in a time of celebration, and the other reaching forward hopefully for something better and more fulfilling. Standing here at what was now day 0, I can fully recognise what I was longing for.

For this stay I had booked a Twin Towers View Suite—a wonderful room that had stunning views to the Petronas Towers from both the living room and the bedroom. Additionally, the room also provided us with access to the Traders Club Lounge on level 32, which is such a blessing when it comes to sundowner cocktails and the chance to do bottomless drinks at happy hours. Let me say, we had consecutive nights of happiness from the 30th to the 1st of January, inclusive.

Traders Club Lounge - Traders Hotel - KLCC - Kuala Lumpur - Malaysia

The magnificent view from Skybar - over KLCC towards Petronas Towers - Traders Hotel - KLCC - Kuala Lumpur - Malaysia

In the two full days that we had prior to the New Year celebrations, we didn’t really move further than what the internal lift system would allow, which means that we pretty much travelled almost exclusively vertically—from the buffet breakfast on level 5, to our room on level 23, to the Skybar on level 33, or to the gym or to the spa. Add to that two separate experiences at the Pavilion Kuala Lumpur, which is a vast, upscale mall, approximately a 15-minute walk from the front door of the Traders, and there you have it—our collective KLCC experience for the last few days of 2025. Even so, our time there was more than satisfying.

What we came for was really the view to the Petronas Towers, which are icons of Malaysia and absolutely spectacular structures. Both by day and night, these buildings stand proudly in the heart of Kuala Lumpur, architecturally significant, magnificent in design and visual appeal, and true KL identifiers. I can’t really say if they are underrated structures, but when the sun goes down, their brilliance is on display for all to see. Sitting in front of these structures in the confines of a hotel room allows you the time to appreciate and ‘bask in their gravitas’, and also just reflect generally. Those moments of peaceful contemplation were priceless.

Out and about in KLCC a few hours before NYE-  KLCC - Kuala Lumpur - Malaysia

Out and about in KLCC a few hours before NYE-  KLCC - Kuala Lumpur - Malaysia

Out and about in KLCC a few hours before NYE-  KLCC - Kuala Lumpur - Malaysia

5,844 days from when I last celebrated New Year’s Eve in this building, I sat on the windowsill of the Twin Towers View Suite with my wife and son. The darkness of our room overwhelmed by the vibrancy, and nearly dystopian, cyberpunk-type view in front of us. The city hum of early evening, and the low electric haze glowing off the layers of concrete and glass, giving way to the increasing energy being created by the crowd below. Screens, lights, neon, horns, building facades—all constructed in front of us in what could look like a wide glass picture frame. Here I was, 5,844 days later, these same eyes looking at the city below, welcoming in the year 2026, and occasionally flicking my mind back to how I welcomed in 2010. Sixteen years tethered by a single thought.

Prime vantage point for the  NYE fireworks - Traders Hotel -   KLCC - Kuala Lumpur - Malaysia

An amazing view from the Twin Towers View Suite - Traders Hotel -   KLCC - Kuala Lumpur - Malaysia

You can just see the outline of 2026 on the tower facade - Traders Hotel -   KLCC - Kuala Lumpur - Malaysia


Counting down to the final seconds, and then in a moment, there we were—a new year in its infancy. No longer really thinking of what I need and what I want my world to be but now thinking of how I want to be able to shape the world for my son.

As the first morning of 2026 grew older, we ventured out for a small stroll to make sense of it all. It was New Year’s Day of course, and there’s always a vibe to that, albeit relatively low key. For all the New Year’s Eve’s that I’ve survived, and consequential New Years Day’s thereafter, this was a good one.

Pavillion KL - Jalan Raja Chulan St - Kuala Lumpur - Malaysia

Morning view - Traders Hotel -   KLCC - Kuala Lumpur - Malaysia

Pavillion KL - Jalan Raja Chulan St - Kuala Lumpur - Malaysia

This day, the first of 2026, was going to be our last full day in Kuala Lumpur, and in fact Malaysia. The next day, we were scheduled to depart at 08:30 for Colombo in Sri Lanka—a new country on the horizon for all of us: No. 12 for Aiden, No. 61 for Inga, and No. 74 for me.


Monday, December 29, 2025

Lumut & Ipoh (Malaysia) - Hard Rock destiny

Lumut (Malaysia) & Ipoh (Malaysia)

26 - 29 December 2025

Planning travel is one of life’s great joys for me. I’m the kind of person who can look a year ahead, organise finances, coordinate logistics, plan experiences, and research every detail to ensure a smooth, well-considered trip. My wife, on the other hand, is perfectly content to show up and be guided. After nearly ten years together, I think she has enough confidence in me to know that our holidays will mostly run smoothly. What’s more, I can carry the excitement and anticipation from the moment the idea is born right through to boarding—think of me as your travel energy drink keeping the momentum and enthusiasm alive every step of the way. Certainly, I involve Inga in decision making, and she is across any of the major decisions when I need an opinion as to what will benefit us as a collective, case in point, day 1 of our Malaysia, Sri Lanka & Maldives trip.

Ready to fly - Tullamarine Airport - Melbourne - Australia

Ready to fly - Tullamarine Airport - Melbourne - Australia

The start of this excursion we were going to be based in Malaysia, mostly so that we could be based on Kuala Lumpur for the NYE fireworks, it was simple as an idea as that. In advance of our KL stay, we had wanted to spend some time outside of the capital and maybe have a fairly ‘light’ and ‘breezy’ kick-off to out end-of-year R&R.

Having had some liberties bestowed upon me for my willingness to plan, I also have the ability to construct travel around some of the things that I enjoy, for example, targeting locations that have a Hard Rock Café, and in Malaysia, there really is an abundance of riches, for example, Penang, Melaka, Genting Highlands, and Ipoh, to name a few. We’d already been to Penang, so the other three were options and thoroughly dependant on how I constructed our travel motion. What our destiny became therefore, for the first few days as least, was the construct of how we could get to the Ipoh HRC (after the Genting option was defeated in a close call), by also being able to enjoy some water parks on the way, an imperative for Aiden (and also for Inga and myself, if truth be told).

As Genting Highlands morphed into Ipoh, so my scanning of the West Coast of Malaysia became clearer with each passing Google Maps search. Influenced by my desire to find a comfortable relaxing hotel, within striking distance of Ipoh, and one that could occupy enough of our time in period from Boxing Day to the 29 December, I landed on the lovely Double Tree by Hilton, Damai Laut resort, in Lumut, as our first port of call. Underpinned by some lovely scenery of the nearby Pangkor island, which sat relatively close to the western Malaysian shoreline in the Melaka Strait, this looked like the right place for all of us to start absorbing those holiday vibes. What’s more the mini on-site water park, looked like a treat for Aiden too.

Hilton Damai Laut Resort - Lumut - Malaysia

Hilton Damai Laut Resort - Lumut - Malaysia

Hilton Damai Laut Resort - Lumut - Malaysia

Hilton Damai Laut Resort - Lumut - Malaysia

Now recounting my steps back to somewhere in the middle of the year, I recall asking Inga whether upon landing in Kuala Lumpur whether we bunk down for a night at the nearby Sama Sama hotel next to the airport, catch some sleep which was stolen in transit, and then drive up to the hotel, OR, whether we just harden up and accept the 3-4hr drive from KL airport on day 1 as simply, ‘paying the price of entry’.  Believing that the holiday excitement vibes would likely carry us through day 1, we opted for pushing the pedal to the metal and gunning it out of the city.

On reflection, this was our only dubious call of the trip. We did this. We drove out into the KL morning traffic, and out of the city, and then we drove, and drove….and drove through landscapes of perpetual blandness. For all of what Kuala Lumpur is, and for all that it still yet to discover about it, the drive from KL to Lumut was soul destroying. Near (5) hours of road with not much to show on the experience to time scale. Relief only came upon our arrival at the Double Tree. But sure enough, dropping our bags in our room was our entry pass to holiday fulfillment. This place was just the tonic we needed. Not overwhelming but more than pleasant enough for us to unfurl our blankets of adult accountability and tension, and lay them nicely on a sandy beach bathed in gold sunshine.

The Damai Laut resort was lovely and obligated us to do not much more than decide upon when we’d head to the pool, when we would need to acquire drinks and when we should consider having meals. An enjoyable start to the vacation without being overwhelming.

Hilton Damai Laut Resort - Lumut - Malaysia

Hilton Damai Laut Resort - Lumut - Malaysia

Our three days at the resort honestly did feel enough by the time we left, but neither do I think that we overstayed. As we exited on our last day we made our way north-east to Ipoh, a town in approximately the centre of the western side of Malaysia, with a population of nearly 800,000. Located between Kuala Lumpur and Penang, Ipoh has become both a major transportation hub, and recently, a city that has started to attract a number of inquisitive tourists. For mine, the drawcard was of course being able to add another random HRC (Ipoh) to our list of HRC conquests, and additionally, for Aiden (only lol), was being able to visit the fabulous Lost World of Tambun waterpark (https://sunwaylostworldoftambun.com/), which is a Sunway property (apparently significant and well known in Malaysia).

Driving into Ipoh, it felt like we were in the midst of a revisit to Penang. The same traffic, the same heat and equivalent type of architecture. The Ipoh HRC was relatively close to the centre of the city and certainly became a checklist item, without being a standout. Still, we can say that we’ve been there. Indeed, our visit to the centre of Ipoh was fairly limited and we only really got to spend some time on Concubine Street, which was an enjoyable hub of market, café and restaurant activity in the centre of Ipoh.

Hard Rock Cafe - Ipoh - Malaysia

Hard Rock Cafe - Ipoh - Malaysia

Hard Rock Cafe - Ipoh - Malaysia

Hard Rock Cafe - Ipoh - Malaysia

After our stop we made our way to our accommodation for the evening at the nicely appointed Ipoh Sunway Onsen Suites & Tambun Guesthouse, which literally overlooked the Lost City of Tambun waterpark. A great property, with an epic swimming pool, this place had the best ‘bang for buck’ on the trip, with the room rate working out at approximately $87.50 for one night, which provided us with a 2 bdr apartment, with cars space, balcony overlooking the park, full kitchen, an ensuite for the main room. If anyone is looking for a great deal in Ipoh, I certainly recommend this place.

Ipoh - Malaysia

Concubine Street - Ipoh - Malaysia

The next day was spend a full day at the Lost City waterpark and it was fabulous! Not the biggest or most impressive waterpark but enough to maintain our interest, and certainly enough to make Aiden fall in love with a large waterpark that was filled with all sorts of exhilarating slides – which was the real point. When your child develops their own sense of exciting for something you also enjoy, well that’s just a really enjoyable feeling.

Hard Rock teddy - Ipoh Sunway Onsen Suites & Tambun Guesthouse - Ipoh - Malaysia

A great view of the Lost World of Tambun Waterpark Ipoh Sunway Onsen Suites & Tambun Guesthouse - Ipoh - Malaysia

Lost World of Tambun Waterpark - Ipoh - Malaysia

Lost World of Tambun Waterpark - Ipoh Sunway Onsen Suites & Tambun Guesthouse - Ipoh - Malaysia

With a full day of water bound excitement already formulating its own pleasant memories, we headed for Kuala Lumpur. Our small side detour aside, we were returning to the big Capital C to see out the last few days of 2025, and to experience the count down and NYE fireworks from the Traders Hotel in KLCC.

Having experienced a NYE fireworks display at the Traders once before, I knew that its proximity to the Petronas Towers and its prime vantage point would set us up perfectly for the 2025 finale. So driving down the busy stretch back to KL, there was already a lot more to be looking forward to!.


Saturday, July 6, 2024

Kuala Lumpur (Malaysia) - Hardly Rocking!

Singapore (Singapore) - Kuala Lumpur (Malaysia)

03 July - 06 July 2024

It hasn’t been that long since our last overseas adventure—Vietnam, October '23 to be exact. But you know how it goes; the middle months of this year have somehow stretched out like a never-ending Netflix series. Weeks blending, with early mornings, late nights, juggling the usual parental duties, all while finishing my fourth degree. Yeah, it’s a bit much. It’s like life’s pressing the fast-forward button, but you’re stuck in slow motion. And let's be real, I’m not alone in this. There are probably millions of parents out there running on empty, fuelled by caffeine and sheer willpower, all while doing battle with sleep deprivation like it’s their side hustle.

Inga and I had cooked up the idea for a getaway at the start of the year. Honestly, this trip to Penang could’ve been anywhere in our tropical neighbourhood—Fiji, the Philippines, you name it. But in the end, the battle for our destination was won by the most economical flights that could whisk us away to sun, sand, and an endless supply of margaritas. So, a big shoutout to the Hard Rock Hotel Penang! Victory was yours from the start.

Now for the challenges.

It always seems like the weeks leading up to any holiday are just begging for chaos to strike. But for this trip, the universe really went all out. It felt like one thing after another, each crisis barely averted, and there were moments when I thought the only margaritas we’d be sipping would be from the North Melbourne Guzman y Gomez.

First, we had the inevitable bouts of illness—nothing too serious, but just enough to threaten our plans. Then, in a classic last-minute twist, we discovered Aiden’s passport was a month or two past its expiration date. And when did we find out? Five days before departure. Cue the express passport scramble, complete with a $450 price tag and a lot of nail-biting.

Just to keep things interesting, I somehow managed to throw out my back, which left me practically immobile for a few days. Picture me, laid up like an invalid, right before we were supposed to travel. And because that wasn’t enough, I had a showdown with the bank the night before we left, which locked me out of my account. This little saga ended with me rushing into the bank to prove my identity, a mere two hours before our Scoot flight to Singapore was scheduled to take off.

Scoot flight to Singapore

Scoot flight to Singapore

Melbourne Tullamarine Airport - Australia

Our little 'Rockstar' - Melbourne Tullamarine Airport - Australia

Thankfully, with our collective will and wily wits, we managed to get everything on the straight and narrow, all in time to make our flight which had is sailing sweetly into the sky just after noon on a Wednesday.

Budget Airlines

Budget airlines, they are what they are, and all things considered, they’re not a disaster. Of course you miss in-flight entertainment, some complimentary drinks and some other small things which aren’t so important for me to consider enough to make an issue of. The price differential across three passengers does enough to lower my care factor to something infinitesimally minimal.

Singapore

On this occasion Singapore was what ‘we in the game’ know as either an ‘extended transit’ or ‘long transit’, approximately a day in duration, enough to make use of a hotel room, get a decent night sleep and have a few drinks. For this stop we decided to bunk down at the D’Resort Hotel@ Downtown East - https://www.dresort.com.sg/ - and borrowing directly from their website, ‘it’s a resort experience where you can step into paradise, in one of Singapore’s finest nature inspired, all inclusive staycation resorts, featuring an integrated Water Park experience – located just 10 mins from Changi Airport’.   How can you go past being 10 mins from Changi, having a water park on your doorstep AND paying under $200SGD in Singapore? That made a whole lot of sense to me!

Singapore is a fantastic place and my prior experience here have always been pleasant but for this long transit I didn’t think we needed much more than a bed….and a Water Park! Lol

Wild Wet Water Park - Singapore

Throwing up the horns - Singapore Changi Airport - Singapore

Wild Wet Water Park - Singapore

https://www.wildwildwet.com/ - Wild Wild Wet water park was literally right outside our hotel, making it the perfect pre-flight adventure after breakfast. With a 5 PM flight out of Changi to KL and the park opening at 12 PM, we squeezed every drop of fun out of those 2.5 hours. Then it was a mad dash back to the hotel for a quick change before heading off to the airport, just in time for our flight. These days the ability for online check-in, ride-hailing apps, contactless check-outs, it all works in your favour to maximise your time and minimise unnecessary hassle. From memory we left D’Resort Hotel at about 3:25pm, and we were already cruising through duty free and being called to board at 4:15pm. Not bad.

Kuala Lumpur

KL remains a bit of a mystery to me, much like Buenos Aires was during my first visit. I can sense—both instinctively and intuitively—that there’s so much more to this city that I think I’d like or find intriguing but each time I’ve been there, I’ve only scratched the surface. There’s a depth to KL that I haven’t yet tapped into, and I have a feeling it’s one of those hidden gems of Asia that, once I manage to break through veneer, will draw me in completely, no questions asked.

Arriving in KL at night is a treat. The lights of the skyline draw you in like moths to a flame, punctuated by the almost mythical twin Petronas Towers. Standing brightly and boldly, head and shoulders above the accompanying monuments to all things capitalism, these gorgeous towers are something to behold. An iconic structure of not just KL but Malaysia, which at one time in the early 90’s were identified as the tallest structures on earth, are incredible structure of architecture & engineering.

Ascot Star - Kuala Lumpur - Malaysia

Ascot Star - Kuala Lumpur - Malaysia

View of the Petronas Towers from our room - Ascot Star Hotel - Kuala Lumpur - Malaysia

For the next few nights, we made the Ascot Star KLCC our home. We stayed in a fantastic one-bedroom apartment on the 25th floor, complete with a direct line of sight to the Petronas Towers—a breath-taking view in a city full of towering skyscrapers. But the real highlight was the rooftop pool on their so-called ‘Level 99.’ It felt like a pool in the sky, an open invitation to take in the dramatic cityscape. We spent about a couple of hours there immediately after arrival, soaking up the view and the atmosphere, and somehow, the devilishly cold water that had me shivering, even though the evening temperature was hovering nearly at the 30 degree mark. Of course, when you have a 5-yr old that’s water addicted then there’s not much else you can do than ‘Do what he says’ and stay in the pool to save him from his own ‘dives and bombs’ and shiver yourself senseless into the evening.

KLCC - Kuala Lumpur - Malaysia


Ascot Star Hotel - Kuala Lumpur - Malaysia

Aiden - KLCC - Kuala Lumpur - Malaysia

The Elisher Team - KLCC - Kuala Lumpur - Malaysia

For the remaining part of that evening, which by now wasn’t very long at all, we made the pilgrimage down to the Hard Rock Café – Kuala Lumpur.

Why the Hard Rock?

I get asked the question a lot. What is it about the Hard Rock? Is it the food? Is the music? What’s the inevitable magnetic pull that you feel when you identify an HRC café in any city?

….this is not a difficult question for me to answer.

The HRC is a bit like a calling card, an easy sort of verification that you’ve been somewhere, and you can get the merchandise to prove it. What’s more, rock music is what I’ve grown up with and it makes up about 80% of my playlist and about 95% of my live music choices. So for me, and for us in fact, the music is on point, the memorabilia is kitsch but still interesting, the food options a good and the drinks are great. Couple with the fact that the service is usually very good and there are often live music options at the venues, it makes it all very much ‘right up our alley’.

Hard Rock Cafe - Kuala Lumpur - Malaysia

Hard Rock Cafe - Kuala Lumpur - Malaysia


Hard Rock Cafe - Kuala Lumpur - Malaysia

Our next day was effectively the only full day we had in KL on this occasion.  We kicked off by taking a walk to the Petronas Towers and then through to KLCC Park & Garden, such a wonderful oasis in this city of giants. Travel these days for me is a little about reminiscing and a lot about trying enjoy the experience through Aidens’ eyes. I’m tacitly aware that all these new memories are going to shape, influence and be impactful, so I really want to make his travel experience as fun and as memorable as possible.

Now, from a purely nostalgia initiated perspective, I dragged Inga and Aiden to the Traders Hotel that front onto KLCC park and had them come up to the Skybar for an early afternoon drink. If you haven’t heard the story, then of course you can read about historic events via this blog right here, https://hdbc2.blogspot.com/2010/04/berserker-httpen.html. This place holds the ghost of 'Elisher past'—having rang in New Year’s Eve 2009-10 here with old  friend Jet Frichot, I had to some back to the ‘scene of the crime’. So whilst here I needed to show the both of them where I made that ‘infamous dive’ into the pool whilst in the earliest moments of 2010 and of course, retell the whole story regarding how daring it was. Although the reality of it all is very different, time always add the additional weight of the bold and outlandish within its own storytelling DNA. Good memories never the less.

Where I made that 'infamous jump' for NYE 2009-10 - Skybar - Traders Hotel - Kuala Lumpur - Malaysia

Skybar - Traders Hotel - Kuala Lumpur - Malaysia

The stunning rooftop pool at the Ascot Star Hotel - Kuala Lumpur - Malaysia

The KL skyline from  Ascot Star Hotel - Kuala Lumpur - Malaysia

That evening we decided to head down to Jalon Alor https://www.wonderfulmalaysia.com/food/jalan-alor-food-street.htm, food street. As the website reference says, a ‘hustling, bustling, cacophony of sights, smells, colours and food’. There are rows upon rows of hawkers stalls serving up a myriad of delicacies, which makes it difficult not to get enticed by all of them.  Also, that dichotomy of the new, sleek, capitalistic, urban jungle is nicely offset in this space. There’s a street buzz of all things local which is as intoxicating as it is fascinating. We settled in for a wonderful meal of a variety of chosen dishes, all absolutely flavourful and relatively inexpensive.

Jalan Alor 'Food Street' - Kuala Lumpur - Malaysia

Jalan Alor 'Food Street' - Kuala Lumpur - Malaysia

Mederka 118 @ 678.9 mtrs, currently stands as the second tallest building on the planet, only behind the Burj Khalifa - Kuala Lumpur - Malaysia

Jalan Alor 'Food Street' - Kuala Lumpur - Malaysia

Aiden identifying his next plan purchase - Jalan Alor 'Food Street' - Kuala Lumpur - Malaysia

Unfortunately this was all we really go to experience of KL. I know that there’s more in this city, I can feel it innately without pointing to anything specific that will confirm my suspicion. I know that we’ll come back and I know that I need much more time here to discover exactly what’s on offer.

The next day we bid farewell to the Ascot Star & KL, heading to the domestic airport in order to catch our flight to the island of Penang.

 Domestic terminal - Kuala Lumpur - Malaysia

Domestic terminal - Kuala Lumpur - Malaysia

One of the friendliest drivers we've encountered - great experience - Domestic terminal - Kuala Lumpur - Malaysia

Thank you for being a great such a great host.