Contrary to yesterday, today was a pretty good day. Had a decent breakfast (including warm pain au chocolat š).
After breakfast I took myself off to Singaporeās Botanic Gardens. The gardens are 166 years old, a UNESCO World Heritage Site and Asiaās ātop park attractionā (according to trip advisor).
Which makes it all the more satisfying that entrance to the majority of the gardens is free. You could spend several days here exploring all the different areas.
The one area that is chargeable is the National Orchid Garden. Even this is only S$15 (11ā¬, Ā£10), so less than half the price of the rubbish observation deck from yesterday.
And a million times more impressive.
Letās Talk About Orchids
When I was in school, we were told that an orchid was a flower, singular, and so rare that because weād never go to tropical South America, we would never see.
Orchids were described to us as some almost mythical plant that weād only see in textbooks.
Bull. Shit.
Of course, as I grew older I realised that orchids were a broad species and found all over the world. But still, learning about the numbers, distribution, growing and propagating methods, and the sheer variety of them was eye-opening.

Did you know:
- There are around 28,000 species of orchid.
- There are a kind of herb.
- Their seeds are microscopic, and donāt contain enough nutrients to germinate, requiring a symbiotic relationship with fungi to provide the necessary fuel.
- Vanilla extract comes from Vanilla planifolia, a species of orchid native to Mexico, Central America, Colombia, and Brazil.
And so on and so on. I took so many pictures Iāll put them all in a separate gallery.

Really, I could have spent more hours here than I did, taking photos of hundreds of different varieties that I didnāt know the name of.

(seriously)
However, a) my phone was dying in the heat (the chilly āCool Houseā was a blessed relief) and b) I had to find stamps.

Singapore Post
Singaporeās national postal service has the most ā1980ās C&A Skiwearā brand logo.

Since the MTR station was near a mall with a branch in it, I thought Iād try my luck with stamps there. They had a vending machine that had a couple of options and, seeing no other outlet, I tried it out.
Result: minus S$5.20 and plus zero stamps. The error message was in Chinese so after tapping every button on screen I gave up and went to the counter. āOh yeah. Youāll need to ask for a refund via this website [points to QR code],ā like this happens regularly.
āAnd we only print standard POS stamps here. You need to go to the GPO where they have a philatelic shop.ā
Off I traipse. And the GPO shop is rather nice. You browse the stamps, choose what ones you want and quaintly write down the codes on a piece of paper like youāre in Argos, and then someone fetches them from a cupboard.
I rather went overboard so I hope Iām not fuelling my motherās habit again. Maybe Iāll drip-feed them to her over a few months š
And Thatās Almost It š
Tomorrow morning I head back to Changi T3. There Iāll board a Singapore Airlines Airbus A380, and Iām not ashamed to say that that aircraft is part of the reason Iām even in Singapore.
I figured that airlines were phasing out usage of the A380 and really only Emirates and SingAir were still committed to them. Seems thereās been a post-pandemic revival in fortune and some are being brought back into service by (e.g.) Lufthansa.
Anyhoo, hereās my chance to fly this super-big-boy plane. And with wifi, so my last post for this trip may be from 10km straight up.
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