Ubin - Singapore Pulau
Ah Huat points to a wild boar snuffling under a durian tree. "That's my neighbour," he laughs.
For now, however, the island endures. As dusk falls, the shophouses in Ubin Village light up with kerosene lamps. A group of backpackers from Europe share a table of ikan bakar (grilled fish) and coconut water. A Chinese uncle plays a scratchy Hokkien ballad on a transistor radio. A hornbill—black and yellow, prehistoric-looking—perches on a power line, watching. singapore pulau ubin
Step off the wooden jetty at Ubin Village, and you’ve left the "Fine City" behind. There are no traffic lights, no air-conditioned malls, no MRT trains rattling beneath your feet. Instead, there is the crunch of laterite gravel, the lazy flap of a stray dog’s tail, and the distant, rhythmic thwack of a parang chopping coconut husks. Ah Huat points to a wild boar snuffling under a durian tree