Summer Programme Uitm Perak Branch

Summer Programme Uitm Perak Branch Summer Programme UiTM Perak 2018
10-24 July 2018. Come and Join us!

09/07/2018

Greetings all!

How are you? We certainly hope that you are all in great health and are ready to start the adventure of a life time as we are already in the month of July! How time flies and the Summer Programme is scheduled to start tonorrow. Yes, tomorrow! What? You missed the deadline to register online? The dates are simply not suitable for you?

Fret not...as we are taking every possible feedback into consideration. Since there have been many queries regarding the dates, we are glad to inform that there are changes to the dates of the programme to accommodate more interested participants to join our Summer Programme. We believe the participants are going to benefit from the Summer Programme as it has been tailor-made to incorporate cultural and educational activities that will be held at various breathtaking tourist attractions in the state of Perak.

As for the dates....we are still receiving feedbacks from potential participants before we decide on the dates as to accommodate as many participants as possible. Once the dates are finalized, we will announce it here.

So ladies and gentlemen, potential participants of Summer Programme 2018, do stay tuned!

This summer we are inviting you to discover Perak. Get to know the people, learn the culture, experience the tradition a...
06/06/2018

This summer we are inviting you to discover Perak. Get to know the people, learn the culture, experience the tradition and enjoy the fun by exepriencing hands on cooking of the local dishes and playing local traditional games. So hurry! Call your pals, pack our bags and come and visit us here!

For more information, please visit our web page and Facebook:

https://perak.uitm.edu.my/summerprogramme/ #

https://www.facebook.com/SummerProgrammeUiTMPerakOfficial/

Online registration is available at:
https://goo.gl/forms/ekXiL5Q09wMlRdxs1

Contact Person :Sheema Liza Binti Idris (Project Director) Email: [email protected] __________________________________________________Ameri Bin Mohd Sarip@Shariff (Deputy Project Director) Email: [email protected]

Do something different this summer by joining our summer programme!  Check out our website for more info ya: https://
28/05/2018

Do something different this summer by joining our summer programme! Check out our website for more info ya: https://

Contact Person :Sheema Liza Binti Idris (Project Director) Email: [email protected] __________________________________________________Ameri Bin Mohd Sarip@Shariff (Deputy Project Director) Email: [email protected]

12/04/2018

Come and join us this summer!

Are you ready for an adventure of a life time? Here you are!
27/03/2018

Are you ready for an adventure of a life time? Here you are!

Come and join us...
27/03/2018

Come and join us...

ABOUT a famous (or infamous?) old castle situated in the region of PERAK.The Kellie's Castle (sometimes also called Kell...
24/03/2018

ABOUT a famous (or infamous?) old castle situated in the region of PERAK.

The Kellie's Castle (sometimes also called Kellie's Folly) is a castle located in Batu Gajah, Kinta District, Perak, Malaysia. The unfinished, ruined mansion, was built by a Scottish planter named William Kellie-Smith. According to differing accounts, it was either a gift for his wife or a home for his son.[citation needed] Kellie's Castle is situated beside the Raya River (Sungai Raya), which is a small creek to the Kinta River.

William Kellie Smith (1870—1926) [1] was born in 1870 in Kellas, Moray Firth, Scotland. In 1890, at the age of 20, he arrived in Malaysia as a civil engineer. He joined Charles Alma Baker's survey firm, who had won concessions from the state government to clear 9000 hectares of forests in Batu Gajah, Perak. With the substantial profits made from his business venture with Baker, Smith bought 1,000 acres (405 ha) of jungle land in the district of Kinta and started planting rubber trees and dabbled in the tin mining industry.

In time, he named his estate "Kinta Kellas" after his home farm "Easter Kellas". Smith went on to own the Kinta Kellas Tin Dredging Company as well. With his fortune made, he returned home to marry his Scottish sweetheart, Agnes, and brought her over to Malaya in 1903. They had a daughter named Helen the following year.

In 1909 Smith built his first mansion, "Kellas House.," which was so unique that it was even mentioned in the London Financier newspaper on 15 September 1911.[citation needed] (Smith's mansion is accessible from the main road across a bridge over a stream.)[citation needed]

History
In 1915, with the birth of his son and heir Anthony, Smith started planning for a huge castle with Scottish, Moorish, and Tamilvanan Indian architecture.

Smith brought in 70 craftsmen Tamilvanan from Madras, India. All the bricks and marble were imported from India, too. Included in the plan for the 6-storey tower was Malaysia's first elevator, an indoor tennis court and a rooftop courtyard for entertaining.

During construction, a virulent strain of Spanish Flu struck his workmen. When his workmen approached him to build a temple nearby, Smith readily agreed. In return for his generosity, they built a statue of him beside the other deities on the lord murugan temple wall. It is believed that a tunnel was built to the temple from the castle.[citation needed] (Descendants of the Tamil labourers brought over to Malaya to work on the mansion still live nearby even now.)[citation needed]

William Kellie Smith died at the age of 56 of pneumonia during a short trip to Lisbon, Portugal in 1926. William's wife was devastated and decided to move back to Scotland; construction on the castle was never completed by Tamilvanan workers. In the end, Kellas House, later known as "Kellie's Folly" or "Kellie's Castle," was sold to a British company called Harrisons and Crosfield.

Kellie's Castle today
Kellie's Castle is now a popular local tourist attraction, with some believing it to be haunted.

It was used as a setting in the 1999 film Anna and the King and 2000 film Skyline Cruisers.[2]

In 2015, Kellie's Castle was the site of the first ever 24-hour comic challenge in a castle. A collaboration between Port Ipoh and the Malaysian Comic Activist Society (PEKOMIK) and Malaysian Animation Society (ANIMAS), the event took place on 21–22 March 2015 and was claimed as the "scariest" 24 hour comics challenge.

20/03/2018

Is Kellie's Castle really haunted? Uhuhuuu...let's first find out the history of it, shall we? And here it goes....(next post)

HOW MUCH DO YOU KNOW ABOUT TAIPING LAKE GARDENS? LET'S FIND OUT.The Taiping Lake Gardens was originally a mining ground ...
20/03/2018

HOW MUCH DO YOU KNOW ABOUT TAIPING LAKE GARDENS? LET'S FIND OUT.

The Taiping Lake Gardens was originally a mining ground before it was established as a public garden in 1880. The idea of a public garden was the brainchild of Colonel Robert Sandilands Frowd Walker.[1] The garden was developed by Charles Compton Reade (1880–1933), who was also responsible for planning the Kuala Lumpur garden town, together with Lady Swettenham.

The abandoned tin mine ground was donated by Chung Thye Phin as a recreation park for public use. In 1884 the gardens were planted with grasses, flowers, and trees; a part of the gardens was fenced, to keep bulls out.[2]

The 64 hectares (160 acres) site was the first public garden in Malaya, and was cherished for its beauty; it has been well-maintained since its opening. There are ten scenic lakes and ponds, which highlight the gardens. Along Residency Road, near the gardens, were golden rain trees (Malay: Samanea saman) or hujan-hujan (pterocarpus indicus) planted along the pathway. In George L. Peet’s A Journal in the Federal Capital, when he visited Taiping in 1933 he said “I know of no more lovely sight in this country than the Taiping gardens when the rays of the early morning sun are shining obliquely through their clumps of bamboo, palms and isolated trees scattered on islands among the expanse of water. One receives in that glorious half hour an experience of light in foliage that is quite unobtainable in England”.

There are few private and government houses located near the gardens; among them are the Old Residency (home of the Secretary to the Resident), the Raja’s House at the junction of Birch Road and Residency Road and the army officers' residences on Batu Tugoh Road. The gardens were so striking that they attracted many travelers to write of their beauty:

The streets are shaded by rows of the angsena tree, which at irregular intervals bursts forth into a riot of blossoms, even more yellow than those of the laburnum. These it rains down in golden snow upon the streets, providing a carpet fit for a Sultan, for yellow is the royal colour in the East. With its golden snow, the angsena spreads abroad an almost overpowering scent, even more sweet than the smell of the pinang blossom. Most of the towns in Malaya have planted this Pterocarpus indicus as shade tree, but in Taiping it has grown to a greater height than elsewhere.

— Cuthbert Woodville Harrison, An Illustrated Guide to the Federated Malay States (1911)

(Source:Wikipedia)

teasers... welcome to Perak
20/03/2018

teasers... welcome to Perak

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