| You can go up to a viewing point to see the place |
| There's loads of museums and historical sites to wander round |
| Bomba means fire |
| All round the town are these trishaws with music and bass louder than any 'boyracer' back home - seriously |
| These are in front of the old Portuguse Fort |
| 'Quick, where's the gunpowder?!' |
| You can go up St Paul's Hill above the fort, where you can get an alright view of the city and out to sea |
| A British built lighthouse in front of St Paul's Church, or what's left of it anyway |
| Had to get a piccie of Paul at St Pauls, obviously |
| This is a tree bearing fruit that I can never remember what it's called, but looks like a hairy gentleman's bits, but tastes very nice |
| On the way there, the train broke down, but we got there eventually... |
| In the museum are loads of confiscated items, these are toys |
| This old Yamaha was used to smuggle in tin. They could fit 50kg in the seat and tank area. Must've handled like a bag of spuds |
| Model of an old British vessel in the Maritime Museum |
| This is part of the Maritme Museum and is a replica of an old Portuguese vessel, The Flor De La Mar which sank off the coast of Malaka |
| And boats need air support |
| Couldn't help but notice that the 'Double Matthew' looks a bit rude |
| We had a wheely good time - sorry |
| Here's me playing with my gun |
| There's loads of old buildings, temples and such down near the old town near Jonker Street |
| Some of the architecture has been kept in good condition and are used to their full extent |
| A fountain dedicated to Queen Victoria |
| Something to do with the Dutch, I imagine |
| With the area being so mixed, there are even Christian Churches about. This was build a couple of years after the one in Manchester I used to serve at, but looks sooo different |
| The Malacca River running through the old town |
| A modern temple to look tradtional |
| Some stumpy wierdos we saw |
| Great thing about warm temperatures and no salt on the road - so much survives |