Sixth day in Malaysia

Mondo Tourism Updated on 2024-01-30

Today we come to the Skybridge in Langkawi. Since we were flying to Penang at 5pm today, we didn't choose the mangrove forest similar to yesterday's project because I wanted to see a different scenery in a limited time.

I made a long cable car and got to the top of the mountain. Tickets for the cable car are 85 people and the Sky Bridge is for 6 people. Children aged 3-12 years old will be a little cheaper. The Sky Bridge is a long bridge built between two mountain tops, and you can feel the trembling of the bridge deck when you walk on the bridge deck. I was afraid of heights, but I walked calmly, because the bridge deck was made of cement instead of glass, which greatly alleviated my fear.

Descending from the flyover by cable car, we went to a Pakistani restaurant for dinner. Looking at the decoration style and the ** inside, I thought it was an Indian restaurant, but after chatting with the staff inside, he told me that although the owner is Pakistani, the staff inside are Chinese, Malaysian, and Filipino, and it is a mixed restaurant. In the past few days in Malaysia, what impressed me the most was that Malaysia is like a small United Nations. Muslims, Indians, Chinese, whites, people of all kinds, races, and religions get along naturally and harmoniously. A local Malay driver told me that before the epidemic, there was a direct flight from China to Langkawi, but now there is none, and if you want to come here, you can only transfer in the capital Kuala Lumpur.

The ride-hailing app here is not Didi, nor Uber, but Grab. Grab payment binding can choose Alipay, bank card, credit card, and even cash options, which is still very friendly to foreigners.

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