Home | About David  | Past Visiting Cyclists |Guest Book Contact | Links


Home

Visiting Cyclists              Map + Directions
About David
Contact
Guest Book

   Site Seeing
Toddy Plantation

Making Clay Porttery
Oil Palm Plantation
Night Market
Parit Buntar Town
Tanjong Pinang
Kuala Kurau
Kuala Bagan Tiang
Kuala Gula Town
Dry Fish
Prawn Farm
Fish Farm
Bird Sanctuary

    Activities
Sauna Bath
Tour de Langkawi
Hash House Harriers
Waterfront Resort
Boat ride to Fish Farm
Canoeing in Gula River

 Malaysian Culture
And Traditional





France & Italy
  
 Indian Culture
Wedding
Temples
Fire Walking




 
Chinese Culture
Wedding
Temples




Malay Culture

Wedding
Mosque


    David's Travels

  
Cycling Sponsers

    Cycling in Thailand
    Cycling in Laos
    Cycling in Cambodia
    Cycling in Vietnam
    Cycling in Myamar
    Cycling in Malaysia

    Cycling  S.Thailand
    Cycling in Betong

    Cycling South India


    House to Airport
    Madras
    Mamalipuram
    Pandicherry
    Cithemaram
    Nagapatinam

   
   
   
    


Links

 

Bicycle Touring Cycling , Asia on Travel Bikes

Activities in Kerian District

Hash House Harrier
Bagan Serai

Taiping Lake 4H    Kulim Hi-Tech    Bagan Serai   Baling Hazards

http://www.gthhh.com/calendar.asp


     Click Here Cycling Sponsers                      Click Here David's Travels

Hashing, as we know it today, began in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, in 1938, when a group of restive British company men started a hare & hounds running group. They named the group after their meeting place, the Selangor Club, aka the "Hash House." Hash House Harrier runs were patterned after the traditional British public school paper chase. A "hare" would be given a short head start to blaze a trail, marking his devious way with shreds of paper, soon to be pursued by a shouting pack of "harriers." Only the hare knew where he was going . . . the harriers followed his marks to stay on trail. Apart from the excitement of chasing down the wily hare, solving the hare's marks and reaching the end was its own reward, for there, thirsty harriers would find a tub of iced-down beer.






 

Hashing died during World War II (Japanese occupying forces being notoriously opposed to civilian fun), but came back to life in the post-war years, spreading slowly through Singapore, Indonesia, Australia, and New Zealand, then exploding in popularity in the late 70s and early 80s. Today there are thousands of Hash House Harrier clubs in all parts of the world, complete with newsletters, directories, and regional and world hashing conventions.




 

Despite its growth, hashing hasn't strayed far from its British and Malaysian roots. A typical hash "kennel" is a loosely-organized group of 20-40 men and women who meet weekly or biweekly to chase the hare. We follow chalk, flour, or paper, and the trails are never boring. When forced to, we'll run the occasional street or alley, but in general we prefer shiggy . . . fields, forests, jungles, swamps, streams, fences, storm drains, and cliffs. And although some of today's health-conscious hashers may shun a cold beer in favor of water or a diet soda, trail's end is still a party. Perhaps that's why they call us the "drinking club with a running problem!"




 

 
 

           Click Here Cycling Sponsers                         Click Here David's Travels

Back to Home

 

Copyright © 2006 David's Cycling Adventure. All rights reserved.

 

My American bicycle touring friends, Tim and Cindie Travis, gave me the book below when they stayed at my house in Malaysia.

The Road That Has No End: How we traded our ordinary lives for a global bicycle touring adventure

 

eXTReMe Tracker