Travel warning: Lagos, the capital of Nigeria, is not for the faint-hearted.
The airport is like the descent into hell. Once in town there are very few nice views or handsome landmarks — one just drives around in a state of mild apprehension.
In three days I got just three nice photos, they are all on this page. One is of the nice Tutsi man who took me Christmas shopping; one is of the pretty fitness instructor with the amazing Star Trek coif at my luxury boutique hotel (“The Wheat baker” on Ikoyi Island, Lagos’ answer to Belgravia) and one is of athletic banana vendors on the main street.
Banana-vendors road-side, Lagos.  | 
          
It’s not that there  aren’t a lot 
of snap-worthy subjects roadside — in fact there are any number of  
statuesque ladies in fancy dress and uniformed officers hanging out 
poetically  as they lean on automatic assault weapons — but my driver 
and guide wouldn’t  let me take any snaps of them. 
“People don’t like white folks taking snaps of them,” he explained.
This is an enormous handicap for a white photo-journalist.
I confined myself to covering the goings-on in my hotel, surreptitiously, with my Blackberry, but had limited success.
Every time the guest wing lift- doors opened a Naomi Campbell look-a-like would emerge, long purple toe-nails poised to attack if I so much as raised a smart-phone.
“People don’t like white folks taking snaps of them,” he explained.
This is an enormous handicap for a white photo-journalist.
I confined myself to covering the goings-on in my hotel, surreptitiously, with my Blackberry, but had limited success.
Every time the guest wing lift- doors opened a Naomi Campbell look-a-like would emerge, long purple toe-nails poised to attack if I so much as raised a smart-phone.
Kurus, my Tutsi shopping consultants at Harrid’s Mall, Ikoyi next to the National Museum of Nigeria.  | 
            My foxy fitness instructor at the delightful Wheatbaker boutique hotel, Ikoyi.  | 
          
There was also a photogenic  bishop who 
haunted the coffee shop. In his dress sense he was a dead ringer for  
Michael Jackson’s father, right down to the giant diamond studded cross 
around  his neck and white alligator cowboy boots, but he was always 
surrounded by  Southern Baptist  sycophants warding off demons. 
I decided to watch the  local television 
channel, “Magic Africa” , to get a reading on the local  culture. Almost
 every program featured domestic violence played out in nouveau  riche 
homes: Over-sized leatherette lounge sets are essential to film-making 
in  Nigeria I discovered: banking scams are hatched on the arm rests, 
wives and  girl friends are hurled down hard onto the holstery and 
semi-automatic assault  weapons are stored underneath.
Still from “African Magic” television show. 
 | 
            |
Shamans in tribal dress  shaking 
sticks also featured prominently in many of the episodes I watched. The 
 shooting angles are ridiculous and the scripts bizarre (I’ll spend any 
amount  of money to get you back, honey”) but it's addictive.
•         •        •
On one trip out I went to  the National 
Museum, also on Ikoyi Island, where my white face was welcome — “You’re 
 most cordially invited, sir,” said the guard at the main gate — but no 
 photography was allowed. The custodian even turned on the portable 
generator in  the courtyard so I could go through the beaten-metal 
Waterworld-style doors and  see the magnificent Benin heads and other 
artifacts inside.
Tribal artifact/stone totem from Central Nigeria in the National Museum.  | 
          
On another trip out I  went to a huge 
communal nursery run by a Lebanese immigrant which featured row  after 
row of the same boring palm. In matters horticultural the Nigerian elite
  seem to prefer the Pondok Indah-Semi-Classical-restricted-palette 
look, perhaps  as a reaction to their former colonial master’s garden 
exuberance. The other popular  style for the avant-garde apartment 
complex is “Gotham City Grunge” realized in  severe lines with  entrance
  gates of beaten metal plates (a national obsession) with rivets all 
welded on  like.
As a city Lagos has few  redeeming 
features besides the charm and enthusiasm and dress sense of the  
Nigerians themselves. There is nothing quite like the site of a big mama
 in  funny dress emerging from a black S.U.V. , or an alpha male in 
kaleidoscopic pyjamas, or the sound  erupting from Victoria Island 
Stadium on Gospel Sunday.
I was lucky to witness these cultural treats and felt as I left Nigeria, after surviving the two hour obstacle course at Airport Departures, that Lagos is perhaps best enjoyed in small doses.
I was lucky to witness these cultural treats and felt as I left Nigeria, after surviving the two hour obstacle course at Airport Departures, that Lagos is perhaps best enjoyed in small doses.
•         •        •
View from the glass lift at the MCA, New Years Eve.  | 
          
From the city often voted  the world’s worst I flew Emirates, one-stop, to Sydney, the city often voted  the world’s best.
For a Bali-dweller like me Sydney is the perfect Christmas holiday destination: it has sea-views galore, moving traffic and no-one offers you a massage or land to develop.
For a Bali-dweller like me Sydney is the perfect Christmas holiday destination: it has sea-views galore, moving traffic and no-one offers you a massage or land to develop.
My Christmas tree at Lavender Bay, Sydney (Flores Island fertility totems).  | 
            decorations, Sydney.  | 
          
On the way from the  airport I 
stopped at Wiley’s rock-pool in Coogee and found a Batak family, the  
Siregars, frolicking  in the surf in a  way one never sees on Samosir 
Island.
Sydney brings out the best in the Batak I divined.
Sydney brings out the best in the Batak I divined.
Sydney Harbour thrill-seekers.  | 
          
On Christmas Eve I took  my Batak 
companion to St. Mary’s Cathedral for the laser show and the 150  strong
 choir and the atmosphere. He came away unimpressed: the ‘Bogans’ in  
shorts, toting shopping bags, ruined it for him he said.
Nor was he impressed by the fire-works on New Year’s Eve, viewed from McMahon’s-Point.
Nor was he impressed by the fire-works on New Year’s Eve, viewed from McMahon’s-Point.
“Seen it before,” was his  verdict.
So I took him to him to the deliciously Art Deco Cremorne Orpheum cinema to see “Life of Pi” in 3-D.
“Biasa” he said.
Next day we went to Wendy Whiteley’s secret garden in Lavender Bay for real Sicilian pizzas cooked by the gardeners.
“Same as Pizza Hut” he lamented.
So I took him to him to the deliciously Art Deco Cremorne Orpheum cinema to see “Life of Pi” in 3-D.
“Biasa” he said.
Next day we went to Wendy Whiteley’s secret garden in Lavender Bay for real Sicilian pizzas cooked by the gardeners.
“Same as Pizza Hut” he lamented.
Batak tourist pressed into service by Lavender Bay matron.  | 
            Batak after Christmas lunch.  | 
          
At the fabulous new wing  of the Museum of 
Contemporary Art (MCA) at Circular Quay he was under-whelmed by the 
Anish Kapur exhibition, but loved the view from  the glass lift.
The one thing that got him excited was a trip to the famed Darling Harbour Aquarium with a society Queen’s Council and his children. After ogling sharks for hours he was taken to Lim’s in China town for Yum Cha.
He came back with a smile as wide as Lake Toba — the Chinese all-you-can-eat smorgasbord had hit the spot!
The one thing that got him excited was a trip to the famed Darling Harbour Aquarium with a society Queen’s Council and his children. After ogling sharks for hours he was taken to Lim’s in China town for Yum Cha.
He came back with a smile as wide as Lake Toba — the Chinese all-you-can-eat smorgasbord had hit the spot!
•         •        •
The old Raja of Karangasem, East Bali, with the palaces Nandir (male Legong) troup. The Raja’s son is in the front row in Condong costume  | 
          
Back in Bali the floods  have started in 
earnest and urban tourists are being washed down the new Kuta  underpass
 hole. The hills are still alive with the sound of Legong,  
however, and I go to Peliatan  for the  premier of the revival of Nandir
 (all male Legong) by the dance and gamelan  troupe of A.A. Bagus 
Mandera and  A.A. Rai Dalem, sons of the late great Maestro Gung Kak. 
Look out for it on  your next trip to Ubud — it will blow your galoshes 
off!