Showing posts with label Camerons. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Camerons. Show all posts

Thursday, August 27, 2009

Farmer Bala and friend open their fourth hotel in Camerons

ONE man, simply dressed, with a smile on his face, walks daily from Brinchang to Tanah Rata, Cameron Highlands, calling out to anyone he meets on the road.

One look and you would never have guessed that the cheerful man is a millionaire farmer who worked hard to become who he is.

Bala: `I started on my own at 27. I was a farmer then and I always will be’

S. Bala Krisnen’s is a story of rags to riches, of hardship and hard work.

Born into a family of seven, his mother, who plucked tea leaves for a living, could not afford to educate him after Form Three. So as the fifth son in the family, Bala began working in a vegetable farm to make ends meet.

Later at 27, he acquired his own farm and has never looked back since. As years passed by, he branched out into building townships and buying hotels but his first love is still farming.

“I started on my own at 27. I was a farmer then and I always will be,” he said with a smile.

For Bala, he has come this far due to his friends who are partners in his hotel business.

Yee: Bala’s business partner and close friend.

Among his close friends is Datuk Yee Shan Kon, a familiar face in the highlands and who also worked his way up despite his father’s influence in society.

Yee’s father, who was in construction, fell ill in 1973, leaving Yee to run the business at the age of 20.

Bala and Yee’s friendship is almost 20 years old and they ventured into development in 1987.

However, their most notable collaboration was in 1990, when Yee and Bala developed the Bandar Baru Brinchang township. A year later they opened up their first hotel, the Rosa Pasadena, and thus became hoteliers.

Today, they are proud developers of a fourth hotel owned by Bala but managed by their company.

Located just three minutes away from Tanah Rata, Hotel De’ La Ferns is a boutique hotel and the latest addition to the town’s growing wonders.

Cosy touch: Each floor has a theme like this Autumn splash on the ground floor

Although Bala and Yee are simple men, their ideas and designs for the newly opened hotel says otherwise.

According to them, the English Tudor themed hotel was inspired by their travels abroad.

The architecture of the building is to be marvelled at as it takes the shape of a fern leaf just like its name suggests.

“We wanted to build something different so people would want to come back,” Bala said.

The entrance is quite unique with a chandelier and the parking lot is spread around the hotel with bricks resembling a grand red carpet.

As you proceed into the hotel, the sofa set with arm chairs often found in English homes gives the place a warm and cosy feel.

Plush: The interior of one of the suites.

The place is lit with specially designed rose lamps and the Fern restaurant has timber resembling heavy beams often found in old Irish bars. The al fresco dining area is set before a wall of Vietnam marbles that sparkles in daylight.

The restaurant is popular for steamboat for dinner and scones for high tea.

Each floor has a theme, be it summer, winter, autumn or spring and the five-storey hotel personifies the themes with coloured carpets, lighting and fixtures.

The 75 rooms are a luxury by itself with ample space for an extra mattress and with beautiful views of the countryside or golf greens.

Apart from that, the room has beautiful furnishings to complement the hotel. No two room is alike, whether in architecture, the fittings or the furniture. Each room has its own appeal.

There are also two pent suites, the Cameron Ferns and the Highland Ferns which cost RM1,800 each per night.

There is a lounge area on the lower floor to greet guests and a more intimate cosy lounge with bed and sofa upstairs. The bathroom has a powder room.

“We wanted to give the hotel one year to see its progress but the hotel including the pent suites have been full every weekend since it was opened three months ago,” he said.

The rooms are equipped with HD LCD TV, satellite television and movie channels plus broadband facilities. There is also a private electronic safe deposit box, an integrated coffee and tea making set and a fully stocked mini-bar as well as ironing facilities.

The hotel can accommodate 200 people for meetings at its largest meeting rooms and smaller rooms are equipped with Wi-Fi services.

Like true Cameronians, both Bala and Yee have displayed pictures of various Cameron Highlands landmarks, flora and fauna along the corridors and in the rooms.

“What better way is there to promote the Highlands than by displaying pictures with the names of places so tourists would be interested in visiting these?” asked Bala.

He also prefers employing locals, especially from the orang asli settlement, to help them earn a living.

For Yee and Bala, there is no end to their work and they want to continue bringing new things to Cameron Highlands and its people.

He hopes his three children would some day be able to take over his business and make Camerons’s a better place for everyone. His eldest son Saravana Kumar, 23, is already involved in the business.

The other three hotels in Cameron Highlands are Hotel Rosa Pasadena, Casa De La Rosa and Hotel Rainbow. Room rates for Hotel De’ La Ferns ranges from RM380 for the Superior Double and Superior Twin to RM 780 for the Family Suite that can hold a family of five.

> For details on Hotel De’ La Ferns, visit www.hoteldelaferns.com.my or call 05-491 4888. For enquiry on the other hotels visit www.cameronpremierhotels.com.my.




Source : STAR
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Friday, March 23, 2007

Tea as a Tourist Attraction

Talk time: Maznah (second from left) talking to Boh Plantation chairman Tristan Russell while Caroline and Datuk Meriam Yaakob representing Permoladan Nasional Berhad look on.
The home of the country’s favourite and leading tea brand, from Boh Plantations in Cameron Highlands, has been one of the main tourist attractions in Pahang.

It is learnt that more than 5,000 visitors per week, both locals and foreigners, spend their time having a taste of the uniqueness of the tea, and some make purchases for their consumption at home from the plantation.

Recently, the company officially opened its new Boh Tea Centre in Sungai Palas to provide tourists with a unique and comprehensive experience of the tea industry.

Fresh: Caroline explaining a new product to Maznah.
Pahang Tourism, Arts, Culture, Heritage, Women and Family Development Committee chairman Datuk Maznah Mazlan, who officiated at the ceremony, said the Boh Tea Centre was more than just a commercial entity as the plantation has helped in environment preservation.

Maznah said most visitors spend at least two hours at the centre while having their “tea break” and enjoying the greenery.

“It is a beautiful landscape where tea trees are grown on the hills in rows. It is such a wonderful sight,” she said after the launch of the centre recently.

Modern method: Caroline explaining the machinery used in processing the tea leaves.
The company’s chief executive officer Caroline Russell said the visitors participating in the conducted tours at the centre will gain first hand information of how tea is grown and processed to provide the “ummph” (the wonderful taste as advertised), that Boh is known for.

“The centre also boasts a 6.096m (20ft) overhanging platform which presents a spectacular view of the estate and this balcony is a favourite spot for visitors as they immerse themselves in the beauty of the surroundings while savouring one of Boh’s many types of tea,” Caroline said.

According to Caroline, the Boh Tea centre has received recognition for its design, and in 2006, the Pertubuhan Arkitek Malaysia (PAM) has awarded the centre a honorary mention in the category of public and civic buildings for the building’s design quality supported by the surrounding environment.

Patience: A worker sifting tea leaves at the factory.
“The timely launch of the centre is in conjunction with Visit Malaysia Year 2007 and aims to complement the efforts and enhance tourism in Cameron Highlands.

“By launching the centre officially, I believe it will cater and contribute to the increasing flow of visitors to the highlands and our estate,” she said.

Boh Plantations is the largest tea-growing company in the country and owns four tea gardens in Fairlie, Bukit Cheeding, Boh and Sungai Palas, all in Cameron Highlands.

It started operations in 1929 and has been the tea pioneer and tea expert since then.

The plantation covers 1,200ha of tea gardens in highland and lowland areas and produces four million kilogrammes of tea annually, which translates to about 5.5 million cups of tea per day.




Source : STAR
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Wednesday, March 14, 2007

Pahang seeks your help to protect Camerons

CAMERON HIGHLANDS: Want to preserve the beauty of Cameron Highlands? Then step out and make your voice heard by helping to alert authorities about illegal activities which harm the environment.

The public has been urged to be the eyes and ears for the Department of Environment (DOE) and other enforcement agencies who are facing an acute shortage of manpower.

Pahang Tourism Committee chairman Datuk Maznah Mazlan, in making this call, said the indiscriminate dumping of pesticides or refuse into rivers by some irresponsible farmers and other activities, like illegal land clearing, must be stopped to ensure the preservation of the highlands.

"We cannot do this solely by ourselves, please provide (us with) the information as we are shorthanded in terms of manpower," she said after officially opening the Boh tea centre in Sungai Palas, here, on Thursday.

She stressed that the Pahang state government would strive to ensure that whatever’s left of the jungle fringes in Cameron Highlands would remain as they were.

"Any form of future development here, if allowed, would be subjected to the highest level of scrutiny in terms of its effects on the environment," Maznah said.

She said this when asked to comment on Boh Plantations Sdn Bhd chairman Tristan Russel’s speech appealing to the state government to preserve the jungle fringes surrounding the tea plantations.

Russel had said that these jungle fringes should be regarded as national treasures and the felling of trees on the ridges above them should not be allowed.

"I very much stress that we are supportive of vegetable farming which provides a livelihood to many people and food for the nation. These (vegetable and flower) farms are also important tourist attractions.

"However, they are most suitably located at the bottom of the valley from the point of view of both best agricultural practices and scenic preservation."

Russel also urged the authorities to ban the clearing and bulldozing of ridges which left behind "scars" that could adversely affect vital water resources.


Source : NST
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