In the late sixties and early seventies, we stayed in a rented room near the Kek Lok Si Temple in Ayer Itam. The room was one of three in a wooden house with a big compound. There were three windows but only one was opened. It looked out into the compound. “Bar lay”, a raised wooden platform, occupied two thirds on the left side of the room. Mengkuang and straw mats lined the platform. Items that were seldom used were kept in carton boxes underneath.
A two-door wardrobe and two smaller cabinets stood on top of the platform. Our clothes and other important documents were kept inside these cabinets. The platform doubled up as our bed too. Mum would roll out the cotton-filled mattress when we were about to turn in for the night. After that, she would string up the four edges of the “bang ta” (mosquito netting) and we would crawl inside to sleep.
There was another small cupboard on the floor with a metal oscillating fan on top. We had our meals on a round foldable table which she cooked over a gas stove in the kitchen at the back of the house. Rice was cooked in an electric cooker in the room. Two formica chairs rested on the wall beside the table. That was for guests who visited us ocassionally. I know Mum had a sewing machine that she used to make pillow cases, bedsheets and pajamas, but I cannot remember where in the room she placed it.
Mum sought permission from the landlady to rear chicken, and sometimes ducks, too, on one corner of the compound where she built an enclosure. Just outside the enclosure, banana trees grow on fertile blackened soil. These were from burning garden debris – dried leaves, twigs and branches pruned from trees in the compound. She built the enclusore and coop by herself mostly, from putting up the chicken wire fence to building the rickety coop for the birds to rest in the evenings. The coop had a place for the birds to perch inside.
She also made the trough for the feed by sawing planks to size and nailing them together. The birds were fed with a mixture of corn kernels, oat groats, chopped green vegetables, mashed steamed fishes and finely ground chicken feed. The green vegetables and fishes were discards that the grocer would sell at a very cheap price. Sometimes, when she was tilling the soil and found earthworms, she would chop them up as well and fed them the poultry. The birds drank a lot. Mum filled up discarded glazed saucers with tap water for them.
The birds were fed twice a day – once in the morning and once in the evening. If there was leftover rice, they were added into the chicken feed as well. Once in a while, when Mum was busy with other chores, she would get me to feed them. It was not something I liked. The enclosure was full of chicken droppings. The yet to be neutered cockerels would sometimes attack me when I got too close to them.
The grains were bought from the sundry shops around the market, the ground chicken feed from the small livestock supply store beside the bridge over the Ayer Itam River opposite Swee Wah Mini Market. The medicine for livestock inside the store were arranged on shelves and made it smell like a hospital. The chicken feed were pre-packed in brown paper bags. She would buy two or three packets whenever she dropped by at the store. Otherwise, she would get them from the sundry shops that sold them loose and by weight.
The locals call the area around the bridge “keow thau teng” meaning the place above the bridge head. Underneath the bridge, on both banks, garbage from the market and houses along the river created an eyesore. There were animal carcasses, too. At the other end, on the same side as Swee Wah Mini Market, there were stalls selling curry noodles, hokkien mee and delicious Nyonya kuihs. I liked the kuih talam best for its sweet and salty taste, and pandan fragrance. On the opposite, there was a small stall selling uniforms, stationery and such. What I remember most about this stall is the bak hu (pork floss) that was kept in a huge glass jar. I would pester Mum to buy some for me everytime we passed the stall.
In the morning, vendors displayed chicken and ducklings in open top wood cartons on both sides of the walkway on the bridge. Mum would be at the market by seven when it was at its busiest. She squatted by the boxes, looked for the healthier birds, gently held those little yellow fluff balls and turn them over to determine their gender. I would squat beside her and tried to grab the chicken with my small hands. She would stop me. She said the chicken would die if I were to drop them.
The chicken cost 30 sen each, ducklings slightly more expensive. She usually bought ten at one go. The selected chicken were put in flat bottom paper bags made from newspaper. They would be struggling and chirping away inside. Mum would put the paper bags in her “chai na” and continue with her marketing. The “chai na” was a weaved bamboo basket, cylindrical with an arched handle. It was used mostly for carrying groceries from the market. These have since been replaced by plastic ones like those found in supermarkets.
The poultry were kept for festive seasons like the Chinese New Year and Dong Zhi (Winter Solstice Festival). There were more hens than cockerels. The hens were for meat and eggs. The cockerels were neutered to make them grow fat. They were called “eam kay”. When the cockerels matured, Mum took them to her father, my Ah Kong, for neutering. They would balloon up afterwards and slaughtered for extra special occasions like the birthday of an elder in the family.
The neutered rooster, called a capon, was also prized for its fat. “Eam kay eu”, as it is known, was removed and placed in a glass bottle before the carcass was washed to prevent contamination. It would then be preserved in salt and used as a lubricant to remove splinters in the skin. The few times I had stubborn splinters embedded in my hand, Mum would wrap the wound in the salted fat for a few minutes. The splinter could then be removed with little effort.
Mum slaughtered the chicken herself. She would slit the bird’s throat and let the blood drip into a bowl. The carcass was then soaked in a pail of boiling water. This made it easier for the feathers to be plucked out. Most of the entrails would be discarded except for the gizzard. It was supposed to be a delicacy – steamed, sliced, dipped in soya sauce and eaten just like that. I never liked the gizzard for its unusual taste and texture.
Pete how’s the chronology like.Was your father around when you had your accident?Where did you stay before moving to the rented room? I suppose your father had passed on by then and were you already disabled by then? Your mum was really fantastic in facing the challenges.
Peter:
The accounts will not be in chronological order. I will write whatever that comes into mind. My father passed on in 1994. While I would not say my mother brought me up single-handedly, she played a major role in me becoming who I am today. Yes, she was a great woman, not only to me but to her relatives and friends.
Swee wah mini market – gosh, I remember that place. We used to buy our toilteries and what-not from there. Your writings bring back so many of my long lost memories. I used to walk to Ayer Itam market with my mom in the morning, and yes, she has the chai na too! we do not take the bus, Lim SengSeng bus- the green colored bus, it cost 15sens, i think.
Thanks for sharing. Please continue to write.
Peter:
Mei, you stayed somewhere near Ayer Itam, too? The next trip back, I am going to take lots of photos of Ayer Itam. I do go there most times when I was back but that was to see my aunt who still stays there. I used to take either Lim Seng Seng or the city council bus to town and everywhere. If you were in school uniform, the fare was 10 sen only. Thank you for sharing. 🙂
We lived in a house off Old Klang road from the 70s to 80s. We were lucky to have a fenced garden. It was a good size garden. My parents would buy chicks and ducklings to rear for food. My dad built the cages from iron bars and wires. We let some of the kampong chicken and ducks run around the garden. There was a tiny hen which we didn’t eat. She had many sets of chicks. I think she lived for more than 4 years. Then one day, I never saw her again. She must have gone some where to die from old age. We had ducks that flew and came back to our house. I could never witness my dad slaughtering the birds. But what you had described is similar to what my dad did. As I get older. I hate to see animals suffer. I would stop my car to pick turtles up and relocate them when I see them crossing a road. I like feeding wild life and concern with human over development.
Peter:
I miss those days in the kampung. What a live it was – carefree, fun and simple.
I lived near Choong Nam theatre. There was a resevior and we used to walk up from our house to the resevior in the evenings. I remember picking up those little red seeds that dropped from the trees, lined along the walk to the resevior. And you so aptly put it, life was just careful, fun and simple then. My parents have since sold the house, and my dad has passed on in 2004. Thanks for offering to take more pics of Ayer Itam. A place I once called home.
Peter:
I remember Choong Nam and Kok Pin. My parents used to take me for movies there. Mum used to buy this children’s magazine in Chinese called Er Tong Le Yuan which has the Doraemon comic inside from the small bookshop facing the cinema. I also remember the kopitiam beside the carpark that we usually go for meals. I like the roasted pork rice there. When I was in Form 3, I spent a fair bit of time loafing around Resorvoir Garden. Two of my friends were staying there.