The Newsletter Of Tiara Damansara Condominium

Monday, March 05, 2007

About Tiara Times

Tiara Times (TT) is all about us who live in Tiara Damansara. TT tries to update Tiarans (let's call ourselves us that) about the happenings in this condominium. The happenings can be on anything. We just would like to hear from you. Whatever input we get from you is fine, since our aim is to get Tiarans who live here to interact, to get to know one another, to do things together, to laugh together - in short, be one big happy family!

If you have a comment about the general conditions of Tiara, the cleanliness, the facilities, security or vehicle access or parking, please also write in. However, if you have specific complaints about your unit or another unit, please direct those complaints to the Tiara Management Office.

TT will have a box in the Management Office for residents to drop their articles in. Or you can email your articles to tiaradamansara@yahoo.com

Please put your name, contact number and email address in your article. If you would like your article printed in TT but prefer to use a pseudonym, you may do so.

We really look forward to hearing from you. Surprise us and inundate the mailbox and / or email-box with articles.

Saturday, March 03, 2007

Volume 2 Issue 5

Tennis Court Re-opens

Good news for Tiara residents!
The refurbished tennis court is now ready for play. As an added bonus, a new practice wall has also been built within the court area.

The court had been closed since January 16th 2007 for major repairs. It started with the tearing up of the surface,which experienced settlement. Then the crusher run was replaced and compacted to receive the new premix. A “Petro-Mat” was laid over the entire surface and the premix laid and compacted. The new premix was then allowed to cure for 14 days during which the practice wall was built.
At the end of the fortnight, “Tech Tone”(the playing surface) was applied to the court surface. After conducting ponding tests, the final colour coating was laid and the lines painted. All specifications of the court conform with International Tennis Federation standards.

Residents can book the court by personally going to the King’s Gate guardhouse or calling 7956 2811. Residents of each unit may book the court for one hour a day, not exceeding twice per week, with bookings done no more than three days in advance.
This is to ensure fairness to all residents. For those needing more clarification please check the Rules and Regulations board at the tennis court.
Happy playing!

MBPJ Health Check

Congratulations are in order for the residents of Tiara Damansara Condominium. On February 6th 2007, 12 members from the Health Department entered the premises of Tiara to perform a 100% check for mosquito breeding grounds.

A resident in Tiara was down with dengue and hospitalized, hence the check by a health officer, an environmental officer and 10 anti-malaria inspectors and staff. Entering after 9am, the check took a couple of hours, as personnel combed every square inch of Tiara's 12 acre site, searching for possible dengue mosquito breeding grounds.They found nothing.
However, the serviceman cleaning the swimming pool had left the door of the pumphouse next to the ladies' toilet open. A couple of inspectors went ten feet underground to check for possible breeding sites, and, unfortunately, larvae were found.

A compound of RM300 was issued to Tiara under the Destruction of Disease-bearing Insects Act, 1975. Building Manager Paul Baktha appealed for a lesser fine since no one could possibly have foreseen the existence of larvae ten feet in the underground pump room. He was successful in getting the fine reduced to RM100. A chemical, Abide, a powdered stuff, was then released into the water to destroy all larvae.

Tiara Council 2007

The Annual General Meeting of Tiara Management Corporation on February 3rd 2007 at the Function Hall saw the election of eight councillors for the new Tiara Management Council team.

Those elected for office for the year 2007 were, in alphabetical order: Dr. Asma Ahmad Shariff, Ms. Goh See Meng, Mr. Harith Ahmad, Ms. Lily Tan, Datuk Lim Sun Hoe, Ms. Margaret Lim, Mr. K.Surendran and Mr. Willy Boo.

At its first monthly meeting held on February 10th 2007 at the Tiara Meeting Room, each councillor was tasked to head a portfolio. Sub- Committees under their portfolio had to be headed by them as well.

With13 portfolios for 8 councillors, it was apparent that some would have to hold more than one portfolio. The 13 portfolios were: Sports and Recreation; Tiara Times; Finance and Accounts; Landscape; Pest Control; Cleaning Services; Social; Cafeteria; Legal; Administration and Human Resource; Maintenance and Engineering; Security and Safety; Parking.

Some related portfolios were then banded together so that a total of 8 would be formed. The following portfolios are headed by:

1. Dr. Asma Ahmad Shariff - Sports and Recreation
2. Ms. Goh See Meng - Editor, Tiara Times
3. Mr. Harith Ahmad - Finance and Accounts
4. Ms. Lily Tan - Maintenance and Engineering
5. Datuk Lim Sun Hoe - Landscaping, Pest Control and Cleaning Services
6. Ms. Margaret Lim - Social and Cafeteria
7. Mr. K.Surendran - Legal, Administration and Human Resource
8. Mr. Willy Boo - Security, Safety and Parking

Swimming Pool

For quite some time now Tiara's swimming pool has been in dire need of major repairs and upgrading. After 15 years, the wear and tear has started to show. Despite servicing three times a week, on Monday, Wednesday and Friday, the pool still turns green once in a while. This is due to rust formation from the reinforced concrete bars at the base. Rust slips through the gaps between the tile joints and missing tiles, causing rust to deposit at the gaps.The filtration system at the pump house is only able to remove these residue to a certain extent whilst the remaining rust gets deposited in the sand filter system, causing the system to underperform. Structural repairs need to be done urgently.

Since the pool is quite heavily used in the evenings and weekends, many concerned Tiarans (swimmers and parents of children using the pool) have voiced their complaints to the Management for swift action to rectify the situation.

Contractors have been sourced to repair and refurbish the pool. It is high time rectification works are done on the pool for the benefit of the residents.

Employee Rights

Most employees in Malaysia are ignorant of their rights and obligations at the workplace. When they encounter problems at the office, such as victimisation by their employers, they will usually seek help from their friends (who may be equally ignorant of the law), or from lawyers (who do not come cheap), or from the Labour or Industrial Relations Departments (which involves logistic and emotional inconvenience).

As an alternative to the above, the website www.employee.com.my which was launched on June 19th 2006, will address problems faced by employees with workplace legal issues.

It is open to all employees in Malaysia, and best of all, it is free! Just register as a member, write in your workplace problem, and you will be provided with an answer, stated its Advisor. Just log-on to www.employee.com.my and follow the simple steps.

Tiara Classifieds

The first advertisement for Tiara Times appeared in the Feb.15th 2007 edition of the newsletter. For those wishing to place advertisements, the rate is RM10 for a minimum 4 lines of 8.5cm wide. Each additional line will cost RM2.

So, for those who have items to sell, or a service to provide, do send in your advertisements to the Management Office.

Uncle Loh

With the festive Chinese New Year approaching, a Tiaran, KBS, wanted to offer some cheer to Uncle Loh (who was highlighted in the Dec.16th 2006 and Jan.13th 2007 editions of Tiara Times).

She drove me as we went to his haunt near the Mediviron Clinic in Paramount Garden on February 13th 2007, with a goodie bag in hand. However, he was nowhere to be found. A nurse at the Clinic informed us that he was further down the road, near the eating stalls. We trudged over but he was not there.

We then enquired from a Chinese lady who was trying her luck at a Toto outlet whether she would know about the homeless man ."Oh yes, he is at the 7-11 shop behind here," she enlightened us. So we headed that way, and sure enough, Uncle Loh was there.

Shirtless and dressed only in a blue pair of cotton shorts, he was singing a Chinese song at the top of his voice, with his arms flailing in the air, like a conductor leading his orchestra.

"Uncle Loh, we are here again, with some food for you," we greeted him as we stood next to him. We handed him home-cooked porridge of minced chicken, button mushroom, diced carrots and greens. KBS had tar pau'd a plastic container full of chicken, omelette and greens as well, besides handing him a bottle of mineral water and biscuits. In keeping with Chinese tradition, we gave him a few kum (mandarin oranges) and an angpow each.

Uncle Loh grinned from ear to ear, so happy was he with the gifts. "Thank you, thank you, you are so kind to give me so many things. Do come to the Church tomorrow and listen to a talk," he invited us. We thanked him for his invitation, saying we would drop in on him again after the festive period, with Chinese New Year cookies for him.

As we walked back to the car, the lady who had informed us where Uncle Loh was, told us that it was sad that although he had well-to-do siblings and relatives, no one offered to look after him or give him some space in their homes.

As we drove back to Tiara, we felt sad that there were so many homeless and destitute who have no idea about festive cheer since Life had dealt them a harsh hand.

Essay Competition

It is that time of the year again when students and others can send in essays and win prizes by parti¬cipating in the Commonwealth Essay Competition. This was brought to my attention when a proud father handed me an essay written by his 12- year old Chempaka School daughter, and asked what I thought of her efforts.

“Excellent,” I proclaimed, after reading through her essay on "Everything suddenly went quiet." Not only was the standard of English high, and the sentence construction good, her essay also showed a maturity beyond her tender years.

For students and residents here in Tiara wishing to send in essays as well, the website on instructions how to compete can be downloaded at: http://www.rcsint.org/essay/

The Competition is divided into four different age groups, termed Classes, and each Class offers a choice of 5 topics, plus the Commonwealth Question. Since the aim of the Competition is to reach a diverse student body across the Commonwealth, there are options for both academic and creative minds.

The four Classes are for students born between:
1.1988 - 1990 (Class A)
2.1991 - 1992 (Class B)
3.1993 - 1994 (Class C)
4.1995 or later (Class D)

Some of the interesting topics which can be written about, and which are really quite easy, comprise:
• Welcome to my family.
• A world without aeroplanes.
• Is the majority always right?
• You are ruler of your country for a week. What would you do?
• Your two favourite toys come alive and take you on an adventure.

The Commonwealth Question is open to all candi¬dates. If a candidate chooses to answer this question, there is no necessity to submit any other essay. Prizes are given for a winning entry on the Commonwealth Question in each of the four Classes. This prize is in addition to the main prize offered for each Class.

So,put on your creative caps and send in your entry. Who knows, Students In Tiara Condominium Boleh!

Thunder Mushrooms

It had been a cold night, after raining a good part of the late afternoon and evening, but the rains eased off towards the earlier part of the morning of January 21st 2007.

I opened my bedroom window at 8.50am the following morning, and a carpet of white on the ground met my gaze. This was the third time Thunder Mushrooms had sprouted right beneath my bedroom window and balcony. Thunder Mushrooms in Chinese, Cendawan Busut in Bahasa, and Termitomyces Albuminosus, its scientific name.

I knew these mushrooms were edible and not poisonous. I had eaten them many times before. My first time was when a friend, Lady Julie, cooked some of these together with prawns, sliced chicken (or even sliced pork with some fat on it) and bamboo shoot. An excellent cook, the dish was delicious. Her gardener had picked the Thunder Mushrooms and bamboo shoot from her own garden in Section 5, Petaling Jaya.

When Lady Julie and Sir Ken Scriven went to visit their daughter in UK, I stayed at their home for a month, to look after their dogs. During that stay, I picked mushrooms twice, harvesting those on the ground just outside the living room, but not daring to venture further below, where there was a drop of about ten feet.

Apoo, their Indian gardener, had encountered a King Cobra twice, when he picked the mushrooms below. Lady Julie told me his encounter: Apoo saw a sea of white Thunder Mushrooms below the drop, and he made his way down to pick them. When he looked up, a King Cobra was eye level with him, in its poised position to strike. Apoo "chatted" to it, though he was quivering in fright, telling the Cobra, in Tamil, that he was but a poor gardener harvesting some food for his family, and to please leave him alone and not harm him, not moving at all as he spoke. He seemed to have gotten through to the snake, since it slithered away, leaving him unharmed.

Having heard this, I kept to the ground above and never dared venture further down.I feared the King Cobra not understanding me if I spoke to it in Chinese,or English...

Out of curiosity, should any Tiaran have had Thunder Mushrooms sprouting outside their units, I would be happy to hear about it. Surely,in our sprawling grounds, other parts may also have had such mushrooming of the Cendawan Busut, also known as the Termite Mushroom.

I got in touch with Dr. Wan Hassan, a specialist in Tropical Agriculture, Food Science and Technology as well as Nutrition and Animal Husbandry, and the author of several coffee table books, with another just hot off the press in January, entitled Healing Herbs of Malaysia. After listening to my description of the mushroom, he told me that it was the Termitomyces Albuminosus, and when conditions were right, they sprouted. Despite his 25 years with the Malaysian Agriculture Research and Development Institute (MARDI) as a research scientist and a Director, he said that MARDI had yet to discover what the conditions were which would make the wild growing mushrooms sprout. Hence this species was not cultivable.

That morning, I managed to gather two large plastic bags of the Thunder Mushrooms and packed them for friends who had given me standing orders to reserve these for them should I harvest any. I kept back a portion to put into fried rice, for the Nepalese guards.

Over the next few days,I fried some in butter and had them for breakfast. Excellent.

Our Administrative Assistant, Puan Salmah Ahmad, knows about these Cendawan Busut. In the villages she has lived in, in Kuala Selangor as well as the Felda Scheme in Sendayan in Seremban, she has harvested bags of them, countless times. She said that ten minutes or so after thunder struck and heavy rains poured down, she would take two or three ten-kilo beras plastic bags and pick the mushrooms outside her home.

However, not all mushrooms can be eaten. And mistaking a toxic species for an edible look-alike can be fatal, cautioned Professor Emeritus Datuk Ahmad Nawawi Ayob. The Professor, who has spent most of his life studying the Fungi Kingdom, is a connoisseur of mushrooms and an advocate of cultivated varieties.His favourite, though, is the Cendawan Busut of Peka Ayam, aka the Termitomyces Albuminosa, the Thunder Mushroom. This species of mushroom have a symbiotic relationship with termite nests, he added.

"The older generation of kampung folk know these well, as do the orang asli," the Professor stated, "but the thing about mushrooms is that you must know them expertly. If you don’t, just buy them from the supermarket or market," he advised.

Mushroom poisoning happens throughout the year, throughout the world, "So if you dont know your mushrooms, don’t even think about touching them," summed up the mycologist. This is because mushroom poisoning, officially known as mycetismus, can be fatal. The toxins from poisonous mushrooms are lethal, causing nausea, vomitting, cramps, diarrhoea, disrupt the entire working of the nervous system as well as cause hallucinations. They also cause cellular destruction, liver damage, kidney failure and death - usually occurring within hours.

But the edible varieties are nutritious. They are a cheap source of protein, contain all the essential amino acids, are high in unsaturated fatty acids, low in calories and good for roughage as well. Popular varieties imported or cultivated include the famous Shiitake, Paddy Straw, Enoki and Button.

Mushroom cultivation is a good business too since it grows very fast and harvests are frequent. They also fetch a high price.