Home Blog Page 406

Wing Sing 53’ Sailing Junk Cruises Hong Kong Waters

0

Wing Sing 53’ Sailing Junk Cruises Hong Kong Waters

For visitors and locals alike, custom sailing junk charters can be organised to many parts of the southern islands and more distant New Territories, and booking via a large agency like Northrop and Johnson ensures high standards and seamless service.

Hong Kong has so much more to offer than busy shopping arcades and restaurants. From the surprising waters of the Eastern Approaches, lapping protected beaches backed by tropical parklands, to the small fishing villages of the outer islands, and not forgetting Hong Kong’s own miniature Riviera, Victoria Island’s exclusive South Side, there is plenty of scope for boating enthusiasts.

It will come as no surprise to learn that Hong Kong has developed its own vibrant cruising culture over the years. From super yachts moored in prestigious marinas to the fleets of leisure junks that sail out of the Sai Kung and Aberdeen Typhoon Shelters every weekend, cruising is part of the Hong Kong experience and lifestyle.

And what better way to explore these seemingly endless coastlines than on a fully functional and luxuriously appointed sailing junk? Lovingly restored by its private owners over the course of several years, this ex-fishing junk has been propelled to levels of sophistication previously unknown in the world of traditional sailing junks.

Wing Sing is the perfect synthesis: luxury yachting, in traditional Chinese style. The best time to sail Hong Kong waters is from September to December, when the water is warm, the skies are blue, mostly cloudless, and a pleasant north-easterly breeze brings much appreciated relief from the tropical heat, but March to May is good too. Only the colder mid-winter months and humid mid-summer require a little more dedication. A sample itinerary…

Day 1 | Exploring The Pristine Coastline Of The New Territories

Depart in the morning from Sai Kung pier, and head for the remotest beaches on the NE shores of the New Territories. From the islets off Kau Sai Chau to the white sands of Tai Long Wan, it is difficult to imagine you are only an hour’s sail away from one of the world’s busiest metropolises.

On the way back, enjoy the sunset views from Wing Sing’s quarterdeck with a bottle of chilled rosé, before alighting at the Noonday Gun, in Causeway Bay, ten minutes’ walk from a busy Hong Kong restaurant and night-life spot.

Day 2 | A Day In The Po Tois

Board in Aberdeen in the late morning, and head out for the Po Toi islands, where the Leung family upholds the fine cooking traditions of its original fishermen population, in one of the ex-colony’s most famous fish restaurants.

After an unforgettable meal, and a rest, scale the peaks of this magnificent, barren island, and enjoy the breath-taking views.

On the way back, anchor off Stanley for a refreshing swim and an aperitif, before returning to Aberdeen, where a table has already been booked for you in one of the Jumbo Floating Restaurant’s many private dining rooms.

Day 3 | A Night Around Victoria Island, In Great Gatsby Style

Boarding at the noon-day gun, in Causeway Bay, just before sunset, head for the epicenter of Victoria Harbour and enjoy the spectacular light show from Wing Sing’s quarterdeck, with a glass of champagne.

Then circle the island by the west and head for Deep Water Bay, on the South Side, where a candlelit Chinese dinner awaits, to musical accompaniment provided by a traditional Cantonese ensemble. After the last toast has been made, return to Aberdeen harbor, a 15 minute taxi ride from the CBD.

Summary

Hong Kong may not have the geographic spread for a week-long charter, but many of its more unique and unforgettable features are best discovered from the water, on day or night-time excursions. And what better way to taste the charms of this South China city than aboard a classic Chinese sailing junk.

Wing Sing

Wing Sing is a 53’ sailing junk. She has sunbeds on the foredeck, a shaded mid-ships, high stern and vast aft deck providing abundant space for admiring the views, sunbathing, cocktails and enjoying a first-class meal.

She will accommodate up to 24 guests. The vessel also offers romantic overnight stays for four people. The professional English-speaking crew of three includes an outstanding French chef. Chinese, Thai and Indian menus are other options. Prices start at US$3,388 per charter.

For more information, email to liesphuket@gmail.com.

Words by Anthony Rendall | Images courtesy of Wing Sing

Northrop & Johnson levels up with a strong presence in the Asian market

0

Northrop & Johnson look forward to an exciting new chapter in the Asian market with Joshua Lee at the helm

The Asian operation is now under a new management as Joshua Lee of Lee Marine acquires full license rights to Northrop & Johnson Asia. He will assume the role of Managing Director for Northrop & Johnson Asia, effective immediately.

Joining the Northrop & Johnson as Managing Director for Asia, Northrop & Johnson COO Daniel Ziriakus hopes to see significant growth in the coming years.

“We feel that under the revamped management, our Asia team will be able to better assist our clients and achieve greater success, while being more integrated with our Australian office, four offices in Europe and six offices in the US,” says the company’s COO.

On Lee’s new appointment, he says: “I see this as a natural move for both Lee Marine and Northrop & Johnson Asia as we will concentrate both companies on their core strengths.” He promises to deliver the high standards the industry has come to expect from him with respect to his new role at Northrop & Johnson, which has established 10 years of presence in the region.

“Lee Marine will continue its award-winning sales and after-sales service of new and used vessels smaller than 30 metres, and Northrop & Johnson will concentrate on large brokerage sales, new construction and project management, charter and vessel management services,” adds Lee.

Lee is the Founder and Managing Director of Lee Marine in which he established in 1997. He has more than 25 years of yachting experience, of which 20 years were spent exclusively in Asia. Today, the company has seen more than 700 yachts sold and delivered, making Lee Marine one of the most established brokerages in Asia.

With Lee in the senior management team at Northrop & Johnson Asia, the new management team will reaffirm Northrop & Johnson Asia as the benchmark large yacht brokerage in the region.

For more information on Josh Lee’s new appointment at Northrop & Johnson Asia or the new management of the Asia offices, contact PR@NorthropandJohnson.com. Reach Josh Lee at his email and make general Asia-related enquiries here.

Soros Fund Management given the crypto good-to-go

0

Back in January, financial mogul George Soros called cryptocurrency a “bubble” and that investors were operating on “some kind of misunderstanding”. That “misunderstanding” was short-lived and the Hungarian-American investor has made an impressive turn-around because Soros Fund Management will reportedly be investing in cryptocurrencies. 

Launched in 1969, Soros Fund Management gained notoriety in 1992 for its aggressive bets against the British pound, which made Soros “The Man Who Broke the Bank of England”. He is also the man that many blamed as being responsible for the Asian Financial Crisis in 1997.

Currently operating with approximately US$26 billion in assets, the firm hired Adam Fisher last year as head of macro investing. And he has been given free reign to conduct trades in virtual coins a few months ago. Though he has yet to make a wager, it is speculated that he will be pulling the trigger very soon.

Soros, speaking at the World Economic Forum in Davos, mentioned that digital coins cannot function as actual currencies because of their volatility. Despite his comments, Soros explicitly dabbled in cryptocurrency earlier last year. His investment fund amassed a stake in overstock.com. As a result, he became the third-largest shareholder of the discount e-commerce company. 

Overstock was famously one of the first large companies to accept Bitcoin back in 2014 and started accepting more major cryptocurrencies mid last year. In addition, the company also had plans to launch a cryptocurrency exchange and their own tradable token. 

Despite the billionaire’s previous apparent misgivings about digital currencies, he believes that as an innovation, it can be a safe haven for funds during cyclical financial slumps and that it could be utilised as a hedging tool. Unfortunately, he did not reveal additional details and given his propensity for big shorts in a pond that’s already rife with speculation and speculators, it makes for an interesting development with an overarching impact that will have a far-reaching ripple effect.

It seems like Soros is not the first financial mogul to invest in cryptocurrencies either as the Rothschild family too are taking similar steps. It is still too early to speculate how this growing interest in cryptocurrencies could affect the market, but at this point it is still anybody’s guess. Stay tuned.

BaselWorld 2018 Limited Edition Casio MR-G G2000HA

0

This wristwatch, G-Shock MRG G2000HA, is the latest edition to the G-Shock line of shock-resistant range unveiled at the Baselworld luxury watch event (March 22-27, 2018). This model, embodying the “Tetsu-Tsuba”, which means Iron Guard of a Japanese Sword, is symbolic of the samurai spirit in the Japanese tradition, following centuries long path of development in the hands of unnumbered artisans. The watch tells its owners’ proud stories in addition to fulfilling its role as a weapon. “Its value extends not only to the blade itself, but also to the koshirae (“fine craftsmanship”) applied to the sword fittings,” according to the watchmaker in a statement.

The metal exterior is finished with a unique, developed in cooperation with traditional Kyoto-style hammering master Bihou Asano.

The MR-G gets a stylish look this 2018 marked by the the surface layers which involved  a highly applied technique called “Arashi-Tuchime,” to obtain the pitted texture before the deep-hardening processing to achieve the desired effect.

Available in four textured tones of moulding, cutting, hammering and AIP® coating, the AIP® (arc ion plating) — is a registered trademark of KOBE Steel Ltd, which is integrated into the watch’s construction embodying ultimate strength and beauty of the MR-G. The ultimate result reveals a finished appearance that are both stoic and primitive.

Featuring the Dual disk display with two independently driven disk hands employed for the date and function displays, there’s also city codes (in blue) shown in a small window at 3 o’clock and water resistant up to 20-bar. Other functions of this solar-powered wristwatch, include shock-resistance, LED light (Super Illuminator), radio-controlled (Multi Band 6), GPS-controlled and smartphone link functions for automatic time adjustment and easy watch setting (world time for over 300 cities).

www.casio-watches.com

1972 Ferrari 365 GTB4 Daytona

0

1972 Ferrari 365 GTB4 Daytona

The 1972 Daytona designed by Pininfarina is the 15th of only 158 examples finished in Argento Auteuil (silvergrey) colour. Originally supplied by Maranello to H.W. Motors of Walton-Upon-Thames, bearing the chassis number 15835, the car was delivered brand-new to a classic car enthusiast and historic racer. The Daytona featured the optional extra of air conditioning, original number plate “MPB 125K,” with 35,900 miles remaining on the car today.

Easily recognised by its unmistakable bodywork by Pininfarina, underneath the hood is a 4.4 litre, quad-cam V12 engine that develops an astonishing 352 bhp and boasts a top speed of 174 mph. Also, this example has a low-mileage and is said to be a highly collectible 1972 Ferrari 365 GTB/4 Daytona, it has changed through several hands of some significant collectors in the past.

However, “It’s in incredible condition thanks to the very careful ownership of its previous guardians, and I’m sure it will be of serious interest to car collectors worldwide,” commented Silverstone Auctions’ classic car specialist, Adam Rutter.

This year marks the 50th anniversary since the great launch of the 1972 Daytona at the 1968 Paris Motor Show. Noted for being the quickest and most expensive on-the-road model Ferrari had ever built up to that point, the Daytona represents a very special collector’s piece from the auction house’s inventory as it is the first-ever “Sale of Ferraris in association with Ferrari Owners’ Club GB” at the world-famous Silverstone circuit on May 18, 2018.

Estimate to auction off between USD 700,000 and USD 806,000 at the inaugural Silverstone Auctions.

Unparalleled precision: Longines VHP collection is not Your ordinary Quartz watch

0
Longines Ultra Quartz
Longines Ultra Quartz

Timekeeping, and by extension wristwatches, used to hold much greater allure and prestige among a broader spread of society than it does today. This is not a reference to the 19th century or something, but instead mere decades ago, at the precise moment quartz gave more people the chance to have their own personal timekeepers. Strangely, the promise of a brighter future for accuracy did not pan out as planned.

Budget air travel and an ocean of information distributed worldwide that can be called up in an instant on any screen from phone to tablet and terminal, have set the bar very high for curios. In other words, nothing excites anymore. Though it has only been a few centuries since table-sized clocks were accurate enough to be fitted with minute hands, and just about a century since the affordability of wristwatches extended beyond gentry to the common man, the general public seems to have largely forgotten what an awesome thing a wearable timekeeper is, in reliably dividing the continuum of time into discrete intervals that we can mark and measure.

The digital timekeeping future began in earnest with Longines leading the charge in Switzerland
The digital timekeeping future began in earnest with Longines leading the charge in Switzerland

Quartz watches: An Existential Crisis

We bring this up because before accurate timekeeping became so commoditised (appearing on phones and ovens, as it is often bemoaned) that it descended into the mundane, watches were special and regarded with the respect accorded to specialist instruments. And the very thing they specialised in was precision timekeeping. Those were the days when chronometry competitions would generate a fair bit of excitement, because creating a supremely accurate watch was no small feat of technical ingenuity.

The advent of quartz changed all that. When a plain vanilla quartz watch mass produced on a dime (figuratively speaking) can sustain 10 times the accuracy of even highly accomplished mechanical watches, the mystique around highly accurate (by pre-quartz standards) watches simply disappeared. Timekeeping has since been relegated to quartz, while mechanical timekeeping has largely reinvented and reinvigorated itself, largely abandoning the pursuit of absolute accuracy.

Longines VHP, definitely not your vanilla Quartz watch
Longines VHP, definitely not your vanilla Quartz watch

The Neuchâtel observatory held the last of the old-era chronometry competitions in 1972. In 2009, the watchmaking museum in Le Locle, Switzerland celebrated its 50th anniversary by launching the International Chronometry Competition. After successive editions of the biennial event with really short lists (as opposed to shortlisted) of competitors, it was decided that the 2017 edition would be postponed. There are a few reasons for this – it wasn’t “international” and only top winners in each category were announced as a special consideration to thin-skinned 1st and 2nd runners up if they chose to remain anonymous – but the very idea of precision timekeeping, whether from a quartz or mechanical timepiece, just wasn’t very relevant anymore.

Unparalleled precision: Longines VHP collection is not Your ordinary Quartz watch

Heaven knows we still need precision timekeeping. How else would we know our eggs are just right? But being concerned about precision timekeeping has become akin to worrying about not having enough ice in winter. To be fair, absolute accuracy is these days largely a function of atomic clocks and these perform vital functions along the bleeding edge of science and technology. In fact, the accuracy of the atomic clock shames even the most sophisticated quartz ticker, much like quartz itself once did with its mechanical predecessor.

That is why Longines VHP Conquest is such a refreshing gesture, in bringing precision back into the discussion in a meaningful way. VHP is just Very High Precision, no more, no less. There have simply been too many articles that begin with “you no longer need your watch to tell the time” as a preamble to reviews of yet another timepiece sporting all manner of exotic features at real estate prices that don’t relate much to time telling. The Longines VHP dispenses with both ostentatious mechanics and smartwatch multi-feature computing power. Instead, it is all-muscle about accuracy, with zero body fat.

Precision and Autonomy: Longines VHP collection

Two types are available (basic three-hand and chronograph) in a handful of dial options (black, silvered, carbon effect, and blue) and two cases sizes so Longines has got a wide spectrum of preferences covered. The headline feature is that the VHP will tell the time accurately with a margin of error at +/-5 seconds a year. In other words, you’ll gain or lose just about 5 seconds on this watch a year.

Driven by a quartz movement developed by sister company ETA exclusively for Longines, the VHP has few rivals at this level of precision – the Citizen Chronomaster comes to mind, with which the VHP notably shares some features.

Conventional quartz watches usually manage around +/-15 seconds a month, and chronometer-grade mechanical watches will deviate by a few seconds a day. At +/-5 seconds a year, there is no reason to ever reset the VHP for the duration of its battery life, rated at five years. Not even to set the date, as it features a perpetual calendar that will get the date right till the year 2400.

 

For travellers, the hour hand can be adjusted independently in one-hour steps, and gentler turns of the crown will manage the 30-min gaps between certain time zones. The watch also features a Gear Position Detection (GPD) system that monitors the position of the hands, so if the watch experiences a shock (if, dropped for example) or encounters strong magnetic fields and the hands are affected, the system will kick in to set the hands to the correct time. It is entirely autonomous, requiring no intervention from the wearer, and neither is it connected by radio waves to any higher authority – it is just a very accurate watch that takes care of itself to remain so.

For extended periods, when you do not expect to wear it, you can pull the crown to put the watch to sleep – when it is pushed back, it will remember what time and date it is supposed to be and set itself accordingly. It is a neat trick the WOW team saw in person at BaselWorld and it is quite magical. It also makes stopping the watch for photoshoots so that the time remains fixed at 10:10 terrifically difficult! If this seems familiar, you might have seen something like it in Seiko’s Kinetic Auto Relay watches.

We still need accurate time, and nothing is more convenient than a flick of the wrist to get it. Smart watches do a fair bit more, if one doesn’t mind charging them all the time, and radio-controlled watches are great if you live in a region adequately bathed in signals from those aforementioned atomic clocks. But if you want a solid watch untethered to anything but your convenience, the Longines VHP could very well be the last watch you need. Want is a different matter of course!

Longines VHP: Tradition of Precision Timekeeping

Longines has a track record of precision timekeeping, being a pioneer of sports timing, while winning numerous timekeeping awards for its timepieces in its 185-year history. In 1954, it developed its first quartz clock which set a series of precision records at the Neuchatel Observatory. This clock formed part of the Chronocinégines sports timing system which included a camera that captured images at 100 frames per second, leaving no room for dispute at the finish line.

It was also among the first manufacturers to introduce a quartz watch when it launched the Ultra-Quartz in 1969.

Its next chapter in high accuracy quartz arrived in 1984 when it introduced the Conquest VHP. The latest VHP collection of 2017 has pushed the limits of precision even further, with convenient features like self-regulation, time-zone setting and perpetual calendar that make it one of the easiest watches to live with.

 

Get Exclusive Connections with LUXUO Thailand
Join us today
Connect!
Close
Join us for exclusive access to Luxuo Thailand's contents and events
Subscribe
close-image