Sunday, December 18, 2011

Tuesday, April 28, 2009



In this picture, taken in Mini Malaysia Ayer Keroh Melaka.

Rosliza bt. Darussamin

Nur Aina bt. Azmi
Muhammad Za'im b. Azmi
Nur Aini bt. Azmi
Muhammad Azim b. Azmi

Wednesday, April 22, 2009

INSPIRASI

In 2007, Dzhanar-Aliyev Magomed-Ali, a 63-year old Chechen, cycled all the way from his home in the Caucasus Mountains to Makkah and back. The pensioner crossed 13 states on his bike, apparently after his mother appeared to him in a dream and told him that he must perform the hajj, and perform it on a bicycle. He traveled through Azerbaijan, Iran and war-torn Iraq, where he claimed a group of American soldiers smashed his bicycle and called him a “Russian pig.” He had to head back to Iran, and bypassed Iraq by riding through Armenia, Georgia, Turkey, Syria and Jordan before finally making it to Saudi Arabia.

SELAT TEBRAU


SELAT TEBRAU as viewed from Menara MSC Cyberport Johor Bahru.


Thursday, January 8, 2009

Along Nur Aina bt. Azmi


8 January 2009

Today is the fourth day Aina stayed in SSI. Hope she will adapt the hostel culture in SSI. Aina, you must take this hurdle as a challenge to yourself. If you can, you will be able to be a good girl.
Dari ayah yang menyayangi Aina. Ingat Allah sentiasa bersama-sama kita. Oleh itu ingatlah Allah setiap masa.
Wassalam.

Wednesday, May 21, 2008

PERSONAL EXPERIENCE

AMI AS I WAS

It was on one sunny day where this teenage boy discussing with his friends of what he want to be. Being an ordinary boy without knowing a colour tv before the age of 12 is really a blessing. Hardship to earn money is the only word to have it. Either it is used to buy a pack of sweet or a spare part of the bicycle; one has to work for it.


AH BAK AND COFFEE BEAN

Grandma has always taught me about hardship. Plucking a coffee bean, sell it to the middle man Ah Bak and there is a reward. The ratio one-third is mine and two-third is for grandma. Ah Bak always in his daily routine with his C90 Honda bike.

MY FRIEND SABARUDDIN

Sabaruddin is very creative with a lot of things. He taught me to modify my bicycle into really a look a like of TS100 Suzuki scrambler. A simple modification of front fork has really caused me an hour of nagging from my mum. The full conversion of the 16 inches bicycle takes 2 months to complete. An upgrading took a process in phases.

MY BICYCLE HAS BORN

Firstly I have to find my auntie’s bicycle which was hung at the back wall of our washroom. Dismantle it and straighten the front fork by using an intact hardwood beam underneath of the house. Forced by pulling the fork downward, refine it by knocking with hammer and there it is straight.

That is the first phase conversion. I have made several modification by changing the handle bar to a scrambler look a like, colour by mean of put in new coat to the bicycle, an extension to front fork, trimming the mud guard and put in a fender to have a number at both sides.