No Halloween Horror Nights? We went on a creepy Singapore tour instead

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No Halloween Horror Nights? Nosotros went on a creepy Singapore tour instead

With Universal Studios Singapore's HHN cancelled, why not try a walking tour of Singapore's state of war sites, consummate with creepy real-life tales. Don't forget to watch the video!

No Halloween Horror Nights? We went on a creepy Singapore tour instead

Oriental Travel and Tours' co-founder and guide Jasmine Tan is a principal at telling real-life anecdotes of her suspicious encounters during The Creepy Tales of Singapore tour. (Photograph: Joyee Koo)

30 Oct 2022 07:23AM (Updated: 09 Jul 2022 03:02AM)

With Universal Studios Singapore's annual Halloween Horror Nights (responsibly) cancelled for the 2022 season because of COVID-19, we won't be surprised if Singaporeans are scrambling to get their inexpensive thrills and goosebumps going elsewhere.

Thankfully, at that place are a scattering of tours out there to help you do merely that. Nosotros decided to try one of these out – and even got a blast from the by equally a bonus.

With Universal Studios Singapore's Halloween Horror Nights out for 2020, we decided to endeavour a walking tour of Singapore's lesser-known state of war sites, complete with creepy real-life tales.

The one nosotros took, called Creepy Tales Of Singapore, was equal parts history and spooky night tour that explores sites where Globe War II battles and massacres took place.

The Creepy Tales of Singapore (Photograph: Joyee Koo)

Walking effectually the island's well-nigh atmospheric, unlit (yep, no lights in the Garden City!) areas in the wee hours of the night sounds evocative enough. Only with tales of ghosts and sightings en road, including "a disappearing old auntie in the toilet", those looking to practise something different this Halloween will feel more than a little spooked.

READ:Halloween doesn't scare u.s.. Nosotros're Asian – we've got the pontianak all yr circular

Organised by business partners Jasmine Tan and Stanley Foo who run local visitor Oriental Travel and Tours, the tour took us to Kent Ridge Park and Labrador Park before catastrophe up at Bukit Chocolate-brown Cemetery.

Bukit Brown Cemetery is one of the stops on the Creepy Tales of Singapore tour. (Photo: Joyee Koo)

The pair developed it every bit part of the Singapore Tourism Board's Tour Blueprint Challenge, which helps operators come with new local tours.

Naturally, this bout is different from your traditional haunted houses and typical horror movies – don't expect jump scares and eerie music during the 3-hour tour.

Instead, it taps on good ol' innate fear and trepidation that comes from hearing existent-life anecdotes of hair-raising encounters alongside the storied history of the sites visited.

Bukit Brownish Cemetery is ane of the stops on the Creepy Tales of Singapore tour. (Photo: Joyee Koo)

READ: 6 hotels in Asia with chilling reputations – and the stories behind them

And because it'due south all in existent time and real life, you might have an unexplainable see of your own. Is that extra footsteps I hear? What's that rustling behind the leaves? Am I seeing shadows? Has this slight cakewalk been blowing all along? Why are the hairs on my arm standing? Who knows?

The Creepy Tales of Singapore (Photo: Joyee Koo)

At Kent Ridge Park, you'll be taken on a long bridge in a secluded and serenity loma and told the story of state of war hero Lieutenant Adnan Saidi, who bravely led troops in a ferocious fight against invading Japanese soldiers in what is today known as the Battle of Pasir Panjang. Sadly, he was eventually captured, hung from i of the very trees you'll detect yourself standing by – and, erm, bled to death.

At Labrador Park, the guide will as well accept you to the spot where Japanese soldiers executed Chinese males in the notorious Sook Ching massacre. (For history buffs, this is only one of the sites – it also took identify in Changi Beach and Punggol Point.)

The Creepy Tales of Singapore (Photo: Joyee Koo)

Information technology is here, at Labrador Battery, which formerly housed Globe War II guns, that the guide will also offer upward the use of electromagnetic field (EMF) detectors  – tools commonly used by paranormal investigators – to those who want to try and notice whatever supernatural presence.

READ: Singapore celebrity ghost stories: A spooky road, a very stiff 'perfume' and a headless man Bukit Brown Cemetery is i of the stops on the Creepy Tales of Singapore tour. (Photograph: Joyee Koo)

Finally, no creepy tour will be complete without a night walk through a cemetery. And aye, Singapore'south very own Bukit Brownish Cemetery can be both surprisingly peaceful and eerie at the aforementioned time.

Believed to be the largest Chinese graveyard outside China, Bukit Brown Cemetery had around 100,000 graves (earlier recent exhumations), including those belonging to hundreds of early on Chinese immigrants.

Bukit Brown Cemetery in the heart of the night during the Creepy Tales of Singapore bout (Photo: Joyee Koo)

Many famous and important people of different classes and origins are buried hither, including Dr Lee Choo Neo who was Singapore's beginning practising female physician and the aunt of tardily Prime Minister Lee Kuan Yew.

One pro-tip: Do clothes comfortably for Singapore'southward humidity, although fancy Halloween costume dress-upwardly would make for not bad photos. For ease, send between all the locations on this tour is provided, making things birthday more comfortable and fuss-gratuitous.

The tour begins at 7pm at Haw Par Villa MRT station and ends at hawker middle Adam Road Nutrient Centre, where participants tin advantage themselves with supper while beingness "debriefed" by the guide.

The Creepy Tales of Singapore tour. (Photo: Joyee Koo)

With Oriental Travel and Tours' co-founder Tan serving every bit our passionate and eager guide, her mastery at sharing real-life anecdotes of suspicious encounters and knack of overall ghost story-telling combined with all-encompassing knowledge of lesser-known Singapore facts proved a sure-fire way for a chilling dark out.

And proof that Creepy Tales Of Singapore is a fun way to get spooked this Halloween (or any other fourth dimension), with its alternative take on what truly is night life in Singapore. And hey, it's always a bonus when you get a fiddling history lesson thrown in.

The Creepy Tales Of Singapore tour is available every Wed to Fri at S$150 per person. Bank check out https://oriental.tours/ for more information.

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Source: https://cnalifestyle.channelnewsasia.com/entertainment/singapore-ghost-tour-halloween-247156

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