Sunday, September 26, 2010

For all the tea in China



Shangri- La, indeed. Just a couple shots from our lush eastern Shenzhen hotel. The tea is a big ball of dried flowers in water and it tasted like a big ball of wet flowers.
Otherwise very lush accommodations-- incensed infused jacuzzi, pure white bedding, and Luca is modeling above, nice big fluffy robe.

Not Really a Buddhist Monastery
















So we have this guidebook to sites in Shenzhen and if you haven't gleaned from the rest of the posts that we have created, there really is not much culturah in Shenzhen. The city is only 30 years old and if anything did exist before 1979, it has been "paved and" someone "put up a parking lot". For real. For folks who know me, you know that I have had an interest in Buddhism for a long time. So you can imagine my delight to read that there was a Buddhist temple on the eastern side of the city. So we took a cab from our lush hotel and ventured to our first Buddhist temple. As we approached the entrance to Fairy Lake, I wondered aloud-- and to Vic's delight-- if there would be only vegetarian fare and if we needed to cover our heads in honor of the great Buddha. Just inside the entrance to the park is a large tour bus. We are beseeched to come aboard, but I have a higher calling, of course, and I decide we will walk to the Great Buddha of Shenzhen. Our first idea that maybe this wasn't a temple was the first pagoda we reached housed various botanical flowers. Nice, but not Buddha. By now there is sniggering from V. and complaining about the walk from R and L. Now, annoyed and determined, I press on to the next spot of Fairy Park, a giant beautiful building -- featured in the photo. When we climb the 108 steps to the top of this pagoda, we are able to view the expanse of Fairy Park. Let's see, there are paddle boats, a golf course, greenery in the shape of China, ice cream shops, more meaningless, but pretty pagodas. And a big fake Buddha.
All right, all right, I say to my laughing family, let's walk out of this park. On the way out, we happen upon stone sculptures of the Chinese zodiac. That is Vic in front of his zodiac symbol, appropriately the Goat.
Maybe there will be a Buddha in Hong Kong...

Saturday, September 11, 2010

Our first visit to Hong Kong
















We were told that if you wanted a respite from Shenzhen that Hong Kong was the place to go. I honestly thought that, "How much different can it be than Shenzhen? We are only 45 minutes apart by ferry and it is China..." So, I was wrong. Hong Kong, if you haven't been, is this awesome mix of Europe and Asia, old and new, English and Mandarin, green spaces and dense urban areas. A cheap and easy ferry ride from Shekou, where we live, but seems like a different continent. Folks are very diverse-- not just Asian and the food is reflected in that. We went to a great English pub for pitas and chicken and chips and the waiter understood us. We went to an English bookstore. $7 for a People magazine was a bit steep, but I bought it anyway:) Because the area in which HK was developed is mountainous, the shops and streets are built going up. We learned that the longest outdoor escalator is here in Hong Kong. A very cool peak tram carries you up to the Victorian Garden, the region that original British colonists inhabited. Chinese natives were not allowed as far up the mountain, except for the servants who had to travel 3rd class. Same old, same old story of colonization. At the top of the mountain are various trails, Victorian architecture, and the ever present Starbucks. Both pictures featured here are taken from the peak. We walked down on this long green path-- outstanding really for such an urban environment. Streets have British names like Wellington, Queen's Road, Shelley Road. Traffic passes on the right, not left. You should consider coming....

Thursday, September 2, 2010

Transportation in southern China
















So here are just a few of the ways that folks get around town here in Shekou. To the left is a the mobile flower guy that I have a little softness for. He sits on the stoop in front of our apt most days next to his bike of trees and plants. He speaks no English and I speak no Mandarin, but he and I have made an agreement of sorts that come Christmas, he will supply our first "living tree". He rattles on about the great qualities of various plants and I nod appreciatively. When I ask, "Dou shou xian?" or "How much?", he pulls out his calculator and looks at my freckles and gives me the Western increase. I shake my head and I type in half the price and he laughs. So far no tree, but we are getting there. I like his perserverance and product quality. He likes my interested face, I think... To the right is one of the infamous red taxis. Infamous only to our family because we usually get in one with a driver who wants to kill us and can't read my Mandarin signs. Fortunately, Vic has perfected the words for right and left-- yo and suo -- in the right tone. With strong gestures, we usually get to our destination.

Beneath and left is a shot that Luca took from his school bus. We never knew that anything can be carried on a bike. We are trying to discretely capture a family of 4. This fella in the photo is a recycler. Recycling is done somewhat haphazardly, but with determination, here in China. Read: folks can make a living off recycling paper, metal and plastic, but they have to peddle their service around town. Fortunately, Chinese have mastered the whole work ethic here. No slackers around...




This is the school bus in front of our apt complex that brings R and L to school every day at 7:30. Kind of fancy actually.