Big Wave Bay

Big Wave Bay
Not just another beach!

Thursday, December 29, 2011

Keiping and Bangkog

Hello Most Excellent Ones,
I have been on the go since the holidays started.  A lot has happened, but I will spare you all the details and focus on the highlights.  I spent four days in Keiping, China on a missions trip with the school. Keiping is a good five hours straight west of Hong Kong and is not touristy at all.  Over forty kids and ten adult supervisors went on this trip so it was a big undertaking.  We visited several schools and churches and everywhere I went I was told that I was, now brace yourself, because this might be big news, VERY TALL.  Kids wanted to get pictures with me all the time.  I felt like a celebrity.  But in reality a tall, white guy is obviously not seen a lot in Keiping.
We also did some home visits.  My group went to a very poor home.  It was a cement shed really.  My apartment in HK is tiny, but I live in opulence compared to most people in China.  It made me very grateful for what I have.
It was orange season and you could get tons for a very good price.  It was while buying oranges that I had a once in a life time experience.  The Chinese are very gracious people and I have never once experienced any racism directed towards me.  But just after buying oranges a Chinese man on a motor bike roared by and cursed me out with a very mad face, and a shaking fist.  Yikes.   He must have thought I was American.  I bet if I told him I was Canadian or wore my hockey Canada teeshirt nothing would have happened.  It was a strange experience being the object of racist scorn.  Very dehumanizing and it also made me kind of mad.
On the last day of the trip I went with two of my students to visit a grade 7 class for their Christmas party.  Grade sevens look the same all over the world.  Kind of an awkward cross between kid and adult, they are all kinda geeky looking.  This particular group of kids were all rather pumped about the party and they had a program for us.  Games and singing.  Weird though, when a kid won a game he/she had to sing a song to the class.  In Canada that would be considered a punishment.  Yet the strangest part of the experience was that there were 56 kids in one small class.  56 grade 7's in one class!  Are you crazy?  But wait it gets better.  There was no teacher supervision.  I guess he went out to the teacher's lounge for a nap or something.  So I was the only adult amongst 56 Chinese kids who hardly knew English.  And I certainly was not planning to supervise!  Yet remarkably the 56 students managed themselves very well for over an hour.  No problems whatsoever.  The student leaders ran the class beautifully.  That would/ could never happen in Canada.  Leave a class of grade 7's alone would be grounds for dismissal.  Yet, maybe the reason why China is becoming a world power is that the kids take education seriously and teachers don't have to waste time disciplining them.  Hmmm.  That would be great speaking from a teacher's perspective.

After my China trip I took a day off to relax and pack and then it was off to Bangkog, Thailand.  I thought Hong Kong was crazy busy, with crazy busy traffic, but Bangkog wins.  The city is one big traffic jam.  Unreal.  They also don't bury their cables.  Kind of scary to see it all hanging all over the place.
The Thais really love their king, Rama 9.  His picture is everywhere.  There was one picture where he was holding a camera.  I don't know if this is really accurate, but Rama 9 kind of reminded me of a guy who is king of 1315 Frontenac.  Glasses, dark hair, hmm.
One morning while I was doing pushups in a park near my hotel I heard music coming on and then a whistle.  I looked up and witnessed one of the strangest things I have ever seen.  Everyone in the park had stopped what they were doing and stood at attention.  It was kind of surreal.  Obviously the national anthem was playing.  When the music stopped there was another whistle and everyone unfroze and carried on with what they were doing.  Interesting.  By the way I stopped doing pushups and stood at attention.  No use going to jail for wanting to do pushups during a national anthem.  Gotta respect the king!    There was also an outdoor weight room at this park.  Pretty primitive, but you would not want to tell that to the rather muscular men manning those weights.
On my second day in Thailand I went on a tour to an island  well south and out of Bangkog.  On the way we stopped for snacks.  Crsipy squid was offered.  Crispy squid?  My appetite ended in a hurry after seeing that.  On the way to the island I did parasailing for the first time.  It was a rush. Great fun.  Then I spent the rest of the day swimming and snorkeling.
On my third day I went to a river island, in Bangkog, called Koh Kret where mercifully no cars are allowed.  The island is known for its pottery.  It is also a very rural place and there was evidence of the flooding that took place earlier in the year.  Otherwise I did not see any other signs of flooding anywhere.  Koh Kret was peaceful, interesting and I saw an alligator/crocodile plunge into the water.  Hmm.   Now that was kind of interesting.
The next day I went on a Buddha temple tour.  Quite frankly I think Buddhism is wrong.  That a religion would be ok with widespread poverty and the exploitation of Thai women by western men is disgusting to me.  The temples were impressive though,  I have to admit,  and the reclining Buddha was amazing.  About a hundred feet long, solid gold, it weighs 5 tons!  Ridiculous!  I could not help but think, and sorry if this might offend anyone, that a lot of the unnecessary suffering that so many Thais have to endure due to lack of proper shelter, food, and clothing could be easily taken care of if you just melted that Buddha down.  Five tons of gold could help a lot of people have a better life. After the reclining Buddha I went to the King's old palace.  Very impressive.  I will let the pictures speak for themselves.  So much wealth surrounded by so much poor.  Drives me crazy.
After a decent sleep I headed for the bridge over the river Kwai.  This was made famous in a movie.  Check it up on line.  I am too lazy too fill in the details about it.  The Japanese made their prisoners build a bridge and a railroad while basically starving them. The worst war museum in the world near the bridge gave a more detailed account of what happened.  I say worst cause it was dirty, disorganized, and the junk they had was covered in dust!  There was also junk tossed here and there like a kid's messy bedroom.  The cement models they had of soldiers and world leaders was absurd and poor.  Since when was Hitler's face green?  The Thais need some German consultants to get a war museum done right.  Talking about Germans ze vere everyvhere as well as several thousand fat and white Russians who when sunbathing on the beach looked like those Elephant seals basking with the penguins on Georgia island.  The Americans and Canadians were in short supply.  I guess they are all in Mexico or Hawaii now.
After that "interesting," experience my tour gave me an opportunity to meander down a river on a bamboo raft and have a twenty minute ride on an elephant.  The elephants took us into the river.  One of the elephants had her baby chained to it.  The poor little guy did not want to enter the river, but when it got yanked in by mom it had fun going underwater and fooling around.  Typical kid.  Always saying no and playing around.
After gorging on Thai food, its great by the way, and cheap, I slept well for a night and then I headed to the floating market.  Land around Bangkog is very low, its a flood plain really, and it was interesting to travel through canals and by homes right up against the water to the market.  The market itself was kind of fun.  I floated around for about half an hour in this little dugout, did not buy a thing, but took great pictures of people.
Then finally on my last day in Thailand I took a sweet train trip to Hua Hin and rode the waves for a few hours.  There was a lot of people doing this para surfing thing.  I did not have enough money to try, but next year I think I will give it a shot.  Looked like fun.

Well now I am back in Hong Kong, I still have a few days of R and R.  I will check in again on the weekend of January 7-8.

Happy New Year and God bless you all.

Love adios and peng on,

Dirk  
   

Sunday, December 11, 2011

Merry Christmas 2011

Dear Great Ones,
The ricechronicles are going to take a break for a while, but the next entry after I have been to China and Bangkog, Thailand should be excellent.

Thank you Great Ones for your emails, Skype times, and most of all your prayers.  I wish you an excellent Christmas time.  God bless you.

Love adios and peng on!

Dirk

Sunday, December 4, 2011

Lion Rock/Christmas/John Daly

Hello Interesting Ones,
Another weekend has come and gone and I must say it was interesting to say the least.  The weather right now is like a perfect summer day in Alberta.  Very sunny, a little cool in the morning and evening, beautiful, just right, plus 25 during the day.  The one big difference however is that I am yet to meet a mosquito here.  I got no problem with that.

  I headed up to Lion Rock on Saturday.  The view from the top is unreal, Kowloon, Hong Kong, and Shatin are visible.  It is a tough climb, lots of steps.  Had an encounter with a rather large monkey on the way up.  He blocked the middle of the path and I could not go any further.  We checked each other out.  Wearing sunglasses helped me cause he could not see my fearful eyes.  Finally the big galoot sprinted up the steps then launched himself on to a skinny tree which he shook with great vigour, then flew off that tree onto a large rock and watched me pass.  It was an impressive manly display. I guess I was infringing on his territory or he felt I was a threat to his women.  He can have both, no problem, you the man monkey face, I just wanted to get to the top of the mountain for the view.  Funny sign found on the trail about the monkeys.  It says if you just ignore them and don't offer any food that they "should," leave you alone.  "Should," thats good.  Yet I have only heard of one story where a monkey has actually attacked someone.  Nevertheless, despite the little adventure with the he man monkey the view from the top was unreal.

Despite Hong Kong being 90% buddhist Christmas is celebrated here.  Money is a great motivator and the shops are enjoying the season.  Christmas decorations are up everywhere.  A lot of it is over the top, but the spruce tree in the lobby of my complex smells great, like the forests back home that I skied through, so that is wonderful.  Yet the weather is simply not conducive to getting in the Christmas mode.

On Sunday afternoon I went with a group of guys from school to watch a major golf tournament here in Hong Kong.  Remember 70% of Hong Kong is natural, there is a lot of money, and despite the lack of good flat land there are a few golf courses.  I personally hate golf.  It is too slow, takes too much concentration,  makes me stressed out, and I am a failure at it, despite efforts to learn.  I would rather bike.  I hate watching it too.  Yet, the chance to see some of the world's best blast a white ball around intrigued me so I went.  We ended up following a guy named John Daly who is infamous for his beer gut, chain smoking while playing, bleach blonde hair, crazy pants, and a wicked drive.  Man could he blast that ball.  His fans wear crazy pants as well and his caddie wore the american flag as shorts.  Ok... It was all a little strange following this fat guy in goofy pants and being very still when he blasted a little white ball up the fairway.  Nevertheless it was an interesting way to spent a December 4 afternoon.  Did I mention it was about plus 25 and perfect?

Well my dears till next week.  May God bless you and keep you and may His face shine upon you.

Love adios and peng on!

Dirk



Sunday, November 27, 2011

Sweet Lamma Island

Hello Excellent Ones,
This week I journeyed back to one of my favourite spots on earth: Lamma Island.   It takes about a half hour ferry ride to get there from the central piers of Hong Kong, which is just right for a sweet little nap.  I got off at Yung Shue Wan which is a little village of narrow winding streets, and has great restaurants plus some hippie like shops.  No cars are allowed on Lamma, which is the greatest thing.  So people walk or ride bikes.  Perfect.
After taking a walk through Yung Shue Wan  I came to a lovely beach where I plunged in the cooling waters of the South China Sea.  Swimming on November 27 in the ocean.  Great.  It was after all 27 above today.
Then I marched through a jungle and over a small mountain ridge to another village called  Sok Kwa Wan.  There I met up with some friends and we enjoyed a lovely seafood meal and a great conversation.  While it may sound that I am on constant vacation please note that these experiences occur only on the weekend or off days.  But it is nice to feel that summer vacation vibe every weekend here.
Now that the weather has cooled off to 25-27, and the humidity has been killed off, I plan to go hiking every weekend.  Stay tuned.

God bless you and have a great week.

Till next time,

Love adios and peng on,

Dirk

Monday, November 21, 2011

Peng Chau Revisited

Hello Great Ones,
This will be extremely short.  A few months ago I visited Peng Chau Island and gave you a pretty good description of what it was like.  Well I went for another visit and found some more weird stuff for you to wonder about.  Hong Kong is like that.  Every day there is something new to marvel about.

God bless you,

Love Adios and Peng on,

Dirk

Monday, November 14, 2011

Sven Again

Hello Great and Amazing Ones,
Sven left yesterday, much to my dismay, the week with him flew by.  He did a ton of things by himself when I was at school and we did a ton of things together when I wasn't.  Some highlights include trying to meet up with each at a train station.  Through texting we managed to figure out that we had gone up to the train tracks through different entrances.  He was on one end I was on the other.  Despite 100's of Chinese between us I could make out his white face and balding scalp sticking a shoulder and a head above everyone else.  I of course was easy to spot despite the multitudes of people.  Sometimes it is ok to be a VVM.  Very Visible Minority.

I took Sven into "real China," to Shenzen to the greatest "knock off," mall in the world.  We had some fun with a sales person at a purse shop trying to sell Sven an "authentic," knock off watch.  Why this salesperson was selling me DVD's and Sven watches at a purse shop is a question I am still mulling over.  Anyway Sven managed to get the salesperson to drop the price of her "authentic," knock off Bulgaria watch or whatever its called from 400 yuan down to 150 yuan.  Sven though wanted it for 50.  As he strode out of the store, without making a deal I might add, the shopkeeper pitifully in desperation cried out 100.  Sven, the hard man from the middle east, kept going.  Wow.  He did say later he felt a little sorry for her.  Tough as nails, thats my brother.

So to see how tough he really is I took him on a little walk through the jungle.  At first it was clear sailing, gradual slope, lovely scenary, monkeys everywhere checking us out, and Sven rather smugly said that the walk was a piece of cake.  But then came the… steps.  After basically climbing up 1000s of steps and down 1000s of steps my poor brother was pretty wasted at the end.  Yet the view at the top of the mountain ridge, of Kowloon and Hong Kong, was well worth it.

Well Sven made it back safe and sound to Doha and he liked Hong Kong so much that he might consider applying for a job here.  That would be great if he managed to get out here.  Any way have a great week.  Till next time.

God bless you all,

Dirk


Sunday, November 6, 2011

Sven

Hello Great Ones,
My brother Sven is with me for the next week.  He arrived on time, Friday evening, and after taking the bus ride from the airport and a small tour of Kowloon City he declared that he was ready to transfer from Doha, Qatar, (otherwise known as the closest thing to the moon on earth,) to one of the greatest places on earth: Hong Kong.

The next day I got him huffing and puffing up the road to the peak.  He wanted to take the tram, but forget it only wimpy tourists do that.   He whined quite a bit, but at the top he said he was happy to have walked up. We stayed up at the peak till it got dark and took some great pictures.  I have a new camera with a panaroma feature so that was cool.

On Sunday I took Sven to the Vine and afterwards we ate lunch with friends at Agave, the best Mexican restaurant this side of Mexico.  Then we headed to Big Wave Bay and rode the waves.  It was great fun.  Sven had to buy some trunks at the beach.  They have nice Hibiscus flowers on them.  Sweet.

Then we headed back on the Kowloon Ferry.  Tomorrow Sven goes to the bird market and Shenzen.  Will be fun.

Love adios and peng on,

Dirk

Saturday, October 29, 2011

Interesting Streets



Hello Amazing Ones,
I find the streets here in China very interesting.  Narrow, wide, and in between, I love taking pictures of them.  So without any further ado I have posted some of my favourites.  And thats it.  The shortest blog so far.  Have a great week.

Love adios and peng on,

Dirk 

Wednesday, October 26, 2011

Window of the World

Hello Great Ones,
 I have had the week off due to semester break so that it is great.  Going on a mission trip over the weekend into China was wonderful again, but I was pretty tired afterwards.

When I got back I headed with a friend for a little break to Shenzen, the massive city that borders Hong Kong and we checked out one of its numerous theme parks, "Window of the World."  It was so bad, absurd, and over the top silly that afterwards I did not fret about the price of admission.  @14 dollars Canadian.  I was entertained by the absurdness of the park.

Two other real positives was that the sun was behind a smog/rain cloud so there was no sun beating on us and the temperature was a comfortable 25.  Plus the vegetation in the park is great, lots of Banyan and palm trees.

Basically Window of the World has taken all the major landmarks around the world and made a model 1/3, 1/8, 1/59 th whatever, of its original size.  All the continents are represented.  So we started out with Asia and saw all the temples of Thailand and Cambodia, then moved on into Australia and saw Ayers Rock and the Sydney Opera House.  From there it was Europe, windmills, Venice, castles, then to South America and a bizarre open pit mine from Venezuala, followed by Africa and its animals and grass huts.  North America or rather the US was well represented by Niagara Falls, a model of Manhatten, with twin towers, statue of Liberty, and then there was South America again with Jesus on the hill overlooking Rio de Janerio.  Indians were well represented too and for a few bucks you could shoot an arrow.  There was also a log ride, where you rode along in small craft in water, like disneyland, but the overprotective Chinese made us wear rain ponchos and gave us a towel.  I rebelled took the junk off and got wet like a man.

This park also had a bizarre statue park, where you could see "masterpieces," from around the world. There were also Chinese cowboys, an indoor ski hill with a tee bar lift, the  Effiel Tower, and Chinese men doing Hawaiin folk dances in grass skirts.  Riiiight!    Then there was another European village.  Of course there were vendors everywhere selling junk and coconuts.

 It was all rather bizarre and with the Chinese embracing halloween it made it even more bizarre.  For example there was a Mercedes Benz with a flat tire and a skeleton behind the wheel near the Egyptian exhibit, which of course had pyramids.  Weird.  All in all if I was really serious I would rank Window of the World a two out of ten for tacky displays that were run down and rather lame, but for entertainment value, because it is so bizarre and tacky I would give it a solid 10 out of 10.

So I wish you a great week and God bless you all.

Love adios and peng on,

Dirk


Sunday, October 16, 2011

A Weekend in Hong Kong

Hello Awesome Ones,
It has been pretty bleak and rainy for the last three weeks, but today was a welcome respite, with the sun visiting Hong Kong again.  Temperature went up to 29 today, it had been a frigid 25 for a while, yeah I know get out the violins,  and so I headed out to a beach on Sunday aft.  More about that later.

This week I am going to write a little on what I do on a "normal" weekend.  Friday is a social night and I head out with friends to eat or do something interesting.  This past Friday was the annual staff supper at a golf and country club.  Before dinner I released some tension by driving a few golf balls towards mainland China.  The course we were at is right at the border and you can see the high rises of Shensen.  By the way a school board member put the dinner on for us, so that was great.  So I devoured steak, steak, and potatoes, was a welcome changeup from fish, fish, and rice.

Saturdays is my skype day and I check up with Helga and Alf, plus the kids.  I also become happy homemaker and take 15 minutes to clean up my humble abode.  I also get some provisions for breakfast, I always eat out, when dinners are 5 to 10 dollars, why cook?  I also haul my laundry to the local Chinese laundry business, wait they are all Chinese,  and get my weekly accumalation of dirty clothes cleaned, and folded for a few bucks.  Excellent.

Then, like this past Saturday I will do something like go out with a friend and watch English soccer at an English pub and cheer on Man U or Chelsea or Liverpool.  Its jolly fun watching a game with the English especially if you are cheering for the wrong team.

Then Sunday is church day which I attend without about eight others from school.  The church I go to  is called the vine and it is a converted theatre.  Metal vines cover the building. Only in Hong Kong, only in Hong Kong.   Check the scripture, God is the vine and we are the branches.  The church is a pretty rocking place, great music, great message, all in English, it is a taste of heaven in that every race and at least 50 countries are  represented at the Vine.   Great.

Then, now to rub it in a bit, after church I go out for lunch with my friends or head to a beach or jungle.  Today was the beach.  October 16 and I was splashing in the waves.  Still wrapping my mind around that.  Plus 29 lovely.

Have a great week ya all.  And God bless you.  Thanks for your interest in my life here in Hong Kong.

Love adios and peng on,

Dirk 

Sunday, October 9, 2011

Stonecutter's Bridge

Hello Great Ones,
Hong Kong is a city of amazing man made structures.  This is due to the challenges of a  rugged landscape, islands, the sea, and having to pack eight million people in a very limited space.  One of the great challenges facing Hong Kong is being able to transport 8 million people around the territory with some ease.  One of the most amazing structures to help this process is the Stonecutter's Bridge which opened just in 2009.

It is the second largest cable stayed bridge (whatever that means)  in the world.  Due to the interesting challenge and extreme difficulty of building the bridge it was featured in two Discovery Channel Extreme Engineering series.

It won the 2010 Supreme Award at the Structural Awards in London.  Never heard of that but it must be like winning a Grammy Award.  Ha ha.    The bridge is 1.6 km long, high enough that ships can go underneath and it cost 356 million US to make.  Whoa.

On Wednesday I had a day off and went biking with a friend.  To get to my friend's place I had to bike underneath and past the Stonecutter's Bridge.  It was pretty amazing.

Well I hope you all had a pretty good week.

Love adios and peng on,

Dirk


Saturday, October 1, 2011

1961, Typhoon, and Sause

Hello Great Ones,
Sorry no pictures this week.  I should have taken a few, but I did not.  I have no valid excuse for why not.  Maybe I was not in tourist mode so I just forgot.  Still I had few interesting experiences this week.  On Tuesday night I went to a Mexican restaurant in Kowloon, they got everything here baby, and spent some time with five other men that I got to know through a mutual friend.  It was interesting in that four of us were all born in 1961.  The other two were born in 1949 and 1964.  This was great since most people I know at the school were born in the 70's or yikes even the 80's.  So what do old 50 year old guys do?  Well, we had some good laughs talking about the 60's and 70's.  Was good.  Nice to hang with some guys my own age for a change.

On Thursday I had an unexpected day off.  Typhoon Neset, I think that is right, was 300 km off the coast of Hong Kong and the typhoon warning system hit number 8. Kind of gives you an idea how big and dangerous typhoons are when one 300 km away is considered close and life threatening.  Once you get up to warning 8 schools are shut down, and buses and subways stop as well.  So it was a good chance for me to catch up on some sleep.  The winds were pretty bad and there were a lot of branches and debris laying around later.  The winds made the rain go sideways and it lashed my apartment pretty good. By the evening everything was calm again.

On Friday I went to a neighboring town called Sai kung with a friend and ate at a restaurant called Sauce.  It was awesome.  All you can eat Tapas, Spanish food served small.  Very good.  I think Hong Kong should promote its food.  They have everything here.  Some is crazy expensive, but for the most part you can have a great meal, like I had for less than 20 dollars Canadian.  Great.

So that is it for this week.  I will try to get some visuals for next week.  Have a good one eh?


Love adios and peng on,

Dirk

Saturday, September 24, 2011

Peng Chau

Hello Tremendous People,
Hong Kong is amazing.  I am still discovering new places to visit.  Yesterday I took a ferry ride from Hong Kong to Peng Chau island.  No cars are allowed on this island.  So only biking and walking allowed.  Great!  So it was nice and quiet.  There are a lot of old people on Peng Chau.  It must be the final earthly stop for a lot of Hong Kongers.  Not a bad last stop.

 Went for a walk through the island's jungle and saw papaya and banana trees.  The beach was pretty well deserted and  I fell asleep on it after reading for an hour.  After meandering for another hour and eating at a quaint Thai restaurant l left for home happy to have discovered such a pleasant little place.

Have a great week.

Love adios and peng on,

Dirk

Sunday, September 18, 2011

Kowloon Walled City Park

Hello Awesome Ones,
One of my favourite places on earth is the Kowloon Walled City Park.  I have done a blog on this park before, but it deserves another.  If you google Kowloon Walled City you can see what it was like before.  Now it is an incredibly beautiful park.  Several different pagodas, surrounded by unique vegetation, waterfalls, ponds, and statues makes it really unique. It is a great place to relax, pray, and get your head straight again.  And it is only a 15 minute walk from my place.   Enjoy the pictures.

Love adios and peng on,

Dirk    

Sunday, September 11, 2011

Chinglish

Dear Great Ones,
One of the saddest things that I have heard is a Chinese mandate to improve their English language signs.  This will end one of the most fun things about being here.  Reading the "English" translations of some of the signs here always provides a light moment.  These translations, also called, "Chinglish" has inspired one German to actually publish pictures of several Chinglish signs.  His books have sold well and he has been interviewed on TV.  Here is a small sampling of what I have found here in Hong Kong.  Enjoy and I am sure some of the signs will make you laugh.

Love adios and peng on,

Dirk 

Sunday, September 4, 2011

Bamboo

Hello Excellent Ones,
One plant that I see everyday here in Hong Kong is bamboo.  Here are some facts about it from the always, cough, cough reliable source Wikipedia.  Bamboo is grass.  It can grow a 100 cm a day, humans eat bamboo sprouts, Pandas eat tons, it makes up 99% of their diet, bamboo is used as medicine, paper, textile, furniture, pipe, water processing (cleaning), weapons, furniture, fishing rods and bicycles?  Bamboo is the Chinese symbol of longevity.

It is also used as scaffolding.  Light and sturdy you see it everywhere in front of buildings.  While China seems to have a lot of fussy rules about everything they don't seem to have any standards for putting up bamboo scaffolding.  The only safety equipment workers put on are helmets.  Otherwise they wear no safety straps and as for footwear?  I have seen one worker 50 feet up wearings socks and flip flops.

So enjoy the pictures of the bamboo scaffolding.  Note the men high on top strapping bamboo together with black electrical tape.  Pretty amazing.  And kind of scary.

Till next time.

Love adios and peng on,

Dirk 

Sunday, August 28, 2011

Plant Life and Flowers

Hello Excellent Ones,
It was an eventful week in that I started school again.  Our school has a six day cycle.  This, I think, is to provide some variety in a student's life.  So this past Wednesday it was day 1.  On Thursday it was day 2, Friday day 3, Monday will be day 4, Tuesday day 5, Wednesday day 6, and then the cycle restarts again.  Holidays don't count.  So if you end on a day 4 and have a ten day break you start on day 5.  Only at the end of the school year does the cycle end.  When school starts it is day one.  Get it?  The only reason why I am writing all this is that on days 1,3,5 I am at the Shek Kip Mei campus, about 20 minutes away from the main one.  I will teach grades 1, 2, and 3 PE.  On days 2,4, and 6 I am at the main campus, Kowloon City and teach PE to the kindergarteners, grade 7 and grade 10.  If I don't pay attention to the day I may end up at the wrong campus which would be no good.  So pray I keep track.  Things look pretty good.  Kids love PE so I am a big man on campus.  Literally.

For the visuals this week I am going to present some unique plant life that I have found here.  Hong Kong has some amazing parks with some very interesting plants.  They also have a flower market which will be a must for every visitor that comes.

Enjoy,

Love adios and peng on,

Dirk 

Saturday, August 20, 2011

Lion Rock

Hello Great Ones,
I had a rather quiet week.  I had to report to school on Wednesday for staff meetings.  Kids arrive next week and so I embark on another school year.  Wow time flies.  However on Saturday I climbed up Lion Rock and back.  Lion Rock is the peak of one of several small mountains that overlook Kowloon.  As mentioned several times these small, jungle covered mountains are a refuge for not only monkeys but from the millions of people in Hong Kong as well.  It only takes a half hour walk from my place to get to the base of the Lion rock mountain and then it is another half hour to forty-five minutes to get up.  Saturday was great in that the views of Kowloon, Shatin, Hong Kong and the South China Sea were great.  Enjoy the pictures.

Love adios and peng on,

Dirk

Sunday, August 14, 2011

ICC, Monkeys, Biking

Hello Excellent Ones,
It was a pretty eventful week here in amazing Hong Kong.  After three very fast months I said good bye to my Elsie.  We had a great time and Elsie found HK amazing.  She is in Thailand now on a mission trip.  Before Elsie left though we went to the International Commerce Center( ICC) together. Here are some facts about the ICC that you need to know.   Located in Kowloon, overlooking Victoria harbour,  it was built from 2002-2010.  It is the world's fourth tallest building.  118 floors, 484 meters or 1588 feet.  Most of the floors are used for office space but on the 100th floor there is an observation deck.  That is where Elsie and I went.  The 101 floor has several five star restaurants and the Ritz Carlton has control of floors 102-118 making it by far the highest hotel in the world.  There is a swimming pool on the 118th floor.  On the 107 th floor is the Presidential Suite which rents for @12 000 Canadian dollars a night.  Yeah wow!  Elsie and I went during the night, which was wonderful.  It was clear and the lights from Hong Kong were amazing.

The next day Elsie and I went for a jungle walk.  The jungles and beaches that are near Hong Kong saves it for me.  If Hong Kong was just a concrete jungle, and it is really, then I would be getting out of there as quickly as possible.  There is only so much noise and frantic lifestyle one can take.  But like I said the jungles and beaches are awesome.  The beaches are fun and the jungles are quiet, peaceful, smell great, interesting, have amazing views, and there are plenty of entertaining monkeys to make your day.  They are wild, but are used to humans and so pretty harmless unless you feed them.  Not recommended. So Elsie and I had a nice walk and it was a good finale to our time together.

On Saturday morning I got up with my young, (I got 20 years on them) friends, Ryan and Jill, at 4:00 am for a jungle ride up to a mountain called Tai Mon Shan  (Big Cloudy Mountain).  We left early to avoid the heat and also to give us plenty of time to get up there.  It was a wicked workout.  The path going up was all paved, so that was good, but man was it steep.  So at times I had to push the bike up.  We got to the top when the sun was just burning off the fog.   We could see Shenzhen and parts of Hong Kong from on top.  Going down was much easier and we flew down.  Five hours to get to our destination and one hour to get back.  The ride down was great.  I was yodelling for most of it.

So that is it for another week.  I have to report to school by Wednesday and the kids come the following week.  Yet I am sure there will be eventful things to report next week.

Love adios and peng on

Dirk


Sunday, August 7, 2011

Mui Wo

Hello Great Ones,
This post, unlike last week, will be subdued.  Hong Kong with all its noise, people, and energy can be overwhelming.  Macau even more so.  Mui Wo is a sleepy little village located on Lantau Island, which is right next to Hong Kong Island.  Lantau has some basic claims to fame.  It has the airport, it has the Big Buddha, it has Disneyland, and it has hundreds of acres of unspoiled nature.  There are a few settlements here and there, but for the most part Lantau is peaceful.  Elsie and I spent a good part of Sunday at Mui Wo.  Great beach with hardly anyone there, nice affordable restaurants nearby, beautiful scenery.  And quiet.  It was so nice to be in an uncrowded and quiet place.

 During one of our swim times a school of fish suddenly started jumping out of the water around us.   Elsie kind of freaked, but it was so funny.  Then it stopped.  I was laughing and then pow one more fish jumped out and hit me square on the forehead.  I kept laughing.

A heard a guy say once that heaven will be all the places that you loved being at on earth.  I have several of those places and Mui Wo has just been added to my list.  I could see myself hanging out there for a few thousand years when I get to Glory and I have nothing but eternal time on my hands.

Love adios and Peng on,

Dirk     

Monday, August 1, 2011

Macau

Hello Excellent Ones,
Macau, like Hong Kong, was once a colony of a European power.  Hong Kong was run by the British, of course, while Macau was taken over and managed by Portugal for many centuries.  In 1999 it was turned over to the Chinese who then made it into a Special Administrative Region like Hong Kong.

Macau is located just 60 kilometers west of Hong Kong and most people reach it by a turbo jet boat.  A fleet of these boats  run every fifteen minutes hauling people from Hong Kong and China to Macau and back.  Travel time on one of these super boasts from Hong Kong is about an hour.

Macau is made up of a peninsula which is called Macau and two "islands,'" Taipa and Coloane which were recently connected by land fill.  The territory lies hard against the coast of China and is separated by only a narrow waterway.   Macau is much smaller than Hong Kong.  Thirty kilometers total area so   you can whip through it all in way less than an hour, depending on traffic.

Macau's claim to fame include: most densely populated place on earth- 18000 people per square km, a lot more on the weekends when the gamblers and tourists come;  a very cool old city-looks like old Lisbon, the Portugese influence is everywhere, old buildings from the 1400's, cobblestone streets,and signs.
It is Asia's biggest gambling center. It makes more money than Las Vegas and The Venetian on Taipa is 10 times bigger than its small twin in Las Vegas.

It is also an off shore tax haven.  It is a verrrrrry interesting place.

Elsie and I turbo boated to Macau on Sunday.  We did not need special visas but had to have our passport checked.  For the Chinese it is tougher.  Passport, visa, and lots of money are required for entry.  Talk about discrimination.

Once we got to Macau (the peninsula, so Macau, still with me?, consult a map if you are lost) we hired a driver, a young ex Romanian, with passable English who gave us a blitz tour of Macau.

First stop was the A Mah Buddhist temple.  It was unique in that it was carved into the side of a hill.  Incense and chants hung heavy in the air.  I am not a fan of Buddhism, but I thought the temple was pretty cool.  From there, we headed to the middle of the town to Senado Square which felt like downtown Lisbon, expect nicer.  Very touristy.  Elsie and I had rock star moments there.  Several Chinese girls got their picture taken with the tall, blond, beauty from Canada, while I got ONE picture taken with a girl from Taiwan who was absolutely in awe of my height.

Next stop was the Ruins of St. Paul's.  Only the facade was left and there was a place nearby with paintings and bones.  Since I have been to Europe a few times, it was yawn, been there done that.  The Mount Fortress was nearby so Elsie and I went up to catch a panoramic view of Macau.  The cannons up on the fortress were: been there done that as well.

On we went through winding, narrow, cobblestone streets that were: been there done that, but I enjoyed them.  Then our Romanian friend, his English starting to fade after 3 hours of it, drove us over a 4 kilometer bridge to the infamous Cotai strip, which not long ago was water between Taipa and Coloane.  After filling it up with earth and making the islands one, the powers to be built several casinos, which as mentioned before rakes in more money from gambling suckers than Vegas.  Elsie and I decided to head to the Venetian because there was, get this, an ice sculpture show.

To describe the Venetian as over the top would not do it justice.  Ridiculous, incredible, amazing, wow, unreal, are a few words that might give you a small idea of what it is like.  I will try to explain, as will the pictures, but I know it won't do it justice.  As you drive in there are buildings in front of the hotel that look like buildings from Venice. Actually they are exact replicas.  They have the famous tower and plaza of Venice (no poopin pigeons however,)  a famous bridge, (too lazy to look up what it is called, but its there, plus a big pool of water by the main lobby with gondolas just sitting there.

Once Elsie and I got our tickets for the ice show in the lobby we then had to trek a half hour through this place just to get to the hall where it was taking place.  On our way we saw gondolas gliding through the middle of a mall, with people in them, on real water (I am sure of it) then through an acre of slot machines and tables all heavily used, (just a fraction of what was there.); through these massive hallways with enough carpet to probably cover the trans Canada from Calgary to Banff, roofs painted like the Sistine Chapel; restaurants selling every type of food known to man; I could go on, but needless to say, I had never done that or been there, so I was in awe, as was Elsie.

We finally found the ice show.  The Venetian had imported a cooling system, I don't know where, a meat packing plant perhaps, then brought in several tons of ice, no exaggeration there, then transferred a bunch of Northern Chinese ice sculptors from Harbin.  Harbin by the way is the sister city of Edmonton.  I kid you not.  I think they exchange notes on how to stay warm cause their winters are about the same.  I kid you not there either.  I think.  Harbin by the way has an ice sculpture festival every winter like Quebec City, so since it was the off season and the ice sculpture guys must have been kind of bored, the Venetian brought them in for a month, gave them tons of  ice, and said go for it.  An Ice Sculpture Festival in the middle of summer at a casino in a sub tropical place will be a hit for sure. Crazy enough it is!

So after Elsie and I got parkas from the entrance to the ice show we stepped into another world.  Whoa was it cold!  It has been a while since I was in minus fifteen, you can start playing the violins now, and my poor body, now used to a sub tropical clime went into a slight shock.  My nose froze, my ears, hands, and my knobby knees as well.  It really sucked.  Next time I will bring pants.  Duh.   Despite my discomfort I still managed to take a few pictures of Elsie frolicking on the ice.  We had to laugh at the Chinese kids going down this pathetic little ice slope and shouting in glee.  They no nothing about true sledding.  I will let the pictures and comments give you an insight of this amazing display.  Nevertheless at the end of it I was frozen and it certainly made me think:  am I nuts for considering leaving Hong Kong for months of cold like that in Canada.  It was only minus fifteen and I was in it for less than an hour.  Ok I know what you are thinking.  Dirk has turned into a cream puff. Sure but I am a very, warm and happy cream puff.  Once we got outside of that fridge plus 35 felt great.

So that was our adventure in Macau.  A great day trip kind of trip.  Have a great week.

Love adios and peng on,

Dirk







Saturday, July 23, 2011

Crowds

Hello Amazing People,
Talking about amazing and people there are 8 million of them packed here in Hong Kong.  99% of them, like myself, live in tiny apartments, or flats as they say here, (old British influence) that are crazy expensive $700 000 Canadian for my little two bedroom flat.   Some flats are much smaller than mine and have 10-15 folks squished into them.

 In Canada everyone seems to have a house and an average Canadian spends a good chunk of their life span maintaing, landscaping,  paying off the mortgage , and living in their house.  Here in Hong Kong people's lives are centered around work, eating out, shopping, and basically doing anything to stay away from home.  With no maintenance, mortgage (most pay rent) and hardly any space why would you?   Mind you the weather, excellent for about 350 out of 365 days a year helps a lot too.  As a result people are out on the streets of Hong Kong constantly.  And not just a few people.  A lot of people.

One of the most crowded places on earth is the Mon Kok area in Kowloon City because it has the Ladies Market and The Night Market, infamous for their wide variety of knock merchandise plus it has several streets blocked off for pedestrians to roam around and shop.  It also attracts various organizations like Greenpeace, Amnesty International, plus traveling music and acting groups that display and perform for the masses that invade Mon Kok pretty well every day.  Only a typhoon warning and the early morning hours causes the crowds to wane a tad.

Elsie, our little Elsie now 21 and officially an adult, got a chance to perform with her DRIME (Disciples Ready In Mobile Evangelism) team from Trinity Western University in Mon Kok.  Drime is basically dance depicting the life of Jesus and people's response to Him.  It is quite good and was well received by the audience in Mon Kok.  Elsie is planning to go on to Thailand later in August with a DRIME team and she is certainly looking forward to that.

Well that is all for this week.  I failed to get a picture of Chinglish this week, but I did see a sign on a boat that I was disembarking and did not have time to capture on digital:  "Remain seater until boat is secure at berth."  Or something like that.  Next time I will have the camera ready.  Enjoy your week.

Love adios and peng on,

Dirk




  

Saturday, July 16, 2011

Shenzhen

Hello Excellent Ones,
It has been raining, it has been dreary, so Elsie and I did something rather spontaneous yesterday to cheer our selves up a bit.  We hopped on the train, rode north for half an hour through the Hong Kong Territory and went into Shenzhen, China.  Some quick facts about Shenzhen first.   In 1979 Shenzhen was a little fishing village just over the walled border between Hong Kong and China.  Think old East/West Germany and its border.  A big bad wall with plenty of razor wire and guards with orders to kill anyone foolish  enough trying to cross.  

Yet the Chinese government decided in 1979 to do an experiment with Shenzhen.  It made the little fishing village a "Special Economic Zone."  They called it "socialism with Chinese characteristics."  Yeah right. "Over the top capitalism" is what it really should have been called.  The Chinese government chose Shenzhen due to its proximity to Hong Kong, one of the world's most blatant capitalistic places on earth.  The experiment's goal was to attract business interests from Hong Kong and around the world by offering a place where they would be charged little or no taxes to run their businesses and have access to a work force that would work for practically nothing.
Well this little experiment basically worked well to say the least.  Businesses from Hong Kong and around the world poured in and at last count 30 billion US dollars has been invested into Zhenshen making it one of the fastest growing cities in the world even 30 years later.  More Special Economic Regions followed and it  propelled China to where it is at today, the world's second largest economy, soon to be number 1, a country whose investments around the world, Africa, Brazil and yes Canada is basically keeping this world afloat economically.  The leader of Brazil was asked why they are doing so well economically now after years of tough sledding.  "Chinese investment," he said.  Any way Shenzhen in 32 years has grown to a city of 14 million!  Include Hong Kong's 8 million that makes 22 million in an area much, much , much smaller than Alberta.  Thank God there are some green patches and nature parks around here!

Ok back to the trip Elsie and I took.  We crossed the border into China, it reminded me so much of the old East Germany days, minus the guns, lots of passport controls, lots of cool stamps from unsmiling guards, lots of waiting around,  that is so painful for me, yet when we got through we took a short walk to  the Luohu Commercial  Market Mall.  We had  been told about this "mall," but seeing is believing.  Really the mall should call itself the: "The Knock off Centre of the World."  You can literally get anything and everything here for a very decent price.  There are thousands of little shops, it is a maze where you can easily get lost in.  You can also get clothes tailor made.  Elsie came with a few pictures of what she wanted, I came with a sample shirt and after was all said in done we were fitted for clothes that in Canada would have set us back around $1000 Canadian.  Instead we paid about $350 Canadian.  We also bought several DVD's, that were of good quality for about 3 dollars a disk.  It was quite an experience being at this place and I will let the pictures and comments give you a better idea of this place where, "socialism with Chinese characteristics," thrive.
Have a great week everyone and I hope you are enjoying your summer!

Love adios and peng on,

Dirk

Sunday, July 10, 2011

Cliff Jumping

Hello Amazing People,
I am slowly letting myself unwind.  I am getting into serious relax mode.  Elsie is working at a tutor place and I am teaching a little basketball on the side as well.  Yet we had plenty of time to go to one of my favorite places on earth, namely Sai Kung Country Park.  We went on a 40 minute trek, once we arrived at the Sai Wan trail head by taxi, through a jungle to a deserted beach.  The little settlement of Sai Wan nearby provided us with water and lunch.  At the end of the beach was another rather rugged trail through some more jungle.  Elsie and I took that trail, then clambered up some rocks to a fantastic waterfall.  We did some cliff jumping there into a deep pool of refreshing water. It was unsalted which was nice.  We spent several hours enjoying ourselves and then marched back through the jungle to a waiting taxi that we had called ahead for.  Taxis are relatively cheap so no problem.  All in all it was a treat to fly through the air and plunge into some nice, cool, fresh water.  Ya hoo.

See you next week.

Love adios and peng on,

Dirk

Tuesday, July 5, 2011

18 Things I Bet You Have Never Seen In Your Life

Dear Incredible People,
Sorry I am a little late this week, but I spent the last four days in China on a school mission trip and I am just now finding the time.  The group that goes on these trips to China call themselves Glow In The Dark, as Jesus is often referred to as light in the darkness.  The kids are led by a teacher named King Yu who has been at CAIS for almost forever, but did start out in North Dakota and New Jersey where, because he is Chinese, he really stood out.  Eventually he found himself back home in Hong Kong.  King Yu and his group of grade 10-12 kids are all quite excellent and what they do is put on a program for local churches in China.  So they sing, dance, and act out gospel songs and stories.  I came along to help King ride herd on the kids and I also was coerced to sing a few songs with them.  My voice, like my physique, cough, cough, blended in nicely with the numbers presented.  After the program is done the kids, and most of them know Chinese, tell other kids who have shown up for the program about the Lord and many decide to become followers.  It is all very real, sweet, and beautiful to witness even though I don't understand a word, but the kids often translate so that helps.

Any way I have titled this edition 18 Things I Bet You Have Never Seen In Your Life because I saw some very interesting things on this trip, which by the way included the city of Keiping, and the villages of Ma Gon, Chek Hum and the San Cheun Church in Keiping.  I am sure you can google the locations.  Ok where was I?  Oh yeah if you have seen five of the things I am about to present or more you are pretty cool, if not don't worry I still think you are cool.  And just to make sure you know that I am not making some of this stuff up I have included photo evidence.

1.  Crowd at the border between Hong Kong and Shenzen, China.  Lots of people.  Lots and lots.
2.  Urine district.  Thats what the sign said at the Chinese restroom.  Really.
3.  Over the urinal were the words Close Easy and Close To Civilization.  Ok whatever you say.  I love Chinglish!
4.  A Bamboo pipe.
5.  Chinese Bible
6.  Old people sorting out Lychi nuts on a street corner.
7.  Majong games.  Kinda like rummy.
8.  Fireworks in front of a restaurant that had a million motorbikes, preferred method of transportation for many Chinese, in front of it.
9.  Chickens pecking at garbage on a street corner.
10.  Kids from a variety of Asian countries singing English gospel songs to Chinese people.
11.  Visible minority standing amongst real Chinese junior high girls.  I was a rock star for a moment.
12.  Kids riding with umbrellas to ward off the sun.
13.  Narrow "road," in rural Chinese village.
14.  Chinese Coca Cola.  Its the real thing!
15.  Kid eating a chicken head.  I understand the comb of a chicken is quite tasty.
16.  Europe meets Asia.  All great.
17.  Empty street with cool buildings.  In Chek Hum.
18.  Great Kids.  I am sure everyone got this one.  At least I hope so.

Have a great week,

Catch you next time,

Love Adios and Peng On,

Dirk

Sunday, June 26, 2011

Seafood and Kites

Hello Great People,
The school year is winding down and I am in my annual downward spiral from high to low stress.  Hard to think anymore so I am doing a lot of cleaning.  This week was highlighted with Elsie's birthday on Tuesday, June 21.  Elsie turned 21 and I took her and Noelle to Sai Kung to celebrate at one of the great seafood restaurants there.  They are very unique in that they keep all their food live and thus fresh in outdoor tanks and aquariums.  You choose what you want and a guy/girl starts gathering from the tanks/aquariums and within half an hour you have a great meal.  We had lobster, crab, shell fish, fish, oysters, and clams.  It was messy, it was tasty, it was great.  Few of us can say we celebrated our 21st in Hong Kong and I know Elsie will remember her 21st for always.
On Thursday Noelle headed back to the states so my apartment seems a little bigger now.  On Saturday Elsie and I rented bikes and headed to Tai Po Waterfront Park.  It is an amazing place with great plant life, a rose garden, an insect house, and observation tower.  There is also a big field where many people fly kites.  Elsie and I laid on the grass for half an hour and watched the kites dance in the sky.  Some of the kites were incredibly high.
As usual I am looking forward to summer and I am planning to explore the Hong Kong territory more in depth, spend time at the pool, and do plenty of nothing.  Next week Elsie and I are in China on a mission trip so the blog will be a little late, but don't despair I'll get something on as soon as I can.  Till then God bless you all and enjoy your week.

Love adios and peng on

Dirk

Sunday, June 19, 2011

Hoi Ha is Great

Hello Great People,
Some highlights of another interesting week:
1.  It rained so bad one day that when I was crossing a street water underneath it was pushing a manhole cover about five inches up.  Sorry no photo evidence, but it was amazing.
2.  Ate a grand seafood meal with the girls.  Fried Squid, boiled frog legs, boiled eel, Oyster pancake, shellfish, and prawns.  Sorry no photo evidence, but it was amazing.
3.  Pancake breakfast for Father's Day.  Thank you Elsie and Noelle.  That was so wonderful.  Got some nice knock off polo shirts as well as a Ritter Sport, which was made in Germany, with California almonds sold to a Canadian in Hong Kong and devoured by a German Canadian.  Definitely no photo evidence here.
4.  Kindergarten grad.  Very cute.  Very funny.  They spoke English and sang a song in Manderin.  Amazing,
5.  Hoi Ha.  Quaint mini village in Sai Kung Country Park.  Its beautiful, has a beach and is home to a marine park.  So we snorkled and checked out fish and coral for a few hours before collapsing on the beach.  We all got burned a bit, but it was fun.  Great to be at the sea and in the jungle.  Check out photo evidence.

So that is it.  Thank you for your Skype times, emails, and prayers.  Don't ever stop.  God is using your encouragement to help me get through the lonely times and coping with this strange and different land.

Love, adios and peng on,

Dirk  

Sunday, June 12, 2011

Hockey Morning in Hong Kong, Sushi, and Swing Dancing

Hello Great People,
I have said this pretty well in every blog I have posted.  Hong Kong is a strange and weird place.  This week nothing has dissuaded me from this analysis.  On Wednesday and Friday morning me and a fellow PE teacher took a bunch of grade tens to the eighth floor of a mall to go ice skating.  The rink, appropriately named The Sky Rink was actually familiar to me.  I received a book several Christmases ago called the Tropics of Hockey or something like that.  It was a story about a guy who spent several months travelling to exotic places around the world to observe and play hockey.  Sky Rink was his first stop.  The rink, about a third the size of a normal rink was actually ok, despite the fog rising up from the ice due to the heat and humidity of Hong Kong.  While the kids were putting on their blades I took a few shots, on skates, it felt so good. Next year I am playing in a rec league on a regulation sized rink near my place at a department store called Mega Box.  The rink at that place is on the tenth floor of the Mega Box with a great view of Kowloon Bay.  Surreal.  Any way back to The Sky Rink.  To add to the absurdness of the rink on the 8th floor it also had a roller coaster track going through it.  Look at the picture.  I kid you not.  The roller coaster is defunct now, maybe someone shot a puck at the roller coaster when it was going, I don't know, but it is weird.

On Friday night I took the girls to a sushi bar.  This one had a conveyer belt loaded with food.  So you would grab what you wanted and depending on the color of the plate that is what you would pay.  Cool. We also had Chinese ice cream.  Not recommended.  Elsie had shredded green tea ice; I had Mango ice cream mixed in geletin rice covered in chocolate sauce; and Noelle had a Strawberry jello thing.  Stick with Hagen Daz if you come to China.

Finally, to finish off the weekend of weird, Elsie and Noelle dressed as garish 1980's girls and I went to a swing dancing party.  Hong Kong has a pretty good swing dancing scene made of expats and a few Chinese.  I lasted about 10 minutes before I headed back home.  Was interesting though.

Finally I have found an excellent church called the Vine.  The church will be moving into their new home soon; a converted five story theatre that will have cement vine branches "growing" on the sides.  Full of expats it is like the United Nations.  Yet, it is a good place, people seem to be genuine and God is in the house.  But the building suits Hong Kong.  Weird.

Have a great week and I will check in next Sunday.

Love, Adios, and Peng On!

Dirk  

Sunday, June 5, 2011

Boat Culture

Hello Great People,
One of the big cultural differences between Hong Kong and Alberta is the thriving boat culture here.  Mainly expats rent boats, "rent a junk," is an actual company here, on the weekends and travel to a nearby beach where they spend the day swimming, waterskiing or doing other water sports.  Lunch is also included in the deal.  On Saturday I went with Elsie and Noel and a good chunk of the CAIS staff on a boat ride from Kowloon to Clearwater Bay.  It was about an hour boat trip.  It was lovely.  Lots of sun, good conversation, and play in the water.  There were several other party boats anchored near ours and it all created a very relaxed, California vibe.  After an eight hour day on the water we headed back to Kowloon and ended the day with a steak.  Not bad at all.

The next morning I went and watched a hockey game.  As I have mentioned many times before I have learned to expect the unexpected here in Hong Kong.  While it was Saturday night in Vancouver and the second game of the NHL Stanley Cup final was in full gear it was Sunday morning here.  That did not deter about 100 expat and Canadian Chinese to gather at 8 am on Sunday morning at a simulated driving place.  In other words this place had about 20 little plastic cars.  Each had a tv screen in front of it.  Normally you pretend to drive a car while reacting to the road that the tv screen shows you.  Yet on Sunday morning the tvs were tuned to the hockey game, Canucks vrs. Bruins.  There were about 10 other big tvs and a bar that was going full bore.  Most of the people wore Vancouver jerseys and from what I gathered most had either been born there or lived there for a while, especially after 1996.  No wonder Vancouver is sometimes called Hong couver.  It was all kind of surreal cheering for Vancouver sitting in a little plastic car, surrounded by fans sipping on beer at 8:00 am.  Nevertheless it was interesting.  The right team won and there was great cheering, but it was all rather strange.  I am a big hockey fan, but I think next time I will go to church like I usually do.  Yet, it will be something I will never forget.

Love adios and peng on,

Dirk

Sunday, May 29, 2011

Big Wave Bay

Hello Great People,
Big Wave Bay (BWB) is great.  It is a small village with a splendid, well maintained beach and like its name suggests, there are days when the waves are big and fun to ride. On Saturday I took the girls, Elsie and Noelle to BWB and they loved it. The journey to BWB is rather fun too.  First there is a 15 minute hike through the neighbourhood to the Kowloon Bay pier.  The older buildings in my neighborhood were only allowed to be built to a certain height due to their proximity to the old airport.  Once that was shut down and the airport moved to Lantau island new buildings like my Skytower were built and they tower over the old pre new airport relics like  redwoods to pieces of grass.

After getting to the Kowloon pier we hopped on a ferry for a 12 minute ride across Victoria Bay to Hong Kong.  Once there you have to pass through a fish market. It is very interesting if you can stand the smell.  After a four stop subway ride you alight onto a bus terminus and grab the number 9 for a harrowing ride on an impossibly narrow road that winds along the edge of a jungle covered cliff.  Then the bus plunges down to sea level where you alight on a lovely tree lined road.  After a pleasant 15 minute hike one finally alights onto the beach of Big Wave Bay.  After setting up base camp and renting a body board for about 20 dollars Hong Kong about 2 bucks Canadian you are ready to ride the surf.  Great fun.

On a random note the next day we went for a bike ride and encountered Woody, Buzz Light Year, and little Aliens.  Pixar has a show going on at the Heritage museum.  Typical Hong Kong.  Expect the unexpected and bizarre.

Till Next Time,

Love Adios and Peng On

Dirk   

Sunday, May 22, 2011

Amah Rock

Hello Great People,
The rainy season is upon us.  It has been raining every day for a week.  It can come down pretty hard, but it is really warm, like a luke warm shower.  Today was torrential.  In fact it was a red rain.  The weather bureau ranks the amount of rain that comes down by colors.  Red is pretty bad, you go out in that and you are drenched instantly, while black rain is pretty, pretty bad.  Actually really pretty bad in fact.  Black rain causes flash floods and it is best to stay inside.  Have not experienced black rain yet, but I have heard the legends.

It stopped raining for a while this afternoon so I took the girls, my daughter Elsie and her friend Noelle, on a hike up to Amah rock overlooking Shatin.  We then walked on over the mountain back home to Kowloon.  It takes about two hours and walking through a semi tropical jungle after a rain storm is pretty nice.  It smells nice, but is awfully humid.  The girls saw their first wild monkeys.  They were frolicking up in the trees, one jumped from branch to branch.  Looked like fun.

We clambered down through the jungle as it was getting dark and took some good night shots as bats flitted unnervingly around our heads.

When we get into Kowloon we saw a Sheltie puppy and of course Elsie and I swooned as we thought of Lady.  Elsie gave the pup plenty of pets.

Elsie and Noelle are certainly enjoying Hong Kong.  They love the food, the swing dancing, and are awed by the sights and sounds.  They both managed to get an English tutoring job on Saturday and have a few more interviews next week.  So it looks like their little holiday is coming to a close, but that is ok.  I am sure they will still find plenty of play time.

It is great to have company again and things are going good.

Love, Adios and Peng On

Dirk 

Sunday, May 15, 2011

Jungle, Beach, Dress Up day, Nunnery

Hello Beautiful People,
Tuesday was a day off so I took a friend from school and the girls, Elsie and Noelle, on a two hour jungle trek.  It was hot, it was hilly, it was buggy, it was fantastic.  We ended up at a very isolated beach and basically roasted for several hours on the sand and rode the waves.  Great fun.  Later we roller coasted in a little boat over some pretty massive waves back to Sai Kung, a small town near Kowloon.  What a great day.

Later in the week there was a dress up day at school for the primary students.  Many of the kids dressed up in traditional Chinese clothing and there were also some great dresses from Korea, Japan, Africa,  India, and Malaysia.   It was excellent and a great way to build up the CAIS community.

Today we went to the Chi Lin nunnery.  The garden was stunning.  Literally an army of workers keeps it up.  So overall it was a good week.  It is great to have Elsie and Noelle with me and they are certainly enjoying Hong Kong.

Till next week,

Love, Adios, and Peng On,

Dirk

Sunday, May 8, 2011

Ocean Park

Hello Great People,
The big news is that after several months of being on my own I finally have company!  Elsie my youngest  daughter (20 going to be 21 June 21) arrived last Sunday and is with me now for the next three months.  She brought her friend Noelle along so my little apartment has been de-bachelorized and rearranged and tidied up.  It is taking me a little while to find things again, but it is great to have the girls here.  Next week they will both be working at an English tutoring place in the neighbourhood.  They will also be offering some private tutoring as well so hopefully within a week or two they will be teaching a lot of English to a lot of people for a lot of cash.

The girls certainly like Hong Kong.  They loved the markets, bird, ladies, and fish, plus they have gone swing dancing twice already.  I took them to a Bible study/potluck at an authentic Chinese family's apartment.  The apartment was in a slummy building, but the actual apartment was nice.  It was a great experience for us all.

Talk about experience I went with a group of guys to a theatre that we rented.  There were only 20 seats but they were all lazy boy recliners.  Popcorn and drinks were unlimited so we watched THOR! in 3d on our lazy boys.  Pretty sweet.  Hong Kong is full of surprises.

On Saturday I took the girls to Ocean Park which is an aquarium/amusement park.  I am not an amusement park type guy, I would rather bike through a jungle, ski down a monster mountain, or windsurf on a wild and windy day for amusement, but once every ten years or so, when every thing absolutely works out I will drag myself to an amusement park.  I find them expensive, hot, and since the patience to wait in lines is not a strength of mine, and I am resigned to the fact it never will be, I find them annoying.  Yet Ocean Park was ok.  I was with Elsie and Noelle, the aquarium was amazing, there was a Panda exhibit, and a few rides were actually ok, especially the rotating spiral tower one which gave an amazing view of the South China Sea.

The girls are also enjoying the weather, plus 30's this week, and we have been cooling off in the Skytower pool every day since they got here.  While they have been adjusting to the time change and weather pretty well the girls are having trouble keeping up to my walking speed.  Since I don't have a vehicle I tend to walk a lot more and with daily PE my walking speed has improved a great deal.  Poor Elsie just can't keep up yet, but I am working on her exhorting her with inspirational words like calling her, "gramma."  I am sure my baby will be able to keep with her almost 30 years older dad soon.

So overall I am happier now and the summer looks good.

Love, Adios, and Peng on,

Dirk 

Saturday, April 30, 2011

Interesting Plants

Hello Great People,
Sprained my ankle pretty good last week playing basketball with a bunch of kids.  Ouch!  I was doing pretty good too.  Scoring baskets and awing the young bucks with my moves.  And then…  So I did not do much this week in fact I watched a lot of Hockey Night in Canada with my left foot up.  Except here in Hong Kong it is Hockey Night in the morning due to the time change.  Imagine listening to Don Cherry at about 9:00 am.  It is rough enough in the evening, but in the morning when you are a little sleepy and groggy, it is like a slap in the head.
So this week I am going to focus on the interesting plant life that is here.  It is mainly green all year, but a few trees lose a few leaves, yet nothing like home end of September.  So enjoy and I am sorry that I don't know the names of all the plants.

Love Adios Peng On,

Dirk

Saturday, April 23, 2011

I'm not white, I'm sunburnt.

Hello Great People,
A while ago one of my grade one kids, Justin, came up to me and asked me if I was white.  I told him no I'm not white, I'm sunburnt, which is pretty well the truth considering I am outside practically 16 hours a day.  I asked Justin if he was Chinese and he said I think so (he is) and then he got distracted by his white (for real) buddy who wanted to play.  For those who are racist they should come and watch my kindergarten and grade ones play.  Black, brown, yellow, white, pink, red and all in between those kids play and fight and hold hands and hug and are buddies with whoever.  They are colour blind.  The older kids sometimes make a crack or two about their colour or someone else's, but they really don't care and they treat each other very normally, ie. with some respect, some jive, always finding something to laugh or make a crises about.  At my last parent teacher interview I did not have one white guy show up, lots of Chinese, a few Indians (from India the real ones) and a black doctor from Nigeria.  Being a very visible minority, tall, old, and sunburnt has barely registered with me because everyone I have crossed simply does not care.  So it is obvious that racism is learned and I say it can be easily delearned.  Just watch my classes of many colours and within half and hour you will realize: people are special because of who they choose to be not by the colour their genetic code gave them.  End of sermon.  Have a great Easter!

Love, Adios, and Peng On,

Dirk

Saturday, April 16, 2011

Jungle Ride

Hello Great People,
I always thought Hong Kong was a concrete jungle.  In reality that is true, although I find the buildings amazing here, but 70% of the Hong Kong territory is covered by a real sub tropical jungle.  On Saturday I went with my friend and fellow PE teacher guy, Ryan and his wife Jill on a monster six hour bike/hike through a jungle.  Ryan and Jill were varsity athletes at the U of Saskatchewan, Ryan football, Jill basketball and since they are only @ 30 and keep fit it was a massive challenge for my 50 year old bones to keep up.  Most of the time I managed to keep up with Ryan, but Jill was another story.  A lot of times we boys were trying to keep up to her.  Wow.
The first part of our trek was relatively easy.  A raised cement trail through a marsh, along the sea coast , and into the jungle was no problem, but man if you weren't paying attention flying off that trail would not have been good.  The middle part was up and up, over rocks, up steps, down little patches, then more rocks, shale, and steps.  It was only about 2 kilometers but I would say we had to carry the bikes for all but 200 meters of it.  So why did we go on this trail?  It is one of the few trails that mountain bikes are allowed because the powers to be give the bikers the worst ones, while the hikers get all the sweet ones.  Not good!  Nevertheless we survived what Ryan called the Ho rri ble   trail, lame joke trying to make it sound Chinese.  The last third of this trek was on a paved trail again and we ended up at a quaint village, near a campground.  We biked the campground then had a replenishing meal before having to go back on the Ho rri ble trail to get back to where we started.
I have biked some mean trails before with Rochelle back in Canada, Kelowna, Kimberly, Crowsnest Pass, Canmore, but this baby was by far the most challenging.
Still summer is pretty well here, it is hot @26, and the sounds, sights, and smells of the jungle were amazing.  It was like being in the jungle greenhouse at the Calgary zoo yet the sounds of monkeys, birds and loud cricket like bugs made the experience unique and wonderful.
Next week I am going camping with a group from the school on Monday and Tuesday, then I am taking them windsurfing on Wednesday, and body boarding on Thursday.  Then it is Easter holidays and my Elsie will be with me on May 2nd.  So there are a lot of great things going on in my life.  Thanks for your concern and prayers.  God is good.  All the time!

Love Adios and Peng on!

Dirk

Sunday, April 10, 2011

Its a little weird.

Hello Once Again,
The weather here in HK is getting hotter.  Had to turn on the air conditioning for the first time in months today.  Kind of like back home when you have to turn on the furnace for the first time in the year.  Summer is a comin.
On Tuesday I had a day off due to Ching Ming festival.  That is a day when Hong Kongers visit the graves  or vaults of deceased love ones.  They clean up the graves, put flowers on them and spend time reflecting.  Due to the limited space here graveyards are build on steep hills and it is really expensive to have a grave.  Must opt for the cremation, put in an urn, stick in a vault option.  Any way I visited a graveyard and I was a very visible minority taking a few pictures.  Ok on to happier things.
Came by a doggie pit stop and kids and dads playing cricket.  It is a big sport amongst those from India and Pakistan.

On Friday night there was a carnival at the school and I was asked to get dunked.  It was for a worthy cause so for half an hour I endured some very cold water being dumped on my head.  My life is kind of weird at times.

 I also went up the peak at night and sadly did not get great pictures.  It was amazing seeing all the lights and it will be a required trip for guests coming here.  I will also figure out how to take better pictures next time.  Big miracle happened after the peak.  I left my camera on the bus.  I ran for about a kilometer to the Central Bus Terminus and sure enough, after some hassle,  found the camera again.  Thankfully the bus that I had ridden on had been shut down for the night.  Whewww.  I was thanking God for that.

Today I went to a church that is located in a district called Whampoa.  There is a store that is built like a boat there.  What more can I say.  Totally weird.  But that is Hong Kong.  Every day I discover some thing different and weird about the place.  Hong Kong is great.  Have a great week everyone.

Love, Adios, and Peng On!

Dirk

Sunday, April 3, 2011

Hong Kong Views

Hello Everyone,
This will not be a really long or in-depth blog.  Spent an afternoon with a teacher friend , Gary, who is one of the few teachers I work with that is older than me, by 12 years!  Despite his age he is in great shape and he kept up with me easily, in fact at times I had to keep up with him!  I have a new hero.  He bikes, hikes, and swims all the time, so there you go.  Exercise regularly and you will be spry for a long time.  Ok I know it is snowing in Alberta and I hear that some are believing that summer is likely to be cancelled this year and I feel sorry for you, but man was it hot here yesterday.  Gary and I sat outside at a Thai restaurant and I had to move into the shade cause I was roasting.  Then we hiked up to the peak and took some good pictures from on top.  So that is all, sorry, not that exciting, but I wish you a great week and thanks to all of you who check in with me.  And for those of you who feel sorry for me due to the heat I have to endure, which is probably no one, I appreciate your sympathy.
Love, Adios, Peng On,

Dirk  

Sunday, March 27, 2011

Getting 50

Hello Everyone,
When I was working on the Hutterite Colony the kids would always tell me on their birthdays that they were getting a number, so for example rather than saying, "I am ten today," they would say, "I am getting 10 today."  I tried to correct them, but didn't really make a fuss when they kept saying it cause I think it is kind of funny.  Any way I got 50 this past Friday, March 25 and I want to thank everyone who checked in with a card or an email message.  Thank you very much! If someone had said a year and a half ago that I would be getting 50 in Hong Kong I would have called them daft.  Yet it has happened and it was pretty special.  
I gave myself a little gift early on March 24 by taking my PE 20's to a driving range.  We got some instruction from a pro and then had fun blasting little white balls.  When I am relaxed I can drive a little white ball pretty good.  But put me on a course and I usually drive the little white ball into the woods or other fairway.  I hate when that happens.  Still it was fun, but my poor city kids were complaining of calloused hands after and some developed blisters.  Pansies!
On March 25 I received congratulations for turning half a century seemingly every hour by someone.  Some kids even gave me a hug which was sweet.  In the evening I had a little party with about ten friends from school who also live here in the Skytower complex. We gathered in the complex's clubhouse, which had a pool table and plenty of room.  While the girls chatted the boys played pool.  I have observed this type of behavior from kindergarten up to grade 12 to University and onto adult hood.  Girls talk more, boys play more.  That is just they way we are programmed I guess although why talk so much when you can play?  My new friends brought cards making fun of my age, (as requested by me) and some were quite good.  Some samples:
1.  50 isn't old if you're a tree.
2.  Get Well Soon-wishing you a speedy recovery.  Oh…right you're not sick you're old!
3.  Congratulations for reaching an age where you can wet your pants without feeling embarrassed.  (Ouch that one hurt a bit.)
4.  (And then my personal favorite)  Hey!  You're old.  (That was from a PE colleague who is noted for his deep, intellectual statements.)
My cake had 25 candles on it, any more would have set off the fire alarm.  It was a mango cake and quite good.  Mangos are great.
Anyways it was a nice time and I appreciated every second.
The next day I went with my deep PE buddy on a mountain bike ride around a reservoir.  I would rate it, according to a ski hill rating, a black diamond.  Lots of hills, steps, rocks, roots, cliffs, it is brutal but great.  Got home early from that, had a recovery time then went to a colleague's birthday, she "got" a quarter century younger than me, 25,  on March 26.  Ok now I feel old.  She rented a Hong Kong tram and asked us to dress gangsta.  Huh?  Not sure what a gansta is so I dressed kinda like a gangsTER.  So I travelled 2 hours through the middle of Hong Kong on this tram with these kids dressed like gangstas. Then we went to a German hofbrau haus type restaurant where we ate wurstals and had a beer and listened to a Chinese band playing ABBA songs.  When asked why they don't play German polka music, because that would of course be appropriate considering the setting and all, they replied, "we only sing happy songs."  Ouch!  That stung a bit considering my Germanic blood.  Well whatever, as I keep telling you, Hong Kong is a strange and exotic place where it is normal to expect the bizarre.  All you can really do is laugh.
So I hope you all have a great week and pray for me as I try to get that ridiculous ABBA song, "Dancing Queen," out of my head.
Love, Adios, and Peng On!

Dirk

Saturday, March 19, 2011

Stretched

Hello All,
Finally got the pictures of me abzeiling off a cliff.  That was a rush.  Adding to the drama was the ocean crashing against the rocks nearby.

The disaster in Japan has had some effect here in Hong Kong.  The daily English newspaper has assured us that we are too far from the plates that destroyed New Zealand and Japan, the nuclear reactor nearby is safe too, plus the islands of The Philippines will protect us from any Tsunami, and the winds are blowing towards North America so no problem about radioactive fallout.  Still someone spread the news that salt has properties that will protect you from radiation so there was a mad rush here in Hong Kong to buy salt.  Vendors were selling it for 10 times the normal cost.  Huh?  I bought three bags of chips and I am counting on their salt content to save me.  Eating salt raw does not appeal to me at all.  Guess if I was really desperate I could just run over to the harbour and drink sea water, but it is kind of polluted, so I would probably die from that.  No, I think I will go back to the chip idea.

There was also an email going around that we were not to go outside, especially in the rain due to radiation.  After some panic it was deemed a prank.  Still on the serious side there are quite a few Japanese kids at my school and while their relatives are safe in Japan it still is tough knowing your country has suffered such a disaster.

This week I supervised a group of kids who formed a club at school called the Social Justice Club.  Twice a month they go to downtown Kowloon near the infamous Night Market, where you can buy knock off items at knock off prices, and help a mission bring food for the homeless.  I was surprised at how many homeless there are in Hong Kong and that they are all quite old.  The people who received the food were all very grateful and we had fun chatting with them.  Of course the kids had to translate for me, but I learned some Cantonese that night.  Jesus Love You sounds like So Oily and peace is Peng On.  Afterwards I took a taxi to my comfortable apartment and had a snack.  I have a lot to be thankful for.
So whether it is repelling over a cliff or helping feed the homeless my experiences through the school here in Hong Kong have been priceless so far and I am very grateful for them.    Thanks for your care and comments.  Have a great week.
Adios and Peng On!
Dirk

Sunday, March 13, 2011

Zhongshan

Hello All,
Well I had an interesting weekend this weekend.  Actually since I arrived here in Hong Kong every weekend has been interesting, but this one was really interesting.  On Friday after school I caught the ferry with two other teachers from the Kowloon pier and headed over the Pearl Delta to Zhongshan, China, pronounced Jong san to help supervise thirty-five high school kids from my school.  These kids are part of a school club called GID (Glow in the Dark.)  It is named this because as Christians we are to shine God's light on a dark and hurting world.  Three to four times a year this group heads into China and spends several hours with students from a local school playing games with them and doing other cultural activities.  They also spend time visiting Christian missions and do singing programs at local churches.  This program is run by a man named King Yu.  What a great name, but its for real.  Most Chinese people have a Chinese and English name.  King's english is King.  The Chinese word for King is Wong, which is as common as Smith in Canada.  Any way  King is a calculous teacher at CAIS and has run this club for 11 years.
Once my collegues and I arrived in Zhongshan a driver picked us up and took us to the hotel where we met up with King and the GID group.  They were allowed to leave earlier, but because I and my fellow teachers had to instruct some classes we were released later.

We had a lavish eight course meal at the hotel.  King loves to eat and we did not go hungry over the weekend.  Every meal was a lavish 8-10 course extrvaganza.  I ate fish, shrimp, pork, chicken, lamb, basically every common farm animal, (I hope not dog, but I am not sure) and vegetables galore.  Eggplant, cabbage, corn, bok choy, etc, etc, breakfast consisted of dumblings and this soup thing called congi.  One thing I learned about chinese eating habits  that I had never known before is that it is common to clean your plates with the tea that is brought to the table.  I tried, I made a mess, I will carry on like I did before and trust my stomach to handle any strange bacteria that enters in.  Good so far.

On Saturday morning we took a drive into the country and had a "cultural experience," on a farm.  For the GID kids and those from Zhongshan it was a unique experience since they are all city kids.  After playing some ice breaker games like tag, and with the parachute, we went to a farmers field and were allowed to pick tomatoes. cabbage, and carrots.  I showed the Chinese how to pull out a carrot.  Wiggle first then pull gradually.  They were impressed with my farming skills, but that is about the extent of it.  The kids were also allowed to catch chickens.  That was funny because the kids were as skittish as the chickens.

After another amazing 8-10 course lunch we headed into Zhongshan and met up with a church youth group in a massive echoing gym.  My hearing has eroded over the years due to teaching gym and well, it took another hit from 100 loud kids.  Hopefully I will still have some hearing left when I retire.  From there we headed with the group to another 8-10 course "tea", really it was a lavish meal and gorged ourselves once again.  One of the kids on the trip, Shiloh, who interesting enough has never been to North America and has been raised in Hong Kong by Italian parents, became a bit of a rock star due to his blond hair and teeny bopper good looks.  My height was interesting to most of the kids, but Shiloh was the star and he must have signed a hundred autographs while on tour, I mean on our trip.

Once the meal was over we broke into groups and headed to different homes throughout Zhongshan.  It was very interesting to see how a typical Chinese family lived.  Zhongshan is for the most part a very clean and modern city and the house we visited was pretty good.  Yet the strange part was that the lower level of the house was a hair dressing salon.  So we visited in the waiting room.  During our conversation the husband and wife took turns cutting people's hair.  I tell you China is a little different.  It is part of the deal.  Any way one of the kids, Natalie, knew Cantonese and was our interpreter.  I learned that Christianity is growing by leaps and bounds in China.  The government is allowing "registered" churches to exist because they see the economic benefits of having good hard working and benevolent Christians in their society.  Yet, the government does not want unregistered home churches.  In fact you face imprisonment if caught at an "illegal" home church. These churches are however, thriving.  Many people feel constricted by the officials that monitor registered churches and wish to express their devotion to God in ways that may not be approved by the government.  Such things as prophecy, speaking in tongues, being slain in the spirit does not have government approval in China and this of course reflects a paranoid and ignorant attitude.  How can any government control God and what He wants to do.  Interesting enough the fact that the government will persecute those who don't toe their religious line has caused the home church movement to explode.  One of the most dangerous things Christians are doing in China is helping those who escape North Korea to find refugee in South Korea.  China is buds with North Korea so they would not be happy if you were helping the enemy.  Yet just like the underground railway helped black slaves flee into free  Canada at great peril to the white people who helped them, so it is with the Chinese Christians helping those to freedom.

After the home visit we headed back to the hotel and collapsed from an exhausting, but great day.
On Sunday we headed to a local church.  The pastor, Pastor Wong (King, not kidding) wore a tie that didn't match, a dress coat, and jeans, (guy is probably not married,) but in my books a pastor that wears jeans and wears their hair a little too long is probably a decent and very real guy.  Obviously the Chinese church police don't really care either about Pastor Wong's clothes and hair.
The kids did a great job with their presentations and we teachers got in to the act reading scripture in five different languages, to show our school's international dimension, and then having it translated by one of the kids.  So we presented in mandarin, cantonese, english, french and german.  Guess who got to say his thing in German?  Weird to speak German in China to people who have no clue was ich sage. (What I am saying) Still it was kind of fun.

After church guess what?  We gorged again on another 10-15 course meal or was it 8-10 I don't know, but except for chicken head I pretty well tried everything and so far I am holding up just fine and I hope it continues.

So all in all it was a great time and the next trip will be in June to some isolated Chinese villages.  I am signed up ready to go.  That will be verrrry interrressting.  Adios my wonderful family and friends till next time.

Your Dirk

    

Sunday, March 6, 2011

Its a little different

Hello All,
It is pretty obvious that things are a little different here.  This week I am posting some of the more bizarre things that are within walking distance of my humble abode.  It is early March and the temp is low 20's, above that is!  Stores tend to be really small, they have no doors and much of their wares spill out onto the streets.

There is a park nearby,  which once was an apartment complex called the Kowloon Walled City.  It had the highest concentration of people on earth.  Google Kowloon Walled City and check out the pictures.  KWC was also a dangerous lawless place that was even avoided by the police.  After it was demolished in the early 1990's a beautiful park was built.  There are some pretty cool things like a jogging track, basketball and soccer pitches, a biking track for kids, playground and lots of interesting plant life.  It also has occasionally some weird exhibits.  An exhibit of lamp stands with shades along one of the paths at the park has to be one of the strangest things I have ever seen.  It is like they went into peoples' homes and asked if they could borrow their lamps for a while.  Huh?  At night this display was even more unusual.  When you walked by each lamp they would turn off and on and make some weird, kind of spooky sound.  What the…?  Bizarre!

Kowloon City where I live seems to never shut down either.  Hong Kong is the same way.  On Saturday night I was jostling with literally hundreds of people on the street.  The place was hopping, restaurants were full and lights were on every where, kids were playing basketball and soccer.  The time?  9:15 pm.  Apparently they just get going at that time.  Yet apartments are small, the weather is grand, things are happening, so why not.

And finally a great Chinglish sign.  It says:  No dog is allowed to foul.  Your cooperation is greatly appreciated.
What!  Who made the law that dogs are not allowed to foul?  Love the visual too.

I live in a strange and exotic place.  A little wacky at times, but never boring.  Next week I am in mainland China.  Now that will be interesting.

Adios folks,

Dirk