Big Wave Bay

Big Wave Bay
Not just another beach!

Sunday, March 25, 2012

Guess That Place

Hey Great Ones,
First of all thank you to all of you who wished me a happy birthday.  I really appreciated it.  I had a happy birthday.  I ate at an indian restaurant with some fellow teachers who were also celebrating their birthdays around mine.  There were about twenty others who joined us to eat and laugh the night away.  I was the oldest, but it did not matter.  Was great fun.  On my actual birthday I took a ride on a junk with some friends, that will be blogged some other day and I had Cantonese practise and pyrogies with some friends later.  I had not had pyrogies since Canada so it was a great treat.

The day before my birthday I went to the annual Hong Kong flower show.  It was interesting to say the least.  Some of the stuff was beautiful, other things were tacky, while some displays were just plain bizarre.  I will blog more on that later as well.

For today though I am going to give you a little quiz.  Take a look at the pictures from the HK flower show and guess the place, without looking at the caption, which by the way has the answer.  Yeah, yeah pretty lame test I know, but I think the pictures will give you an indication of what the show was like.

Have a great week, God bless you, thank you, and see you all next time.

Love adios and peng on!

Dirk  

Sunday, March 18, 2012

Singing The Praises of Lamma

Hello Great Ones,
The gray gloomy weather that has been hanging over Hong Kong like a bad mood for much too long finally lifted today, replaced by sun, blue sky and plus 28!  So I went to Lamma island which is one of my most favourite spots on earth and soaked up the summer atmosphere.  Sadly forgot to bring a swim suit.  Could have easily gone in the water today.  Wait what day is it today?  March 18?!  Huh?  I still am not really used to this summer in March or November business yet.

Any hoo let me sing the praises of Lamma.  Easy ferry ride from Hong Kong, only 20 minutes for starters.  No cars allowed.  Awesome.  Narrow streets lined with shops and restaurants, nice to eat outside again, and crazy to see beach toys for sale.  There are also lovely walking/biking paths,  all over the place.

And then once you have walked through the little village you move into some jungle and alight onto a lovely beach, complete with shade trees, and change rooms, plus a shark net well out into the water to keep those critters from tearing your leg off.

 Besides the sharks Lamma is great.  Do not be surprised when I retire on sweet Lamma island, one of the greatest places on earth.

Till next time.

Love adios and peng on!

Dirk 

Sunday, March 11, 2012

Some Colour to Brighten Your Day

Hello Tremendous Ones,
Wahhhhhhhh.  It has been overcast and grey and rainy and gloomy, except for one amazing sunny afternoon, for over a month!   It is impossible to go anywhere or do anything because it is so drab and wet.  Compound this with report card hell, over 16 classes, plus other niggling details and one feels like one is grinding through life, just get this time done, so one can actually live again.  Terrible!  The challenge is to find life in this drabness and overload.   So today I present you with some colourful and encouraging pictures of floral and other plant life found here in Hong Kong.  I have left a ton out, but I think these pictures will chase mine and possibly your blahs away.

Tell next time,

Love adios and peng on!

Dirk

Sunday, March 4, 2012

Domestic Helper

Hello Great Ones,
Hong Kong has the unique distinction of having the most "domestic helpers," or nannies as they are called in Canada, per capita in the world.  There are over 300, 000 domestic helpers, mainly from the Philippines, all women, in Hong Kong.  They are big part of the culture here and many, too many in fact, not only take care of the house and cook food, but bring up the children of their employer as well.  Most of the children I teach have parents who put in long hours at work and as a result their domestic helper brings the child to school and collects them at the end of the day.  I know one young boy at my school who only sees his parents on Sunday.  His parents leave before he wakes up and get home long after he is asleep.  This boy is being raised by his Filipino nannie.

From what I have observed, and please understand that this is just my perspective, the young kids, kindergarten to grade three, treat their nannies for the most part like an aunt.  They hold hands with them and it is obvious that for many there is a mutual love and affection for each other.  Yet the older kids, particularly the junior and senior high students treat their nannies, again at least from my perspective, with a certain disrespect.  Watching domestic helpers, adults in their 30's or 40's,  carry the musical instruments and school bags of the kids while they munch on junk food, walking five steps ahead of them, disturbs me.  When I have mopped up the water on my outdoor court at school, after a rain shower, many kids have questioned why I have done that.  That is a job for a helper many kids have told me.  I in turn have told them a little manual labour is good for them and if they don't keep quiet I will get them to join me.  That usually shuts them up.

Some observations and things that I have learned about domestic helpers here in Hong Kong.  Most earn about 300-500 Canadian dollars a month.  Many sleep on little cots near the kitchen.  Several of my colleagues at school have domestic helpers.  One guy has had one for years and says he can't remember the last time he made a meal, cleaned, washed his clothes, did dishes, etc, basically anything domestic.  He says he could not imagine life without one.  Yeah, basically he would not know where to start when it comes to maintaining a household.  During dinner parties domestic helpers serve the food and then fade away into the kitchen where they remain, while the, "guests," entertain themselves.  Domestic helpers get one day off, Sundays.  They also get one to two weeks a year to go back home.  For some it is more like once every two or three years they can go back home for a while.  Most helpers have left families and children behind in their country of origin and they in turn are being raised by grandparents.  While I think most people are good to their domestic helpers, I have heard of very abusive situations. I struggle with the whole domestic helper system here in Hong Kong because I see it as a flagrant example of a rich population benefitting from the poverty of another society.  Really the domestic helpers should be home taking care of their own children or working on their own dreams, rather than doing menial tasks for the rich and basically earning less than a day's wages of the ones who have hired them in a month.  I just don't think it is right.

Back to Sundays when the domestic helpers have a day off.  Many congregate in parks across Hong Kong and use cardboard as their blankets.  Once a month, after being paid, several helpers gather in a place called Central, in Hong Kong, and pack huge boxes of stuff that they have bought with their meagre wages.  These will be sent to their impoverished brethren back home in the Philippines, or Indonesia, or Malaysia.  Witnessing this packing was incredible.  Later trucks, hired for cheap, picked up the boxes and brought them to places where they would be transferred onwards.

I have read that the Philippines main source of revenue, their greatest industry,  is the money and goods a huge chunk of their population sends back from working abroad.  Wow. I think poverty sucks in not only does it deprive people of material goods and food, but worse it strips them of their dignity.  Please don't argue that it is their fault or they are not working hard enough.  It is mainly a corrupt political system that has lost its way and has mismanaged its resources and their people that causes poverty.

Please pray for the domestic helpers here in Hong Kong.  May the HK government one day make it law that domestic helpers get salary increments every year that they serve, that they get more time off to be with their families, and employers get tax benefits or other incentives if they provide some sort of education or trade for their help.  I think the Hong Kong government would benefit more from finding ways to better the domestic helpers lives rather than allowing this crass, exploitive system to exist.  End of rant.

God bless you all.

Love adios and peng on!

Dirk