Friday, March 31, 2006

Kunming

Just got all the posters, thanks Hugh and family. The Kiss Kiss Bang Bang and Constant Gardener ones are awsome! Anyway, this weekend Piers and I are going to have dinner with Sally (the UK GAP lady) in Kunming and most of the other GAPpers in Yunnan. So this is a short message to keep you posted...

Tom

Thursday, March 30, 2006

Play my game!

This is a game I got from Sophie - http://sophamapoph.livejournal.com/

Step 1: Put your MP3 player or whatever on random.
Step 2: Post the first line from the first 20 songs that play, no matter how embarrassing the song.
Step 3: Post and let everyone you know guess what song and artist the lines come from.
Step 4: Strike out the songs when someone guesses correctly.
Step 5: Looking them up on Google or any other search engine is CHEATING!

1. Laura, can't you give me some time?
2. Kicking away the moments that make up the dull day.
3. You wanna know if I know where?
4. Who's in the bunker, who's in the bunker?
5. To pretend no one can find the fallacies of morning rose
6. Watched her as she winked her eye, you don't make me sorry
7. Did I drive you away? I know what you'll say
8. Oh mirror mirror, You’re coming in clear
9. The ocean wind, cold on our lips, the wild fern growing, the sinking ships
10. What a drag it is getting old
11. 6 AM, day after Christmas
12. When you are set to throw in your hand, when you are far from home
13. Where, where have you been my love?
14. In the cool of the evening, when everything is getting kinda groovy
15. You oughta know why you feel so hollow
16. Two tall glasses of sweet iced tea, underneath the sweet gum tree
17. My girl, my girl, don't lie to me
18. This plane is definetly crashing
19. If you close the door, the night could last forever
20. We passed apon the stair, we spoke of was and when

Alright! GO!

I made some of the ones i thought were a big harder a bit longer (with out passing the one sentance mark, just more commas :P)

Tuesday, March 28, 2006

Last Day in Tonghai

Sorry about that. Lunch was delicious, and you have to get in there before the students do or you'll be in there for 15 mins.

Anyway, on the last day we got up early and met Albert (Jan left for Kunming, she said she was craving western food.) He took us to a noodle resterant for breakfast, then we went with him to the local kindergarden where he had to take one short class. He works as a kind of freelance teacher, mostly tutoring outside of schools though. So all the kids introduced themselves and Albert had them playing games with us and stuff. It was really lovely. The school was a four story building and they had a slide for kids alongside the stairs that went all the way down to the ground floor! After that we caught a mini bus to the Mongolian village which was about 10 minutes out of Tonghai. It was really amazing, but I think it's all in the pictures really, so after that we caught a bus back to town and left at 1 on a bus back to Eshan. We've promised to keep in touch with Albert and we'll definetly bring the Kunming guys and Yuxi girls to Tonghai to go tour somewhere with Albert. He recommened a slightly larger town near Tonghai, I've forgotten it's name though. Apparently there's also a really old Mosque in Tonghai which is worth seeing.

Hope everyone back in Australia is well.

Tom

Last Weekend, Tonghai: Albert, Mongolians and the most beautiful temples I've ever seen!

Last weekend Piers and I went to Tonghai.
We left Eshan on a 9:30 bus and arrived in Tonghai at about 10:15.
There were heaps of hotels near the bus station so we quickly scouted it out and went for a reasonably low priced one (without being the cheapest). It was 60 yuan for one night in a double room, which is pretty good.

The first day we explored Tonghai, we quickly discovered the local market (a larger version of the one in Eshan). Then we went somewhere to get lunch. One the way we found this army store where I nearly accidentally electrocuted myself with a tazer. It was this flashlight that doubled as a tazer, but i couldn't read the chinese so i just assumed it was a flashlight and was fiddleing with the switches while i was holding the tazer end! Anyway after that we found somewhere to eat and had an ok meal. We explored the central area of Tonghai, discovering the beautiful old street and Tonghai No. 1 Middle School. GAP should really send some gappers there because it's a really awsome school, and Tonghai would be a great city to be placed in. Anyway, while we were checking out the old temple traditional building behind the school we met into one of the students, who's english name was 'Ran'. He was fairly confident with his english so we were able to talk for a while and understand each other pretty well. Ran's dad (it was a saturday and so the students had free time to go home and i think his parents were there to pick him up) who was into photography wanted to have a look at my camera, so he is the person taking the pictures for us when i'm in the shot.

At some point we went to a supermarket, where i found a plastic shop manakin's hand just lying on the ground, so i kept it. We contiuned walking around town, Piers bought a suit jacket and I found a really awsome suit - especially awsome because it fit me and it's hard to find clothes that fit me in China - but I hadn't brought quite enough money with me from Eshan to get it and then be sure i would have enough for the rest of the weekend. Especially considering we are going to Kunming next weekend to meet the Gap lady from England, Sally, who is going to be there for some reason, and I'll need money for that and then have enough to eat for the rest of the month haha.

I don't recall anything much we did that afternoon, but in the evening we discovered a bar called '2nd Back Seat'. The owner/bartender spoke suprisingly good english so we were able to talk as it wasn't very busy. The bartender's band also played in the bar. He was (amazingly) a fan of pretty reasonable western music, considering most people in china have really terrible taste in music we were really suprised. He also really liked Radiohead! Bizzare! He didn't understand the english lyrics to any of it though so he'd sing along just making the noises. We listened to his band play and then went to check out another bar we'd spotted earlier. This was much the same, expensive (by Chinese standards) drinks, though it was better lit. Eventually we felt tired and went back to the hotel.

The next day we got up late (hooray!), although after a bad night's sleep on both parts because the beds were pretty typical for china, shockingly uncomfortable (damn!). We decided to go check out temple we'd spotted on a hill while exploring the town. This temple was pretty typical as to the others we'd seen in china. An old lady let us into the top area with a key so we could see the temple and after we'd left a donation she started pointing across the town at pagoda on top of a high mountain, suggesting (we assume) that we check that out. We got the name of the mountain (i don't remember what it was) and we got a motorbike car thing there (i think they're called took tooks). We paid the driver 10 yuan (we got totally ripped off there, should have been 2 apparently). The climb up the mountain was actually really nice and not at all tiring. On the top of the mountain there were 4 or 5 old traditional buildings. Then right on top over looking Tonghai were two pagodas. While taking some pictures an asian man in a bright orange t-shirt said hello, how are you in really perfect english. We were really suprised, it turned out his name was Albert and he ran a cafe/taught english/offered his services as a guide to tonghai and some other nearby towns for forigners! We were VERY luckly to run into him, and we all got on very well. He had with him a lady from somewhere near Newcastle (UK, not NSW) who's name was Jan. Jan was..... um.... well she was just nuts. She talked as though she was complaining all the time and she'd go on about how China was no good now because so much was changing. She also made pretty rude generalisations about China and the Chinese. She had been to China like 7 times, but knew basically no Chinese and complained about the Chinese food! God knows why she came! At one point she actually said 'The problem with all the changes in China is there's nothing to complain about anymore.' Not that it stopped her. A girl from a local school was with us as well. Jan's parting words to her? 'Remember what i told you, no husband, no kids, no worries.' WHAT!? Leave her alone you batty woman.

Anyway Jan aside, we got on really really well with Albert, who was really really nice and is I think the best english second language speaker we've met in China. We went back with them to his cafe, where he immediatly dished out COLD beer - you cannot get chilled beer in china, they don't do it for some reason - in reaction to our suprise he said, 'I am used to Australians' Hahaha, see how awsome he was. Anyway after a really nice lunch (of which jan refused to eat anything but the potato dish) he invited us to come see the Buddest temples with them. On the side of this mountain were some 31 temples! We'd never seen them because they were all hidden by the trees up the side of the mountain. They were easily the most beautiful place I've ever been to in China. It was increadable peaceful (Jan had been there before so she took it very quickly and rushed up to the top) and we just talked with Albert. I doubt I could really describe any of it very well, so just check the pictures for this one.

After this we had dinner at Albert's cafe (Jan decided to go back to her hotel phew). Dinner was also delicious and the cold beer was plentyful. We talked with Albert and then he convinced us that it was definetly worth staying sunday night (we'd already missed Sunday's bus anyway) and going back to the school tomorrow lunchtime, in order to visit the Mongolian village. What? A mongolian village in southern China you ask! Well it turns out 754 years ago, Gengis Khan was moving his army down through China and he decided to sent a scouting party ahead as he was planning to come down to the south of China. However, he changed his mind and went a different way. The scouting part in the mean time settled in an area near modern Tonghai and their decendants are still there and have their own Mongolian traditions still!

We were fairly easily convinced. We also decided that we'd have to bring some of the other gappers with us to have a tour with Albert next time. Anyway we went booked into a new hotel, Albert got us rooms for like 30 yuan a night! We then went with him a bar we'd never noticed on the old street, which was really nice.

OOOH Lunchtime, i'm starving.... I'll do the last day after lunch, I promise!

I have Skype, call me



My status

Monday, March 27, 2006


Shop front


A much more modern house in the Mongol Village


A lady smacks the straw with a stick, while listening to loud Chinese pop


House in mongolian village


Street on Mongolian village


A cactus growing on the roof of a house!


Doorway




An old lady, she is 84


More street


More street


A street in the village


Two ladies


Two ladies prepare vegetables


Big stacks of ...something


The kids follow us


More wall


A wall on one of the more modern buildings in the village


The kids follow us around for a while shouting 'Hello'


Old lady and young man


And again


The kids and the two old ladies



Another lady brings her basket


Shows him that the bottom needs fixing


A lady brings her basket for him to fix


Two old ladies and some kids


The man who rides into the village every week on his motorbike to fix and sell bamboo baskets


Man walking down alley in mongolian village


Alley in mongolian village


Piers and Albert walk down an alley in the Mongolian village


Doorway


Doorway


An alley in the Mongolian village


The view from the table at Albert's


Again


Looking across the bonsai garden


Bonsai tree, this one has been growing for 100 years



A fountain (turned off) of a dragon playing with a ball, when it is working the water comes from it's mouth and spins the ball







A butterfly on some flowers


View across the flower garden 2


View across the flower garden