23.7.08

Phuket at last


I've been in Phuket now for almost two weeks... but it feels like it's been longer! I don't have much time to write (at work now) but suffice it to say it's been more or less paradise at a buck's price. The Kamala King's School has been (in)conveniently canceled for this week, so Chris and I have been working on some themed plans for a weekday camp for the residential kids. We've visited Phi Phi Island twice now, and stayed in Railay Beach, and otherwise hanging around in luxurious pools that belong to luxurious resorts (in which we don't have the money to stay) and sipping away at the swim-up bars, watching every sunset in our usual terraced restaurant with huge bay windows, and visiting nearby (crazy) Patong Beach every once in a while. Kamala is absolutely amazing (see beach above) and just quiet enough that you don't feel like you're back in Europe/America with so many tourists elsewhere (see Phi Phi.. meh). Anywho, back to work now. Just keeping this thing updated. (Quite hard when every moment is precious here!) I'd say I miss home, but who could when the sand is this white, the food this delicious, and everything this cheap!

9.7.08

Bangkok!

I have just arrived in Bangkok, and now patiently (OK, more than extremely eagerly) await Chris's arrival tonight. The hotel (or resort as they call it, though it rather resembles a really well kept motel since it has at most 50 rooms) is quite convenient at a 10 minute drive from the international airport, and the staff are really quite fluent in English and all smiles. The only downside is the monsoon season that is so readily apparent as I sit with the wind blowing hard from the door and pouring rain. I wish the usual monsoon summer rains would be less frequent than the everyday occurrence that they are famed to be. Oh, and of course mosquitoes are rampant here, and as I write I am being eaten alive! My grandma used to always say my blood was so sweet that I always found the attention of every mosquito near me. Not sure that's such a great thing, more of a back-handed compliment I'd say. Well, I am off to take a nap. Safe and alive in Bangkok and off to gorgeous Phuket tomorrow morning!

8.7.08

Disaster: American Girl's Attempted Entry to China (Failed) & Quarantine in Hong Kong

Sooooo... I love Hong Kong. I'd describe it as a very British New York Chinatown completely slammed with Chinese people all speaking Cantonese (and decent English). Especially if you are in the subway, it is just like London's Tube filled with Asian heads bobbing around. But I supposed I digress....

Yesterday I tried to return to Shenzhen from Hong Kong after two days with my dad sightseeing and (a lot of) shopping in HK. Too bad the hotel we stayed in had a 13th floor which we happened to live on-- I'd like to blame it on sheer bad luck rather than our own negligence-- because apparently my Chinese visa (remember how I got my American citizenship and after so much celebrating can't enter China..) had only one entry time on it, which I used up coming into Shanghai from America. Thus we were quarantined at the Shenzhen harbour waiting for the next boat to HK (which consumed 8 hours of the day filled with a lot of anxiety, stress, tears, and mostly just regret that I wouldn't be able to return to Hefei to say a proper farewell to my grandparents). We opted not to wait the requisite 4 days to rush another $150 visa to China, and so now I am flying out to Thailand tomorrow from Hong Kong. My luggage luckily made it from Hefei (thanks to Daddy's business connections) to here, and now packing is going to consumer this whole day (well, and probably more shopping, you know me). It works out quite well considering how large of a blunder it was to try to enter China without the necessary documentation. (Lucky I didn't get sent to jail, right? I even thought about swimming to China's border, but alas, the police held my passport while we were quarantined to prevent such a ridiculous move.) I just find it amazingly ironic that while I held a Chinese passport for the last 11 years, I always met trouble crossing any border (and I did cross a lot of borders in that time), but now, my American passport gives me trouble entering what I'd like to call my motherland. I suppose the Olympics did cause so much stricter guidelines on entering China. Now I am only 2 hours late in arriving at BKK International Airport, but still 7 hours ahead of my travel partner. :) Well, I'm off to more preparation-- I do believe I bought too many things in Hong Kong to stuff into my giant backpack and even another suitcase.... I'll write once I have more time in Thailand!

3.7.08

黄山: "Yellow Mountain" - China's granite beauty

I am back from Guilin already (last night) and after a more relaxing day in Hefei (went to see Grandparents' new highrise apartment, the huge French supermarket next door that sells more fresh produce and animals than you can imagine, and the house I grew up in which is smaller than a quarter of the size of my apartment now), I have realized that I have a lotta catching up to do blogwise.

So here goes my attempt at Huangshan.
This is the main gate reading Huangshan on top, which translates to "yellow mountain." It is really a series of mountains in a range. We took a cable car in the morning to one peak, called White Goose Peak. From the ride alone you could already see the "sea of fog" that awards Huangshan its fame.At the top of White Goose, the stretch of clouds and fog look like the stretch of clouds and fog look like an ocean of cotton balls that were more comfortable than any bed... except for the thousands of feet you'd tumble if you were to try.Particular to the mountain range are Huangshan pine trees, which grow only on the steep slopes of the mountains fully upright and with dispersed branches-- a quite oriental look if I may say. Along the concrete steps which break the foliage of these pines you encounter these amazing workers who carry bags of concrete on bamboo shoots for further building, stopping every few steps for respite from the weight; I can't imagine how heavy those bags are. Their calves are huge! Chinese work ethic will never cease to amaze me sometimes.
Chinese culture incessantly necessitates poetic names (unfortunately the poetic aspect is lost in translation) for odd-looking things-- Huangshan in particular has names for endless pine trees or stones. Here is "Monkey Guarding the Sea of Fog":
And this particular stone is humongous, but the way the weathering of the mountains have coincidentally shaped it, it looks like some god had set it atop this peak. "Flying-over Stone":

Can you see the ants that are really people at the rock?Engraved on this giant rock are letters which bring good luck if you touch them and leave some money....
See, it's huge when I hug it!

Everywhere else, the sea of fog is just incredible. You can see one mountainscape one second, and a blink later, those peaks have disappeared under the waves and new ones have appeared. The height of where we stood was always disguised by the sea, as we were really almost always a thousand meters (more than 3000 feet) above sea level-- it was as if we were in a different world where the ground became the clouds.
Still at the top, peering downwards scared my mom to death (and to screaming at me) as I like to lean over the rails to see what's below: steep, steep rocks for a terrible death if you tumbled!
The climb at times was a bit slippery (especially on the second day which was completely rainy) and steep and full of narrow paths guarded by rock walls. (But of course, that makes it fun.)

Anyhow, I realize this entry is a bit brief since I'm trying to catch up (and also pack for Shenzhen/Hong Kong simultaneously) but the pictures speak for themselves (except I really, really wish I had a big ole expensive camera to capture the beauty of Huangshan). We spent two days hiking around in the mountains... although every picture in that album might look the same to you, the aeshetic appeal never diluted with each new scene...

I will write about our trip to Guilin when I get a chance (if not, check here for pictures).... :) Otherwise, I leave for Shenzhen tomorrow morning, Hong Kong for two days after that, back to Hefei for a day, and then Bangkok and Phuket!