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* vibrant * pulsating * electric *

Monday, March 16th, 2009

By Speedygonzales
from Hong Kong to China on overnight train, heading north

“Vibrant, pulsating and electric.” So said a family member of Hong Kong.
Weaving through the evening crowd to the Night Market last night, it was all of the above. Fairy lights twinkled, neon lights blazed, the crowd elbowed and nudged its way along the buzzing street, shoulders brushing, everyone jostling to their destination. Until this walk we had only once had cause to hurry, and so had meandered our way through the city. This time, in an effort to not have *too* late a night, we tried to hurry. Impossible. You can step in front of someone, slip between others, elbow someone out of the way without causing offense (everyone else is doing it too!), accidentally trip on a young man’s shoes, but you cannot go much faster than the crowd. Fortunately for us, the crowd was going fast enough.
Big cities are fast. Fast and impersonal.
We’ve enjoyed merging into the crowd in Hong Kong, but as I took a final ferry ride this morning to pick up the salubrious Russian visas, I considered how much I was looking forward to the return to China. Slow and personal China. 
Of course, I am expecting the China of the north to be like the China of the south and I may well be disappointed yet, but it will be nice if we discover it to be even half as friendly, polite and thoughtful as the south. You see, down there we never rode a bus without someone insisting on giving up their seat for the Mother With A Baby, and we often saw young mothers virtually arguing with old men about who should take the seat….HK was nothing like that. Everyone’s out for themselves (well, to be pedantic, Dad was offered a seat once – but by a lady from Shanghai, so that didn’t count).
The only reason people stop you in HK is to offer you a copy watch or copy handbag or massage or tailormade suit. In China, people smiled in friendly greeting, and talked with us. Circus act aside, there’s something nice and personable about it.

So here we are clickety-clacking another night away. We’ve chosen hard sleepers for this 20 hour journey, a decision we had a little apprehension about after the Vietnamese ones, but which has proven to be unfounded. Even these cheapest beds are well-padded and come with pillows and thick duvets….although it must be noted that the kids came back from an excursion to the other end of the train with enviable reports of  “only two beds in a room” (we have six), “and a padded armchair” (the eleven of us are sharing three pull-down-off-the-wall seats in the passageway – it’s either that or perching on our permanently made-up beds where there is not room to sit up straight if you’re over eight years old – we didn’t manage to get the comfy larger lower berths so all our beds are on the smaller second and smallest third tiers!), “and an ensuite” (we’re sharing boudoir facilities, and we know who with – we see everyone who goes, seeing as we’re positioned right next door to the loo!), and the piece de resistance, “and a door, Mum!” (no such luxury for us, we’re in open compartments, which, actually, we prefer when we have kids sharing with total strangers. In case you think this is taking an unnecessary risk, let me tell you about our compartment-dwellers. All of them struggle to lower themselves on to their bottom berths – no chance of them climbing up to abduct our kids! All of them were asleep before any of our children. All of them are sweet old granny and grampies. Good sorts to travel with.

And speaking of fast (well, I was ten minutes ago)…..as I took off on one ferry with ER2 this morning, Dad and the eldest four children sailed away on another, all of us heading for HK Island, but two different terminals.

Their goal was to scale the heights of one of the most recent tallest buildings in HK. And that they did – all the way to the fifty-fifth  (of eighty-eight) floor. That is one long way up! And these pics are one long way down:

If there had been an earthquake, they’d have been fine. Apparently (though I wouldn’t want to try it out) it is built with all sorts of anti-earthquake technologies, one of which is a huge concrete oil-dampened ball sitting at the top of the building. Basically, in the event of an earthquake, this huge mass dampens the motion of the building, preventing it from shaking apart. Someone did some experiment with a golf club shaft wobbling – with nothing on top the shaft wobbled wildly when shaken, with a dampened golf ball at the end of the shaft it didn’t shake as much. So why not use it on top of a really really tall building?! Not sure you’d catch me entrusting my life to a golf ball experiment. But there was no threat of earthquake today and up they went. 55 floors in 40 seconds. Pretty impressive.
At the top were predictably awesome views, and also a comprehensive display of the counterfeit measures in the bank notes of Hong Kong. Now this might not sound all too captivating, but it’s what they came home raving about! So there you have it.

 

In the meantime, I shot up an only-53-storey building, and in doing so, came away with the speed record. 46 floors in 15 seconds. Fast.

And now we are chugging along at 130km/hr. To China.

I was just about to sign off, when along came the train stewards, and guess what they did. No, you’ll never guess. But remember I told you how polite and thoughtful they are? They are going along each compartment, yes even our cheap seats, and arranging the shoes at the doorway, so that if anyone has to get up to visit the toilet in the night, they’ll have no trouble finding their shoes (at least I think that’s why they’re doing it). How’s that for thoughtful? Oh, you cynical ones might say it’s all part of the service, but we ain’t seen service like that on any train we’ve been on so far!
And if all our shoes have been stolen in the morning I’ll agree with you that they were just helping the Shoe Burglars make a clean getaway.

Night night
(with all the shoes lined up, I’m guessing the lights are soon to be dimmed)

*magical*

Friday, March 13th, 2009

By Rach (who left her knitting at home this day)
Hong Kong

“It was worth lots of ice creams,” Lboy8 commented as we strolled away from the most breathtaking fireworks display. Boom after boom of colour had sprinkled and spiralled into the sky, illuminating and then silhouetting Cinderella’s Castle in a choreographed display of wonder.

For months the children had gone without icecreams (and worn too-short pyjamas for a winter and forfeited last year’s Easter eggs and done all manner of extra jobs) – all to save money for a trip to Disneyland. They were not disappointed.

There was only one *thrilling* ride, but for children who have only one other amusement park experience with which to compare, this in no way detracted from the day. Besides, they went on that roller coaster five times!
For the rest of the nine hours they were delighted and enthralled and amused and entertained, and they laughed and waited in short queues and chattered and spun and climbed and rode and giggled and adventured and flagged mid-afternoon and got their second wind and experienced some more and oohed-and-aahed…

ERgirl2
We headed first to Fantasyland to give the younger ones a gentle introduction to the world of Disney attractions. A ride through one of our favourite books with Winnie-the-Pooh seemed just the ticket. And it was…..until the honeypot we were travelling in turned bouncy with Tigger and the lights went out and ER cried the rest of the way, “Please let me out, please let me out now.”

This one fear factor ruined her for the next three rides. She can ride a real live elephant, but was petrified on the carousel horse. She loves dolls, but sobbed her way through “It’s a Small World”. She jiggles to music and makes all kinds of dress-ups, but the big yellow glasses did nothing to enhance her enjoyment of the (admittedly loud) orchestral 3-D show with Mickey Mouse and Donald Duck. The rest of us loved it though. Even when a lion jumped right off the stage with wide open mouth….and other jumpity moments too.

Fortunately a ride in the spinning teacups flicked the switch for her, and she ended up delighting in the whole experience. She rode the horses another half dozen times, spun in the teacups some more, controlled Dumbo’s ascent and descent more times than I could muster enthusiasm for, did a spot more spinning, zoomed around in a UFO, and when we revisited her one other unfavourite ride, she was happy to snuggle on my knee, pull my hand over her eyes and just peek out occasionally to avoid the about-to-swallow-me hippo, the wild apes with shooting guns and the fire that threatened to engulf our boat.

Tgirl4 was altogether a different story. She was impressed with the storybook ride, adored the spinning teacups (“Go faster Mama, please can you spin faster!”) and begged to be allowed on the roller coaster. Against our better judgment (she’s only a little wee four years old), because she exceeded the height restriction, we let her go.
She emerged, a blonde bouncing ball of adrenaline, urging me to accompany her for a second ride, “You’ve GOT to come Mama, it’s so much fun, you’ve really got to do it.”
And so, against my better judgment, I did.
T4 talked me through it all – we have to wait here, we have to watch the screen for instructions, we have to keep our hands and arms and legs in, you have to watch me coz I’m a child, we have to pull the bar down now, it’ll be dark and and slow at first, but don’t worry, soon it speeds up and gets exciting, and it gets all turny and it’s so much fun –
At this, she pulled my hand on to her leg and held it tightly.
”Do I need to hold your hand?” I wondered out loud in anticipatory semi-darkness.
”Yes, coz it’s still scary,” she beamed up at me.
She was right.
She bounded off her second ride, as eagerly as the first, “I so have to find Dadda and tell him you screamed all the way!” 
Right again!

She’s teetering between two worlds, this little button. One minute all grown up and a companion in the 6 and 8 year old brother games, and the next she’s still only little. Big enough for a roller coaster, but not alone.
Then, when she saw Buzz Lightyear she wanted to show him a sticker she’d been given of him. Noticing the length of the queue waiting for a Buzz Photo Op, I suggested she show her sticker to the huge Buzz model nearby.
”But he’s not real Mama,” she pointed out.
Big Brother enlightened her, “Nor’s the other one T. He’s just a person dressed up.”
T4 remained dubious, and, still being little, failed to observe we were walking away from the <yawn> queue as we talked.

Mboy6
”The roller coaster was my favourite and also the worst thing I went on.”
Even worse than being spun by his baby sisters in the teacups!

Not that Mama feared much better.
Soon after this next photo Kgirl10 observed, “You’re very pale Mum” and others chorussed gleefully, “You’re green!!” I used to *love* spinny things. Not so fast now.

 

My stomach may not have been up to it, but my brain was still working. Flying above the park, taking a river cruise, I couldn’t put her out of my mind. Her name was Wendy and our conversation on a Yangshuo street went something like this:

You lucky many children. China no have many. I no lucky. I have two. Girls. No lucky. No more, too much money. I no have money. I no have boy. I want see two things. I want see sea. I want see city.

She lived just a bus trip away from the city, a day away from the sea. But she had no hope of ever seeing either.
How do you lose yourself in hedonism with her words replaying over and over?
They jarred against the flashy glitzy manufactured experiences.
I couldn’t reconcile the two.

Rob had less trouble. He was too busy playing the goat or playing with his new toy memory-capturing-tool (that’s why there aren’t too many photos of him this day, and more than one or two of me….he was behind the lens).

Magical memories that will last a lifetime. 

 

money here and money there

Saturday, March 7th, 2009
by Mr & Mrs (empty) Money-Bags Hong Kong

 

Never mind the Rolexes or precious pearls. Our needs are more modest. THERE a plate of rice covered with a selection of meat and vegetable dishes cost a ... [Continue reading this entry]

chalk and cheese

Thursday, March 5th, 2009
by Rach Guangzhou, China to Hong Kong

 

We went from Chinese rice porridge for breakfast (just like they've been eating for centuries) to the most modern of cuisines - if you can call it that ... [Continue reading this entry]

?do you know?

Wednesday, March 4th, 2009
by Rach-who-does-not-know-but-wonders Guangzhou, China What do these pictures have in common?

[Continue reading this entry]

downtown sights and sounds

Tuesday, March 3rd, 2009
composed by everyone as we walked 12km round town today - go little legs! Guangzhou, China DOWNTOWN....

....SIGHTS....

[Continue reading this entry]

The Great Mall of China

Monday, March 2nd, 2009
by the lady, who prefers to create than consume Guangzhou, China So it's the Great Wall the kids are hanging out to see, but they've had to do their time in a few malls first. The biggest mall in Asia is ... [Continue reading this entry]

spotted in China

Sunday, March 1st, 2009
by Rach Guangzhou, China

(or security guard, anyway!)

today.....just like centuries ago.....mud brick tiled house, cart, garden, pump....

Much nicer than any of ... [Continue reading this entry]

from the ends of the earth

Saturday, February 28th, 2009
by phone-phobic Rach, friend of phone-phobic Rosie Guangzhou, China

 

We were standing right there in the middle of that bridge when Rob quietly chided Mboy6 for fiddling with the valuable-items-in-his(Rob's)-buttoned-pocket. Apparently pickpockets are prevalent round ... [Continue reading this entry]

apartment living

Friday, February 27th, 2009
by Rachael Guangzhou, China China features four times in the top twenty "biggest cities of the world", and while we won't be going to number 19 (Shenzhen), we will be visiting numbers 14 and 16 (Shanghai and Beijing), and right now ... [Continue reading this entry]