Wednesday, 8 December 2010

Tuesday 7th December

Oh wow, we had such a brilliant day yesterday I hardly know where to begin. Except to say that I have ached in every muscle of my body all night, despite a hot bath and Nurofen before I went to bed! Yes, it was the day of the Bike Ride!


We got up and went to meet Ceci at Tai Wai Station, where she took us for breakfast/lunch/brunch. I had my trusty cheese and egg sarnie, this time in toasted bread, which was delish. Ceci and NM polished off a large bowl of noodles and spicy beef.

With coffees it all cost me the princely sum of £6.



Then we walked round to the bike rental shop. I don't mind saying that both NM and I were petrified, neither of us had ridden in about 30 years, and neither wanted to let everyone down by not being able to ride or falling off! The guy brought out bikes for us to try, and we wobbled about the pavement before heading off.

And then things got better! There is a complete network of cycle tracks alongside the Shing Mun River, and we cycled the distance of 3.5 MTR stops, about 7 miles, before cycling back.





If we lived here, we'd be cycling every weekend. Or if we had such suitable cycle ways at home I'm sure we'd buy bikes there too. Luckily, yesterday wasn't as hot as it has been, and there was quite a breeze so the journey was pleasantly warm rather than burning!

After dropping the bikes back, Ceci took us up the 1000 steps to the Monastery of 10,000 Buddhas. What an amazing place! This is the view as you approach the climb...



The whole way up is lined with gold buddhas, every one with a different face, pose and position!


He was one of my favourites

When we got to the top, this is what we found





It's a beautiful place, so peaceful, and so far off the ground!!

From here we climbed to another monastery further up into the hill, which is being renovated and certainly has the WOW factor!

This statue of Kuan Yin stands about 30 feet high!

And the hillside is just covered with more buddhas

I have so many more photos I could publish here, but the internet connection is so slow it's taking forever, and we're going out again shortly.

We took ourselves back down to Tai Wai for some refreshments, then back on the MTR to Shatin, where the rest of Ceci's family had arranged to meet us for dinner. There were 8 of us sitting round a table in a very nice restaurant sharing many delicious dishes. The whole Chinese way is so sociable, with everyone sharing and helping each other.


We gave Charmaine, Ceci's daughter, her Christmas present which she was allowed to open. She's the excellent Latin dancer, so we bought her a DVD of Strictly Come Dancing and had great fun trying to explain the concept!

She also had some artificial snow, so she could pretend to be English and a chocolate Advent Calendar which was admired by everyone.





So today we're off to the Po-Lin Monastery and Big Buddha, and the Ngong Ping Village. Tonight we are having dinner with NM's brother and sister-in-law before we return home late Friday night.





Tuesday, 7 December 2010

Monday 6th December

When we got up this morning, we didn't realise what the day would bring!


Our plans kept changing today, so I ended up going back to the bead shops to finish shopping for my daughter-in-law's wishlist. NM decided to come with me and make sure I went the right way out of the station, haha, then he could go on to do some shopping in Fish Shop Street.

A bead shop, just for Manda :)

After getting waylaid looking at mobile phone cases, we eventually got to the bead shops and he then headed back to the station. On his way through a side street, he bumped into his old best friend from when he lived in Hong Kong. They hadn't seen each other for 12 years! Neither of them would normally have been in that area; it must have been fate.

We all had a drink together and made plans to meet up for a meal and a proper catch up on Thursday before we go home. What a lovely thing to have happened, we are both so excited!

But then, when NM arrived at Tung Choi Street, it was full of fire engines, ambulances and Police. There had been 3 arson attacks at 5am, many shops and stalls in the next street were totally destroyed and about 200 residents had to be evacuated.

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Even 12 hours after the attacks, the emergency services were all still present, and the residents were sheltering in a small park, some of them still in their nightclothes.


My favourite shop must be amongst those destroyed. The majority of the shop and stall owners had no insurance, and their shops were totally stocked up for Christmas. I hope the Police catch the man responsible, and quickly, before he ruins any other livelihoods.


And then this was our tea. Not very Chinese, but delicious all the same. Thanks Pizza Hut!








And today? No laughing at the back, but we're going bike riding through the New Territories!

Anyone who knows us will be laughing hysterically at this point. I haven't ridden a bike for about 30 years, and neither of us are exactly built for the activity any longer, but Ceci thinks it's an excellent idea. It's pretty hot and sunny still, so we have to buy sunhats as well, but carry jackets for later. We've got a busy few final days coming up, with lots already planned, and I can see both of us being unable to move much tomorrow....

Until then, dear readers. Think of us and our saddle sores as you toddle off to work today ;)

Sunday, 5 December 2010

Sunday 5th December


We've had a fab day today!

We decided to have a day out using the Hong Kong tram system. The trams are the oldest form of public transport in HK, and they have the World's largest operating fleet of double decker tramcars. And it's incredibly cheap - each trip only costs $2 per adult - about 16p!




But first a geography lesson. For those not familiar with Hong Kong geography (that was me until I first visited), HK is made up of 3 main areas; The New Territories, Kowloon and Hong Kong Island. To get between Kowloon and HK Island, you can either drive through one of 3 motor vehicle tunnels, take the Star Ferry or use the MTR (the cheap and extremely efficient, mainly underground, railway).



The Victoria Harbour between Kowloon and Hong Kong Island used to be 2 miles across, but after all the reclamation works which have been taking place in recent years, it is now only 800 metres at its narrowest point. When we were on the Star Ferry last week we had to wait ages to dock, as the ferries get across so much quicker now the distance has been so foreshortened, there's always a queue to "park".

To get across to HK Island to begin our mammoth journey we took the MTR, to pick up the tram at Kennedy Town. They were holding a craft market in Kennedy Town when we arrived, and we bought some great gifts for ourselves and friends.


And there began the start of our 18 mile journey, which took 1 hour 45 minutes and cost the princely sum of 16p each!!

This is a map of the island, tracing our route through.


The view as we left Kennedy Town on the best seats on the tram









A typical shop selling everything as we passed through Sheung Wan









And a little dim sum shop in the street









Here is the Western Market building, which is one of the oldest structures on HK Island and used to be a wet market. It now houses shops and a restaurant.







Now, here is something that absolutely
fascinates me here - the scaffolding on all the buildings. It's all made of bamboo which has been lashed together, there's not a metal pole in sight! And they use bamboo for everything, including the buildings under construction, some 80 or more floors high! I hate heights anyway, but to trust your life to some bamboo poles and string? Brrrrr, no thanks!


The next stops on the journey are in Central District, and this is where the scenery changes. Everywhere is full of people and bustle, and you reach all the huge office buildings and designer shops. There is Louis Vuitton, Bvlgari, Gucci, Prada and many more, in complete contrast to the majority of the country.



Sunday is the Philipino Maids day off here, so the whole place is full of women sitting out on their flattened cardboard boxes,
chatting; doing their nails; playing bingo; eating; in fact anything they can do all together in massive groups. The noise is unbelievable!





We also saw a Hong Kong Salvation Army band playing Christmas Carols here!




This is a cool photo from Admiralty, the next stage on the journey, of a new building containing the reflection of the old housing on the other side of the road








And this is the view through the front of the tram as it continued its journey through Wan Chai, Causeway Bay, and Tin Hau.


This is a very familiar sight everywhere. Ladies go round all the shops and market stalls (and bins in some places) collecting up the cardboard and tin cans. They squash it all down flat, load it onto their trolly and take it to the recycling departments, where they are paid a small amount for all they have brought.

Sometimes the ladies are very old and quite tiny, but their trollies are huge, piled high and very heavy. It's a tough way of life :(


And now we have arrived at our destination - Shau Kei Wan. we've travelled 18 miles, in 1 hour 45 and paid just 16p each.

This whole country is fabulous, but a place of such immense contrasts. The rich are very rich and the poor very poor. We regularly see very disabled beggars outside the Louis Vuitton shop, oh the irony.

And to end our day, we went back to Mongkok where we saw the strange performers the other evening. Mr Bodypop was having a night off, but Sharon Osborne eat your heart out......

Saturday, 4 December 2010

Friday 3rd December



We had a really cool day today!

We decided to stay quite locally to save our feet, as we've walked miles already.


The centre of Tsuen Wan is just up the road, and the first shopping centre went into had this as a wall decoration.

The plants are all real and living, in a sort of tiered wall hanging basket full of soil. I've never seen anything quite like it before.






We did some shopping and I bought some boots ready for the snow at home! The girls here all wear their boots all the time as it's winter here for them. And we're still in short sleeves! NM bought his 5th I-phone case! They have so many to choose from here.

On the way back to the hotel we walked through this beautiful park. They really know how to do calm here, the parks are clean and well kept, and the plants and trees are beautiful.




The Park had originally been Hoi Pai Village, a Hakka Settlement, which was demolished in the 1980s to make way for the park. The Chan Yi Cheung Ancestral Hall was left standing and is now home to the local stray cat families.


In the evening we met up with old friends Ceci and Stella, for drinks and a meal at a really nice bar in Knutsford Terrace, Tsim Sha Tsui. Knutsford Terrace is the Kowloon equivalent of Lan Kwai Fong on Hong Kong side.

We got chatting to some other Gweilos (foreign devils!), alias 2 ladies from Cardiff and Scotland, who live and work in Hong Kong. It was funny to sit amongst the mix of nationalities, chatting about English shops and the snow!



When we got back to the hotel at about midnight there was an awful racket of hammering and banging coming from our floor of the hotel. They have been renovating, but the noise is supposed to stop at 6pm. I rang down to the front desk and when I finally made myself understood (with NM laughing away behind me as I tried to describe "banging" and "hammering" to a young and bemused Chinese guy), he sent the manager to investigate.

We went out into the corridor and met a Chinese guy from the room opposite, who had got himself locked out of his room. He very politely said Good Evening, whilst looking like a Chinese Mr Bean, in his comedy pyjamas. We flew back into our room, and how we laughed! In fact we were still laughing an hour later; he so matter-of-factly told the stern faced managers "I have lost my key". We heard his door opening about 10 minutes later, so he must have got back in :D

Today we are revisiting Fish Shop Street and the Beads quarter, before going to Discovery Bay for a farewell dinner with NM's brother and sis-in-law, and his parents who are due to fly back to the UK tomorrow, snow permitting.

Friday, 3 December 2010

Thursday 2nd December




...took us back to Hong Kong Park for a better look while everything was still open.

For such an enormous, busy and bustling city, they do a natural oasis of calm and beauty very well indeed!


The first conservatories are for dry plants, display plants and humid plants.











Everything feels so green and lush.











From here we moved into the aviary; 3000 square metres of meshed aviary containing over 600 species of bird, and 30 metres tall in its highest points!

These birds enjoying their tea are Red Lorys and black capped Lorys.








And I liked this little chap, who almost completely
blended in with the background









For a sense of irony, here's the view from inside the aviary...


On our way out of the park we stopped at the lake, which has such an abundance of fish and creatures


Today, Friday, we're staying locally for the day as our feet are feeling the brunt of all the walking! Tonight we're going out for dinner with friends, so if the internet holds up I'll try posting again tomorrow.

Wednesday, 1 December 2010

Tuesday 30th November

Today we took ourselves to the local supermarket to stock up on provisions. I love shopping in other countries and looking at all their produce. Some things here are instantly recognisable, others not so. After our freshly prepared lunch, we went off to meet NM's parents in Central.

There we took the Number 15 bus up to the Peak, where a new Hong Kong Police Museum has just opened. We were allowed to take photos outside, but sadly not inside.













There is a large section on Triads, with actual photos of their ceremonies, and a room about the poduction of heroin! The recipes are on the wall, together with the branded packaging, and there is a heroin kitchen with all appliances intact! They do say that different methods are used nowadays, but I reckon it could give people all sorts of ideas!!

After the museum we took a taxi to The Peak for a coffee and rest, then went back down by bus.


We were walking through a very busy part of Mongkok when we came across these people. Oh how we laughed! Please excuse the fact the video is on its side and just enjoy!!! The woman is singing Chinese Opera, the tall guy is body popping, the one in the middle is well into it all, and we're not quite sure what the one on the right is up to...



We reckon they're a couple of sandwiches short of a picnic :D

And then this is what happens when you set yourself up to perform without a street licence...


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