Thursday, July 30, 2009

Last week in Hong Kong!

Its actually down to my last eight hours now...I'm flying off to London at midnight tonight for a two-week trip through Europe with my friend Jamie. We will be country hopping through Edinburgh, London, Paris, Brugge, and Amsterdam before returning to Atlanta on August 14th!

This past weekend was a whirlwind of excitement...I went to Macau on Saturday morning for a day-trip, and it was (sadly) the closest I got to mainland China this summer! Macau is grimy and crowded, but the East-meets-West architecture and lifestyle were very interesting. I felt like I could be walking through a little Italian or Spanish town. The Portegeuse influence (it was a colony until about ten years ago) is most vividly seen in the pretty churches and delicious food. I ate wayyy more in 10 hours than any rational human being is supposed to consume. We also stopped by the infamous casino strip for a touristy light-animal-craziness show at the Wynn where a friend managed to win 600 HKD playing blackjack, completely accidentally. I don't trust my luck enough to do that!

Sunday I made the trip to Lantau, one of the largest islands near Hong Kong and only about a 40 minute ferry ride away. We took a cable car trip through some pretty treacherous cliffs to reach the tallest seated outdoor Buddha made of bronze in the world. Apparantly there are others that are larger, but they are not seated, outdoors, or made of bronze. Anyways it was very pretty and i will put up pictures when i get the chance! We then took a bus to the south of the island and had a scrumptious meal on the beach at a south african restaurant and enjoyed a night stroll before heading back.

Work was a whirlwind of goodbyes and wrapping up projects this week. I also go to go out and interview some people on the street Monday because the broadcast journalism was out sick...I was on the 9 am news!

Its the last day so i need to go finish up everything! Next update from Europe!

Wednesday, July 22, 2009

When the dog eats the sun...


SOLAR ECLIPSE!! It was so amazing to be in Asia for the longest solar eclipse of our lifetimes...and for probably the most watched eclipse in history. I went with the news crew to a mountain outside of Hong Kong earlyyy this morning to take pictures of over 1000 people who had gathered to observe the eclipse. I expected craziness and costumes...but the telescopes and astronomy were still pretty cool. Here it was only a partial eclipse, so i still got too much sun being outside for that long!


The weekend was good--Friday night I met up with cousins/uncles from Delhi and showed them around a bit. Saturday was another alumni brunch (I'm getting spoiled) Italian this time. Then wandered around the jade and goldfish markets in Mong Kok until it started raining. And it continued raining through the evening, dinner, and the Harry Potter 6 movie so when we got out of the theater it was officially a TYPHOON LEVEL 9! The highest level is 10 so this was pretty bad, they shut down all the public transportation and I almost got blown away trying to hail a cab.


The next day cleared up pretty early and it was nice to have a refreshing breeze for once. I enjoyed a trip to Kowloon Park, especially watching the Philippino domestic workers enjoy their day off with spontaneous Bollywood dance parties. Also went to the huge History of Hong Kong museum which had a great set up and really interesting cultural displays. Concluded the weekend with the twenty minute light-and-music show on the harbor (largest light show in the world) and delicious Indian food in the sketchy brown-town neighborhood. Perfect day :)

Thursday, July 16, 2009

Wednesday, July 15, 2009

I still can't use chopsticks...

Which you think would keep me from consuming such large amounts of food, but I have managed to overcome my handicap with some creative maneuvering…usually I just spear my food toothpick style.

This weekend was another wonderful one. We were constantly on the lookout for the level 8 typhoon that was supposed to hit, but the most we experienced was a light drizzle. Saturday morning we were taken on a private tour of the Hong Kong container port run by Hutchison Whampoa Limited. The head legal counsel and the CFO of Hutchinson then took us out for a huge Cantonese country-style lunch and impressed us with their stories of body guards, attempted kidnappings, and secret meetings with foreign heads of state. Who knew Hong Kong’s port was so important and busy…it’s the 3rd largest in the world and over 7,000 trucks carrying cargo enter and exit the port every day. I then had a lazy Saturday afternoon, mainly spent digesting, and then were treated to a swanky night on the town by another Columbia alum…all I can say is I didn’t know they made bottles of Moet that big!

Sunday we took a 45 minutes ferry to the island of Lamma, on the southern side of Hong Kong Island. It is mainly populated by “fisherfolk” and famous for its clean(er) beachs, beautiful hikes, and delicious seafood. I really enjoyed the Buddhist temple, hiking through the brush to a rocky beach for the sunset, and picking out the live fish that were cooked for dinner. I did not enjoy the millions of mosquitoes, a re-outbreak of my heat rash, and huge spiders the size of my face. Nature and I have a love-hate relationship. It was really interesting how such a touristy island has maintained so much of its authentic charm—the only way to get between the two towns is walking or biking, the houses are the same run-down traditional Chinese huts, and we witnessed locals fishing, digging for clams, and tending their small farms.

Last night I also had a great dinner at a place that was featured on the Travel Channel show “Anthony Bourdain.” Highlights were the beer drunk out of bowls, the wasabi-covered cold octopus, and the spicy ox tail. Delicious.

Funny sight of the week: a room full of elderly Chinese ladies perfecting their hip thrusts in my “Bollywood fusion” Tuesday yoga/dance class. I would have taken pictures but I think that might have been rude.




Yum. They were alive.


The beach was a relief after our scary hike.


My friend Amy on the beach


I got a pedicure :)

Fishing for dinner
Dinner was looking at me.

Friday, July 10, 2009

I would really like to know


My lunch. MSG fest. So delicious.

Is it possible to overdose on MSG?

Thursday, July 9, 2009

Pollution, pollution, pollution

Well i'm an official hong kong-er now! I have a pollution-induced respiratory infection and sore throat and a humidity/hot yoga induced all-over itchy rash. just lovely.

Monday, July 6, 2009

Get thee to a nunnery!

Okay, i'm getting a little discouraged from updating this regularly again...is anyone actually reading?? Plus, the typhoon-ish weather has made serious exploring a little problematic.

This past week at work was pretty exciting. I tagged along with one of the reporters Pauline Chiou, on Wednesday to the handover day protests. I enjoyed talking to the many protestors and taking pictures even though it was a hot, hot day. There didn't seem to be a real comprehensive agenda...it was more like a protest "fair" with table after table of demonstrators with different causes, handouts, and decorated umbrellas. The most popular cause of the day seemed to be universal suffrage, now pushed back to 2017. Some of the photos I took are here: http://edition.cnn.com/2009/WORLD/asiapcf/07/01/hongkong.handoverday/index.html

This weekend, in a psuedo-celebration of July 4th, all the interns were treated to a buffet-style dim sum lunch at the China Club, in the old Bank of China building, which is kind-of a "anyone-who's-anyone"-has-a-membership sort of place. The views were pretty nice, and about 4 hours of digestation were necessary afterwards. The alum who treated us made a couple comments, including "well i'm glad I got my money's worth out of that buffet" and "i forgot how much college kids eat, even the girls!" which made me think we may have overdone it a bit... My favorite were the Peking duck pancakes. Deeeeelicious. We had also been invited to an evening bbq/fireworks celebration at the American Club (just to mix things up a bit) but it was cancelled on account of the weather.

Sunday we had planned a trip to Lantau, the biggest island outside of Hong Kong where there are good hikes, beaches, and a huge gold buddha statue. Unfortunately a combination of thunderstorms and waking up late kept our sightseeing to the neighborhood. We visited a Daoist (i think) nunnery at Diamond Hill with serenic temples, tea shops, lotus pools, and banyan groves. An afternoon shower only added to the alluring peacefulness of the area, and its traditional architecture was emphasized by a background of typical Hong Kong skyscrapers. We then headed to Kowloon City for delicious (cheap) thai food and a tour of the Kowloon Walled City Park which until 1992 was a teeming mass of squalid and towering apartment buildings, not subject to any laws, government, or order. It wasn't eliminated until 1992, and now there is a park with exhibits of the history of the area.

Only three more weeks left and I have so much more to see!



The ingenious gutter system at the nunnery

One of the little lake-side temples

The lotus pond
An interesting tribute to Mao at the China Club