Tuesday, November 30, 2010

Hi-Tech, Baby

I have added two new features to the blog. They are both located near the bottom. The first is a news feed about everything China, Shanghai, or Asia. Just click on one of the stories and you will be forwarded to that feed and also given the option of related articles. The second add-on is a Google search bar located just below the last posting on each page. This allows you to search this blog as well as the web. So, for example, if you see  a reference in this blog to a place in China and your interest is piqued , just do a search and learn all about it.

Wednesday, November 24, 2010

Quick Update

OK-- The kid's name is Jude Harper Dykstra. Our second grandchild. Now one girl and one boy. No pictures yet, but you have seen it before. No hair , pale skin, scrungy face, etc, etc. I know there is a segment of the viewing community who wants to see pictures so I will have some up here eventually. I predict great things for this kid , as well as Clementine, and that is not due to the fact that they are my grandchildren. Really. No, really, I'm not kidding. Well, maybe a little.

Catching Up-Travel-- Guilin and Yangshuo

Guilin is located in Guangxi region in southeast China. Jane and I and our fellow ex-pat friends Marc and Jeanne traveled to this area in May, 2010. It is located on the west bank of the Li river and it's name means " forest of sweet Osmanthus" due to the large number of fragrant Sweet Osmanthus trees in the city.This area has some very unique scenery as I will photo document. In addition to Guilin we also visited Yangshuo county in Guilin which is famous for the karst peaks along the Li River. Karst is a landscape formed by the dissolution of layers of soluble bedrock such as limestone. Karst topography is common throughout the world but usually in the form of sinkholes. This region of China has unique hills with this topography. Enjoy the pictures and I will be back soon with more.

Hill with karst landscape.


Rice paddies.

Working the fields


You get to work anyway you can.

Machinery helps. preparing the soil for planting.

But then you have to maintain it.
Old reliable is still at it. It's the fellow who is
stopping for a smoke.

Showing our friends how to properly pick-up your date.
Her father was very impressed.

I sat in the road to get this picture and they gently walked
around  me.

Arriving at the rice terraces. These were lodging options but
we did not stay here.


At the top.
The "Pros" had more elaborate vehicles. This women was
being carried to the top of the hill. We walked.

Sunday, November 14, 2010

Flash Announcement

We are now the proud grandparents of our second grandchild-- a boy! 10 lbs. 2 oz.-- 22 3/4" to Anne and James. Born 11/14/10 at 11:55am and as yet unnamed. All name suggestions will be warmly appreciated but probably discarded. He will be little brother to Clementine.

China Silk Road Tour

We went on a terrific trip the fist week of October to the extreme western region of China to retrace the Silk Road. The road is an interconnected network of trade routes across the Asian continent connecting East, South and Western Asia with the Mediterranean as well as North and Northeast Africa and Europe. It gets it's name from the lucrative Chinese silk trade. It extended for 4000 miles and was an important path for cultural, commercial and technological exchange among traders, merchants, missionaries, nomads, soldiers and others. This trade began during the Han Dynasty ( 206- 220 BC)  and it a significant factor in the development of the civilizations of China, India, Egypt, Persia, Arabia and Rome. Our trip focused on the northern route thru China and we visited the cities of Kasghar, Dunshang, Turpan and Urumqi. The one picture I have provided on this posting is of me and Jane at an oasis in the Gobi desert. And who says they only exist in your mind. I have also included below a shutterfly link graciously provided by Chandle Lee, one of our co-travellers. Chan is a NYC architect currently working in Shanghai and has a real touch with the camera. His pictures provide a great slideshow of many of the interesting and beautiful people and places we experienced. I know you will enjoy them. I will provide more photos and commentary in future posts.  
http://share.shutterfly.com/action/welcome?sid=8UYuWbVo2b4I

Shanghai Street Scenes

On a recent Saturday morning, I decided to take my camera and stroll around some of the neighborhoods near us. The area I have highlighted in this posting is the Dong Tai Lu ( lu meaning street) area comprised of the before mentioned street as well as other smaller ones . It is called the "Antique Market" although some of the antiques are still warm. Occasionally you find something of value and something you really, really needed but the objective of a morning here is to have fun and soak up some local culture. If a vendor asks 300 RMB for an item you should get it for 40 or 50 or you walk away. There is another one right down the Lu!
Market near Dong Tai Lu
Washing facilities still used in some old lane houses. Many
families might use this facility to wash hands, clothes. Outside
 sinks were used for washing food for dinner.

Aunt Tilly never thought she would be so famous!

Are we disturbing you?
One of the lanes of Dong Tai Lu.

Anything Chinese for you?

Great juxtaposition. Would Mao ever had thought. After I
downloaded this picture, I noticed what was under the Playboy
cards. Hey, at least we are still on top.

One of the many vendors.

Does anyone play the Guqin, Se or the Erhu?

Any thing Mao sells or family paintings.

I think he has had his picture taken before.

Many of the vendors live above their stores.

I came upon this man giving his bird a shower. 

Turns out he has other birds and does pottery.

Slim pickins.