Wednesday, June 21, 2006

Here comes the sun

PHOTOS & VIDEOS HERE
(I had to delete some photos from last week in order to put up new ones... apparently I can only host 10 videos at a time)

Didn't do anything really special last week, except working on the project. Had a good weekend though. With the clouds finally making place for the bright Asian sun, the feeling of vacation is starting to grow... On friday we went to The Peak with the whole group and had a very nice BBQ there. In HK you can find many BBQ sites, so you only need to bring your own coals, food and drinks. Very nice atmosphere, with only the fire as our light. And the view... close to the BBQ site we could look down onto the other side of HK; the ship harbour and lots of high buildings of course. So beautiful... I keep saying to the Chinese: 'we don't have this in Holland...'

BBQ with the whole group

Beautiful HK by night

On saturday the weather was really great. With Marije and Annet I went to Stanley; a part of HK which is on the southern side of HK Island. It's famous for its market and the beach. Really funny, when you get there (by bus), it's like you've arrived in some kind of mediterranean village... so different from the hectic city life. We went to a nice little beach which was not too busy, just getting a tan and cooling off in the bay every now and then. Visited the - very touristic but nice - Stanley market and went back to the city, where we had dinner in a nice Italian restaurant in SoHo. I notice that my appetite for Western food is growing after 4 weeks... McDonald's is earning more money on me lately... also because they're so cheap; only about half of the Western prices.

Yeah baby, it's vacation!

On sunday I spend the entire day in school (open here every day 24h), to work on some drawings... earn some money. Too bad for the sunny day, but luckily I could ignore that as there are on windows in the school studio. I posted a 'panoramic video' of our studio here, have a look and see where I spend most of my time in HK.

This week things are starting to get a bit stressful... We only have 1 week left to finish our final presentation, which is always more work than you anticipate. So I'm prepared for making very long days, and seeing very little sunlight... actually I'm now still in school, at 11:3o pm, again, all alone... maybe I should go now...

Monday, June 12, 2006

Weekend

Last weekend:

CHECK THE PHOTOS HERE (AND VIDEOS!)

Saturday:
  • Hong Kong Museum of History
  • Shopping
  • Eat with the group: most students and the Dutch tutors Stella (leaving) and Mathieu (arriving). Because of this dinner with the Dutch tutors, I thought I'd give the group some Dutch treats... Bought some real Gouda cheese and had it sliced into cubes. Stella brought the flags from Holland.
  • Icecream at Haagen Dazs
  • Drink some beers at a bar
Sunday
  • Went to Lantau Island to some nature finally, with Marije, Annet (Dutch girls), Sanna and Heini (Finnish girls).
  • Seeing the Big Buddha... you guessed it, a really large Buddha statue.
  • Walking along the 'Wisdom path' to some religious wooden poles
  • We met Mathieu there and then Annet and I hiked with him along a trail for almost hours, while the others went to see a monestary. The hike was really nice, check out the pictures and videos!
  • In the evening we watched the soccer game of Holland vs Serbia-Montenegro in an Irish pub. Expected there to be more Dutch people, but we seemed to be the only ones. It was a lot of fun though, watching the game. I dressed up in an orange shirt and wore an orange cap of course... 1-0 for Holland, great game!

Wednesday, June 07, 2006

Halfway...

I've been here for three weeks now already... Time flies when your having fun. The IDO project lasts six weeks, so we're halfway already.

The Wong Tai Sin temple.
MORE PHOTOS HERE

Last weekend I was quite tired from the trip to China, so I didnt really do much then...
Walked around, visited a temple, sat in a park, took the escalators up to the mid-levels, saw X-Men 3 and did a bit of shopping.

This week, we have been working hard on developing ideas and concepts for the project. This morning each group gave a 15 minute presentation about this. In the afternoon, we heard there was a 'black rainstorm alert (with black being the highest, red medium and yellow lowest), which meant that all schools and shops close, so we could go home early. Soon after we left the school the rain stopped though, and the shops never closed, so the rain alert was no big deal. This evening however there was quite some thunder and heavy rain, so I was glad to be indoors. That's a bit of a pity; the weather here in HK hasn't been great since we're here. Mostly cloudy and rainy and the forecast for the coming week is the same. Hope to see some sun while I'm here, so I can go and checkout the nature around here.

To give you an impression of what we're doing here, I've posted some pictures of the school. We all work every day in our own room, with 4 tables for each group. In this room, we get lectures, we do brainstorms, draw, work on the computer, have group discussions, presentations, everything. Unfortunately it has no windows, so we don't see much sunlight during the day.

So let me describe a typical day for me in HK:
  • Alarm clock rings around 7:30, or 8:00. I hit snooze a couple of times before I actually get up...
  • Take a shower (good showers here).
  • Breakfast: in the first week I had breakfast at the hostel restaurant, and ate toast with eggs everyday, but to protect my cholesterol level (and to save some time), I now stop by a bakery across the street to get some orangje juice and croissants to go.
  • We then take the bus to the school, takes about 25 minutes. We start at 10 am, but I like to be a bit earlier, relax and check my email first.
  • Around 12:3o we go out to have lunch, at a different place each day. One time this week I went with some of the HK students to a 'K-lunch', a Karaokebar where you can have lunch and sing at the same time! We had a long break that day, so we really enjoyed ourselves. It's a typical karaoke place, where you have your own room with a karaoke set, and you just order some food which they bring to the room. Quite cheap too, actually.
  • After lunch we work on until about 18:00 or sometimes later. Really depends on the amount of work we need to do. If we have a presentation the next day, we might stay at the school until very late, even though yesterday my group finished really early, around 17:30, while most of the other groups worked very late.
  • After school, I go and have dinner with some people at a restaurant. Food here is quite cheap. You can eat very well for only 3 or 4 euro.
  • Usually get back to the hotel quite late. There's a basketball field next to the building, where we sometimes shoot some hoops at night. Good to get some exercise. The sweat makes you take another shower though.
  • Bedtime...
Mondays and wednesdays are working days, so we can plan our day ourselves and do as we like. Tuesdays and thursdays we have meetings with our tutors and lectures (e.g. about presenting).
Each friday we present the results of the week, like we did today. My group's presentation went quite well. We all had to rate eachother, and our group scored highest, together with another group.

I also saw The Da Vinci Code this week. It was okay, entertaining. It was exactly like the book, which of course is better...

To see more photos, go here.

Me and a temple

Me and the skyline

Me and some crazy Chinese students

Sunday, June 04, 2006

The Real China

(Today I'm starting to post English for a change, so my foreign friends can read it too)

Well, it's been quite a week... (talking about last week - it took me a few days to create this post)

The short version: last week, from Monday to Friday, we went to the Yunnan province in China and visited the capital city Kunming and a small rural village called Keyi, to do research on the people and their environment.

If you wanna skip right to the pictures… I have put them on a different website. To see them, go here: http://temporaryexpatrick.myphotoalbum.com/ I got some video as well! Below you will only find a few images.

And now the long version...

On Monday, we departed from the beautiful Hong Kong International Airport (voted Best Airport in the World for 5 years in a row!) to Kunming, the capital city of the province Yunnan, in China. I expected to fly in a really small and old airplane, but it was actually quite modern and not so small. Food wasn't great, though.

A few hours later we arrived at Kunming Int'l Airport. Maybe you've never heard of Kunming (I hadn't, before I started this project), but it's actually a huge city! It has about 5 million inhabitants. Yunnan in total has around 43 million! A small bus brought us to the city, first to drop off the tutors at their hotel. You should have seen this place... it was probably the most luxurious and expensive hotel in the city!

How different from the hotel where the students were staying... Well, actually it wasn't bad at all... In fact, the Kunming University Hotel was a pretty good hotel, better than the one we are staying at in HK. We had our own bathroom! After settling there, we visited the school of design at the Kunming University, where they teach all kinds of design except industrial design. Still, I was surprised about the good facilities they have there... One roomed was completely filled with a lot of Mac workstations, G4 I think. Not bad.

Next morning we drove to the village of Keyi by the same bus, took about 2.5 hours. The roads weren't as bad as I though they would be. A bit bumpy sometimes though, especially the last part. On arrival near Keyi we were welcomed at the village gate by the villagers, dressed in traditional clothing. We had to participate in their ritual, meaning we jumped over a small fire, during which the woman were singing in their native language while men were performing some kind of dance... very special.

OK, at this rate I'm gonna write a whole book, so I'll speed things up a bit.

So, in the village we stayed in someone's home for two nights, it was very nice and tidy, much less primitive than I expected, though the toilet was a hole in the ground, in a small 'building' outside... interesting if you have to go in the middle of the night. The purpose of our stay in the village was to study the people and their culture; their products, their customs, traditions, skills, etcetera, so that now we can develop products for them that they can produce themselves and sell for export, such as textiles or wooden handicraft.

We interviewed people (with the Chinese students as translators), observed everything; took a lot of photos and video. My group went out to the fields to see what kinds of crops the people grow their. It was mainly tobacco, which Yunnan is well known for. About 90 percent of the village families grow tobacco, which is mostly sold to a Chinese cigarette company. Every day we ate in the village 'central building' at small tables and low seats. Everything we ate was locally grown, like the meat from the pigs, brown beans, walnuts, vegetables, eggs, potatoes. It was quite tasty. During each meal, the villagers would come up to each table, dressed in traditional clothing and bring out a toast to us, drinking their locally brewed 'firewater' (some sort of very alcoholic ricewine), after which they sang beautifully in their native language (not Chinese). They did this three times at each meal, for each table!

Some photos of the village:
For more, go here


All the houses in the village were very simple and poor buildings but surprisingly they had a very large and relatively new primary school building. Apparently that was sponsored by some rich guy. On the basketball field outside the school we played a basketball game against the villagers. It was a big event, all the school children came to watch and there were even a reporter and photographer from the local press to witness! You would think that the tall Europeans would easily beat those short Chinese, but nothing was less true! They were really good! Great fun, nonetheless.

On the last night, the villagers gave us a big show, with singing, dancing and music, which was so cool to see. Also, in return, we had to perform something. We (the Dutch group) sang Sinterklaas songs to them. Really silly of course, but I think they liked it. The big finale was a fire ritual, where we would all dance together with the villagers in a large circle around a big fire, with music and singing. That was unique, I will never forget. We just kept dancing around the fire till it was almost out.

The next day, on thursday, we drove back to Kunming via a touristic place called 'The Stone Forest', which is a natural wonder; very typically shaped stones, very beautiful. Finally the weather got nice that day, before it was all cloudy and rainy (but also a bit cool, so you dont sweat too much, which is good, cause we couldn't take showers in the village) Before we went back to the hotel in Kunming, we stopped by some shop selling silk products. We didn't really wanted to go there, but we had no choice, because we had a tour guide with us, who joined us at the Stone Forest, and she insisted that we take a look in the shop. I guess that's the way it goes in a communist country... After this short stop we went to a museum in Kunming, where we saw all kinds of traditional clothing and artifacts of the people of Yunnan, for our research. On the last night in Kunming we bought some souvenirs and had dinner in a restaurant, where we ate and drank for only 10 yuan (= 1 euro) per person! Amazingly cheap and the food was pretty good. Afterwards we went to a bar, where we were served big bottles of Chinese beer with tiny glasses! Apparently they didn’t have enough regular glasses for the whole group, so they just gave everyone a shot glass. To finish this great week, some of us went to a karaoke bar where we had great fun singing. I did 'End of the Road' of Boyz II Men of course...

Next day (friday) we flew back to a rainy Hong Kong.

In the weekend I did some relaxing, walking through the city and saw a movie (X-Men 3, pretty cool).

And that was my week…