22 Apr 2014

China

It’s taken me weeks to sort through far too many photos. I have been off travelling again – this was something that’s been in the planning for more than a year. My old friend Sylvia from Perth told me she’d booked a cruise and would I be interested. 

Yes, sure, I said. Where to? So that’s how it started. 7 days from Singapore to Shanghai. 

And then we decided that as neither of us had been to mainland China before, we shouldn't waste the opportunity to see a bit of the country. And it sort of ballooned from there. 

The cruise was an interesting experience – a first for me. Amazed at the scale of things – a shopping street, a three level monster of a dining room, and the sheer numbers of passengers and staff. We were actually sailing through the waters off Vietnam where the initial search was taking place for the Malaysian plane. And as were able to see onto the bridge of the ship, it was rather poignant to see the horizon being scanned with binoculars, on the lookout for wreckage. I thoroughly enjoyed the experience but don’t think it will take the place of land-based travel, at least not for a few years yet.

I found China incredibly interesting. The historic sites we saw – the Great Wall, the Forbidden City, the Terracotta Warriors, Tiananmen Square – were fascinating. The cities were huge and a little overwhelming. But having said that, I loved Shanghai. The old and the new, the wide avenues (some French influence) and the general buzz and vibrancy of the city makes it a city I’d be happy to spend more time in.  We start and ended in Shanghai and finished on the last day with a food tour ‘Oodles of Noodles’. Delicious – as was most of the food we had there. Only one food disaster comes to mind – the hot pot we ordered in the Szechuan area. Mild, medium or hot. We figured we could do a medium. Huge mistake ….

Apart from the wonderful sites we saw, the thing that I found most amazing was the development and scale of everything that’s happening in China. Nothing I’ve read or seen on the TV prepared me for seeing it firsthand. Forest of skyscrapers – towers in the cities, but mostly towers and towers of apartment blocks. While we didn’t actually get out into the countryside to see any ‘ghost cities’, we saw that most of the new apartment blocks are either empty or only partly occupied. Far too expensive for everyday people to buy. And still they go up.  Also staggering was the size of the airport terminals and railway stations, all constructed within the last couple of years and with many more in the pipeline. I swear one of the railway stations was so cavernous it could have held all of Heathrow terminal 5. 

The pollution was a bit of an eye opener. Every day - except for a few clear mornings when there had been strong overnight winds – was extremely hazy, as some photos will show. We were lucky there were no ‘dangerous level’ days where it was advised not to go outside, but certainly you were aware of it. 

New Shanghai - beautiful but a little foggy
Old Shanghai
A street of bric-a-brac - a fine selection of Chairman Mao figurines
Beijing night food markets - yum - starfish on a stick
Snake, scorpions, millipedes, spiders and grubs on a stick!

Beijing - Tiananmen Square
Just a selection of some of the delicious food - duck was the best I've ever tasted
The Great Wall of China

The Terracotta Army - Xian



Street scene in Chengdu - popular pastime of "Picking Ears"
.... and the delightful explanation - car cleaning/picking cars/ears 
A little chilli with your tofu
A visit to see the pandas was pretty special - just so cute! 


Arts Centre Building, Chengdu
We came across a rehearsal (I think it was a rehearsal as they weren't in costume) of Chinese opera - definitely an acquired taste, I think ...


Our suitcases heading down to the boat for boat trip on the Yangtze

Newly constructed towns and cities on the banks of the Yangtze - populated by the inhabitants whose homes are now 180 metres underwater since the construction of the Three Gorges Dam
Some canyons of the Three Gorges
Fengdu temple - if no incense available to make an offering, seems like a ciggie will do the trick.
Fengdu
The Three Gorges Dam
The incredible 5-lock system to move boats through the Three Gorges Dam

A selection of the noodles we tried on our food tour.
On the way to the airport - Shanghai. Still hazy!

17 Apr 2014

Bize Patrimoine does it again ….

Tuesday’s walk was in two parts – first to visit the site of a dolmen which has been recently cleared by the Bize Patrimoine. It’s called la Mère de Dieu (Mother of God). Looking for more information about this particular dolmen, I came across this comprehensive English-language site – seems there’s a lot more of them in the region to be visited.




We then drove to the second stage – a long and hot walk up and down the gorges of Les Causses. In fact the exact same walk we did a year ago when someone fainted. And I reckon I wasn’t that far off – I’ve decided no more hot afternoon walks for me. Though we’ll be starting morning walks soon, followed by picnic lunches. But again, we were rewarded at the end of this walk by wine tasting at the Domaine Marcon in the hamlet of Barroubio (St Jean de Minervois) and I bought a couple of bottles of their highly rated sweet muscat. Before coming to France, I couldn’t abide sweet wine at all, but have certainly developed a taste for this local sweet muscat as an aperitif. 






Latest purchase

Shopping list for last weekend’s vide grenier was interesting coffee mugs and white soup plates.



Moving sideways

Future posts on Bize-Bytes can now be found on Facebook. Link: https://www.facebook.com/pages/Bize-Bytes/895137113876897