Saturday, December 25, 2010
Thai Fisherman Pants
Saturday, December 11, 2010
WOW-Mosquitos
Monday, October 18, 2010
Hiking Seoraksan
Monday, October 11, 2010
Masks and Weddings

Saturday, September 25, 2010
Beijing, Day 4
DAY FOUR (Free Day)
We started our last day in Beijing with a bit of a sleep in (always great on vacation) and then we asked our hotel to get us a few taxis. We hopped in and headed out to the CCTV tower. This was potentially not the best choice for the day as it was the ONE cloudy day we had the whole time but it was fun to look out as far as the eye could see (not far) and gaze down at the wedding below with a really cool tent that sorta looked like a flower. Also being up there allowed us to espy the park across the street so we took off in that direction when we finished acting like news anchors and weather people.
In the park we decided the best use of our time would be to rent an battery powered boat (a nice follow up to our battery powered car ride). We spent our time trying to get as close to things we weren't supposed to and trying to position the boat for a perfect background.
Lama temple
Next we hopped cabs over to the Lama temple. (one L, not two). It was gorgeous. Favorite parts? Gazing at the three story buddha carved from ONE tree while listening to the the monks chanting drift in with the breeze. wow. Beautiful.
Hutong area
After this we decided we wanted to wander back into Old Town so we found this really cutsey cafe on a side street. Dutifully occupied the two chairs oustide and drank a lunch of beer while reading the English Newspaper and trying to ignore the seven old men staring and talking about us.
After finding the fun Art Section with every other closet sized store selling some homemade art/food/clothes we made our way back to Hotel area.
Hotel and Birthday Party
We had a fun shopping district near our hotel so we wandered there for a bit for a few end of the night beers before finding a restaurant near out hotel for dinner. This was a great find! There happened to be a birthday party happening and one for them 8 young men "LOVES foreigners!" and convinced the restaurant owner to go out and buy us noodles because they didn't have any in the restaurant. Then he ordered us cold beef (delicious) some amazing chicken dish and some fried dumplings. Finally they gave us two beers, shared their cake and left us with more food than we could possibly manage between the two of us. It was a pretty awesome end to a great trip!
Exciting things about Beijing:
Chopsticks: Chopsticks are larger-both in length and width. The end doesn't really taper to small. I found I was not so proficient at chopsticks in Beijing.
Bikes: In Beijing, they have bike lanes on all the major roads, and we're not talking tiny little bike lanes where you're afraid of passing someone. We're talking like a full lane of traffic full of bikes. And it is FULL of bikes. People of all ages, clothing styles and bike maintenance.
Traffic Management: There's lots of cars in Beijing as you can imagine so in an effort to limit cars on the road they have certain days when different cars can't drive. It's organized by the last digit (or maybe the first) of your license plate. For example, on Mondays 1 and 9 can't drive, on Tuesdays 2 and 8. and so on. However, our tour guide pointed out that most people get around this by owning two cars.
Subway: Which we unfortunately managed never to ride-only costs 2 yuan. Pennies.
Beijing, Day 2
We started our second day with the Buffet in our hotel- A lovely combination of Chinese and western breakfast ideas. You could eat eggs and toast or noodles and vegetables. You choose!Anyway, we left the hotel at 8am to get to the Great Wall early.
JADE FACTORY
On our way to the Great Wall we stopped at the “Jade Factory” AKA live informercial and store. Little did we know this was to be our fate throughout our time in Beijing. ANYWAY, we got this unintelligible history of Jade in China and then were harangued to buy jade. While no one in our group bought anything we did get to heAr the difference between cheap and expensive jade bangles. Literally hear. When you chink them together the cheap one clinks and the expensive one chimes. Also we learned that Chinese love Jade. Women wear jade mostly on their left wrist because that’s closer to the heart and jade is good for circulation. Also we learned that jade is usually passed down through families. The jade absorbs things from the earth and therefore from people so it is best to pass it through families and not to wear a strangers jade.
ANYWAY, after our Jade infomercial (but don’t worry, we’re not jaded-ha!) we went off to the great wall.
GREAT WALL
We arrived at the great wall around 9.30 and were given two hours to wander about as we pleased. The section we visited is, essentially, a big circle. The part of the wall that we walked encircles a valley which housed troops and soldiers to protect Beijing from Mongolia, it’s one of the new sections of the wall. 400 years old-you know, still older than America. . Hiking the wall was so interesting. Maybe you know, but the wall travels along the tops of mountains so there’s a lot of stairs. And just to make it more fun, each step is a different height. They go from 4 inches to 2 feet. CRAZY! You couldn’t look anywhere other than the steps you were climbing or else you would fall. At times if felt like you were walking STRAIGHT UP! It was pretty cool.Otherwise the wall was, well, a wall. If we had more time and could have done the entire loop I think it would have been more amazing, but the section we were in didn’t really allow us to see the wall wandering away into the distance. It just looked like a circle filled (packed) with tourists. That’s not to say that it wasn’t remarkable. It was still remarkable.
VASE STORE
After the great wall we piled into the car to go to lunch. Lunch was on the second floor of a vase factory. You know those beautiful Asian vases that look like everything is outlined with metal paint? Those are the vases we saw and let me tell you the process is remarkable! So, you have the vase and then you glue on the detail that you want with copper wire so the design is raised up from the vase. And then you hand paint the detail, but because the copper wire is raised, you have to paint it up to 7 times so that the paint is level with the copper and then you fire it.Wow. I had no idea. I was so impressed. Anyway, when our infomercial was over we went upstairs for our buffet lunch. Delish. Nothing crazy or way out there- just good savory deliciousness.
SUMMER PALACE
When we finished with lunch we headed back into Beijing to visit the summer palace. The summer palace is where the emperor used to live in the summer. It was beautiful. There’s a750 meter covered walkway so during super sunny or super rainy days you can still walk outside.There’s a huge manmade lake and lots of green space. It was beautiful. The strangest thing we saw was this bizarre building, shaped like a boat and half in the water – made out of 100% marble. One of the empresses had it made for her 50th birthday. Oh to be that demanding.
PEARL STORE
After the summer palace we were brought to the pearl store. The talk beforehand was interesting. Many of the oysters come from the summer palace pond. She had us guess how many pearls would be inside. Wanna take a guess? Go ahead. Let me tell you it was the biggest oyster we could find in the tank. Ok. Done guessing? More than 20! Wow! Because they are in it to make a profit, obviously they force the oysters to make the pearls. How you ask? Well, they insert muscle from another oyster INTO one of the oysters they want to harvest. The foreign material annoys the oyster so they coat it. In a similar way that we make tears if something annoys our eyes. Anyway, the oyster coats the foreign material and that coating makes the pearl. Neato. We all got a small pearl as a consolation prize for guessing the wrong number.
KUNGFU SHOW
After pearls we went to dinner-back to the same restaurant of the first night- and then we went to a Kung-fu show! The show was about a little boy who joins a monastery (much to his chagrin) but then goes on to study King-fu and become a master! The audience was filled with foreigners. The show was actually in English with Mandarin subtitles. It was pretty fun.
At the end of the night we came back and collapsed into bed.
Beijing, Day 1
We decided to go to China when we realized we had a week off for the Korean holiday
Cheosok. The only problem was that we didn’t want to plan a trip so soon after getting back from Japan. Feeling lazy, we looking online and-lo and behold- we found a 4 day package trip to Beijing! And that brings us to our trip.
Day 1
We arrived in China to our first ever experience of having someone holding a sign with our names on it. It was very exciting and a wonderful way to start our journey. Our tour group is only 5-us and three other NSETS from Korea. Our tour guide is a Chinese woman who’s English name is Wendy. She’s lovely. She herded us to our van and we met our driver, Mr Saun
CHINESE CIRCUS SHOP
We started day one with a Chinese Circus Show at the Heaven and Earth theater. It was a wonderful show in a charming little rundown theather. We saw general acrobatics made more exciting with the use of Diablo and spinning plates. We saw
a balancing act where a 10 year old girl was thrown (and then balanced) onto a three high tower of men. The three main attractions were a juggler, umbrella juggling, and a bicycle act. The juggler bounced, at one point, 9 balls-WHILE tapdancing. The umbrella juggler spun four umbrellas, one in each foot and hand, and the bicycle act had 12 women on one bicycle! It was a fun way to start our evening.
DINNER
Afterward we were taken to dinner. We had duck. Apparently the way the duck is prepared is very special. They are all smoked in a huge oven, many many ducks together. They have no
seasoning added so they use fruit tree wood to smoke the duck and when it comes out it gets cut into exactly 120 pieces. The duck has three layers of delicious. 1st layer-skin, 2nd layer-fat, and 3rd layer-meat. It’s an excellent combination! They serve it with a thick version of soy sauce (imagine the consistency of A-1). We at our dinner and then went to wonder in our area.
NIGHTTIME WANDERINGS
At the end of our street is a lovely church and on the black stone steps in front of the church this man was using water to paint words. He wasn’t using a small paintbrush, it was a large-almost comically sized brush. Imagine the size of a child’s broom. Anyway, the whole processwas beautiful because the water made the stones a nice dark color but by the time he got to the the last step the words on the first step would begin to fade and he would start again. He had three paintbrushes so periodically people on the street would add their words to his.
After watching him for a while we went on a hunt for a sweatshirt. China is cold! Apparently they’ve gone from 90 degrees to 60 in a week! Anyway, we needed to find Jamie a sweatshirt so we braved the mall, found a department store with a hugely aggressive woman who sold us a nice long sleeve shirt for more than half the original price she quoted us.
Warm and ready for adventure we wandered out into the night, found us a little beer stand and drank a beer while watching the female weightlifting championships that were being shown on a massive screen on one of the buildings. When we tired of that we decided to brave the night food market. WOW! Live scorpions on sticks, starfish, flayed geckos, duck fetus, and seahorses-I think that’s the end of the crazy list. Everything else was pretty normal, but it was so crowded that it felt like a fair. We wanted to try the scorpion but had no camera. Soon. Soon.

















