I’m Off the Island

Today I took the Star ferry from the island city of Hong Kong to the Peninsula, which is Kowloon.  I almost took the ferry across last night to watch the light show, but I was so tired that I scrapped that idea and just returned to the hotel.  Which brings me to something I found very interesting.

Yesterday I noticed hundreds of women in variously sized groups around  the central bus terminal,  MRT station and post office, which are all adjacent to one another.   These were women of differing ages and the groups could be from four to about a twelve people.  There were no males; there were no children.  It looked like dozens and dozens of little encampments of homeless people, except that all the women were nicely dressed, clean and obviously well fed.  Many had shopping bags from department stores or electronics stores, etc.   They generally had large quantities of food that the whole of each group was sharing.  The whole thing was rather mystifying to me at the time.

The women had  laid out flattened cardboard boxes to mark out  a space for their group.  The edge of the cardboard was the edge of their space.  All the places they congregated were wide, covered walkways.  So unless there was a monsoon and it started raining sideways, they were protected from whatever.   Mostly that’s the sun this time of year.

It seems that there a LOT of Filipino maids in Hong Kong.  These maids get one day per week off, on Sunday.   When their day off comes, they congregate in groups with their friends and/or relatives.  They eat, gossip, do each others hair and nails, go shopping and probably talk about their employers.  I even saw one young woman piercing another’s belly-button!  They do it all.  And they do it one the street.  By around 7 PM on Sunday night, city workers or staff start coming around and collecting the cardboard to haul it off the street.   There is a nightly light show at 8 PM that is best viewed from the other side of the bay but I think they want these women out of the way when the tourists are returning to their hotels for the night.

Oh, and as long as I’m talking about things Asian, they still use bamboo here for scaffolding when they’re constructing a new building.  Yes, still.  Really.  If you see a big pile of bamboo on the street you know that construction in the area is imminent.   It’s strong, pretty much impervious to the elements, cheap, very light weight and it can be used over and over again.  They put netting or plywood across the bamboo at street level to protect pedestrians and netting all the way around the building being constructed or rehabbed.  Everything is so close together that they can’t allow falling construction materials to go whichever way they want to.  Runaway items must be kept close to the building lest they smash into a car, another building or a person walking by.   It looks a little strange to the Western eye, but it works and seems quite sensible.

Anyway, enough of that.  Let’s move on to what I did in school today.  (The school of my international education anyway…)  Let’s see….I had taken the ferry to the peninsula.  The ferry costs $2.50 HK,  $7.20 HK equals $1.00 US.  So it’s cheap.  It takes about seven minutes to cross.  It gives one a nice view and some good photo ops, but I really wanted a little more, so I walked down a couple of piers and paid $80 HK for a one hour narrated tour of the harbor.  It was very informative and really interesting.  It also gave me a great orientation on how the various places I’ve been and things I’ve seen thus far interconnect.

Kowloon skyline

Hong Kong skyline

After the harbor tour, I headed for the MRT to go to bird park.  On the way to the MRT
(Subway, remember?), I passed a building advertising Chinese handicrafts.  OK, I’ll bite.  I like crafts, as long as they’re good.   So I went in.   Wow.  Let me say that again.  WOW!!!  These were handicrafts like Monet is finger painting.   Carved jade sculptures of the most fantastic workmanship I have ever seen.  Mammoth ivory.  Coral.  Jade in white, green, purple, rose.  Bunches of grapes with birds eating them, life-sized and carved from a single piece of jade.  Floral arrangements.  People doing various tasks. Animals, dragons.  Coral, jade, mammoth ivory in every direction, each piece more fantastic than the last.

Public art near ferry pier

One mammoth ivory piece was one of those balls inside of balls inside of balls things, on an ornate stand.  Each ball was open-work lace carved in ivory.  35 balls in all, each rotating freely inside of the other.    This is the stuff that fine are museums are made of.   This was the same kind and quality of art work that I saw in the Palace Museum in Taiwan.  Only all of this was for sale.

more sculpture

There were many antique pieces for sale also.  As I was looking at one of the cases an Aussie gentleman turned to me and said, “can you believe the prices they have on this stuff?  That one little bowl is over $1000 Euros!”  He was incredulous.  He also apparently thought I could relate to what a Euro is worth, but whatever…  I gently pointed out to him that the piece he was looking at was made sometime between the late 1600’s and early 1700’s and that it was something of a miracle that it was still intact and looking like new.   Only then did he read the rest of the card beside the bowl, that fine print below the price with all the details.  He said, “oh” rather quietly, “well I guess that explains it.”   Yes, I guess it does.

From their I rode the MRT to a point near my destination and walked to the Bird Park.  Well, eventually I got to the bird park.  First I passed the goldfish market.  About a block of every kind of goldfish you can possibly think of and quite a few I’m sure very few of you have seen before.  Plus turtles, salamanders, tiny lobsters, crayfish, you name it.  All for sale.  Many in plastic bags of water, hanging on pegboard in row upon row of fishies in baggies.   All very much alive, swimming in tiny circles.

bags of fish for sale

After the goldfish market, I came to the flower market.  This was larger, covering about three square blocks.  Every kind of plant and flower you can think of was for sale here.  And more orchids than I have seen in my life.  All at prices so cheap it almost made me cry.  And I couldn’t buy a single thing because there was absolutely no way for me to carry it legally back to the US.  Crud cakes (keeping it clean here…).

more flower market

flower market

Finally I reached the Bird Park.  I had read that people here are very fond of their birds.  That’s a really massive understatement.  The blurb I read said that people take their birds to this park in their little cages and sit around in the park with them.  Sort of.  Primarily this is a block-long birds and everything-related-to-birds market.  Yes, there were some people in the park with their pets.  The cages for these pets are ornate wood affairs with fancy porcelain bowls for their food and water.  Intricately carved wood and ivory holders for bits of fruit for the bird are hooked onto the wood.

someone’s pretty baby

more birds

birds anyone?

Some of the cages, which averaged about 10 inches across and 12 to 14 inches tall, easily ran $100 to $150 US, without the bird.  That’s just the cage and the goodies to make it a special home for Tweety.   The birds that were visiting the park with their owners were obvious points of pride.    And almost all of the owners strutting their stuff were men.  There guys were extremely proud of their little feathered friends and I could pay no greater compliment that to take a picture of one of these birds and their ornate “house”.   The guy holding the cage tended to preen more than the bird.

another

another pretty baby

Not so with the birds that were for sale.  A couple of times when I was about to take a picture of some birds that were for sale, the sellers got right up in my face and started chewing me out in Chinese.  I’m not sure why.  They weren’t doing anything illegal.  The birds were well cared for.  I don’t have a clue what ticked them off so much about my trying to take a picture, but they were absolutely P. O.ed about the whole thing.  Whatever.  I just moved on to another seller that wasn’t so touchy about their birds.  No rhyme or reason to it that I could discern.

Prime birds for sale

About the birds.  Most were small.  Almost all were songbirds of some type.  Beautiful to listen to.  Beautiful to look at.  A few were larger birds, parrots, mynahs, conures, etc., diverse and usually colorful.   Many shops sold bird food.  But not just seed or dried fruit.  We’re talking live food, crickets, grasshoppers, meal-worms, etc.   All kinds of stuff.   Plus all the cage furniture and the wood cages.  A small, nice-looking wood cage could go for as little as about $12-15 US, and up (of course).   They were really inexpensive for what was a really nice product.

I kept wishing I could find a way to get one home without the airline crushing it, but I’m not sure how.   Without adding another suitcase, hard-shell this time, and paying even more over-my-allowance fees. (I have made a vow to myself.  After this I’m traveling with one or two changes of clothes plus extra underwear and socks, and washing them often.  Either that or I have to completely refrain from buying souvenirs for everybody I can think of.  Plus, a trip like this causes me to do most of my Christmas and birthday shopping for close friends and family for the next year, ’cause, hey, when am I going to see stuff like this again?  And at these prices?  I think I’ve gotten a bit carried away.  OK, I know I’ve gotten a whole lot carried away.  But it’s all so pretty and so cheap!)   Can I justify or what?

Anyway, out of the bird park, which is more market than park.  Back past the flower market.  Another pang of regret for the things that could have graced my garden and home.  Back to the MRT.  All the while getting more and more hungry and looking for a place to eat.  Back to the docks and, in desperation, doing something I had thus far avoided, eating at a chain restaurant.  But at least it was an Outback, not a McDonalds!  Real food.  Red meat.  I even made them give me a salt shaker.  That’s another thing, Asian restaurants do NOT have salt and pepper shakers on the tables.  They look at you strangely if you ask for salt.     But I’ve been sweating like a pig for almost a month now (St. Louis isn’t humid.  Asia is humid.  And it never cools off.  Not even at night) salt and red meat (another thing that isn’t all that common here) have become a constant craving for me.  I satisfied both tonight.   Well, mostly.  I’m still salt deprived.   And there’s not enough water or juice on the planet to completely rehydrate my body.   Believe me, I’m trying to drink enough.  But I have to breathe sometime…Oh yeah, they have a soft drink here called “Pocari Sweat”  really.  It’s popular, supposed to be sort of a Gatorade-type thing.  I just can’t bring myself to drink something called “sweat”.  Ick.

After I ate I went back down by the ferry docks and found a spot on the raised viewing platform for what is recorded in the Guinness Book of World Records as the largest, longest-running light and music show in the world.  A couple dozen buildings on the Hong Kong skyline near the harbor light up to music.  There’s a lot of neon and color here on most of the buildings.  Not as overwhelming as Las Vegas.  Sort of Vegas with taste.

HK adores its bling.  Everything is colored lights, bling and glitter.  Lots of crystal, chandeliers, etc.  Most commercial buildings have some kind of moving colored lights on their exterior walls at night.   So add some lasers on top of a few buildings that already have their own private light shows going on, co-ordinate them all, have them strut their stuff individually  and in concert with one another and set it all to music.  Voila!  You have HK’s nightly light and music extravaganza.  It was nice.  It was pretty to look at.  Maybe I was too tired.  I was underwhelmed.  But I’m glad I saw it.  I would have felt like I’d missed something if I hadn’t seen it.  It’s the one thing that everybody here talks about and says you just have to see it.   So see it I did.

Night skyline after the light show..

Light show

The I went down the stairs and walked the HK walk of fame.  Like the stars on Hollywood Blvd. in CA.  Except that I never saw a single name I recognized.  Plenty of stars and hand-prints in the concrete.  Just nobody most of us have ever heard of.  Granted, I only walked about two-thirds of it.  I’m told Bruce Lee is on it.  Him, I’ve heard of.  Never seen one of his movies, but at least I know who he is.   His star must have been on the other end of the walk.  Then I went back to the hotel.  And now I’m going to sleep.

Ngong Ping, Something

Since I got so far behind in Taiwan by not posting daily I’m going to try to avoid that here.  Which means I don’t  know when I’ll catch up on Taiwan, but I will sooner or later.

Today I took the trolley to Hong Kong Central station.  The trolleys here are a great value.  Each trip runs 2.30HK, or about  35 cents US.   They run the length of the island and get you to almost any metro (subway) station you could want.    I rode the length of the orange line, the Tung Chung line, to reach the Ngong Ping aerial tram.  The subway ride ran 22.30HK, or about $3.50 US each way.   I know it’s cheaper if you buy their special card, whatever it’s called, but I don’t know that I would use it enough to make it worthwhile.

The trip was quick, quiet and uneventful, even peaceful.  I did get a laugh when I reached the spur line that runs out to HK Disneyland.  Yep, Disney has it’s own MRT line here.  Not just their own line either, they also have their own special train where all the windows in each car are shaped like Mickey’s head and all the cars are painted dark blue with white stars all over them.  Cute.

Anyway, next stop the Ngong Ping 360.  Turns out the whole thing is run by some big HK tour company that pushes its tour packages all the way up the line from the time you get in line to buy the tram tickets until the time you manage to escape with any of you wallet intact.  All the shops above and below are owned by the company and staff by earnest young people dressed in the company’s signature green and gold (tan?) uniform.   I think they took their cue from a mixture of Disney and the cruise lines.  Everything is a package if they can sell it to you!

Ah, but enough on that.  It’s Sunday here today, which means oodles and oodles of people every which way you turn looking to see the sights.  So the line for the tram was long.  It took about an hour for me to actually be able to board the thing.  And I had to decide if I wanted to pay extra to ride in one of the glass-bottomed cars.  I passed as I tend to get vertigo when looking straight down from any height over about 30 feet.  I shouldn’t have.  The price difference was only about $3.00 US and the line was 75% shorter.  Which I didn’t find out until I turned the corner after buying my ticket.  I could have saved myself a whole lot of waiting if I had just kept my gaze straight out to the side.  Isn’t hindsight wonderful?

just getting started

The ride to the top was fabulous.  The mountains were beautiful.  The ocean was beautiful.   The view of the islands was beautiful.  The scenery along the tram route was beautiful.  I think you get the picture.  It was worth a lot of pictures.  Oh, there is a trail up the mountain.  You can hike up; you and hike down.   Either way you would do a whole lot of up and down.  And thousands of stairs both ways.  I have no idea how many hours it would take, but you had better be in pretty fantastic physical shape if you intend to try it.  But it looked lovely as I was floating over it in my comfy tram seat with a gentle breeze wafting through the car.

small section of the trail

The purpose of all this isn’t the picturesque tram ride.  That’s just a nice way to get to the top.  There are buses that go to the top.  I think you can just drive up if you have a vehicle.   The reason for the tram and the theme village the tram company built at the top (with lots and lots of gift shops!) is the Po Lin monastery, ancient temple and giant Buddha that are also up there.   The religious community is renowned for their possession of an actual artifact of the Buddha.  It’s a tiny fragment of bone that was left in the ashes after his cremation.  It’s housed in a little crystal shrine inside the giant statue.   You can view the crystal gizmo that holds the artifact and there is a photo of the bone fragment posted above it.  Looking at the two things I’m guessing that the fragment is about a quarter of an inch long.

just a few steps away

big Buddha

Once you manage to get out of the money-sucking portion of the journey, the mountain top itself is just a really nice place to be.  It’s much cooler than the city.  You’re above the smog.  There are great views in every direction and flowers, birds, butterflies and dragonflies galore.  In short, a little slice of heaven sitting just a 15 minute tram ride from the ant-hill apartment highrises of Hong Kong.   I hadn’t been there 30 minutes before I was wishing there was a hotel I could transfer to for the night just so that I could walk around up there after all the tourists had gone home for the day.   I also wished I had gotten there earlier in the day so that I could have had some time to spend hiking part of that trail that went up the mountain.

There was a wonderful slice cut between two folds of the mountain not far from the upper tram station (maybe 3/4 of a mile) where a small, crystalline stream flowed, tumbling over rocks into a series of small waterfalls and gentle pools that had my name written all over it.  But I had to choose.   The Buddha statue, monastery and temple, or the hike.  It was not a choice I enjoyed making.   But doing both would have meant missing the last tram down the mountain.  I probably could have still caught a bus down…or not.  It might have meant hiking down the mountain in the dark.  Not a happy thought to someone who is pretty much night-blind.

I truly enjoyed the things I did see.  Including a very old monk who was visiting from Tibet who was tying little woven bracelets around the wrists of people who were visiting the temple as a sort of blessing, something about health and long life.  He was attended by two younger monks whose job seemed to be keeping the old master comfortable and happy as he communed with the faithful.  I watched them rubbing his legs when he was tired and adjusting his wrap when his shoulders got cold.   They were really dedicated to the old guy.   They obviously cared for him deeply.

old monk

The temple at the Po Lin monastery is getting an enormous upgrade.  There is a building going up behind it that will be about five times the size of the current temple.
The current temple is beautiful and extremely ornate, as they all seem to be.  It is surrounded by lots and lots of flowers and on both sides of the “street” leading up to it there are places for the faithful to burn incense.  Not the little incense sticks we’re used to seeing.   The smallest of the incense sticks these people burn are at least 18 inches long.   The big ones can be close to three feet long and about and two inches thick.  And nobody lights just one.  They light the smaller ones by the dozen.   Everything is done in threes also, I don’t know why, but they do have a reason for it.    They clap three times before they worship.  Temples have three doors.   Worshipers bow three times when they bow.  It’s all part of the package.  I’ll have to look up the “why” of it all sometime.

figures in shrine

temple altar

temple courtyard

new construction

temple

 

 

 

 

 

 

flag courtyard

incense

Anyway, all good things come to an end and I figured my “end” here should come about an hour and a half before the last tram to avoid the rush of people who had to get down the mountain.  I should have headed down about an hour before I did, apparently.  I spent an hour and 15 minutes in line before I finally got to board a tram down.  I went down wedge between some Israeli guy, who spent the whole trip down talking animatedly with his friend sitting across from him (neither one bothered to look at the scenery until they were about 2 minutes from the bottom from what I could see) and a Chinese man on the other side who sat like a statue beside his wife all the down, neither of them speaking a word.

islands

The subway ride back wasn’t nearly so peaceful.  The car was crammed full of people and I couldn’t get a seat until about 2/3 of the way back to my station.  The trolley was just as crowded.   Everyone trying to get back home at the end of their weekend I guess.   Since my “weekend”, all 31 days of it, isn’t quite over, I wonder where tomorrow will find me.  Guess I’ll wrap this up and do some research on that.

dragon fruit in the market

Goddesses worshiping Buddha

Taipei 101 — the Building

Let’s go to Taipei.  Which is actually pronounced Tie-bay.  “P” makes a “B” sound over here.

Power station with typical Asian beautificaton

Brian borrowed a car from a friend and we headed for Taipei with plans to see the 101 building and the Palace Museum.   Getting into Taipei itself was no problem.  Parking in Taipei is another story.  The funny thing is, we hadn’t driven around for very long when we saw a parking garage that just happened to be only a couple of block from the subway station!  So, car safely parked we headed for the underground.

Just some scenery along the way

The Taipei subway system is fast, efficient and easy to understand.  Having used Japan’s train system, I found that I could easily navigate Taipei’s, even if Brian hadn’t been with me.  But he was so it was a no-brainer.   To use the system you look at a map on the wall, locate the station you are in, which is marked in yellow, look for the station you wish to go to and put the amount of money that is shown above that station into the ticket machine.   The machine drops an electronically coded token into a dish, along with any change you might be owed and you are off and running.

To enter the station proper, where the train platforms are, you pass the token over a reader located in the gate to the platform.  Once inside you board your train and make any changes to other trains at other stations that are necessary to reach your destination.  All the lines are color-coded, so knowing which train is which is easy.  And each line is named for the last station on that line.  Double easy.  Once you reach you destination, you put your token into a slot on the gate and the gate opens to let you out, then keeps the token to be reprogrammed for the next user.

Following those steps we quickly arrived at the station nearest to the 101 building.  From there we took a cab to the 101 as it was past lunch time and we were so hungry we didn’t want to take the time to walk.  The food court was partially under construction (it was due to be completed the next week, wouldn’t you know it?) so our choices were half of what they normally would have been.  But the food we chose was very good so we were both happy.

101 building

After eating we visited the international food store in the building.  I was interesting to see foods from so many countries in one spot.  What made this store different from most other stores selling international foods was that these were all high-end (or at least high priced!).  They were the foods that are the most popular in the countries they came from.  We each picked out a couple of little goodies then we headed for the top of the 101.  Which isn’t really the top.  It’s just an observation platform on the 89th floor.  Since there really are 101 floors, it obviously wasn’t the actual top.

Real top of the 101

We took an elevator to the 5th floor (Bvlgari, Dior, Prada, Vuitton, etc.) where the tickets to the observation deck are sold.  After which we queued up with everyone else for the high-speed elevator.  In short order we were in the car and zipping to the top.  That thing really moves.  I had to get my ears to “pop” 5 times in the space of less than a minute, then we were out of the elevator and being fitted for the correct language for our individual devices that would tell us all about the tower and what we were seeing from each window.  Along with a lot of hype about what a great and dynamic city Taipei is as well as a sales pitch for the goodies in the gift shop as the information on the recorded messages led us past it.

interesting building

One of many great views from the tower

As we neared the end of the tour there were a number of counters selling jewelry made with “Taiwan” red coral.  The we went up a flight of stairs to see the outdoor observation deck and, after that, down two flights for a good view of the device that keeps the tower from swaying too much when the breezes get a mite brisk…like say, during a typhoon.

Wind dampening device

Then we went back inside planning to head for the elevator down, but there were all these wonderful displays of intricately carved sculptures made from coral, rainbow jade and rainbow fluorite.  Each item was more beautiful than the last.  Then there were more counters selling even more coral jewelry in higher price ranges.  Then more sculpture, then more jewelry, you get the picture I’m sure.  But then Brian looked at the time and we realized that if we were going to see any of the Palace Museum we would need to hustle.

However, we didn’t hustle enough.  We walked straight to the train, then took a taxi to the museum to save time but arrived only 40 minutes before the museum was scheduled to close.  Since there is a decent charge to enter the museum, we decided to not go in.  We were so disappointed.  Somehow Brian had thought that the museum would be open until at least 7:30 and probably 8 PM.  Had we realized how early it closed, we would have gone there first, then gone to the 101 building afterward as it stays open quite late. Pooh!

Palace Museum exterior

So we made our way back to the car, and after getting lost in the city for about 45 minutes trying to find the freeway, we finally headed out of town and on to Yalin where we planned to spend the night in preparation for visiting the Toroko gorge the next day.