Sunday, July 31, 2011

Sunday Dinner

The bus ride from the south part of the island is along a windy road and the bus is a Double-Decker that is not that smooth. With the heat, humidity and hunger I started to bonk and the jet lag started to kick in. So instead of continuing Susan and I headed to the hotel.  We stopped and ate at Peking Palace. This was a nice restaurant that served Mandarin and Cantonese.  I ordered the shrimp fried rice and spring rolls and Susan ordered a vegetable that was like our collard greens. It was all very good but the families around us were ordering the Peking duck which is presented at the table and cut in the restaurant (see picture).  Poor picture because it seemed rude to photograph in this restaurant.

Typical HK highrise

This is a typical high rise where the middle class live.  They are monstrous buildings.  Susan calls the apartments "flats".  This is from the bus returning to the city. There was a beautiful horse race track to the right.  The track was a pristine grass.  We rode the bus and trains today with "domestic helpers"

from another blog --

The lives of domestic workers in Hong Kong resemble something like this: They live with their employers and work morning until night six days a week. They wear many hats; nanny, cook, house keeper and also run errands. They keep the households of well heeled Hong Kongers and privileged ex-pats running for paltry pay. Room and board are provided and they are typically paid a mandated minimum wage of HK$3,480, about $450USD a month.

More often than not these women are well educated and fluent in English but due to the dire state of job opportunities in The Philippines they seek overseas employment. Many have children they have left behind with family and send back a large portion of their wages to support them all. They are the migrant workers of Hong Kong.

Stanley Market






Susan took me to the South side of Hong Kong Island to an area called Stanley. The market is an interesting array of little shops selling silk garments, sportswear, art, Chinese costume jewelry and souvenirs. It reminded me of the shopping village in Tunisia.  This part of the island was also like the city we visited in the Canary islands.  Public beach, ocean facing restaurants make up this area.  


While walking over to the market Susan pointed to a pub that she says many people from the US that came over to help open the HKDL park frequented.  This was a welcome rest stop, a very eclectic place with a lot of history.

Blog thoughts

Sorry about typos, grammar and brevity but I try to get my points across quickly. Always go back a few pages because at the end of the day I add pictures that I took when I did not have a network connection or with another camera.  I keep the timeline on the blog correct. 

Time Square HK



Tese are pictures of Hong Kong Time square.  
Waiting to catch the train from Time Square to  Tsim ShaTsui
 
Tsim Sha Tshui is an area where the locals live and shop but tourists make there way across the harbor to get better pricing.  Susan took me to multiple stores, malls and street vendors. Pricing in the US is cheaper on everything I was looking at.  I compared Cameras, Laptops, Electronics.The one thing that seems like a good deal is the tailor shops that will make a custom suit and 3 shirts for less than $250 USD.  

Lunch

Sent via BlackBerry from T-Mobile

Grand piano fitting for the starship enterprise

Sent via BlackBerry from T-Mobile

Saturday, July 30, 2011

HK time square shopping center

Sunday morning I rode a stationary bike for 40 min then met Susan to go sightseeing. We rode a very crowded train to HK times square. I cannot describe how big this place is. Susan says Shanghai shopping much bigger.

There is an art exhibit, these statues are made with waste handbills, magazines and sales flyers.

Sent via BlackBerry from T-Mobile

Mall under the hotel

Susan and I went down and ate dinner in the mall located on main level of hotel. Below the mall is the main MTR rail line.

Mall is very western, Susan says it is 15yr old but IMO it looks newer. Of course there is a Starbuck.

We ate at Zen, Susan ordered in Cantonese. I had Corn chowder, crab soup, Jasmine tea, fried rice and a green vegetable. The vegetable does not have a English translation but reminded me of Asparagus. Hard to pick up with chop sticks but I was abe to eat a lot.
Dinner was 423 HKD

Sent via BlackBerry from T-Mobile

Marriott in Hong Kong

From Lobby
I am in a Marriott hotel. The TV guide is on a bamboo roll which is unique. The view from my room looks at a common road that links three hotel. The lobby over looks the harbor.
Sent via BlackBerry from T-Mobile

Friday, July 29, 2011

Taxi ride into Hong Kong

Sent via BlackBerry from T-Mobile-you can click on any picture to make it larger

747 upper deck

Another shot of the upper deck. I just had a heart attack, they announced flight number and destination and said flight to Ho Min Chi. They then explained that is final destination after HK.

Thanks,
Gregg

This message was composed on a mobile device, please excuse brevity and typos. Please only reply when it is safe to do so.

747 upper deck

The upper deck is very cool

Thanks,
Gregg

This message was composed on a mobile device, please excuse brevity and typos. Please only reply when it is safe to do so.

Another shot of my plane, Mountains and cloud bank

United 747-400



Sent via BlackBerry from T-Mobile

San Francisco

We were 43 miles from SFO when the pilot announced the temp of 63?? It is July right? I opened the shade and saw rolling mountains that looked arid and sparsely populated. It was a clear sky until wham we hit a cloud bank. The infamous SanFran micro climate. Look to left of pic for clouds (click to make larger). You can not make it out but there are large letters on the side of the mountain spelling out SOUTH SAN FRANCISCO THE INDUSTRIAL CITY" This is a city I want to read up on.


Thanks,
Gregg

This message was composed on a mobile device, please excuse brevity and typos. Please only reply when it is safe to do so.

1st Asia Trip


My next adventure is to the Far East.  I am getting on a United Airbus 320 in Orlando and flying 5hrs to San Francisco where I have a layover.  After a 3 hour layover I then board a United 747 for a 13hr trip to Hong Kong, I can remember when Hong Kong was given Special Administration Region status (SAR) by the People Republic of China in 1997.  Hard to believe 14 years later I am going there.   I am meeting Susan in HK who is a peer of mine that now lives in Shanghai.  Susan was born in Hong Kong and has family there.  Here are some fun facts:

The city of New York has 8.3 million people where Hong Kong has 7 Million people. Shanghai where I will travel to on Saturday Aug 6th has 13.3 million people. 1  The numbers are for the city not the metropolitan area.  China has 1.3 Billion people where as the US has 311Million. 
In Hong Kong I will be visiting people that are in charge of providing the infrastructure for the D park that was built there in 2005.  I am learning a lot about the details of International work and it is very intriguing. My colleagues that fly from the west coast do have a much easier flight since they forgo the 5hr flight across the US. 

Sunday, July 10, 2011

Flooring continue two months later :(

We finished room 5 of 7 this weekend.  We are replacing all of the carpet, baseboard molding in the house along with painting and redecorating.  Steph's old room was a bear to get trimmed out due to the walls being not square.  The floor goes down quick but the detailing takes the most time.  


Amazing how much Sally has changed around the house.  She even twisted my arm to get the TV hung on the wall.