Wednesday/ snow all over South Africa

Snow (other than that on high elevations such as the big Drakensberg mountain range) is big news in South Africa.  On Tuesday, snow was reported in all nine provinces of the country, possibly for the the first time ever.   Here’s another one : a third typhoon in one week made landfall on the east coast of China on Wednesday – typhoon Haikui -possibly the first time that has ever happened as well.

These two jokesters from the Free State province make believe it is summer outside in South Africa.

Tuesday/ not going to the beach

We drive by this road sign every day on the way to work. (I like the little pictures). So we start out in Dameisha, and we go to Dapeng where the offices are.  I was curious to see where the two beaches mentioned on the sign were – and marked them on a Google map.  The little green island called Tung Ping Chau belongs to the Hong Kong territory, oddly enough.

Monday/ Pepsi’s Aape can

Here is a limited edition blue  ‘Aape’ Pepsi can that I spotted here at work. (They come in brown as well, and yes, that is an ape face in the circle .. with several other faces floating around in the camouflage).  As far as I can tell the cans are marketed only in China.

 

Sunday/ back to Dameisha

After checking out of the Shangri-La, I knew I had to go directly back to Dameisha : the little beach resort town gets a crush of visitors from Shenzhen on summer weekends that makes for bad traffic jams.  A rainstorm on Sunday afternoon made the traffic situation even worse, but luckily I was in the Dameisha hotel by then.

The driver in the taxi cab across from ours buys a bottled drink from a street vendor at a traffic light.
I like the ‘auspicious’ turquoise color of this deluxe Wuzhulong bound bus!
We’re winding our way through the little port town of Yantian, trying to get around the traffic jam on the S30 freeway.
I’m in my Dameisha hotel room looking down at the main entrance.
And here are the gray colors of the rainstorm.  It is the view from my hotel room looking out over Da Peng Bay with Dameisha beach and the Dameisha beach tower on the left.

 

Saturday/ Shenzhen is hot and hazy

Here are Saturday’s pictures of being out and about in a very hot and hazy Shenzhen.  You can only walk outside for so long before it was almost necessary to go inside a shopping mall or store to get into some air-conditioned environment.  My colleague is new to Shenzhen and so we made the classic stops at the Shenzhen electronics market, the Civic Center plaza and concert hall, and finally went to the McCauly’s pub in Futian district to check out the expats and drink a beer.

Here is the view from my 10th floor room in the Shangri-La hotel towards the Hong Kong-mainland border. The green hill in the background is in Hong Kong. The Chinese building is the customs building.
Here is a map from inside the Luohu metro station. Its sister station across the border is called LoWu. The regional train station with trains to Guangzhou is right here as well.
This giant mechanical clock in located in the middle at the bottom of the first picture. The seconds hand sweeps around and around, so the on-lookers and those posing for a picture are about as close as they should get !
Scooters and high heels at the electronics market off Huaqiang Road, the main street with buildings that house vendors and stores from the Shenzhen electronics market.
This store sells iPhone and iPad covers, buttons, battery packs and related knick knacks.
This is inside the 10 story SEG building, each floor filled with cubicles or enclosed little stores that sell electronics components and products.
Just a colorful picture at a vendor’s cubicle that advertises a shoot-em-up game, that drew my attention.
These are little LED lights for sale.  They are used by hobbyists that build their own gadgets with electronic circuits and switches, and then the little light indicates an ON/ OFF or ACTIVE/ INACTIVE status.
This is the gigantic wavy roof on the Shenzhen museum viewed from the plaza that we emerged onto from the underground metro station called Civic Center. The kids in the foreground are roller blading.   
We’ve now gone up the steps and stand almost under the roof, and this is the view looking back. The sky was very hazy – I left the grays in this picture as the camera captured it (without auto-adjusting the colors with Photoshop).   The black item in the foreground in an umbrella.
Now looking back at the roof with the plaza on the other side. I adjusted the colors in this picture to make the red and yellow pillars stand out a little more.
These street musicians are doing a great job. I couldn’t understand a word, but they sang a beautiful song.
These golden beams that support a ‘spider web’ of rafters are from the lobby of the Shenzhen concert hall nearby.
This is the outside of the Shenzhen library. The photographer is using a gold reflector to light up (or warm up the colors) on his ‘subject’. He actually needs an assistant to hold the reflector at the right angle.
This is around 9pm on Saturday night and we have just emerged from the Shopping Park station in Futian district. The expat Irish pub/ watering hole called McCauly’s is right there.
And this is the night view of the Shangri-La hotel as I approached it after arriving at the Luohu train stop right there at the hotel.
There is a big mirror in the lobby of the Shangri-la hotel that allowed me to take a picture of myself.

 

 

Friday/ escape to the city

I hopped in a taxi and came to the city of Shenzhen just for the weekend, just to get out of Dameisha for a night or two and save on the taxi rides back and forth.

This is the Kingkey 100 building at night : impossible to miss with its gigantic scrolling letters. Each letter is 6 stories tall !  It is near the Grand Theatre train station, named after the theatre in the foreground.   But there was no event and no theatre goers at the theatre on Friday night.
This is a bus stop nearby. The bicycle at the bottom right is a policeman’s.

 

Thursday/ the O-lymp-ometer

I get my live (or previous day) Olympic Games coverage from China Central Television.  The rest of the coverage I look for on-line.  So that is how I stumbled onto the O-lymp-ometer : an invention of the National Post newspaper from Canada.  I like the term for the meter .. but what to make of those very Canadian (British) terms ‘rubbish’ and ‘lovely’ ?

Wednesday/ warm and muggy

Two girls on bicycles just outside of one of the main gates of Da Peng village. This is shortly after 6 pm, as seen from the bus as we leave the office.

 

It’s mid-summer here in south China, so it’s warm and muggy almost every day.  I try to stay indoors but we have to walk to the cafeteria for lunch, which can be quite a sweaty affair even though it is just two or three blocks away.  We are all very thankful for the cool air of our bus at the end of the day.  One of the world’s great inventions, remarked a colleague : the air conditioner.

Tuesday/ the Phantom

May I present one more exhibit from the uppity Mix-C mall in Shenzhen?  This is a 2013 Rolls Royce Phantom.  It lists for around $500k in the USA.  I had to ask a colleague to read the lettering.  Mm, looks like it says ‘ghost’ he said.  Good enough!
Rolls Royce is owned by BMW these days.  China overtook the U.S. to become Rolls Royce’s biggest market for the first time in 2011.  Towards the end of 2011 the inventory of a special $1.2 million red Year of the Dragon Phantom model was sold out (the reports from Bloomberg and others do not say how many cars that was).

Monday/ the dragon and the phoenix

I really liked this bone china plate that was on display at a Shenzhen department store this weekend, and wanted to buy it.  It’s a new design, but alas, not for sale on its own.   (You have to buy the whole dinner set of 20 pieces).  I immediately saw the dragon in the middle, but did not realize right away there is also a phoenix.  The dragon and the phoenix are still used together as principal motifs for decorative designs on buildings, clothing and articles of daily use in China.

Sun-day

Sunday was clear and sunny which meant the crowds from Shenzhen visited our eastern outpost of Dameisha with its public beach in droves.    The streets fill up with cars and buses and the sidewalks with people and vendors selling food and beach paraphernalia. The picture was taken at sunset, which comes around 7 pm at this time of the year.

Saturday/ blue sky

We had blue sky with fluffy white clouds on Saturday afternoon here in Shenzhen.  The pictures are from my walkabout in the area by the Shenzhen’s tallest building, the Kingkey 100.

The Kingkey 100 is located in Shenzhen’s Luohu District in an area which can be described as the financial district. PwC China’s Shenzhen office in on the 34th floor, but I have not been up to the office yet.
The side of the building flares out at the base to add some interest, I suppose – and create a larger entrance lobby.
There is a park across the building. I am standing at the 3D arrow looking at this map at a bus stop.
Mini Kingkey100 towers provide directions and promote stores in the KK mall next to the building.

 

Friday/ the project team’s day off

The project team had Friday off from work.  Our plans to go to a water park were changed – to go to an indoor spa in Shenzhen instead (the weather was uncooperative since it was still raining outside).   And here in the Far East, Friday night had almost come and gone before the 2012 Olympics opening ceremony got underway (at 4 am).  I watched it for an hour or so on local CCTV and then went back to sleep. (Yes, I did see the ‘Queen’ parachute into the stadium with ‘James Bond’ 007!).

This is on the way in the spa. Hopefully the French do not mind that Shenzhen put Mona Lisa on display! Certainly makes her more accessible than the original bullet proof glass in the Louvre.
The spa that we went to is inside the building on the left of the picture.  The building on the right with the thin white ‘pillars’ and black towers is the Shenzhen Sheraton (not the same as the Dameisha Sheraton where we go many Friday nights for a burger and a beer).
This is a dragon fish (an Asian arowana), from a fish tank inside the spa. It is a predatory surface fish, and they get oxygen from the air by jumping out of the water and sucking air into their swim bladders.
A little 2012 London Olympics display in the Central Walk shopping mall nearby. It is actually the Tai Hing company promoting their ‘angry’ milk tea product. Milk tea comes from Hong Kong and is just black tea with evaporated or condensed milk added.
A display sign nearby .. the ‘angry’ milk tea (probably a reference to the game ‘angry birds’) against a backdrop of London.

 

Thursday/ still raining

It was still raining steadily on Thursday and so the umbrellas were out.  I am sitting on the bus on the way to lunch.  It is nice of our driver to drive us to lunch when it rains since it is only two blocks or so to the cafeteria from the offices where we work.  .

Early Wednesday/ arrival difficulties

Typhoon Vicente had passed by Hong Kong by the time I arrived late Tue night, but left a lot of turmoil in its wake.  We left Tokyo an hour late, circled before landing at Hong Kong for an hour, then waited on the tarmac for almost an hour.  So by the time I cleared customs and had my luggage it was 1.30 am.  The van scheduled for my pick-up several hours earlier had left.  The airport hotels were all full  .. I got a hotel room downtown, but the line at the taxi stand had 200 people, and the airport train was no longer running.  One option remained : the airport’s night buses running every 30 mins.  That got me to the hotel at 4 am.   Quite an adventure.

Hermès scarf on display at one of Narita airports luxury stores. (Hermes was an Olympian god in Greek religion and mythology, son of Zeus and the Pleiade Maia).
This head of this ‘solar’ samurai in a toy store bobs back and forth. There is a little solar panel in the base.
An ATM in Narita airport. Looks like 7-11 is in the banking business in Japan as well.
That’s Mt Fuji on the wall of this Narita airport restaurant.
Look for the wolf in this elaborate Red Riding Hood origami display, from a store that sells all kinds of origami kits.
Oh no! McDonalds has infiltrated Japan as well. (That’s a Big Mac). ¥670 for the Big Mac meal is about US$9 : expensive compared to elsewhere in the world.
We’re on the way to Hong Kong.
The wasabi-flavored rice snacks are very very tasty.
This is midnight on Tue night and I spotted this Hong Kong Airlines plane as I stepped off from ours. We are about to board a bus that will take us to the arrivals lounge.
Waiting to check out of the hotel Wed morning, and checking out the offerings in the little souvenir shop. These Chinese zodiac characters are the Tiger (for 2010), the Rabbit (for 2011) and the Dragon (for 2012).
SpongeBob Squarepants and I are on the way to Dameisha. (SpongeBob is not mine! belongs to the van driver).
And here’s the obligatory border crossing picture as we entered the mainland, leaving the Hong Kong area.

 

Tuesday/ at Narita airport

Here we are about two hours from Tokyo, as seen on the flight tracker on the United flight. It was an OLD Boeing 777-200 we were on.

We arrived at Narita airport in the Tokyo area. The layover is 4 hours, which is totally fine given that the more time I spend here the better the weather in Hong Kong will be at our arrival.  The typhoon has actually made landfall and is now moving westwards, away from Hong Kong.

Monday/ Vicente and I are Hong Kong bound

I am Hong Kong bound again, this time on United Airlines to Tokyo (9 hrs) and then on All Nippon Airlines to Hong Kong (4 hrs).  There is trouble brewing in the form of tropical storm Vicente in the Hong Kong area, though.  I might have to wait at Tokyo’s Narita airport for a few hours – or even stay over for a night.

This picture is from Flightaware.com. That is Lantau island where Hong Kong International Airport is located, with little airplanes departing from it. So far the departure delay is only 30 mins.
And here is Hong Kong observatory’s projected track of tropical cyclone Vicente, threatening to turn into a typhoon before it makes landfall.

 

Sunday/ Rainier cherries

It’s Rainier cherry season and I got some even though they are pretty darn expensive.   The cherries were cultivated back in 1952 in Washington State. They are very sensitive to temperature, wind, and rain. About a third of a Rainier cherry orchard’s crop is eaten by birds.

Saturday/ partly cloudy or partly sunny?

I guess that’s like saying glass half empty, or glass half full?  The USA today says the terms are synonymous, weather wise.  But Seattle is right up there with the most cloudy days per year in the country : 226.

I took this picture on Friday with my phone camera, and colored it up a little with Photoshop. The Space Needle’s dome is painted gold for its 50th anniversary this year.