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Showing posts with label International. Show all posts
Showing posts with label International. Show all posts

Sunday, May 7, 2017

Travel, Tulous and Trains; Things I'm Into, in China

Trains
I'm really into trains. Right now, I'm into a lot of things, per usual. 

But trains... Trains are awesome. Trains go so many places, you can show up right before departure and you don't need to check any bags. In China, they're organized, clean and reasonably priced. Trains are pretty cool.

My Province
Me and a couple of my colleagues traveled, by train, to another famous spot in Fujian province- our province. We wanted to check out the houses of the Hakka people, called tulous. And we wanted to stay in one! We'd heard that you couldn't stay in them anymore, so we were pleasantly surprised that, actually, you can. These traditional houses are typically round with an open inner courtyard and most of them are really old. The open, inner courtyards reminded me of European flats, but the round shape is unique and the limited number of windows facing out, gives them a mysterious look. And the red lantern decorations and old-style tiled roofs are really pretty.







The above photos are of a rectangular tulou, that has been modernized and turned into a hostel. The hostel we stayed at!

Interestingly, because of their strange appearance, they were mistaken for missile silos during the Cold War!



Tulous are a popular thing for Chinese tourists, and not a few foreigners, to visit, but there isn't a lot of detailed information about how to get there and get around the area they are located in, online. At least not in English anyway. Thankfully, my amazing teachers assistant/ aka The Reason I'm Sane and Actually Happy teaching 25, 6 year old, ELL students, helped us set things up.







China knows how to turn everything into a money making and worthy tourist site. They lit up the tulous at night! Beautiful.



'They' also sneakily snapped everyone's photo, in the daytime, and sold nice key chains for less than $1.50. With how many tourist funnel through there, it might be a profitable venture. I definitely considered buying one. The amazing part was how fast they printed, cut, put together and hung up the finished product. I was almost shocked into buying one.




.
The area has an obsession with bamboo. It. Was. Everywhere. They made dishware out of it as well as many delicacies. I bought a bamboo cup for my travel souvenir. For starters, you could get bamboo dried, smoked bamboo and pickled bamboo at restaurants. We were served it pickled for breakfast and ordered bamboo shoots for dinner.



Bamboo drying in the sun.



Bamboo shoots are on the right and taro buns on the left. I liked the bamboo a lot. A taro is a tuber and they are purple. The buns were too chewy for us to enjoy. There is yummy ginger tea in the bowl.




Buying some tea.




So these are bridge alternatives. They were everywhere in this area, though I have not seen them anywhere else in China. People can cross them and the water can flow freely through, too. They are not as precarious to cross as they look.



To top off the tulous' unique attractiveness, they have tea and rice terraces, and mountains as their backdrop.



It was another great 3 day weekend getaway in China!

Other Things I'm into Right Now

Besides trains (and travel obviously), I'm also currently into biographies, tea, lotus root and running.

I've read all the biographies of missionaries who came to China, in the Christian Heroes Then and Now series done by YWAM, this year. After reading Bound for Burma (while in Burma!/Myanmar), in February, it seemed like the next logical step. There are 7. 

In fact, I've read 23 books, so far this year.

Tea. On this trip, I picked up some Fujian red tea and I can't get enough of it. I try to get ginger tea whenever I'm dining out, as well. It might be time for me to attempt making it myself. The spicier the better.

Lotus root. It's interesting looking and starchy, but less so than a potato. In fact it's kind of crunchy. And it's delicious.




Running. I'm not back to where I was a year ago, but I'm doing better than I was a month ago. I guess this is currently an 'I'm trying to get back into' thing more than an, 'I'm into' thing. I am happy I bought a treadmill, because I don't believe it's healthy to run outdoors with the pollution.

I feel like a trader ending my I-Love-China-Weekends post with the word pollution, so I'll end by linking a couple new additions to my 'To Visit in China' list: Xian, Harbin, Sanya.


The world is full of wonder full places.

Thursday, March 10, 2016

Omani Top 10

I visited Oman, country number 3-0, a couple of weeks ago. 
Oman in Arabic.

10 Highlights From my Omani Trip
1. The people

2. The swimming
At Wadi Shab. 
This is a sink hole.
3. The mountains
4. The beauty
At Wadi Shab.
5. The hiking
6. The culture
They wear these traditional hats.
A church. Okay, the expat culture, mainly.
A beautiful Mosque
7. The architecture 
8. The beach
9. The sunsets
10. The jumping
I totally jumped this.
No, I don't have a picture of it.
I was terrified. It was fun.

Meanwhile in Kuwait...

-I didn't see the extravagant firework show, but the iconic Kuwait towers finally reopened after 5 years. 
A depiction of the towers.
-I was impressed, and then a bit exhausted, by Kuwaiti pride during National and Liberation Day.
Me and some of my colleagues.
Wearing traditional clothing.

-I visited a quaint, garish, one-of-a-kind village in the middle of the desert. Located only 8 minutes from the Saudi Arabian border. 
Traditional dances and music.
Hanging out in a Bedouin tent.

-My students are overly dramatic, loud and needy. I am an enthusiastic, grumpy(it's cyclical), worn out, energetic(and again, it's a cycle) teacher. And despite all of this, we are still learning and, somehow, most days we really like each other.

-I'm still taking Arabic lessons, still running, still in graduate school and still moving to China.

Friday, January 22, 2016

I'm in a Dream

I learned this phrase last night, in Arabic class: 
نا في حلم
Ena fi holm. 
I am in a dream. Which, loosely translated means, My life is unbelievable; dreamlike.

I am in a dream. Seriously. I know. I've taken "trips of a lifetime"... a lot. Someone has said Someone should say "Take a trip of a lifetime, or live a lifetime of trips." 

Well, I have a couple upcoming trips and I think one is a contender for a "Trip of a Lifetime" label.



Sometimes I feel embarrassed to go to so many places, but I've, actually 😳, found many people are perfectly content to stay near their loved one in their respective communities. Those folks say, "I like to sit back and see the world through your eyes." Ultimately, I keep sharing, though, because, well,... this is my life. 

So whenever I start to feel sorry for myself because it's end-of-the-quarter grading and report-card-comment time, I will remind myself how much I have to be grateful for.
نا في حلم
Ena fi holm. 
I am in a dream.

Arabic class started again last night, after a month long break. Technically I'm at an Intermediate level, but that may be the too-good-to-be-real kind of dream. I am still having fun though and as my dad would say, "That is the important thing.", and as Pete the cat would say, "It's all good."
Actually my dad might say that, too.

FYI, BTW, the real reveal will be this coming Thursday. 

Saturday, October 3, 2015

Back to the Grind Stone

All of vacation I don't feel like blogging and then, when things are getting really busy...

Back to the Grind Stone
I'm sure you are familiar with the 'carrying on'; the lighthearted banter that happens among colleagues of all occupations. I guess it's back to the grind stone. Back to real life. I'm not ready, I need a vacation from my vacation, It wasn't long enough. These statements are often accompanied by sighs, and groans.

I may have been participating in a bit of that, following, last week's, 10 day fall break.

But then,...  Saying goodbye, we each head to our individual classrooms. I turn the key and nob simultaneously, opening the door in the way only me and the maids know how to do, I flip on the lights and catch my breath.

Oh.

That's.
Right.

I like this organized, clutter of color. This is my place. Where I get to be silly, stern and sappy all within the matter of seconds. The place I get to choose what kind of a teacher, and human, I am going to be. Everyday. The place where I get to hang out with its tiny, adorable, annoying inhabitants for several hours each day. 

This is the place I'm loved and scowled at, hugged and, ever so often, given looks of defiance. I love this place! I get to love, in this place. We love in this place.

Niece and nephews, you are famous in 3A.
We each decorated a puzzle piece.
We fit together to make a complete classroom community.
We all love to dance in 3A.

Greece
Santorini has been a place I have wanted to see for a few years now. In fact, out of all the amazing places I've been to over the years, it may be one of the few I actually wanted to go to before the opportunity presented itself. That makes it sound like I stumbled into the 27 other countries I've been to and well, that's not completely inaccurate.

I planned this trip. I knew where I wanted to go, so I made the necessary plans to do it. I was willing to go alone. That would have made it my first solo vacation. But in hindsight, I'm thrilled that a friend inquired if I wouldn't mind an accomplice.

Santorini was even more beautiful than I anticipated it to be.


Photo Dump
My signature shot.
I flew through I-STAN-bul. (My dad lives in TriniDAD and his name is prominent in ISTANbul.) 

A Little More about E break
Someone asked me recently if all I do is travel. The answer is no, though, I did return from summer break, turn around and have fall break. The reason our fall break was so early is because our holidays, at school, correlate with holidays on the Islamic calendar. We took our break during Eid Al-Adha. We (teachers and maybe others) sometimes refer to this as E break. The photo below is from last year. Last year the break fell a little later in our school calendar. This year we got 10 days off though.