Showing posts with label winter. Show all posts
Showing posts with label winter. Show all posts

Wednesday, 14 April 2010

Jim

I was just in the gym, when a thought occurred to me.

The gym, of all places. I have no idea why. Maybe because my brain is relatively unoccupied when I'm working out. I should start thinking about more useful things during that time. Like Accounting, for instance. Or how to resolve life problems.

Anyway. It occurred to me that I know but a handful of people that have been as kind to me as I have been to them.

That's all really. It wasn't really a random thought. I mean, it only occurred to me then, but I think I've known for a while now, and it's been eating away at me. I just couldn't really nail what was bothering me a lot. But there we go. I think it came to me not because of one single thing that happened, but a few experiences, observations and realisations coming together. I'm not exactly sure if this is the case with other people, but I sure hope not. For their sake. I guess that's why a lot of people are more cagey than I am, and less willing to treat people nicely until they get to know them really, really well. I wish I was like them. It makes it a lot harder to get burnt. Time and again. Some wise guy (with all due respect) once said something along of the lines of:

Those that we love hurt us the most.


Just something to think about.

Enough introspective stuff now. I am trying to stick to being lighthearted on this blog, so here goes.

I was walking through Glen Waverley to have lunch with my family, when I noticed how short everybody was. It was ridiculous. Even the white people were shorter than average. I swear, hardly any of them would've topped 1.70m. I thought it was only with Chinamen in China, but apparently not. I felt like a giant.

Last night. I randomly felt a craving for a dog tag. Well, not randomly. I've been seeing them around lately. Leather jacket and dog tag combo. Dream machine right there. It's not that I can't afford a dog tag. But it seems lame to buy one for myself. But then, I don't really trust anyone else to get me one. Like, I want a good one, but not too pricey, and it looks nice. Something around the 100 - 150 mark. I don't know where to start looking. And you know what that means. It means I won't start looking. But seriously, I'd be stoked if someone just randomly got me something like that. Actually, I'd be pretty stoked if someone got me anything randomly. I like it when people give me random trinkets that I can carry around with me, or wear, or something. You know the deal.

I was actually discussing with Orrin while having a look at some ridiculously priced dog tags. Dog tag from T & Co for like 400. And he's like:

But how would your dog know the difference between a T & Co dog tag and a cheap one?


I thought it was a joke, albeit not a very funny one. But a joke nonetheless. I talk about another one. And he pretty much says the same thing. And then he's like "I'm being serious here." Is it just me, or does him not knowing what a dog tag is akin to somebody not knowing what jeans are? Maybe a tad extreme, but I thought it was fairly common knowledge. Expected better from someone who idolises Tupac.

Back to the present. It was rather cold again today. So much so that I missed my sister's scarf that I left at home. That's two days of scarfage now (or required scarfage). One more day like this, and it'll be winter.

And to finish on a grim note, the work, which I should've done more of during the break, has started to pile up. And, when I'm under pressure, I start working harder. Bizarre. So I'm starting to work harder now. And trying to break the trend of positive correlation between frequency of blogging and amount of work that needs to be done. See, I sound nerdier already. Actually, I'm fairly sure I sound like that normally anyway.

Word of the Day: Jim

Friday, 1 January 2010

Happy New Year 2010

Happy New Year to you all. I don't know about you, but if this year can top the last one, it will really be something.

Stuff to look forward to:
- Hopefully Commerce ball
- Hopefully a certain someone will grace me with their presence more.

And that's pretty much all I can think of as real highlights for the year ahead so far. They're not even real highlights. Just something to keep me going. God knows that I'll need it after this list of things to not look forward to:

- Financial Accounting. Apparently I'm going to get chewed up and spat back out by this subject, with it's saliva running off my back, in front of a million people. Humiliating.
- Winter without the scarf that I bought last year.

And that's pretty much it so far. Ok, so not that bad. But I think Financial Accounting pretty much outweighs all the *potential* positives.

Anyway, hope this year treats you well. May everything you do be a great success, and I hope to spend many days of the next year, and beyond, with you.

Word of the Day: 2010

Sunday, 27 January 2008

Harbin - the cold, the freezing, freezing cold

Hmm. Where to begin. A lot has happened in the past four weeks. As in, a lot. I can't even remember half of it. So I guess I better begin where I left off. I'll make it quick because I want to rave about Corey Delaney and his ill-bred antics.

So, I went to Harbin and some nearby states in China's frigid, frozen north with family and extended non-essential others for a week.

Day 1
Basically, it was alright the day we got off the plane. Had a bit of a wander around town. A very dynamic picture of the first day:


Day 2
Not so alright. We got snap-frozen. The temperature dropped to about negative 15. Like, it was cold. It's kinda hard to describe without using cliches. I felt like I was freezing from the inside. I thought it was cold then. I didn't know what was coming the next day. Anyway, on Day 2, we went to, I think it was, the biggest snow ranch in Asia. It was big, but there was nothing there. So we opted to go on a cable car up to the top of the mountain and back down on toboggans. The cable car was downright dangerous. What they did was, the cable car's coming, then they push you on to it. So I got pushed on to it, then I saw these support poles that were leaning at very dangerous angles. Plus my car was broken. Here are some photos taken from there:

This one's of my broken car:



After that debacle, we went on the toboggans. Even our native tour guide, who foolishly followed us up, complained of how cold it was on the way down. My nose was about to fall off after it. If you've ever been to Gumbuya Park, it's like those toboggans, except for the inexplicable stopping and starting. But yeah. It was cold. Like riding a bike in negative degree weather. Here's a picture I took during one of the stops.


It was so cold, my dad got a head cold, which resulted in him dressing up, as he described it, "like Arafat."

Yes, I am a merciless papparazo. My thought/question for that day was: "Why does it seem like midnight at 4 P.M???"

Day 3
We went to a country town in the mountains. The bus ride was adventure enough, with a combination of shoddy suspension and poor road building playing havoc with my brain and the food I was trying to hold down in my stomach. My head hit the roof three times. No joke. Like, I bounced up and hit the roof. From a sitting down position. Stationary. Probably because I was sitting in the back. Then we got off the bus. I felt like there were shards of ice sticking out from my body. There was wind. Fierce, fierce, bone chilling, freezing, arctic-grade winds, combined with negative 20-something temperature. It was cold. Then we six of us had to sleep in a bed for five. Yes. One bed for six people. As shown below:

Best sleeping conditions ever. They tried to split the men (me and dad) off from our family to sleep with other men, which was as scary as it sounded. My dad flatly refused, while making the point that we were already helping them out by only taking a five person bed for the six of us.

I also took these pictures:



Let me tell you how hard it was to take it. It was snowing, freezing and the wind was howling. My glasses had steamed up, which, in normal weather, wouldn't have been that bad. But in this place, the lenses on my glasses frosted over. So basically, those photos above were taken when I was half-blind.

Well, anyway that was pretty fun. Except for the fact that I had wind blowing on my freaking ear for the whole night. And the fact that the log fire under the bed stopped burning in the middle of the night. And the lack of showering facilities and minimal toilet facilities. So really, it wasn't all that fun. But it was all for the sake of the views that we attained. I'd like to tell you it was all worth it, but it really wasn't. I mean, I weathered torrential snow and painful cold to bring you photos like this (these were taken the next morning when it wasn't so bad):

Random photos taken when we were pretty damn bored:


Plenty more at my Flickr. Also, there were many fireworks. I think it was because it was approaching New Years Day, and government officials had siphoned off enough money to leave some over. This photo was taken at the mountain:

while this was taken somewhere the day before:

Day 4
After taking some photos in the morning, we hopped back on the bus, but not on the back this time. Then we found out sitting in the middle was almost as bad as the back, except the ceiling was higher, so you couldn't hit your head. When we arrived at our destination, we found that it was at a frozen waterfall. It was actually pretty nice.

Then we went to this frozen lake, which was also pretty nice.

Me being fully tank and chopping a board of snow:


Then we went to a hotel with a communal cat. Then we had a full-on laughing session after my cousin said to the cat "Luckily for you, we're not you're typical Cantonese people, otherwise you'd already be supper." But in all seriousness, the cat wouldn't leave even when we wanted it to. It curled up and slept. Like so:


I mean, what if someone had a cat allergy?

Day 5
Alright, I wiped up some coffee with a towel on Night 4 (or the night of Day 4, to simplify things...or not). So the next day, the hotel tries to make us pay for it. Then my parents had a massive tiff with management. I mean, get over it. It's a coffee stain on an already ragged looking towel. I'm sure they would've preferred it if we left it to drip on to the carpet. So after we overcame that adversity, we trundled on to our next destination - Long White Mountain (direct translation). But first, a photo from the hotel that morning:

I also found a fake palm tree outside the hotel, which was really quite amusing. At least I thought so.


Fir trees I understand, but one should not dream of the impossible (palm trees in a frozen wasteland).

So we went to Long White Mountain, which was pretty much touted as the highlight of the trip. I was quite happy with it, and felt that we could've gone there for an extra day and skipped out on the five-person bed experience. We saw the Olympic snow statue thingo...

...and one with TB's posing in front (that's supposed to be a heart shape formed by the arms)...


...found out that even the bins look prettier there than the rest of the north-eastern bins...


...and met a neo-John Lennon wannabe on the way.


So we took a car up Long White Mountain to see the much-acclaimed frozen lake up there. And here is a picture I took while up there:


I risked my life (and my camera) taking that photo. The wind was huge. It was like a hurricane. And my glasses kept fogging up and frosting over. Did I mention is was cold? So I almost stepped on a rock and fell off the cliff. Just to bring y'all this photo. And another one:


This was another one that I took in the relative safety of the car back down:


As you can see, the shots aren't so great when I don't risk my life to take them. I say "relative safety" because we were lucky to be able to go up in a 4WD that day. See, when the path is snowed over, what they do is shove thirty people into an equivalent of a 4WD sized box with a shovel out the front and drive through the snow. We heard horror stories of people fainting of suffocation. Then I raised a point. Since they have snow shovelling machines, why couldn't they just shovel away the snow and let the 4WDs go through? It turns out they stole my brilliant innovation before I had even thought out it. So this year they actually did that. So we were lucky it was a non-snowing day, otherwise we wouldn't have gone up, because it cost a mint of money just to go up in one of those boxes with snow shovels. But it was a pretty good view on the peak of the mountain though.

A photo of me taking a free kick on a snowballish thing and generally being an idiot after we reached the foot of the mountain again:


Our next stop was the waterfall, which also happening to be on the mountain. So we trekked up a slope for about half an hour, beating everyone in our tour group in the process, and saw the promised waterfall. We walked past hot springs/rivers in the process:





I know, some of them aren't springs and stuff, but get over it.

Anyway, when we got there, we had trouble finding the actual waterfall. Truth be told, it was kinda hard to see. I had to use the zoom lens on my dad's camera to see it. Here we go with the photos. The first sight I got of the waterfall:


...and that's about as close as I got. In fact, I seem to have gotten further away from it:


When we went back down, we noticed a novel way that people were cooking eggs and corn, like so:


However, being China, I don't how real that was. Maybe they pre-cooked the eggs/corn and then kept them warm in the springs, instead of actually cooking them in the springs. Who knows. Not me. Anyway, we bought some corn and eggs because it was cold. If there's one thing I learned during my trip to the North-East, it's that anything tastes good when the constituency of your body is more icy-pole than human.

Day 6
Owing to the spectacular breaking down of our top-drawer 50-year-old antique tour bus overnight, we spent most of the morning waiting for it to be repaired. So we took photos in the hotel lobby of course. What better past-time.



There's a rainbow in that pic above. It's on the right.

So around lunch, our tour bus got fixed, so we hopped on and went to lunch. Outside the restaurant, we saw a "snowman":


I say that with sarcasm, but that's just the way I am. It's actually a pretty good snowman and you can see that a lot of effort has gone into it, indicated by the tin hat and red scarf and all. Like, you'll never see one like in the movies unless someone specially sculpts it with professional equipment (funny, sounds like something Hollywood would do). At any rate, it's better than any snowmen that we created.

Then we buckled in for a six-hour drive, stopping by to purchase some Chinese medicine. It was here that I took some very innocuous-looking photos, one of which is here:

However, I was informed by certain people that, had the people in the shop not been busy flogging their goods of dubious usefulness to our group, they would've charged me ten dollars per photo that I took of the plane. And there was also a sign there saying so, which of course, I couldn't read. Almost owned hard was I.

So at about seven that night, we got to Kunming, which was the next state. Anyhow, they still somehow managed to take us to the places that the promised to, in roughly 25% of the original planned time. So we didn't get any money back. So then we went out for supper of sorts. It was really, really cheap. Like, we fed our whole family for like 20 AUS dollars.

Day 7
This was the penultimate day. For this last day, we experienced the splendour and wealth of China by visiting a square that they had built for the people, all while the said people were starving and cold. Then we went and toured a picturesque river thing. Photos below.




We then visited this temple thing, which was next to the lake thing (man my vocab is huge). There, I took awesome photos of pegs:


Well, we flew back to GZ that night and, even though it was 15 degrees, it felt sweltering. Anyway, just a thought: The presence of snow usually indicates very cold temperatures. Should've thought about that before we went there. But it was fun. I'll leave y'all with this photo and see you on my next post.

Monday, 17 December 2007

Of China, ENTER, and theft

ENTER shall be discussed later. And yes, there is Internet in China.

So I (and my family) caught the plane at 1 o'clock in the morning on the 15th (Melbourne time), dead tired and really tuckered out. Then I remembered how hard it was to sleep on the plane. So I half-slept for about...5 minutes. Then food was served. Which was what I needed right then, seeing as I wasn't hungry and in need of sleep. So I ate the food, because I wasn't hungry, then I half-slept for about 4 hours. Then I woke up. Inexplicably. So I played DS for a bit, went to the toilet played DS some more, realised that the backlight was probably waking everyone up, stopped playing DS. Half slept for about 2 more hours. Woke up with 2 hours to go on the flight. Alighted at Hong Kong at about 6:30 their time, if I remember correctly (in the morn). (Man, this is gonna be a huge post again. I just spent about 10 line talking about a plane trip).

So yeah, got to Hong Kong airport, and pretty much hopped straight on the bus to Guangzhou. Turned out that we picked the worst ever bus company. What they did was, they told us that it would be an almost seamless trip, with a "short" stop on the border. Then, what they actually did was drop us at the border, picked up other customers and left us stranded for about an hour. My parents went ballistic. Understandably, I thought. So then they decided to shove us all on the bus and go zooming off to Guangzhou.

The weather was pretty bad. Still is. It's winter here. Or supposed to be. It feels like the Aussie spring, plus smog, pollution and general filth. And people. Many, many people. So we bunkered down at my grandpa's old house. It's generally pretty good, except for the tiny stairs, and generally cold water. It's quieter than many houses in Guanzhou.

So the day after we arrived, we went places. Visited rellies. Went to dinner.

The next day, we went shopping and gaming with cousin and wife. Which sounds a bit daggy, until you factor in the fact they're 24. So we bought books, jeans, food, and went gaming. Sarah scored a Hello Kitty doll in a fit of rage (she threw a coin on one of those table things) and Michelle got a hair clip. I got an orange juice that I bought. And a good time.

The next day...more shopping. Bought lots of random stuff. Like really random. As in...golden mices. Go figure. After that, we went and had lunch. As you do at lunchtime. Then we went to do more shopping. Or walking. I tried on those new Converse mouse shoes, but they look dodgy on me. They're a bit thin and queer-looking. My sister got a black pair though. They look quite the awesomes.

Today, we had breakfast at uncle's, and then went shopping. Bought about 5 Levi's jackets for about the price of half a Levi's jacket in Australia. And a Lonsdale jacket. After that, we ventured to a supermarket, which was like walking into Box Hill with about 10 times as many people. It was pandemonium. And I've been informed by my cousin that it's like that every day of the week. After lunch with grandma, we chilled at cousin's place. Still am.

I've been wanting to take a whole pile of photos, but everyone in my family is afraid of thieves. So I guess I can't bust out the ol' digital camera.

The irony is killing me. I can't view my own blog from here.

ENTER was very 93.75. Still don't know anyone who did worse than me. Hope it gets me into Comarts.

My massive family, including cousins and various other hangers-on, and I are leaving for Hong Kong on Friday, so I probably won't blog til after that. That'll make all of you happy. See you after Honky Kongy.