China Musings

Writings and Ramblings (A/V) from Guangzhou, China

New site for travel in the Philippines

Filed under: Travel — Adeh at 9:23 pm on Sunday, November 18, 2007

There’s a new site for finding your way around in the Philipines. You can research weekly trips, or find a ferry schedule directly. I was involved in making the site, so I am a little biased, but I think its  the best ferry schedule site in the PH. I can’t wait to go back.

Flashback: notes from Tibet

Filed under: Travel — Adeh at 12:41 am on Saturday, February 24, 2007

I was going through some old emails and ran into this one… I wrote this the last day I was in Tibet, about the trek we did from Gamden to Samye. Its a god story, and maybe i’ll try to expand on it some day. But in the meantime, this might be able to help some of you looking for Tibet tips.

Enjoy:
Our trek was great, we took a bus to one monastary,
called ganden, and prepared to hike across some
mountains to another river valley and a monastary
called Samye. A guy met us as we were having breakfast
in the guesthouse and asked if we needed yaks. “Yak”
he says. So we arranged for a yak and a yakman/guide
to get us over the mountains.

It was a beautiful walk. First we went to this village
where the yak guy lived and waited for him to gather
the yaks, which turned out to be a horse. But he
promised the next day we would have our yaks. Then we
hiked into this very long river valley, and started
climbing toward what would be our first pass.

We camped at a flat spot for the first night,
apparently 2 hours from the top. It was really
beautiful, with nomad encampments scattered around.
The kids soon enough ran over to see what we were up
to, which at that point was mostly laying flat on our
backs.

The next day our yak showed up, causing a bit of a
stir because we had agreed on a price for 2, but there
was only 1. Thus we set off for zhukar la, the highest
pass on the trip at 17,000ft and undoubtably the
hardest hike I have ever done. It was 3.5 hours
straight up, without a step of downhill, directly
towards this ever visible saddle in the mountains.
Near the top, the trail dissapeared, and it became
just a scramble over rocks and bushes.

We climbed over the saddle then descended into an
unbelievable valley. The only way in was through the
high mountain passes, there were no roads, no power
lines, only a nomad herders camp by the stream at the
bottom. We hiked down into the valley and up again
into the mouth of another valley to sleep.

That valley led to chetur la, the second pass on our
trip. This pass was merely 16000ft, and already being
at 15,500 or so it was much more fun than the previous
days ascent. So when we got to the top andrew and I
decided to add to the excitment and try to get to one
of the two peaks flanking the pass. It turned out to
be pretty easy, if a little time consuming, as we just
walked up the steep slope, holding on for dear life.

The view from the top was great, we could see the
valley we came from, plus the two lakes att he pass,
and the promise of more valley’s below, as we followed
the stream from the pass. We walked along the ridge
and met kayin in the green pastures near the lake.
Then we had to catch up to our yaks, our yak party had
grown because our yak man connected with the yak men
for a group of italians, so we ran down the hill to
catch them.

The rest of the trip was downhill, following this
stream until it ran past the Samye monastary in the
Yarlung Tsampo valley (the yarlung tsampo is the
biggest river in tibet). What was amazing about this
last day and a half of hiking was the change in
scenery. We went from rocks, to boot-high plants, then
to knee high plants, until finally we were surrounded
by a lush forest of small trees, bushes, and
wildflowers. We stoppped in a small meadow by the
river to camp, and there we learned the reason for the
greenness. It poured all night.

The fourth day was a very short hike, we continued
along the river valley and watched it grow from a
mountain stream to a rushing river. About 3 hours into
our hike we came upon the first village we had seen in
days, and an hour later we were at Nyengo, a village
that had automobile connection to the rest of the
world, albeit by very bumpy tractor ride.

Here our yak and yakman turned back, and we continued
on by tractor to samye. Samye looked really cool from
the outside, but we had been advised not to go in,
because we had not purchased the appropriate permits
and the PSB was waiting inside for unprepared victims.
We then caught a hair-raising tractor ride from the
monastary to the river’s edge, where we boarded a boat
to cross the river. On the other side was the highway
heading back towards Lhasa. Just our luck, a minute
after we stepped on the road, a bus for Lhasa came by
and picked us up.

Well, I hope that captures some of the majesty that is
Tibet, but i doubt it. Today it is raining and dreary
in Lhasa, sort of anticlimactic for our last day in
this place.

back from Cebu

Filed under: Travel — Adeh at 2:28 am on Thursday, July 13, 2006

I juist returned from a nice business trip to Cebu, the Philippines second largest city. I had a really nice time there, the people I met were wonderfully nice and friendly, and we were able to get a lot of work done. I also went on a great canyoning trip on the south side of Cebu. I wholeheartedly recommend repeatedly leaping down 5m waterfalls into placid pools of blue-green water.

CM #22 Breakfast at Cheung’s

Filed under: Podcast, China Living — Adeh at 9:25 pm on Saturday, April 29, 2006

Alright, i know it has been a long time. But I’m back. I actually got 2 emails from people besides my mother who watched these podcasts, so I have been meaning to continue, but a rather busy few weeks of work and I just haven’t had the time to sit down at the computer. Well, actually all I do is sit at the computer, but anyway… In addition, now that I have my new mac, I really wanted to do something other than paste some clips together.

So here, it is: a new, iMovied, video podcast.

This was taken in the morning before I left for HK on that ill-fated trip. It is footage of a local jook joint (jook is the cantonese pronunciation, mandarin is zhou 粥) that must have been in business for several years. It might look kinda sketchy, but this place is solid, and the food is good. They only make jook, dumplings (jiaozi), and changfen, typical cantonese breakfast/snack foods.

So everyone, practice your cantonese:
“mmm goy, aw you yut go show yo jook”

“I want one lean meat rice porrige, please.”

CM #22 Breakfast at Cheung’s

Goodbye to Java

Filed under: Work Related, Web Development — Adeh at 6:13 pm on Wednesday, April 12, 2006

I have been working with PHP for a long time now, and Java for longer, and Ruby for about a week. Today, I had to implement a very small script in a jsp page without my library of helper functions. This script in php would have been easy in about 10 lines. In Ruby, 5 lines. In java, it was about 35. I just had to post the most obvious example of Java obtuseness:

public int compare(Object left, Object right) {
return ((Long)((HashMap)left)
.get("timestamp")).compareTo((Long)((HashMap)right)
.get("timestamp"));
}

The context is trying to sort an array of hashes according to one of the entries which was a long. Sounds simple right? Not in java.

When I first started writing PHP scripts, I cursed the fact that there was no typing and I always got mixed up in what was what. But now, I really see the benefits of a loosely typed language!

CM21 - CAUGHT! -> Deported!

Filed under: Podcast, China Living — Adeh at 1:20 pm on Tuesday, April 4, 2006

I suffered the rather dubious humility of being stopped at the entry point to China yesterday after a 2 hours train ride from HK.

The guy said, sorry, there’s no visa.

What? But I have plenty of time left…

Nope, just this one, which ran out March 30.

Oh no…

The following was recorded in my detention room, within the border zone at the Guangzhou east station.

CM21 - Caught!

Update:
I may have been a little bit melodramatic. I made it though a day in HK without incident, although I had no change of clothes and I was running out of HK money. Well, this photo is a good summery of the incident, 4 train tickets on the GZ-HK through train. Almost $100US for this trip… an expensive mistake.

4 tickets

new MAC!!!!

Filed under: Work Related, Well, alright — Adeh at 2:45 pm on Monday, April 3, 2006

I just received a new 1.83Ghz Macbook Pro from my new empoloyer. I am in HK right now, and this is soooo nice. I’m still in the store, writing this about 2 minutes after opening.

cameraitacina.com is LIVE

Filed under: Work Related, Web Development — Adeh at 7:35 am on Monday, April 3, 2006

After a really long development period, cameraitacina.com is live and public. This was not an easy project, and has given me lots to learn during the development phases. I re-wrote the AJAX part using the Protoype Javascript library, which is awesome by the way, and I had to add a cache because it was totally crashing the server under the load. The Chamber of Commerce gets lots of visitors, this site is my highest traffic project by far.

Aside from creating a huge WP theme for the site, we also implemented 3 searchable databases, streamlined the multi-lingual plugin, added an event registration feature, and integrated the photo gallery. It was a lot of work, but I am pretty happy with the result.

Awesome Ruby Tutorial

Filed under: Web Development — Adeh at 3:04 pm on Monday, February 27, 2006

I have been really interested in the Ruby Language and the much hyped Ruby on Rails web development platform. I had already played a bit with Rails, but this weekend, I decided to go back and do some research in Ruby itself. I found this wonderful book/tutorial that I just had to share:

http://tryruby.hobix.com/

http://poignantguide.net/ruby/

They are both written by the same guy. Its amusing, strange, and very informative. It is aimed at someone who is just starting programming, so it moves a little slow. But what it did was it gave me a very good feel for the Ruby language. Not just the syntax, but also the style.

Back in China

Filed under: Travel, China Living — Adeh at 1:09 am on Wednesday, February 15, 2006

OK, I know, why have a pic of SF if I am blogging from China?

Well, I like the picture. Also, we just got back from our US trip. We had a great time, but now its back to work.

I promise, when I get a good pic of Guangzhou that matches this theme, i’ll put it up here.

Now that I am back, I promise to get  back to my semi-regular schedule of 1 podcast a week. Maybe. How’s this. If anyone emails me asking for a new episode, I’ll put one together. I’m not sure anyone is paying any attention.

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