China Musings

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

CM#12 Worms In Yunnan

Filed under: Podcast, Travel — Adeh at 1:30 am on Friday, November 25, 2005

You may have noticed if you have tried reading this blog that I have trouble finishing stories. So, I have decided to get around that problem by going straight to Audiobook. Also, this is for my dad since he complained that he couldn’t put my podcast on his iPod. So here you go, you can take this and listen to it on the way to work.

The music in this podcast is Uyghur music from The Red Rose CD , available at The Camel’s Back.

After a little bit of research, I have found the name of the town I talk about. It’s Yuanyang 元阳, in the prefecture of Gejiu 个旧. The nice lady we met was named Nayue 娜月, but that’s all I can remember.

Here’s a website about the Hope Project in Yuanyang, if you can, perhaps think about a donation.

a mealworm
[Ohio State University]

CM#12 Culinary Adventures in Southeast Yunnan

CM#11 Guangzhou International Car Show

Filed under: Podcast, Alison — Adeh at 12:30 am on Tuesday, November 22, 2005

Live from the Pazhou International Convention Center in Guangzhou, China, we bring you the latest in automotive innovation. Or is it just motive innovation…

Alison shot this movie as she was with the party from Nissan inspecting the booth before it opened to the public. What you see is apparently a rehearsal. The show will last thoughout the week, Alison might deem to take me this weekend.

CM#11 Nissan Booth at the GZ Car show

CM#10 A Special House Tour

Filed under: Podcast, China Living — Adeh at 8:08 am on Monday, November 21, 2005

OK, I know you have all been waiting for this. Where do I actually live? Is it a thached hut, a mansion? Well, you are about to find out. This was shot yesderday afternoon, Sunday.

We have been living here for almost 3 years, and we like the house a lot. Alison is not so crazy about the location or the fact that we are on the 8th floor, but sometimes you have to make sacrifices. Just to give some perspective, we pay 1300RMB per month. That’s about 150USD. For most of China, this is really expensive, but in GZ, a place like this at this price is a steal. Many of our friends live in dirtier, smaller, and less well appointed places for much more. Of course, many of them have elevators too…

CM#10 Tour of 17 Duobao Jie Apt. 801

CM#9 Malaysian Beaches - Tanjung Rhu

Filed under: Podcast, Travel — Adeh at 12:17 am on Monday, November 21, 2005

From the archives comes this gem of a clip taken on Langkawi Island, Malaysia, May, 2005. This was our first full day on the island, and we hired a car to take us to the points of interest. The Island was pretty small, but it had some wonderful scenery. The best view by far was this beach, called Tanjung Rhu. It looked like something out of, well, The Beach (I know, wrong country, but if you squint, you can actually see Thailand from that very beach). Pristine white sand, forested islands… There was noone there, maybe one or two other couples. This was more due to the fact that only 5 months had passed since the tsunami, as the beach was bracketed on both sides by fantastic and expensive looking 5 star hotels.

The problem was that we were paying our taxi driver by the hour, and so after a stroll and some photos, we were off to the next stop on the tour, something I already can’t remember. I really wish we had rented our own car. But all’s well. The taxi driver also dropped us off at the Night Market, where we had I believe the most pleasant afternoon in Malaysia in the company of a group of local kids. We most likely would not have found that on our own.

Salamat datang! (That may mean “good afternoon”…)

CM #9 Tanjung Rhu in Langkawi, Malaysia
Malaysia Trip 2005 Photo Album

CM#8 Chongqing Dinner

Filed under: Podcast, China Living — Adeh at 8:20 pm on Monday, November 14, 2005

This movie was taken over two nights eating out at a local restaurant. Last year we were regulars at this place, coming at least once a week until suddenly they shut down. The place used to look horrible, with un-adorned walls, plain wooden bench seats, and dirty floors. But 2 weeks ago, they re-opened as the restaurant anchoring a brand new hotel that was renovated into the building above it. Now it looks great, the food is the same, and the prices have not gone up too much. We ate there both nights for about 36 kuai, not the cheapest food available but certianly a bargian. And for Alison it is heaven, she gets to eat spicy food anytime she wants.

The restaurant, called 渔之家 (Fisherman’s Home | The Fisher’s Hut | The Place for Fisherpeople to Return to After a Long Trip), is styled as a Chongqing 重庆 (formerly known as Chungking) hotpot place, and they have a lot of normal dishes as well. My favorite is something called Gan Bian Tudo Si 干便土豆丝, which are basically french fries, with chili peppers thrown in. Although I can’t breath fire like Alison can, I still enjoy spicy food.

I have gotten to figure out how to use the Quicktime sotware to paste movies together. I know, the editing needs work, but until someone can get me a real editing program for windows or linux for free, this is what you’ll get.

CM#8 Dinner at the Chongqing place

CM#7 Hong Kong Avenue of the Stars

Filed under: Podcast, Travel, China Living — Adeh at 7:42 pm on Monday, November 14, 2005

This is a video taken during our trip to HK for our 3 year anniversary. The Avenue of the Stars is HK’s answer to the famous Mann Theater in Los Angeles. It was recently completed and I guess they have been holding live shows there on a weekly basis. We happened to catch one of the acts while we strolled the lane. The Avenue itself is placed at the tip of the Kowloon peninsula, right across from the famous HK skyline. The view was really nice and we had a great walk.

CM#7 Hong Kong Skyline

CM#6 This is My Neighborhood

Filed under: Podcast, China Living — Adeh at 12:08 am on Wednesday, November 9, 2005

This video was taken on a grocery run around the ‘hood. We live on a small alley that runs parallel to a larger road. Our community is made up of small, old, old, dwellings and newer block style apartment buildings. Although I appreciate the historic feel of the flagstone lane and the ageing architecture of days long past, I have come to realize that a lot of the people living in these old houses are also still mired in a standard of living that many of us thought we had left behind. Many of these small places have no or very little indoor plumbing. Cooking is done outside, as are clothes washing and sometimes hair washing.

We live in a very peculiar part of Guangzhou, and it is in no way indicitive of the rest of the city. There are several different situations which I hope to bring to you over time, so you can get a chance to see the dynamic nature of life in China.

Chinese Lesson:
路 Lu - Road [street, lane, way]
街 Jie - Street [road, lane, way]

The main street you see is Duobao Lu 多宝路, while we live on Duobao Jie 多宝街. In this case I would say the taxi takes us to Duobao Road, but we live on Duobao Way.

Geekspeak follows:
After spending hours over the weekend and last night trying to find some way to reduce the size of my movies, I finally broke down and upgraded to Quicktime Pro. So, now, instead of 10MB for 30sec we are down to 2MB for 30 sec, which is much more reasonable. The picture is not quite as large or as sharp, but you’ll deal.

Just a quick case in point for anyone who thinks Macs are too expensive: I spent countless hours downloading no less than 8 different video editors and converters in Windows and Linux and not one of them could both load my camera’s mpeg4 files and manage to not crash. When Tori brought over her iBook a few months ago when she was still here, I was able to spend 6 hours putting together a 5 minute movie from15 different clips, with music, titles, and trasitions, with iMovie. Comes right with the computer.

Anyway, Quicktime Pro doesn’t give me all the mutli-track goodness, but it does allow me to serve up my movies in slick H.264 iPod optimized format, and that’s good enough for me.

CM#6 Duo Bao lu

CM#5.5 Bonus Track

Filed under: Podcast, Well, alright — Adeh at 6:32 pm on Sunday, November 6, 2005

I realized that I could include a lot of content in this feed that I have collected but not really let anybody listen to. This was recorded for the magazine Crazy English. They have a magazine for english learners. It is printed bilingually and comes with a CD so you can listen and follow along. This was my first recording with them, about 5 months ago. Since then I have had about 6 sessions for various things. Most recenly it was a entry level English book for 3-4 year olds. A lot or Mr. Dog and Hungry Wolf voices. That was actually kind of fun.

CM #5.5 The Little Prince Chap. 21

CM#5 Teem Plaza

Filed under: Podcast, China Living — Adeh at 11:55 pm on Wednesday, November 2, 2005

After striking out on cheap street, we took the Metro to Teem Plaza (天河城广场) This place was the biggest mall in Guangzhou until the Vanguard Mall opened up next door about 6 months ago. In any case, Teem Plaza is big enough. We took a look at some Sony Laptops and Alison browsed the leather bags. This is a quick look just to get a sense for the size of the place. We also shared some tasty mango gelato.

CM #5 Teem Plaza

CM#4 Zhong Shan 6 Lu

Filed under: Podcast, China Living — Adeh at 11:49 pm on Wednesday, November 2, 2005

This weekend I went shopping with Alison. We stopped by one of her favorite stores, the 5 kuai shop on Zhongshan 6 Rd 中山六路. Zhongshan Road, named for revolutionary leader Sun Yat-Sen (Sun Zhongshan in standard mandarin), is split into 8 parts and runs right through the heart of old Guangzhou. This particular section is a fairly good representation of WWII era architecture. The buildings here are not in especially good repair, and in other places, these style buildings are being torn down by the block. But in some areas they are being lovingly restored. I’ll have to take some video of one of those places.

CM #4 Zhong Shan 6 Lu

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