Saturday 26 January 2008

More cultural experiences!

I have a new camera so my blog updates will once more be in full colour!

This week I finally went to the Hong Kong Museum of Art (on Wednesday when it's free!). The building is on the waterfront at TST, which is one of my favourite areas in Hong Kong, but it's not exactly an architecturally pleasing building. Luckily the exhibitions inside are a bit better. I saw 2 galleries of old style Chinese art (bamboo scrolls with birds and flowers or misty looking mountains and a bit of Chinese poetry down the side), a room full of Chinese ceramics (the exhibition contains examples of pots from all the different dynasties and wasn't terribly exciting) and a contemporary exhibitions called Made in Hong Kong (the work of 7 different artists currently working in Hong Kong). I liked a few of the old scroll type works, but after a few rooms of it they started to seem very similar. The contemporary exhibition was nice because most of the works made reference to things that I've actually experienced or seen in Hong Kong. I also found some maps on display as part of the Charter collection which was a huge collection of works in colonial times but can now all fit into one small room. It was interesting to see how Hong Kong looked back in the day but there was a guided tour going on in the room so I didn't stay for long.

Yesterday I went back to the Museum of Teaware in Hong Kong park to take part in a Wuwo Tea Ceremony with some other Chatteris people. The ceremony comes from Taiwan and 'celebrates the pursuit of ideals of peace, sharing, simplicity and naturalness' (or so says the leaflet they gave us!). The idea is that each person brings their own teaware and their own tea and shares it with the others, and no one is accorded any special rank because the order of sitting in the circle is decided by drawing numbers out of a hat and each person has to serve tea to the 3 people on their left and receive tea from the 3 people on their right. It's a really nice idea but our group had slight difficulties because we didn't really know how to go about preparing the Chinese tea! We had traditional style teapots which can easily sit in the palm of your hand, tiny little teacups that hold about 3 sips of tea, a big bowl that you use for pouring out waste water or used tea leaves and a delicate tray and 'delivery' jug that you use to serve your tea to the other people. It was quite fun, despite our cluelessness, and it's the sort of thing that you'd be very tempted to try at home if you had all the necessary bits of miniature crockery.

After all that Chinese culture, it was time to reinstate some British traditions, so last night I went to a Burns supper! Scott had invited some people round to his flat and prepared haggis, neeps and tatties for us all. There wasn't a piper to pipe in the haggis but Scott did a very good job at reciting the first verse of 'To a Haggis' from memory and afterwards a really tasty meal we gathered round the TV to watch a DVD of Scotch and Wry! It all felt so comfortable and homely that it was a bit of shock to go back out on the street and be greeted by a blast of Cantonese conversation.

Haggis, Neeps and Tatties.

School has been very quiet this week due to students being on exams and me hiding in the heated staffroom. Back to normal for next week though.

Thursday 17 January 2008

Life as usual

It's cold in Hong Kong. I've been layering up my clothes as much as possible but I'm tempted to buy one of the big padded coats that all the locals wear, there's something psychologically warming about a big padded jacket! It's not really any colder than autumn in Britain, but there's no heating here so you need to keep your layers on inside as well as out. Luckily I have my woolly hat, scarf and gloves from my mountain climbing.

Not much has been going on so far this month. Rehearsals for Anything Goes are trudging onwards. We've finally finished learning the 8-pages of tap-dance break, but that just means we have to practise it! School is a bit quiet because the kids have their end of term 1 exams next week and the teachers are all busy cramming in extra revision sessions and proofreading papers.

I've not even been out exploring recently. Perhaps after the new and exciting-ness of Borneo, Hong Kong feels a bit like home now. I've been spending my free time going to cinemas, having dinner with people I've not seen all holidays and doing a bit of shopping (more clothes to layer up in the cold!). I've got half days next week though as the kids have exams, so maybe I'll try to be more adventurous.

Over and out!

Saturday 5 January 2008

Borneo travels

Happy New Year!



It's been a while since I blogged, but I've been busy in Borneo!



We arrived on December 23rd (at 1am!) and (later that day) got picked up by the lovely people at Borneo Native Homestay and Tours (http://www.borneonativehomestay.com/) who we'd booked our 3 day, 2 night trek up Mount Kinabalu with. Mount Kinabalu is the highest peak in South East Asia (4092.5m above sea level) and is apparently one of the easiest mountains to climb. However, if you're not very fit and haven't done any training other than taking the stairs rather than the lift every day, it's definitely not easy! Luckily our first day involved nothing more strenous than visiting the visitor centre and watching a video about Mt Kinabalu.



We set off on our hike at about 9am on Christmas Eve. We did the Timphon Trail which is the easiest, shortest route, but involves an awful lot of very large steps. There are 7 shelters to pass between Timpohon Gate and the Laban Rata Guesthouse where we would spend the night and Rachel and I stopped at every single one of them, and plenty of other places along the way! It began to rain quite heavily around Shelter Number 4, so we donned our waterproofs (thankyou Jude!) and continue to trudge uphill. We didn't see any views due to the cloud and mists, but we did get to see the cool vegetation. There are impressive tree ferns (ferns the size of trees!) that are some of the oldest plant types on earth and crazy pitcher plants that slowly digest any insects that get trapped inside them. We stumbled in to Laban Rata at about 4pm and peeled off our wet layers before grabbing a hot cup of tea. The Guesthouse has a really nice atmosphere, everyone is going through the same challenge, and when the rain cleared up a bit later we were able to go out onto the balcony and admire the stunning view of blanket cloud below us and the dark granite peaks above. After digging in to the buffet dinner and chatting with a few fellow climbers, it was time to have a nap...



... then at 1:30am on Christmas Day, we were woken up! I'd set the alarm for 2:15 but other people in our dorm started rustling about much earlier and there didn't seem much point in lying in bed. We had a little breakfast (Remy our guide had said don't eat too much in case of altitude sickness!) and put on our Santa hats (Rachel had brought 7 along and distributed them amongst our fellow climbers) and headed out in the dark at about 3am. The full moon made the peak look even more impressive as it glistened slightly against the black sky. It's surprisingly cold at 3am at 3600m, so we were wrapped in layers of clothing and woolly gloves, scarfs and hats. The effort of climbing, however, rapidly warmed us up! It was extremely tough going that morning. I would stumble forward for about 20 steps and then need to sit down and catch my breath, then pull myself back into standing position before the cold set in! The path over the granite dome is pretty steep in places and there are sections where you pretty much haul yourself up using a rope, although things flatten out a little when you get closer to Low's Peak, which is the highest point. With our extremely slow progress, the sun began to rise long before we'd reached Low's Peak and it was extremely tempting just to sit down where we were and watch the colours glow, but our guide was very good and kept pushing us on, so we reached the top before the sun was fully up and were able (after another rest to get our breaths back!) to admire the beautiful views and take some photographs. After that, the world seemed to be a much brighter place, for a while, and I felt pretty cheerful on our descent to Laban Rata for breakfast. We had a short break there to repack our bags and have some more coffee, and then we began the long walk back to the Timpohon Gate. It rained again on the way down, so things got quite low for a bit, but as we got closer and closer we started singing some Christmas songs. We finally made it back to the gate at about half 3 in the afternoon. We were given our colour certificates and fell into the back of our waiting van... one of the best things about booking your climb through a tour group!




The other worldly landscape near the peak.


Sun coming up



Me and Rachel at the top!


From the mountain we were driven for about 5 hours to Tempurung Seaside Resort (http://www.borneo-authentic.com/tempurung2.php) which was a bit of a long trip when our day had started at 2am! But the drive was worth it, we were greeted by extremely helpful staff who took us straight to our room to dump our baggage and then whisked us back to the restaurant to help ourselves from the impressive Christmas buffet. The restaurant is open sided and thatch roofed. It was amazing to suddenly find ourselves in such a serene place, sitting at a carefully laid table, being brought glasses of ice cold water and listening to the sounds of waves on the beach. The only hiccup was the lack of phone or internet connections, which combined with an extremely useless mobile phone signal to make it pretty impossible for me and Rachel to send Christmas wishes to anyone.


We stayed at Tempurung for 3 nights to recover from our climb. Our muscles were aching the next day and we hobbled about like old women and moaned every time we had to stand up. Swimming in the sea helped, as did the massage that Amy (one of the lovely staff) arranged for us on the third day. I think we had just enough time to appreciate the peace and beauty of the lodge, if we'd stayed a bit longer it would've got a bit boring as there's nothing much to do, although we could've arranged trips to go white water rafting if we'd had the energy!


We were picked up at Tempurung by the lovely Borneo Native Homestay people (our driver, Conran, was incredibly helpful and full of fascinating facts about the things we passed - for example he told us that in a few years time all the fuel in Sabah will be 30% palm oil) and driven back into Kota Kinabalu to catch our bus to Uncle Tan's Operations Base near Sepilok. Sadly, we couldn't get a seat on any of the earlier buses so had to leave at 8pm, which meant travelling in the dark and not getting to Uncle Tan's Ops Base until 3am! The bus was clean and comfortable enough to nap on and the driver helpfully dropped us off at the right place and pointed at the building we wanted, so we were able to get ourselves inside and fall into bed pretty quick.


Uncle Tan's (http://www.uncletan.com/wildlifetour.html) is a camp in secondary rainforest along the Kinabatangan river. It started off as a really small basic camp run by Uncle Tan (who is sadly dead now) and has grown over the years. Most of the guides live on camp year round and in the peak season they employ part-time workers from local villages. They're also involved in conservation projects - at the minute they're growing tree seedlings to try and create an elephant corridor with the WWF to connect some of the patches of fragmented rainforest.


The camp is pretty basic but has everything you need for a few nights stay. The rooms are basically raised wooden boxes with 3 sides of wood and the front side covered in wire mesh to keep the monkeys out. There is a troop of long-tailed macaques that like to visit the camp in the afternoon and you can hear them dropping on to the tin roofs. During our stay, one of the other guests was napping in a hammock and a monkey came and stole his packet of cigarettes! We saw an awful lot of monkeys, most of them hanging out in trees by the river when we did our river trips, including the strange nosed proboscis monkeys that only live in Borneo. There were also a few crocodile spottings, which is a bit disconcerting when you're only in a wee boat, and a river otter, which was a bit nicer to look at! The boat trips were my favourite part. The camp is set in a flooded woodland so you spend a lot of time winding your way out to the main river through the tree trunks, with large branches covered in ferns and bryophytes flying over your head. At first you wonder how on earth the guides know where to go, but by the end of your stay you start to recognise the way yourself and it feels like you've learned a way into a secret garden.




Inside our cage/room!


As well as the river trips, we did a day walk and a night walk in the swampy forests around the camp. We were all told to wear rubber boots (wellies!) for our walk, but the water levels were so high that the murky puddles came right over the top! The wet feet were very much worth it when we found ourselves standing directly underneath a young male orangutan. He just hung out in the shade, gazing at us nonchalantly as we snapped hundreds of photographs (I'd lost my camera but Rachel gave me hers whilst she took video clips) and didn't even complain when we followed him for a bit as he wandered off. The night walks were more focussed on little creatures - we saw lots of frogs and spiders and the Borneo Blue Tarantula and a black scorpion which the guide let us each have turn in holding. It was surprisingly light for such a scary, spikey looking creature.



The beautiful Orangutan

On our last morning in camp there were no spaces to go out on the boat trip (the new arrivals get priority) so me, Rachel and a Glaswegian girl called Louise had to stay in camp. Louise's boyfriend John went out on the trip and reported that we didn't miss much, just a few more monkeys, and we were much cheered up when a few monitor lizards decided to come and visit the campsite! After that, there was only time to lie in the hammock for a bit and look at the pygmy squirrels (SOOOO small and cute) chasing each other around the tree before we had to pile back into the boats with all our stuff and say goodbye to Never Never Land.


The long bus trip back to Kota Kinabalu was air conditioned, which was fantastic after the oppressive heat of afternoons in the jungle, and as we passed Kinabalu National Park I was able to look up at the spikey peaks poking through the cloud and remind myself that I'd been up there! We had the same experience when we saw the mountain from the window of our plane, but somehow it all seemed a bit surreal.


We made it back to Hong Kong by 1am on Thursday morning, by sneakily using our 1am ferry tickets for the 11:15 ferry from Macau! Then it was back to work.... only for a month and then it's Chinese New Year!