Tag Archives: Nanjing

Places to see pictures to take

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A Monday still feels like a Monday in China!  I have tested  my camera that suffered the fall in San Francisco and it still is able to take and even download pictures.  This makes me very happy.

This was my first impression of China, during the day, from my room in Shanghai.  It looked a little bleak.

Shanghai, China

This is around about sunrise from my room in Nanjing.  I have a lovely view of the sky and a stairwell.

Early morning Nanjing, China

A few nights ago we went to visit the Confucius Temple originally built in the Song dynasty (420-479) and rebuilt in 1139.  I am not sure when they added all the lights.

Fuzi Temple

Confucius Temple at Night

My travel companions window shopping at the Confucius Temple

The Jing Mi temple is a working Buddhist temple.  There are no monks just nuns they both have shaved heads.  Not long ago one of the pagodas caught on fire and the renovations have not finished yet.

Jing Mi Temple, Nanjing China

Xuanwu Lake

I love this place you can rent a boat, buy a hammock or walk for hours.

Sunset at Xuanwu Lake

Half hot pot half not.  The perfect dish to serve every palate.  Hot pot or not seems to be a very messy dish. This was before the mess started.

As my Monday is ending back home it is just beginning.

Good Night!

Yangtze River death wishes and beer drinking

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The good thing about traveling in a group is that many of your activities are planned for you. The bad thing about traveling in a group is that many of your activities are planned for you.  With that said, when we were told that we were going to see the Yangtze River today, the third largest river in the world, I thought this would be great.  So we were in the van driving over the Yangtze River bridge in Nanjing and someone asks, are we going to stop?  The next thing you know we are stopped on the side of the bridge.  Once we are out of the bus we quickly realize there is about a half mile of visibility because the smog is so bad and our vans have disappeared.

Very smoggy day. There is nothing to see.

So we hang out taking pictures on the bridge for what seems like a long time and then go back to the place our van dropped us off.  At which time our tour guide for the day suggests that we have to cross to the other side of the bridge to be picked up.  This sounds like a bad idea.  Crossing four lanes of traffic, on a busy Saturday, in the middle of the day, is not something I would typically do. EVER.   We devise a plan and since crossing the street in China isn’t like it is at home, there may be hope but only a little and I make sure to take my spot in line so that at least six other people  will buffer the blow of the midday traffic in Nanjing when we step into the road.  I am sure that even the most calloused driver will notice hitting a dozen people at a time.  At the appropriate time our guide leads us into the street and we cross 2 lanes and stand on the yellow median line, halfway there.  Bless the four souls that actually stopped their car so we could cross because I have yet to see a car stop for a pedestrian that is more than six inches away.  We make it to the other side and observe the very dangerous job of the median police whose only job appears to be walking up and down the median.

death wish

Imagine 12 people standing in a row on that yellow line to cross the street.

We happily get back into the van glad to be alive and out of our smog bath.  Shocked and dazed we continue with the journey for the day.  Not 15 minutes later at a stop light, in a turn lane, our van is scraped by the city bus, not hard but enough to cause both drivers to shout at each other in Chinese for awhile and hold up traffic.  We are not phased by any part of this interaction and eventually continue on our way to the temple we are on our way to visit.

Ji Ming Temple

We make it to the temple without further incident.  I will share the details, and other pictures, of this beautiful temple at a different time.  When our time is over at the temple we come to find out that our scratched van is in the repair shop for some reason and we all have to fit into one van to go to lunch.  Have I mentioned that there appear to be no seat belt laws here.  So we all pile into one van to head to lunch.

 

Thirteen people in one van.

On the way to lunch we drove through the much talked about Purple Mountain.  Lunch itself was uneventful and so-so, except for the first time ever beer held a certain appeal to me.  I figure if I am going to start running in the middle of traffic I might enjoy some beer while I am at it.

The after lunch activities consisted of visiting Dr. Sun Yat-Sen’s Mausoleum at Purple mountain and climbing a few hundred stairs and a walk at Xuanwu lake.

Sun Yat-Sen's Mausoleum and a few hundred stairs

By the end of the day I am tired and hungry and don’t want to be in a van or climbing stairs but still grateful that I am not peddling a bike, while smoking a cigarette, with an impossibly large load through one of the scarier intersections in Nanjing.

The picture is blurry but you get the point

Instead I am sitting on the street, eating spicy noodle soup and drinking beer in my mind there are few finer pairs and this somehow feels like an unusually rewarding, and cheap meal.

Spicy noodle soup and beer.

 

 

Letter from Camp China

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Dear Friends,

Hello! I have been in China for a few days now.  All of my flights connected with relatively little problem.  The only really unpleasant event was having dropped the bag with my camera in it in San Francisco.  Now the screen on my camera doesn’t work but it still can take pictures.

My travel companions have all been really great so far.  I am living in a hotel in Nanjing I get my own room, with my very own phone number, hot water boiler and mini fridge.

We are on a pretty set schedule so far.

7am Breakfast- Buffet style nothing you have ever seen on a buffet at home.

7:40 Take the car to the hospital.  Where we drive across town and watch Dr. Tiao do acupuncture.  He tells us more and more information each day (the interpreter actually tells us). More about this later.

Clinic goes until 11 then we go back to the hotel for lunch, nap, errand running etc.

1:40 We go back to the hospital for a couple hours in the afternoon it is either lecture or discussion.  We learn learn lots of cool stuff.

Get back to the hotel at about 4:15.  There are 3 groups of students from OCOM here and I just happen to be in the group that goes by car to clinic, because it is across town.  Everyone else either goes by foot or on the subway and on foot.  I feel like I have seen less of Nanjing because of this but it is only my fourth day here.

We have been meeting for dinner around 5:30-6 and then we go adventuring afterward.  Pretty vague, I know.

The food has been pretty good ranging from so-so to great!  There is lots of things to try and our group leader is taking us out for dinner several days to show us some cool places that are close by.

So far my favorite things have been the Nanjing Salted Duck and the food from Western China.  This surprised me somewhat because I was suspicious of all the horse meat and stomach on the menu.  We had eggs, yogurt, mushrooms, lamb and these amazing salted lima beans.  As far as more unusual food go, I think there were some meat noodles on the buffet breakfast my first day.  I don’t know what they were but they were pretty good.

As it turns out I know more Chinese than I thought I did but not enough to effectively communicate, in words, with others.

This afternoon we are going to our welcoming ceremony and dinner afterward. Let you know more about China later.

Hope everyone is well.

Love,

Erika

Driving in Nanjing

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Rules of the road, at least as far as I can tell.

Right of Way

If you are moving you have the “right of way,” if you are not you don’t.  This seems to be true for cars, buses, vans, bikes, mopeds and pedestrians.  As a pedestrian consider the weight and speed of the others who are moving before you assert YOUR “right of way.”

Lines on the road are suggestive, “loosely” suggestive for traffic going either way.

The horn is a multi-purpose tool which can be used in place of a turn signal, and as a personal locating device, it can also be used when you want to move, you want someone else to move, or if you feel someone is too close.

If you have missed your turn you can drive backwards to make your turn but proceed with caution.

There are no helmet laws the only people who consistently wear helmets are the police and they look like storm trooper helmets.

Seat belts seem to be optional the vehicle you are riding in may or may not have both ends of the seat belt available.

I have been told that driving/riding in India, Egypt or Thailand can be much worse.  It is possible that I am slightly sensitive about this, but in the future I will be sure to bring gifts for my regular drivers.  Additionally, I haven’t noticed too many heavily dented cars.  This gives me hope.