So I flew back into HK today and for the first time since I arrived here the sky was clear enough to see the SAR out of the plane window. So I took some pictures to prove it is more green than city :-)
Sunday, 5 April 2015
Tuesday, 31 March 2015
Wandering in Seoul
Tricky to type on phone so will edit when back on laptop in HK. Some pictures from the first two days.
Friday, 5 December 2014
Weekend in Shanghai
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Towards the French Concession |
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View from my hotel |
On the first morning we decided to head to Yuyuan Garden. It is a very beautiful area with lots of old style Chinese buildings, and even though they are clearly rebuilt and fairly new it has a much more natural and less clinical feeling than other bits of Shanghai
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Yuyuan Garden from my hotel |
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Yuyuan Garden |
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Yuyuan Garden Teahouse |

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Yuyuan Garden at night |
After Yuyuan we headed along The Bund to take the touristy photos of the Shanghai skyline. Like Beijing when I visited the smog tends to spoil the view of everything but there are some impressive buildings there. Some nice American gentleman in the hotel were telling me all about the architecture (they had clearly researched it beforehand) and they claimed it was the only place where you could see three buildings over 180M tall in one shot. The tallest building was apparently made out of six seperate sections and after that I tuned out and just ate my dim sum.
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Tourist shot |
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Wandering along The Bund it was interesting to spot how many tourists were Chinese Nationals. Like Beijing they really do encourage the internal tourism scene. Us Westerners definitely are a secondary market for them.
After a few hours shopping and some lovely dinner at a Shanghainese restaurant we hit a hostel bar recommended by an IN teacher at my school, (Chris J) who used to live in Shanghai, called the Captain's Bar. It had a rooftop garden that had a unspoiled view of the Shanghai skyline, good cocktails and a really nice atmosphere.

Shanghai was nice, and I'd definitely visit again for shopping and atmosphere but I'm glad I live in HK. The mainland had many infuriating attitudes that I would struggle with every day of the week.
Thursday, 27 November 2014
Sports and Charity events eat your time
The last few days have been incredibly busy. On Thursday the school swimming gala, Friday was the House Relay competition and as always I decided to run in the staff team, Saturday a 50km charity trek and Monday Division 1 Cross Country tournament. At some point in all this I should probably sleep!
The swimming gala was very snazzy at the refurbished pool in Causeway Bay, with lots of dressing up and house spirit. Einstein House came second which felt familiar after 3 years in St. David House.
The house relay was madly competitive. The kids sprinted off like lunatics. The Senior Heads of House were actually tripping one another other, shirt pulling and yelling if we didn't run fast enough. For 12 minutes. It was insane.
The 50km trek was the hardest thing I've done since being in HK. Absolutely destroyed my legs, I'm glad I did not check beforehand how far it was in miles because if I had realised it was longer than a marathon I probably would have given up halfway.
Cross country was good fun. A day right up by the border with China at a lovely golf course supervising and encouraging the kids. It was ridiculously hot and several schools had to call out ambulances to their pupils. One girl from CIS was hallucinating as she crossed the finish line, staggering from side to side and batting away invisible somethings!
Fortunately all our pupils were good, sensible and stayed hydrated. The A grade boys came third out of fourteen teams so got to collect a trophy but more importantly they beat West Island School (that is our only objective ultimately.)
Since then we've had parent's evening and tonight I'm flying off to Shanghai to do some Christmas shopping. Sleep is a limited commodity here, or perhaps I should say time is limited and using it for sleep would seem ridiculous.
Wednesday, 29 October 2014
Halloween party
So Island School had a staff Halloween get together with a staff pumpkin carving competition that the pupils then voted on.
After sufficient pumpkin soup and punch we had a lovely Halloween quiz that my team won with many prizes, such as glow in the dark rings, Halloween sweeties and the required bottle of wine.
Then we counted the votes for the carving competition.
My personal favourite pumpkin was disqualified due to primary school craft additions rather than just standard carving.

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The Batman was a popular choice |
But the winning pupmkin was Carolina's very artful carving (it took her over 4hrs).
Sadly I didn't have time to enter as I teach all lessons at the beginning of the week so no free's to go pumpkin carving in.
Monday, 27 October 2014
Learning about war
So Thursday was the trip out of HCMC to Cu Chi Tunnels and then back to go around the War Remnants Museum. I'm glad I did them both on the same day, just the museum could have come off quite one sided, but seeing all the traps etc. at the tunnels made it a bit more balanced.
We then carried on to the tunnels, which really are in a jungle. They let us get in through a real entrance (I felt blessed for being small at this point)
They showed us some of the traps set up to intercept American soldiers
You then had a chance to fire anything from an AK47 to an M60. However paying per bullet made it a bit expensive for my taste. A few in the group split 10 bullets in their pair which was a more sensible price.


Lastly we went down the tunnels. They are just over a foot wide and two and a half feet high; I felt they were small and claustrophobic so I can only imagine what it was like for anyone over five three tall. We crawled and slid through them and then was reminded that people lived here for 20 years, in the dark. That gives a great idea how desperate that war was.


Last bit I went around was the political prisoner section, where they had some of the equipment used on prisoners from an island just off the coast. God, humans can be horrific to one another.
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