In true Dale and Jeff form, January 1st brought two new experiences (albeit rolled into one) - a trip to Ocean Park and a Chinese wedding. Ocean Park is a very successful, enormous amusement park/marineland. It is so big that there's a 20-minute cable car ride from one side to the other. From the cable car, there's a breathtaking view of Repulse Bay - the gorgeous high rises and the beach.
But the real draw of Ocean Park is the giant panda exhibit. Years ago, we visited the Washington, D.C. zoo specifically to see the pandas. Unfortunately, they were all asleep. This time we lucked out - there was Big Bertha chomping on her bamboo sticks with her back haughtily turned to the crowd. I am now keen on visiting the giant panda sanctuary in Chengdu, Sichuan, where they let you hold the cubs on your lap (for a donation of $200US!). After snapping about twenty photos, we moseyed around some of the other sea creature exhibits before making our way to the wedding.
Suzanne and Robert, friends from Toronto, had made arrangements to stay with us on Saturday, the 8th before leaving on a southeast Asia cruise the next day. Unfortunately, they had "the trip from hell" getting to HK via London. Their flight arrived four hours late, the cruise ship neglected to send a driver to fetch them, and they had no HK money. Once they got a grip on the situation ... they hailed a cab, boarded their ship, bought a bottle of wine at a 7-11 near the port, and celebrated making it to HK in one piece! Jeff and I collected them the next morning and had a wonderful, sunny day showing them around the city. We also visited their friends, Julian and Laytin, who live on the Peak. What a spectacular view! We even managed to get them to their ship at 6 p.m., in time to check in before sailing at 8. Suzanne and Robert loved their cruise (Azamara) to Vietnam, Thailand and Singapore. They are now in Australia for a few months. The joys of retirement!
As usual, we had our fill of culture and history in January. We attended an eclectic "swing" concert, featuring five different orchestras, ranging from a middle school band (worse than the Wagar High band) to an excellent Filipino orchestra. We are discovering the Filipino love for music, and their talent for both performing and teaching. One Saturday, we wandered over to a gallery showing Michael Wolf's photos of HK corner houses. These are some of my favourite buildings in the city - in need of protection since they are aging, and the city will probably tear them down in the next few years. On a cold weekend, we finally visited the Sun Yat Sen Museum (literally around the corner from our apartment), and the Museum of Medical Sciences down the street. The SYS museum was not quite as interesting as the one we saw in Canton last spring, but the premises are beautiful - an early 20th century mansion, built by a member of the Ho family (HK's wealthiest Chinese in that era). The house is on a hill, and it used to have a clear view of the harbour. It now has a clear view of the ugly apartment high-rises across the street. (Mr. Ho must be turning over in his grave).
On a cold, grey day, Chloe and I did a walking tour of Sham Shui Po, the poorest neighbourhood in the city. Although there are some upscale apartment buildings on the fringes of the district, most of the buildings in "the Po" are public housing. In the early 1950s, hundreds of thousands of immigrants escaped from China, and many squatted in this neighbourhood. A huge fire in the Po in 1953 left over 50,000 homeless. This event begat the start of public housing in HK. Although the "projects" block much of the daylight from the neighbourhood, life goes on in the streets which are filled with cheap electronic stores and accessories such as buttons and bows (the clothing factories used to be located nearby).
Are any of you aware that Prince Charles is a fairly talented artist? An exhibit of his lithographs, as well as sketches and drawings by Queen Victoria and Prince Albert, were on display in one of the office towers a few weeks ago. Charles loves to paint his little homes - Balmoral, Sandringham, Windsor. He is also proficient at painting landscapes. Victoria practised her art during her frequent "lying in" periods after giving birth to her nine children. Her drawings look like something out of Punch or Dickens.
One of the highlights of the month was the UN Holocaust Remembrance Day ceremony at the Jewish Community Centre on January 26. The guest of honour was Father Patrick Desbois, a French priest, whose mission is to uncover the mass graves of the 1.5 million Jews who were shot and buried by the Nazis in the Ukraine, Russia, and Poland. He has spent years searching for these locales, and is rushing to complete his quest before the surviving witnesses to these tragedies die off.
Last month was the coldest January since 1977. The temperature never rose above 20C (no, we don't need sympathy from our Northern friends and family). Of course it didn't come close to the sub-zero temperatures I experienced in Harbin (previous blog), but it still offered me the chance to wear sweaters, jackets, and leather boots, which normally sit forlorn in the closet. I will end this blog with a photo of photo of two dogs - a whippet and a greyhound - parked outside the supermarket, looking embarrassed to be dressed in their winter finery.
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