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Happy Birthday to China!

9 Oct

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This is the week where China celebrates its birthday!  Lots of Fireworks!

Zongzi

3 Jul

Mmmm.Mmmm. Good!

😛

June 20th was the Dragon Boat Festival (aka Duanwu Festival), celebrated by families and festivals all over China every year with delicious food, boat races, and fun times. 

According to Jerry, the high school student I was tutoring, the Festival originated many centuries ago.  All those many years ago, a greatly beloved leader of China (he said king; another student said it was a famous poet/advisor instead) was forced to watch as the enemies overwhelmed his people. Heart-broken at the loss and devastated by the tragic future his people were facing, he cast himself into the river.  The people on the shore saw as he fell into the water and raced out on their dragon-shaped boats to save him.  Unfortunately, they could not locate his body, so they threw out special rice cakes as an offering and means of remembering his sacrifice.  

To this day, they honor this great leader by hosting dragon boat races and eating Zongzi (Zohng zuh)~ sticky rice balls made of a special type of rice and either fruits or meat- date filled Zongzi are the most popular here in Zhengzhou.

The video below isn’t mine, but it shows what the festival looks like!

Another student says that they also have a tradition with hand-made bracelets – boys wear them on one hand (I think the right); girls wear them on the other. Then on the festival, they thrown them into the river to cast off bad luck.  I tried the bracelet thing and ate my Zonzi, so this year should be pretty good! 🙂

Lady of the Lily

14 Jun

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This past weekend was Homecoming for the Students at SIAS, so the Freshman and Sophomores help design floats for their different departments and schools.  This was one of the floats – the lily started closed, then slowly opened as the young girl danced up out of it in the traditional flowing sleeves dance. Very beautiful!

Life in China: Apple I-Pad

12 Jun

Apple I-Pad

The Queen is NOT amused.  In fact, I’m pretty down-right Pi**ed (pardon the language).  After all the trouble I’ve had, I thought it pretty necessary to update all future China-Travelers to the dangers of buying/using Apple products here.

I don’t remember if I told you all this, but Lawrence the Laptop has had another revolt. He attempted going on strike via a broken LCD screen; I cut him off at the start via a nice HDMI connection to my television.  Unfortunately, he laughed in my face and promptly refused to work without the HDMI connection. No need to get into it, it was a whole thing.  

So last November, I bought an Ipad 2 during China’s version of Black Friday. I’ve had an I-Pod for several years, which lasted pretty well and I figured I’d give their tablet a try.  YES, I checked and it is a legit Apple I-Pad; had it tested by the real Apple Company in Zhengzhou (it’s on the apple website as a legit seller).

WRONG!  BAD! Stupid Olivia!  

Here’s Why. .

Price: 1800 RMB (approx. $300)

Review: The price was a little expensive for my tastes (almost all of Apple is), but I figured it was worth the bargain.  Apple products in China tend to run a bit pricier than products in America. Go figure given that they are literally produced about 10 miles away in the city I live in.  They have their own personal runway at the international airport they ship so many Apple products out of here. Yet we still get charge at least 50% again as much as American buyers.  So, I had to wait until 11/11, China’s Black Friday shopping day to pick one up from Hong Kong.  

Initial Purchase: Semi-Good; Semi-Problematic

Review: The first shipment I got was not too terrible.   It came with the charger, a cover, a screen protector, and ear plugs, pretty sweet all together.  The I-Pad itself was unmarked and undamaged, it seemed like everything would be okay.

It worked for about 2 hours, and then problems started.  The swiping part of the screen wasn’t working. It would stall up, like the screen was locked. You could go up about half an inch and down about half an inch, but otherwise nothing was happening. Buttons wouldn’t click, etc.  So we tried turning it on and off again (the answer to most issues), which revealed that the lock screen was not working either. Once again, I couldn’t swipe from the screen saver to the unlock screen. When I did finally get to the lock buttons, it froze and wouldn’t click them.  Tried a hard reset and several other options, nothing worked.  

So we called the seller and sent it back.  They kept it for about two weeks and finally sent me a new version.  This one seemed fine, so life moved on.

Use: Final Product

The final I-Pad I got worked fine soft-ware wise.  Sometimes it would randomly shut down songs or the internet would stop working, and none of the VPNs like it at all.  Otherwise, it was great and I was happy.

Hard-ware wise, the screen cracks like crazy. Literally, press to hard on the screen when punching a button and the whole screen cracked.  I put on a super duper safety case on it intended for toddlers, took it off and the whole edges were broken.  I asked the computer fix-it people and they said it sounds like I was sent a re-furbished model that had a cheap screen put on it.  The screen supposedly should not have cracked like that, but they verified the computer was really apple so they think the screen was just replaced with a cheapo version.  

I was not happy, especially knowing it takes 300 RMB to fix the screen. Furthermore, they admitted that if the top screen breaks the second lower screen there may be no fixing it at all?!?  0_0 Don’t you think that’s something they should have told me about before I bought the I-Pad?  I did a ton of research into I-Pads, I asked questions, and this never came up.  

ERROR: Blue Screen of Death

Anyways, along I go using  my ipad for about 5 months, when suddenly the screen goes blue and the whole thing just shuts off.  Black. Off, no charging, no connecting to the computer, no nothing.  Reset doesn’t work. Plugging it in to the computer doesn’t work. It is dead as a doornail for no apparent good reason.  No warning, that would be too nice. Just stops in the middle of a show.  Takes with it my calendar, contacts, messages, photos, videos, notes, everything. So off I go to the computer store to have it fixed.
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Luoyang Peony Festival

23 Apr

Luoyang Peony Festival!

Follow up on part one of my Luoyang visit! You can see my post about the Longmen Grottoes in Luoyang, another beautiful site to see in the area 🙂

Did you know that for a long time the Peony was actually China’s official national flower? And it started right here in Luoyang, where the Peony was the flower of kings and noblemen.   Now, there are many types of Peonies grown in the gardens of Luoyang, and those gardens are opened up to visitors during the annual Peony Festival!  

Every year from the middle of April until the middle of May, the Peonies bloom and visitors from around the world come to check them out.  The festival itself is during the peak time, usually April 15-25, when the flowers are at their most stunning.  

There are many, many Peony gardens you can see, for example the Luoyang National Peony Garden (it was too busy so our tour bus couldn’t reach it; we checked out another garden) is said to be the very best.  But there are many others you can see, like the one we visited. It was much smaller, but still breathtaking!  You can check out China Highlight’s post for a list of options and prices!

You can reach Luoyang via Train (approximately 4 hours from Beijing and 8 hours from Shanghai) or by Flight, and the price to the gardens isn’t too bad. There are lots of hotels and restaurants to check out, and many other sightseeing activities for your family 🙂

Email in China

1 Apr

Over time, it gets harder and harder to use Google and Outlook products here in China. This is a particularly large issue for the wonderful world of email.  Gmail and Outlook mail are no longer working properly even with a VPN.  

The largest problem I’m confronting right now is that Chinese services are blocking “Received” messages from Gmail or Outlook accounts.  For example, QQ (which my students all use), is completely rejecting anything from GMail or Outlook.  

So what can you use?

Well, here are a couple alternatives:

  • QQ – This is what most of the students are using. Basically, you register and download QQ International, and one of the options available to you with an account is QQMail.They have unlimited space and you can add large attachments. The downside is remembering your totally random QQ# email address (e.g. 123456789@qq.com).
  • Foxmail – Doesn’t work with a VPN on.  Offers you an email system that’s pretty good
  • 163.com – Download with Google Chrome browser so you can translate the system into English while you set up your account. Pretty good, a lot of students use it.  

I’ll try to do a comparison on them later. Right now, I use QQ, and I like it a lot. I do get tired of not being able to send an email to very many people and you keep having to enter confirmation codes. But it works!

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Want to pet. . . .

3 Mar

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CAQ: Is China Safe?!? – The Health Issue: Pollution

27 Feb

Continuing the Commonly Asked Questions series based on questions people give me about China.  While it may not answer everything, I hope that it will clear up some big misconceptions people  have about this beautiful country.  You can find the first part “Is China Safe: the Size/Language Issue Here.

CAQ #2: Is China Safe?!? ~ the Health Issue: Pollution

Yes, this is really what my city looks like some days

 

Concern: China is a scary place with backdoor doctors, unsanitary practices,  horrifying pollution, and dangerous hazards lying around everywhere.

I’ll start by addressing Pollution in this post~ the biggest concern for most people.  Is there  pollution in China? ~ Yes, of course there is.  There is also a lot of pollution in the US, Korea,  Japan, England, India, etc.  Is smog a problem? ~ Yes, smog can be a bad problem, especially on   certain days.  The worst of the smog arrives when we haven’t had rain in a while (Henan had a  drought this year, so that didn’t help), when they burn off the fields in the fall, and when the  machines are running extra long at the local factories.  There are certain days when skyscrapers  right in front of you completely disappear and you can taste the acid in the air.  I’d say that’s been about 7-8 days in my first semester here in China (Aug-Feb).  It can be really, really bad.

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My City Today

 

Of course, I live in Zhengzhou which is one of the worst cities in China, so I can’t measure the rest of China by that. You can see a rating every day for most Chinese cities’ pollution level here, and  Zhengzhou is always pretty bad. But if Zhengzhou is the worst they have to offer, I don’t  think the problem is as prevalent as people believe. 

First, I’d like to say (and I’ll probably repeat this in later posts), a large part of your ability to withstand the smog depends on your own body.  Personally, I generally suffer from serious skin sensitivity and asthma; one bad day in the US will knock me out.  But in China, I’m actually the healthiest I’ve been in a while. My skin clears up, my asthma goes away, I suffer fewer headaches, I’m breathing much better.  Others are the opposite; they’re fine in the States and then get landblasted with respiratory illnesses here.  I think a lot of it is dependent on how your body likes certain environments. Mine seems to like China.  

Furthermore, as far as actual pollution goes, it isn’t like every single day I am terrified of  walking out the door. Only about 2-3 days this semester have I been unwilling to leave  without a mask.There is also the fact that Zhengzhou has coal mines not to far away ~ and  that always adds to the issue, just look at the coal towns in West Virginia.  We have to dust about  twice a week to clean the black off everything, especially outside windows. That gives me a few  concerns about Black Lung or something similar, but it’s my own fault for choosing to live so close  to the coal mines.

Seeing the sun in a bright blue sky is a pretty rare sight around here, but we do get it, especially  after a rain.  And I can see the stars many nights, so long as the fireworks haven’t smoked the  place up. I breath fine for the most part, although I know some people who struggle.  They do have masks everywhere; you can always pick one up to help you out. I personally never really use them unless it’s during the crop burning week. 

One nice part about China is that the people here are incredibly health conscious and actively work to clean the mess up.Even big  factory owners know that their children have to breathe in ‘the air they create; it provides a lot of incentive to clean the mess up. ‘They are truly worried about the situation, and there are constant 

discussions on how to eliminate or guard yourself against the threat posed by air pollution.  They  have extremely advanced masks, they make sure that everyone knows what days to avoid going  outside and what days it’s okay. They are constantly planting trees, bushes, shrubs, and adding water in an effort to combat the problem and reoxygenate the air.  Zhengzhou even bought a “Smog  Machine!”  It goes around the streets spraying water in an effort to cleanse the air.  🙂 

If you move further out of the big cities, the problem isn’t half as bad anyway.

So maybe some cities in China are worse than most of the United States, but they are working with millions more factories, mines, people and other pollution causing issues. As my student’s say,  just look at the advancements they have already made in eliminating causation factors. Give them a few more years, and they will probably have advanced in leaps and bounds.  They like their  clean air, and generally the Chinese are a stubborn/innovative set. If they want clean air, they’ll  find a way to get it. It just takes time and patience, and a willingness to wear a mask every so often till the problem is fixed.

 

 

 

 

Chinese Fireworks!

19 Feb

This video was taken by a friend of mine (I’ll upload mine tonight too), and I thought it did a great job of showing you just how many fireworks were going off all at once around the city. It was mind-blowingly cool!  I counted at least 10 places setting them off at the same time, and from the roof you could see them for miles!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YUeI-AUx5Pk

CAQ: Is China Safe?!? – The Size Issue

16 Jan

Well, small break in the vacation plans – mom fell yesterday and crashed her hip so I spent 13+ hours in the Korean hospital.  Today she is zonked out on pain meds, so I have some time to do a little typing 🙂

I haven’t really had time to answer questions yet, but I wanted to start addressing some of the Commonly Asked Questions people give me about China.  While it may not answer everything, I hope that it will clear up some big misconceptions people have about this beautiful country.

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CAQ #1: Is China Safe?!?

When I began telling family and friends about my new adventure plans to teach in China,I found fear and worry was a bit more prevalent than excitement, and I had to do some serious selling of the idea before they would start to get behind me.  The most common question I was asked was “well, do you think it’s safe?”  After thinking about it, I’ve decided that this question stemmed from concerns of about three things (size/language, health, and security); I’ll address each in turn over the next few posts, but I want to start with the size/language concerns.

Concern: China is massively large and the language is foreign. 

Just looking at a map will tell you that China is one of the worlds largest nations (technically #3, right after Russia and Canada).  Then there is the fact that it is actually the #1 largest nation in terms of populations (1.3 billion in 2015, making up 19% of the worlds’ people!).  Just, woah!  There are 45 cities in China with more than 1,000,000 people, and the vast majority of them are closer to 3-4 million.  Compare that to the US, where only 9 cities have more than 1,000,000 and only 4 of those are more than 1.5.  It’s just kind of mind-boggling to think about how HUGE China really is.  And I think this is one part of China that people actually kind of get – we’ve seen the movies about Shanghai and Beijing, watched the tiny little streets and billions of flashing lights in strange characters leading us into back alleys to be lost in the maze forever.  China’s size is daunting, and I won’t say that this doesn’t scare me at times.

Unlike Korea and Japan, where subway signs, maps, and bus routes are more or less in English, most of the transportation aids in China are in Pinyin.  In fact, there isn’t even a map at all of my home city of Xinzheng, and it has about 600,000 people.  While this seems extremely big to a Missouri girl from a town of 12,000; to the locals, this is practically a backwoods country farming village.  Even the nearby city of Zhengzhou, boasting 5,000,000 as early as 2010, is considered a small city. And that’s TWICE the size of Chicago! And still no good map! Continue reading