Thursday 15 July 2010

Shanghai Healing Home

Slightly different NGO helping Chinese orphans, this time with cleft palates; Shanghai Healing Home takes cares of babies with cleft palates, feed them up so that they can take on surgery and then looks after them while they recover.

They recently moved to a new location deep in Pudong, near Guanglan [广兰] station on Line 2. The new home is much more spacious and homely compared to the old place in Puxi.

They even had 3 new babies (who looked only a couple of months old) who don't have names yet and are provisionally called no. 1, 2, and 3.


Rachel [Left], who has no toy truck to hit me with and Anna [Right].


a very smiley little boy (Benjamin)

Saturday 10 July 2010

Beer in a bag!

[LEFT] Yes, beer in a plastic bag. TsingTao beer is sold on the street fresh from the keg into a plastic bag....yum.


[BELOW] Seafood on Hebei Road [河北路], trying a barbequed starfish - which had a suspiciously green mushy interior which apparently tastes of verylittle given how weird it smells.



[LEFT] An aquarium on the end of Zhanqiao [栈桥] pier, however, you would probably learn more about sealife from poking the food on offer in tanks on Hebei Road [河北路]. Which Greg did repeatedly until a waitress told him off.




[BELOW] a guy baking corn on Zhanqiao [栈桥] pier.

Friday 9 July 2010

Qingdao Bouldering [青岛抱石]

After scouring the internet for information (and contacting some very helpful and some not so helpful ppl) on bouldering in Qingdao [青岛] we managed to find the location (and some routes) for some great boulders. As far as we can see, a guy called Rocker seems to be the leader in posting information about and developing bouldering and climbing in Qingdao.


Sport climbing is available in Fushan [浮山]


Bouldering is avaliable at:

~ JinJiaLing Mountain [金家岭山](also known as Jinling mountian), close to Yinchuan 俄East Road [银川东路] past Tailing Road [泰岭路] - INFO
~ FengChao [蜂巢] (honey comb) - INFO
~ QuanXinHe [泉心河], which is far from town on the otherside of Laoshan [崂山] - INFO
~ ZhangJiaHe [张家河], again far from Qingdao town more in the direction of Yantai Peak [烟台顶] on Hong Shan[红山] - INFO
~ ChangLing [长岭], which is far from town on the otherside of Laoshan [崂山] - INFO



There were loads of boulders with plently of routes on JinJiaLing Mountain to play with:



Rocker's Bouldering Guide - HERE

Saturday 3 July 2010

NanJing [南京]

Nanjing! - a 2 hour train ride from Shanghai (leaves from both Shanghai Train Station上海火车站 and the very new and shiny Hongqiao railway station 上海虹桥火车站 - which is way out west near Hongqiao Airport on the newly opened section of Line 2.

Apart from seeing a bit of Nanjing [南京] we also learnt a valuable lesson: ALWAYS take your passport to stay in a Chinese Hotel (or hostel). They refuse every other form of identification (if you are a chinese citizen you can bring your ID card instead). Also if you had happened to be staying in a different hotel before they could call up to get them to confirm your details, but as we are resident in China that wasn't going to happen. So after sitting in a police station for 2hours to wait to find out that the police have no access to our information registered on the government database. So we had to head home that same day: on the brightside it's free to exchange your train ticket for a different day, just as long as you manage to find the right queue in the train station.

Before we left we managed to get into Zhongshan Mountain National Park [钟山风景名胜区] and see the Xiaoling Tomb [明孝陵景区]:







and Dr. SunYat-sen's Mausoleum [中山陵景区]:




It rained a lot, but atleast it made it bearable to walk around.

Which led to interesting rolled-up-trousers-shoe-free fashion.

Thursday 1 July 2010

More Baobei...

Apparently, Ke Xin [可馨] is now staying with a Baobei Ayi in Shanghai, until they manage to find a 'healing home' (foster family) to look after her and then hopefully an adopter.

According to some other volunteers I met the other day, one of the previous babies (about 3months old) who was born with a massive Teratoma (aparently bigger than her head)possibly a fetus in fetu, and had surgery to remove the growth at 15days old which resulted in her being sliced from hip to hip both at the front and back. She apparently has a waiting list of 200 people (mainly American: lots of Chinese orphans are adopted over to the States) waiting to adopt her. Despite this they think it will take well over a year until she is with her new adoptive parents due to the paperwork involved with the Chinese orphanage, the Chinese Government and the American Government.

I spent my Wednesday lunch time with a little boy (nearly 4 years old) who has some Gastro Intestinal problems and who throughly enjoyed hitting me with a little toy car.

Expo Benefits

So, in addition to the HUGE drive to clean up and green up Shanghai City the Expo has other benefits too. Until the end of the Expo its possible to avoid the normal list of official paperwork and form filling needed to transfer RMB into a foreign currency. Instead all that is needed is your passport and for the value of money that you have exchanged into foreign currency, this year, to be less than $50 000 USD in value. For values over 50 000USD you need to do something special - although I didn't bother finding out what that was on the account of not having 50 000 USD.

So, if you need to get your RMB out of China it's best to do it before this October.

Buying Train Tickets at Shanghai Railway Station

I tried buy train tickets today, before we had just bought them on the day from the ticket counter, but we are attempting some vague 'organisation' for this weekend's trip to Nanjing [南京].

I heard that 'there's a china eastern airline counter where you can buy train and airtickets inside this tomson centre along ZhangYang Road adjacent to Pucheng Road & PuMing Road' LIES! I went and asked the lady at the counter and she said 'No'.

Mind you this guy is a little more helpful on the whole topic of buying train tickets.

Anyhoo...I went off to the station itself and to the HUGE ticketing office [lian ge shou piao chu - 联合售票处] which lies at the corner of Meiyuan Road [梅园路] and Moling Road [秣陵路]. Which is just a big hall with a line of windows on one side and long queues of people trying to buy tickets, there is meant to be a queue for foreigners but I didn't immediately see one. I waited about 20mins in a queue to be confused by the lady behind the counter - i think each counter only sells specific types of tickets - there seemed to be particular queues for slow trains, rapids and expresses. So, I went to a different queue where I finally bought 2 tickets to Nanjing (cost 146RMB per single ticket, train takes 2 hrs to get there and leaves from Shanghai Hong Qiao Railway Station [上海虹桥火车站]). After all the bustle of the ticket hall I passed some funky ticket machines - which it turns out are much simpler to use to book your tickets and have a choice of an english menu (huzzah!). Although I must point out that I only saw the route for Nanjing (and all the stations in between there and Shanghai) on the screen and I didn't check if you could book other routes on it.

How to get to the magic ticket machines? Well from Line 1 metro station, head towards Exit 1

Then before you go up the stairs to exit, turn left down a small shopping alley

the entrance to the small shopping alley
walk to the end of the small shop lined corridor, then at the end face right and go up the stairs to ground level. Once at ground level (at least one of) the ticket vending machine hall(s) [自助售票处] is on the right.

Entrance to the ticket vending machine hall


Magic ticket machines with English