putting the knit in shizknitz

June 20, 2008

Trip Highlights!

Filed under: Uncategorized — Shiz @ 8:47 am

We’re home!  It’s been about 20 hrs since we’ve been home, and I’m still pretty jet lagged.  I wanted to write a quick summary on some of my most memorable moments from my trip before my senior moment kicks in and I forget everything.  I’ll post another link with photos later this weekend.

Pushing Personal Limits:  For those of you who know me, you know I love to push the limits personally and physically.  My trip there consisted of an hour from home to SFO, a 14 hr plane ride from SFO to HK (sitting next to a sweet elderly Philipino woman who had severe memory lapses), 5 hr layover in HK, 13 hr plane ride from HK to Johannesburg (travelling with N Koreans, more on that later).  Let’s just say the total trip was about 36 hrs, and I swear I was hallucinating at the end.  That was definitely pushing my personal limits in regards to plane travel, and I will never do it again unless I’m flying anything better than economy.

Travel Buddies:  the 86 yr old Philipino woman from SFO to HK was a great conversationalist until I realized she couldn’t remember what we talked about 10 minutes ago.  Still, I treated her and helped her as if I would my own 86 yr old grandma.  She insisted that I eat half of all of her food and tried to give me her feminine wipes “what do you do for your flower?”. 

My journey from HK to Joburg consisted of sitting in the back of the plane with about 50 roudy asian men, all whom seemed to know each other.  They were shorter in stature and their skin darker and my guess was that they were Vietnamese.  They didn’t seem to understand English, Cantonese or Mandarin that was being spoken on the plane.  Most didn’t seem to know basic flight etiquette (not standing during take off/landing, locking bathroom doors, turning off cell phone during flight).  Many were fascinated by the food and alcohol served on the plane.  Anyhow, my neighbor started talking to me at some point and because I had consumed 3 glasses of red wine in an attempt to sleeeep (this Cathay flight was horrible… my seat was extra small and the plane SMELLED) I chatted him up.  He mentions he is from Korea in broken english.  I get excited, since I had visited there last year.  I ask if he is from Seoul.  He says north of Seoul.  At this point, I can’t think of any other northern part of Seoul in South Korea.  This is where his neighbor says, “North Korea”.  I am stunned.  North Koreans on planes?  To make a long story short, this was their first plane ride and they had flown from Pyongyang to Beijing (which they referred to as the old name, Peking) to HK to Joburg then onto Windoek, the capital of Namibia to work (paint, he motioned).  We communicated basic things, such as age (he was 30 but in all honesty I would have guessed closer to 40), whether he was married (he was not), and then helped him pronounce words in the onboard shopping magazine.  Another part of great travel is to realize that no matter where you are from (how much more different can we be…..) we are all just basic humans with basic human needs.  I wish I could speak Korean to learn more about him, his lifestyle back home, etc.  I came home to find that N Korea and Namibia have had good diplomatic relations for several years.

Cari & Mark:  This year, I met up with Cari from work in Joburg (she flew in from Brazil) and then while in Cape Town, stayed with her friend Mark whom she had met at Pueblo Ingles in Spain last year (I’m now trying to figure out how to participate in this program timewise).  When you spend so much time together, sometimes all you have to have is a great sense of humor.  We had a wonderful time.

Tienshiao:  Of course, as a 3rd year in a row ritual, Tienshiao and I had an Asia journey (last year was S Korea, the year before Shanghai) and what else can I say?  We live together, we travel well together too.

Johannesburg:  We got there several days after the last of the publicly noted Xenophobic activity occured which almost cancelled the entire S Africa portion of our trip.  We didn’t spend much time in the city at all and only visited the Apartheid Museum.  We stayed at Mbizi Backpackers Lodge with Patrick which was fabulous - one of the best hostels I’ve stayed in so far.  Very homely atmosphere and Patrick really goes above and beyond for his visitors. 

Kruger National Park:  We used Bundu Safari and stayed at Thornhill Lodge.  I wasn’t sure what to expect, we had booked everything through a 3rd party, EcoAfrica (Edna there was FABULOUS) but can I just say, dude, these were spectacular accomodations (and yes, I just said dude).  I forgot I was backpacking.  The meals were great, service was great, quarters were fabulous, and all of the game drives were wonderful.  I actually preferred the evening night drives through the private reserves over the all-day drive through Kruger since we can really get up close and personal.  They pick you up and drop you off, the travel time is about 5-6 hrs from Joburg.

Cape Town:  Mark was so wonderful to us, letting us stay with him.  I love staying with locals because they know where to eat and what to do.  There was so much that we did - his apt had a view of Table Mountain which as he proclaimed in a british accent, “it looks different, everyday!”.  We went to the tops of the mountains to the beaches, drove to Cape Point, saw the Atlantic Coastline, had wine tasting, beer tasting, Malay food, visited an Afrikaans club (LOL - the guy I was making fun of ended up wanting to dance with me), ate all sorts of delicious food including Boerewors Rolls, sweet potato mash, cottage pie, visited the western cape area, watched movies (you must see God Must Be Frazy), oy!  There was so much that we saw, ate and did.  I think though the most mind boggling was the history of Apartheid, and how it only ended not too long ago.  It was interesting to hear about the perspectives from an Afrikaans (euro descent) who was finishing HS around that time.  I would have loved to hear more from someone coloured or black.  Unfortunately, a lot of township tours were closed because of the recent xenophobic activities.

Hong Kong: It was HOT and HUMID.  I think asian people overall do relatively well in these conditions, something about the genetic makeup allows them to not feel this torturous 95% humidity, however, I am not your typical asian.  I am not a size 2 and I SWEAT.  Even given these conditions, I still managed to have one heck of a time there - there is plenty to see, eat and shop for.  Besides, it was interesting to learn about another previously British colony.  We stayed in TST area which is a touristy area.  Everyone is trying to sell you anything (on our way out with all of our backpacks, one guy tried to sell me bath towels.  Please, do I look like I have a place for bath towels???).  We stayed in a hostel in Mirador Mansions to go with our backpacking theme (for a deluxe room through New Garden Hostel, I paid <400 USD) and also to save some $$ for shopping).  It was definitely not like staying at the Pen (in fact, we didn’t even have the right clothes to go eat at their High Tea) but it was definitely functional.  The room was about the size of our current master bedroom and the bathroom (sink, toilet) also incl the shower in the same room.  We visited some old classmates of mine from B school, did day trips to Macau, Shekou and Guangzhou (mainland China, BTW going through a tour is easier and cheaper than applying for a Visa in HK) and had custom shirts and suits made!  We ate some of the most delicious foods (I now have a thing for congee)… can’t wait to post photos of the food.  BTW when you walk the streets on a non-rainy day, avoid the dripping.  That’s the water from the AC!

I’ve slept like 6 hrs in the last few days and with the jetlag I probably have a bunch of typos and have forgotten some key things, I’ll fix them a little later when I’m much more sane :)

June 18, 2008

On our way home!

Filed under: Uncategorized — Shiz @ 10:57 pm



On our way home!

Originally uploaded by Mashimia

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Guangzhou China

Filed under: Uncategorized — Shiz @ 1:27 am



Guangzhou China

Originally uploaded by Mashimia

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June 15, 2008

Macau

Filed under: Uncategorized — Shiz @ 10:53 pm



Macau

Originally uploaded by Mashimia

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Din Tai Fung

Filed under: Uncategorized — Shiz @ 6:27 am



Din Tai Fung

Originally uploaded by Mashimia

We’ve had this now in Los Angeles, Shanghai and Hong Kong. Seems like we missed the one in Seoul.
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June 14, 2008

Hk culture museum

Filed under: Uncategorized — Shiz @ 11:47 pm



Hk culture museum

Originally uploaded by Mashimia

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June 12, 2008

Street food at its finest

Filed under: Uncategorized — Shiz @ 11:41 pm



Street food at its finest

Originally uploaded by Mashimia

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Hong Kong from the peak

Filed under: Uncategorized — Shiz @ 1:05 am



Hong Kong from the peak

Originally uploaded by Mashimia

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June 11, 2008

An authentic dim sum experience

Filed under: Uncategorized — Shiz @ 10:06 pm



An authentic dim sum experience

Originally uploaded by Mashimia

Its complete madness. Makes monterey park look like disneyland.
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Kowloon Night Market

Filed under: Uncategorized — Shiz @ 8:07 am



Kowloon Night Market

Originally uploaded by Mashimia

We stopped for some spicy crab!
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June 9, 2008

Our hostel in Hong Kong

Filed under: Uncategorized — Shiz @ 9:38 pm



Our hostel in Hong Kong

Originally uploaded by Mashimia

The room is smaller than the room I had on my cruise last summer. The bathroom is a combo toilet and shower, so I can shower and something else at the same time.
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June 8, 2008

Cake!

Filed under: Uncategorized — Shiz @ 7:03 am



Cake!

Originally uploaded by Mashimia

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May 25, 2008

Leaving On A Jet Plane…

Filed under: Uncategorized — Shiz @ 11:05 pm

The events that started last week had really put a  worry on my travel plans.  I prayed that my parents wouldn’t see the news, but they did, and called me this morning but thankfully things have started to die down a little bit.  Of course, the news articles all mention “foreigners” which my parents took for a literal meaning whereas it is really referring to Africans from other African nations and are immigrants to South Africa.  I think all is okay for Cari and I to continue our journey altho I do have a contingency plan or two in my back pocket, in case. 

I’m currently packing and I think back to the morning of my packing before my Europe trip last year and am quite impressed by my growth in ability to travel (relatively) light.  Since its gotta fit back into that backpack and I have to carry it, it’ll have to be light.  I’m pretty good about flying long hours (my past trips where I would go and come back, only to go to Asia a few days later)… but this is the first time I’m doing a double whammy.  1 hr from here to SFO, 14 hrs from SFO to HK, 5 hr layover HK, 13 hrs from HK to JHB.  That is all by myself to boot.  I’m ripping as many Korean dramas as I can onto my Ipod as we speak.  woot!

May 10, 2008

Countdown!

Filed under: Uncategorized — Shiz @ 4:39 pm

Almost 2 weeks until my next big trip, where I will be rendez-vous’ing with Cari in Johannesburg, South Africa to kick things off!  In preparation, I had to get a series of vaccinations which ranged from shots to oral medications.  I felt like a hypochondriac with my 5 prescriptions and sore arm, but I guess its better to be safe than sorry.  I started my series of Typhoid pills yesterday, which need to be refrigerated due to live bacteria cultures (I call them “my baby typhoids”).  The baby typhoids have decided to revolt, and I woke up with a horrible migraine this morning.  Ugh.  Not looking forward to those Malaria pills….

April 29, 2008

Go on now go! Walk out the door…

Filed under: Uncategorized — Shiz @ 7:08 pm

(I came here to post when I realized I don’t remember sending my previous post.. LOL.)

I think I was in first grade.  My parents religiously took me to Japanese school every Saturday, all the way to Minneapolis.  The drive was about 60 min one way, which is an eternity at that age.  I despised the fact that I missed Saturday morning cartoons as well as the homework I had to do from J school.  The fun part was all of the people, my parents had friends and I made friends as well.  Most of the people who came to the school were kids of Japanese business people stationed in the Twin Cities area, back then, when it was a huge area of commerce with Japanese businesses during the Japanese economic boom era.

I had a pretty large group of “friends” (in retrospect, I guess they were just my classmates) but I had one “best friend” (yes, back in those days, the term BFF did not exist).  Well one day, she and her family packed their bags and moved back to Japan.  I don’t really remember her, or even her name now, but what I do remember is the pain.  I cried the entire drive back home, I kept telling my parents she was my best friend, and that I had lost my best friend.  Typical of my cynical parents, they responded, “how do you know she was your best friend?”

Loss can be sad.  It’s much harder for the people that get left behind than the one who does the leaving.  I, for one, have typically been the one to leave.  It’s been awhile since I’ve been the one to be left behind.

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