so are u also working for the govt part time? .... i contracted at DoJ and there are lots of jobs like that.... and the PhD? Still think u should finish that off if u can...... I hope that i have taught u guys to 'always only pick up something that u can put down'...lol..... and i still think a PhD is more useful than law school if u are going to teach or work for the govt......
also are u getting any exercises? play some pick up hockey at OU...? and use their gym.... u should do it when ur young....lol..... 'a sound mind in a sound body'....... the spartans said that?.... lol... and they all died out....lol......
i got u some jap tea again, but this time from Japan... and they have a tradition of categorizing teas, like the chinese,... and french wines .... This one is the bottom of the top level out of five...; like the french wines... grand crux..... there are five levels... and five in each level ..... so would be equivalent to a Lafitte or Rothschild.....; it's a little bitter, but what can i say... it's an acquired taste... like caviar.... lol.....
the chinese have six...... and of the green teas (the top of the six), 'dragon's well' is the most expensive and best for you .... jasmine is in the green category.... anyway, ... they have museums for these things....
also bought u a Hamont and Blaine....lol.... can u guess what that is?.....lol... gift buying is very popular in asia....(nee india) ... and there are some exotics......lol..... ostentatious and conspicuous consumption is very big here....lol....
btw fyi ate a lot of kaisaki in Japan... just expensive, man...... forget how much the Toronto one was a couple of years ago... but this was like C$300 to C$500 a person a meal.....; so..... as in 'ah soo...' ...lol.... japan.... not cheap......
and cars.... well... Porsche's, Audi's and Rolls Royce's are cheaper by the dozen here... the real exotic cars and there are many... are Lambos... Ferrari's... and the Aston Martin's, esp the DB6... Maserati's are also very popular.... and NEW is best.....
the best of the best... that's why people are so stressed..... here, making money....lol...... i might retire to China, some small town near Shenzhen or something like that.........lol....
anyway, u might like HK....lol... for a holiday.... it's great.... ah.... but no work......lol... since the standards are so high, there is really no room for us lesser mortals.......

Tuesday, August 17, 2010
Saturday, June 26, 2010
More.....Living in Hong Kong
Yes, I have been travelling quite a bit. I have not found any meaningful work as yet, and spend my days doing the 'house husband' thing. Although this is very different here because of the plenitude of labour and a servant mentality. But i manage to squeeze in chauffeur, cook and maid duties, together with being a father to the two kids, the 'son' cat, gizzmo, who is 15 years old and the 'daughter' cat, zoa (4). Gizzmo is aging well as can be given the medication and bills. They are, seriously, two of the family.....lol.......
Work is not easy to come by here because of a surplus of smart people, my lack of chinese and in-area experience. Hong Kong is truly a cosmopolitan place and like they said about New York.... if u can make it here, u can make it anywhere.......
Golf is $100 to $150 a pop... that's US...lol.... about HK$800 a round, so I play infrequently. Think I played three times since coming back. There is only one public course, run by the Jockey Club in conjunction with the HK govt. They have 3x18 holes. (HK has mostly privately funded public organizations (beneficent corporations? smile)...... it's the 'laisser faire' of the Brits... and lowers taxes...lol...). Then i played at the old Royal Hong Kong, which is in Fanling..... Think it's called the Fanling course now. Very pretty 3x18 again. Played the 'old' course. Pretty but murdered by mosquitoes... and dengue fever is prevalent here......lol.... and japanese encephalitis..... anyway, i survived.... As well, the temp in HK is hot and humid.... 30C plus.... and wet... even when it's not raining....lol..... so that makes the value even more expensive..... Then I played 'Discovery Bay', which is a private course accessible only by hydrofoil. They also have 3x18... costs me almost as much to take a cab, boat, bus on an island and then all the way back..... That was my first experience and i think i wrote about it on Cholly Chee...... spent more time eating and running between meals than playing.....hahahhahaha..
and all courses are anal about keeping time..... the official excuse is that there is a shortage of courses. I have not played enough to judge. But they have a 13x18 course in Shenzhen, China, called Mission Hills, on the other side of the past border..... and very difficult to get to.... I wonder if they are as strict on time....? I mean they have 13 courses.... and face is very important here, so apparently the rich guys get away with everything, and it's the 'regular members', who pay $1m or two to join and then the standard meal charges...... I suppose if its $1k a game, and if u play 5 times a week, then $1m ain't so much.......
Anyway, the days of $30 a round, grassy, 'links type farmers' fields' are over for me... all courses here are perfectly manicured and coiffured, liked the ladies that play on them.....lol..... and no more extra bacon and runny eggs for eats... they have the very best in chinese food and the players actually eat..... before , after the 9th and then again after the 18th... no drinking though, minuscule amounts of it are an offense here if one drives ... and if u have driven here, you'll see why... roads are tight and narrow, signs are obscure... u get the idea..... one basically takes one air conditioned room in the house, puts wheels and a motor in it... and commute.....lol....
Daily ablutions? I basically do my duties as mentioned above, squeezing in a walk and gym in the mornings.... gym is very popular because of the pollution here... it's air conditioned.... BTW did i say i gave up the convertible idea....lol.....; and walks have to be judiciously picked.... I basically walk up Mount Butler (read not the Peak) and down the south side of the island.... the trails there are much 'fresher' because of the airflow, which comes off the china sea and then up the south side and then down the north side into happy valley.... think i wrote about the 'dragons'...... in my cholly chee..... Kowloon, which is the peninsula that juts southwards into HK island is 'nine dragons'.....
(and I still haven't been to Vietnam......so cannot confirm that viet means peace..... but i remember our discussion..... googled it and it means 'south of the southern chinese peoples'.... the viet is the name given to 'southern chinese'... like generically all of the people that live in southern china and the chinese they speak is the viet language... and the nam is 'south of'....)
anyway, the story is that there are holes in the center of buildings, to 'let the dragons run up and down the south side of the island... leaving their nest ... that is Kowloon....' sort of like that building in downtown Montreal with the hole in the middle..... and I thought they had the idea in Canada first... oh... that's 'red rose tea'... lol......
Afternoons, I try to catch up on mail, nap and generally prep for the return of my dragon.......lol...... dragon lady is a generic term here...lol.... People work very long hours here... but like i said of HK.... it is very efficient.... but i am not so sure of its effectiveness....
My pet project.. I got braces for my teeth and am trying to find a solution to my cholesterol problem... because of the many extra stressors in HK, the medical community is much more concerned with marginally high levels of cholesterol... and i think half the population is on lipitol and the other half is on some other non chemical, read 'natural', remedy for clogging of the pipes......lol....
I should correct that... half the people of 'our generation' ....lol...... and trust me... i start CPP in 2013.....lol.... (the rest? they're dead....lol....)
well... u asked........ oh,.... and I am shooting 150, so that's about par... for the course....lol....
Work is not easy to come by here because of a surplus of smart people, my lack of chinese and in-area experience. Hong Kong is truly a cosmopolitan place and like they said about New York.... if u can make it here, u can make it anywhere.......
Golf is $100 to $150 a pop... that's US...lol.... about HK$800 a round, so I play infrequently. Think I played three times since coming back. There is only one public course, run by the Jockey Club in conjunction with the HK govt. They have 3x18 holes. (HK has mostly privately funded public organizations (beneficent corporations? smile)...... it's the 'laisser faire' of the Brits... and lowers taxes...lol...). Then i played at the old Royal Hong Kong, which is in Fanling..... Think it's called the Fanling course now. Very pretty 3x18 again. Played the 'old' course. Pretty but murdered by mosquitoes... and dengue fever is prevalent here......lol.... and japanese encephalitis..... anyway, i survived.... As well, the temp in HK is hot and humid.... 30C plus.... and wet... even when it's not raining....lol..... so that makes the value even more expensive..... Then I played 'Discovery Bay', which is a private course accessible only by hydrofoil. They also have 3x18... costs me almost as much to take a cab, boat, bus on an island and then all the way back..... That was my first experience and i think i wrote about it on Cholly Chee...... spent more time eating and running between meals than playing.....hahahhahaha..
and all courses are anal about keeping time..... the official excuse is that there is a shortage of courses. I have not played enough to judge. But they have a 13x18 course in Shenzhen, China, called Mission Hills, on the other side of the past border..... and very difficult to get to.... I wonder if they are as strict on time....? I mean they have 13 courses.... and face is very important here, so apparently the rich guys get away with everything, and it's the 'regular members', who pay $1m or two to join and then the standard meal charges...... I suppose if its $1k a game, and if u play 5 times a week, then $1m ain't so much.......
Anyway, the days of $30 a round, grassy, 'links type farmers' fields' are over for me... all courses here are perfectly manicured and coiffured, liked the ladies that play on them.....lol..... and no more extra bacon and runny eggs for eats... they have the very best in chinese food and the players actually eat..... before , after the 9th and then again after the 18th... no drinking though, minuscule amounts of it are an offense here if one drives ... and if u have driven here, you'll see why... roads are tight and narrow, signs are obscure... u get the idea..... one basically takes one air conditioned room in the house, puts wheels and a motor in it... and commute.....lol....
Daily ablutions? I basically do my duties as mentioned above, squeezing in a walk and gym in the mornings.... gym is very popular because of the pollution here... it's air conditioned.... BTW did i say i gave up the convertible idea....lol.....; and walks have to be judiciously picked.... I basically walk up Mount Butler (read not the Peak) and down the south side of the island.... the trails there are much 'fresher' because of the airflow, which comes off the china sea and then up the south side and then down the north side into happy valley.... think i wrote about the 'dragons'...... in my cholly chee..... Kowloon, which is the peninsula that juts southwards into HK island is 'nine dragons'.....
(and I still haven't been to Vietnam......so cannot confirm that viet means peace..... but i remember our discussion..... googled it and it means 'south of the southern chinese peoples'.... the viet is the name given to 'southern chinese'... like generically all of the people that live in southern china and the chinese they speak is the viet language... and the nam is 'south of'....)
anyway, the story is that there are holes in the center of buildings, to 'let the dragons run up and down the south side of the island... leaving their nest ... that is Kowloon....' sort of like that building in downtown Montreal with the hole in the middle..... and I thought they had the idea in Canada first... oh... that's 'red rose tea'... lol......
Afternoons, I try to catch up on mail, nap and generally prep for the return of my dragon.......lol...... dragon lady is a generic term here...lol.... People work very long hours here... but like i said of HK.... it is very efficient.... but i am not so sure of its effectiveness....
My pet project.. I got braces for my teeth and am trying to find a solution to my cholesterol problem... because of the many extra stressors in HK, the medical community is much more concerned with marginally high levels of cholesterol... and i think half the population is on lipitol and the other half is on some other non chemical, read 'natural', remedy for clogging of the pipes......lol....
I should correct that... half the people of 'our generation' ....lol...... and trust me... i start CPP in 2013.....lol.... (the rest? they're dead....lol....)
well... u asked........ oh,.... and I am shooting 150, so that's about par... for the course....lol....
Tuesday, June 22, 2010
Jasmine Place HKG restaurant... experience....
This restaurant is in the 2009 Micheline Guide, but not the 2010. it has the address wrong as jasmine house, rather than jardines house....lol... yes, i remember....
what we had, the suckling pig was 'interesting', the steamed minced pork was very nice, but sticky, the red rice was cute, the chicken with almonds is probably more work than it's worth, the broccoli was interesting in that it tasted different via usage of dried shrimps........; I would say, no smiley face in MG means not worth a visit..... and starred are probably overpriced and can get similar food content somewhere else.......
and if we had checked before hand the two dishes mentioned in the MG are 1) prawn on egg white custard with 'tai diao' rice liquor and 2) boneless chicken wing stuffed with glutinous rice. and at $200 pp for lunch I would say that was average price for central lunch costs.
what we had, the suckling pig was 'interesting', the steamed minced pork was very nice, but sticky, the red rice was cute, the chicken with almonds is probably more work than it's worth, the broccoli was interesting in that it tasted different via usage of dried shrimps........; I would say, no smiley face in MG means not worth a visit..... and starred are probably overpriced and can get similar food content somewhere else.......
and if we had checked before hand the two dishes mentioned in the MG are 1) prawn on egg white custard with 'tai diao' rice liquor and 2) boneless chicken wing stuffed with glutinous rice. and at $200 pp for lunch I would say that was average price for central lunch costs.
Tuesday, May 25, 2010
Singapore May 2010
Well, it has come and gone, and this trip I was there for a week in the tropical heat doing a walk about. I now know where the Sheraton Centre is and walked from there to the botanical gardens on the 2nd day. On the first day i walked down Scott's and went west to Tanglin rd? and then east on Orchard all the way to the palace (Istana) grounds, where they promptly stop me from entering....lol.... i believe that was the western part of the central core/civic area; and which i visited on the third day (Fort Canning Park and Museums) , but via MRT... I smartened up...lol.... and the 4th day, I went into the eastern Katong area via taxi and MRT ....
On my first trip we had stuck around Clarke and Boat quays and essential the downtown central district... so i think i just about covered most of the core of Singapore? One night this trip we actually went to Sentosa for a meal on the island at a Susur Lee restaurant. Had been following him since Toronto.
We never did make it to 'bintan islands', but i did find out from the s'pore tourist office that this is the resort town to visit for Singaporeans! ....lol.... it is like Bali to the Indonesians, Puket to the Thai....
Anyway, sorry i missed you guys... especially since i recalled on the route to the botanical gardens thru Tanglin/Orchard and Nassim Rds seem to ring a bell as to your address... on Nathan Rd.... but maybe that was where the taxi took us....lol... to nassim instead of nathan...
In any event, the next time will have to be lunch in little india? or chinatown. and arab town?.... (i did visit the Sri Senpaga Vinayagar Temple on Ceylon St, when i walked around in Katong. Impressive)
i bought an 'insight guides' step by step to s'pore, which was useful; but only to find that s'pore is not a place to take step by step.... it is way too HOT ...lol..... must have lost 5 lbs of water.....
Next time....
On my first trip we had stuck around Clarke and Boat quays and essential the downtown central district... so i think i just about covered most of the core of Singapore? One night this trip we actually went to Sentosa for a meal on the island at a Susur Lee restaurant. Had been following him since Toronto.
We never did make it to 'bintan islands', but i did find out from the s'pore tourist office that this is the resort town to visit for Singaporeans! ....lol.... it is like Bali to the Indonesians, Puket to the Thai....
Anyway, sorry i missed you guys... especially since i recalled on the route to the botanical gardens thru Tanglin/Orchard and Nassim Rds seem to ring a bell as to your address... on Nathan Rd.... but maybe that was where the taxi took us....lol... to nassim instead of nathan...
In any event, the next time will have to be lunch in little india? or chinatown. and arab town?.... (i did visit the Sri Senpaga Vinayagar Temple on Ceylon St, when i walked around in Katong. Impressive)
i bought an 'insight guides' step by step to s'pore, which was useful; but only to find that s'pore is not a place to take step by step.... it is way too HOT ...lol..... must have lost 5 lbs of water.....
Next time....
Tuesday, February 2, 2010
Living in Hong Kong
In Hong Kong, a former British colony, that is trying very hard to shed its skin, 'it is possible to live reasonably quite well, but it is very expensive to live very well'.
Because it is a former financial center, like New York and London, it still has the same expenditure profile as these 'rich' cities. And if one is working as a businessman, banker or otherwise financial person, one could do very well with a 15% tax rate. But there is indirect and secret taxations ... for the 'public good' and the public health. Don't get sick or even require routine medical attention... for every minute the medical professional spends with you, he could be making an extra buck with someone else.......
And it is so easy to spend money in Hong Kong, that in and of itself is another form of taxation. Buyer beware could not be more true than in the entrepreneurial spirit that is Hong Kong.
Don't get me wrong, there are still some gems to live for in this city, but generally speaking, it is a place where people come to make money, spend money and then move on... even in the interim, like holidays. As I have said here before, people come and 'work', and then split for the holidays ... to their home country or to a foreign destination to vacation ... like Bali or Phuket. Or to take in spas, like Japan, or eat, as in Singapore and KL .....
In this Hong Kong has not changed at all since 1997. It is still the smog filled consumeristic hell hole it always was, second only to Shanghai as an 'entrepot' for China..... 'Money talks, bullshit walks' ... to quote Danny De Vito in a movie, is gospel here....
As a kwai low, I would live here for the fixed exchange rate with the US$. But as a chinese, I am sure there are better places to live in China.....
Monday, January 4, 2010
Questions?
If there is anyone who wants to know, where, in the places I have been, you'd like to visit, or what to see and what you would like to eat, let me know and I shall respond.
Do not make it anon.
Japan
In one word, skiing in Hokkaido and traversing in Tokyo, is 'expensive'!
I can think of no reason to go to Japan for a holiday, that you cannot get somewhere else, except for the fact that you have someone you want to meet or some other reason to go.
As a tourist, a skier, a shopper, a gourmand, sightseer..... there is no reason to go to Japan as far as skiing in Hokkaido and tourist in Tokyo is concerned. Unless you are Japanese, have relatives or some other personal reason to go.
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