26 February 2012
Winter in the Tropics
Before classes started we took a trip to Kunming, Yunnan, which lived up to its reputation as China's "eternal spring city."
Surrounded on three sides by mountain ranges, Kunming has embraced the spirit of modernization and is beginning to look like many of China's other mega cities.
20 February 2012
Back in China
Well, we're back in China. While we're in the tropical south, the winter is cool and damp although with no central heat it feels more like cold and wet.
25 January 2012
Time Flies
We leave for China tomorrow, following a semester at home. It doesn't seem like we've been back in Houston for five months, but then as our five year pictures remind us, it doesn't seem like we've been married for 35 years either.
We started our family photo tradition in 1981 when Nils was 5 and Britta was 3.
And we've expanded from 4 to 10.
These figurines our Chinese students gave us are a reminder it's time to get up and move on.
And we've expanded from 4 to 10.
These figurines our Chinese students gave us are a reminder it's time to get up and move on.
12 January 2012
January Road Trip
The blogger has resumed after a semester break, hitting the road to Arkansas and North Carolina.
Bentonville, AR, corporate headquarters of Walmart.
And the newly opened Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art http://crystalbridges.org/. This tree sculpture is the entry to the museum.
22 August 2011
China Farewell
Our 7 week summer vacation is drawing to an end, as is our year of living in China. And we bloggers will be taking a rest.
Shanghai was a great epilogue to our China experience. As this city model indicates, it's a unique combination of river (the Huangpu), gleaming skyscrapers, and the grand buildings along the Bund.
On one side of the river is the modern China ...
13 August 2011
Sayonara
Japan has left quite an impression on us and we've thoroughly enjoyed our two and a half weeks here.
Hiroshima. Just over 66 years ago the world's first atomic bomb was dropped on this city. The Peace Memorial Park is a somber reminder, as the A-Bomb Domb testifies.
The museum has a powerful display of the city before and after the blast; this model shows the fireball and its devastating results.
Given the March 2011 tsunami and subsequent nuclear reactor problems, nuclear energy is a hot topic in Japan.
10 August 2011
Love Japan
Our holiday in Japan is absolutely wonderful; it's so different from China.
There's nothing like a stroll through Tokyo's Ginza, one of the most luxurious shopping districts in the world. The department stores have basement food emporiums like nothing we've seen, with all the bowing staff dressed in black uniforms.
Even the sake barrels look appealing, although we haven't quite acquired the taste.
We heard the sound down the street, followed the crowd, and ended up at a traditional drumming festival ...
... eventually joined by dancers of all ages.
Then to Kyoto, a city renowned for its temples; this is the Golden Pavilion (Kinkakuji), a Zen Buddhist temple founded in the late 1300's. That's real gold leaf.
And we marveled at beautiful dancers, the tea ceremony, and Ikebana (traditional flower arranging).
The phrase 'City of the Dead' came to mind when we saw this hillside Buddhist cemetary, where each headstone comes with containers for flowers and incense.
And you know you're in a great place when you discover long-hair dachsunds are one of the most popular breeds; one day we counted 8 of our furry friends and had our picture taken with Andy and Jiang.
04 August 2011
Beijing to Tokyo
Continuing our summer travels, we completed the most essential goal of Beijing tourism and arrived in Tokyo.
We made the trip from Shanghai to Beijing on the high-speed train in less than 5 hours, zipping along at over 300 km/h.
The day before we took this trip the Wenzhou high-speed train crash occurred, spurring strong public discussion of official mismanagement that seems on the right track.
Built for the 2008 Olympics, the Beijing National Stadium is a marvel -- even the light fixtures match the Bird's Nest.
And having visited the Great Wall, the essential Beijing pilgrimage, we can finally leave China.
Which we did, and arrived at the Lutheran Itchigaya Center guesthouse in Tokyo.
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