Well, here we are, New Year and all that. I hope it finds you all in
the best of health and raring to go!
January 2nd Another walk, not
so fast, my Achilles tendon still playing me up. Still, we live in quite a
scenic town really, so always worth a wander.
I also decided to take some photos of all our trees, just for
posterity. Who knows how long they will stay?
January 4th & 5th Still in pain, conflicting advice from various internet sites. Even
the doctor in the local hospital seems unsure and his advice contradicted
nearly all the web advice! More trees. I never cease to be amazed at the trees
here. How on earth did this one, for example, decide to grow sideways, and how
did it not fall over?
Most of my photos are chosen, for better or worse, by me. Just occasionally Huan will pipe up and say “Why don’t you take a picture of that?” Her choices are not so bad though.
January 6th And we’re off yet again. What do we find, a family in their garden. And a ‘bird’ in a tree.
What do they say “A bird in the hand is worth two in the bush?” Well, I
suppose, as this one is ‘my bird’, one is enough!
January 8th No pictures, they would have been unbecoming anyway. There I was,
crawling, or should I say lying, on the floor, looking for a chocolate that had
disappeared under the sofa. Suddenly, there was a strange ‘popping’ noise, and
a lot of pain in my chest. Once again we were off to the internet! It seems
like I may have cracked a rib, or bruised one, or strained the cartilage, who
knows? Again lots of conflicting advice, but the end result appeared to be that
nothing can be done, you just have to wait for it to heal normally. This
usually takes about 12 weeks!!
Nothing for a few days, the weather was miserable!
January 12th Weekly drive. Let’s go to Diaoluoshan
Park , just after Baoting,
we thought. Let’s get something in the blog besides just walking. Here’s me at
our first coffee stop.
This is ‘Daben Tourist
Information Centre’ where there is information and no coffee shop, but they do have a little
shop selling cold drinks, so cold coffee it was.
It’s a pleasant enough
place to stop; it’s at the Baoting junction on the Wuzhishan to Sanya road.
Some lovely views from the top, we think this might is ‘The Seven Fairy-Lady
Mountain’, but we’re not 100% sure
Here’s the old man having
just hobbled back down the stairs!
Inside the building, there
were a few local crafts on view, but no information about them.
And then we were back on
our way, here’s a screen shot from the dashcam.
When we arrived at our destination, we discovered that the road is
under maintenance, and has been for nearly a year. Now we would have like to
have walked up and showed you some more views, really we would. However, quite
a part from my dodgy ankle, the map showed us it was 18 kilometres to the top,
and then of course another 18 down. Not enough time left in the day for us old
fogeys. Here’s a screen shot of the road.
January 13th Back to walkies
again. Look what we found? Is Wuzhishan going green? A whole row of electric
buses, waiting for something. They were still there at the beginning of
February!
Living in Hainan
we see a lot of the Chinese equivalent of American “snowbirds”. They call them候鸟 – (Hòuniǎo), which means ‘migratory birds’ so near enough. Come October
every year the town starts filling up with ‘oldies’. They like to hang around
on street corners!
To be fair, some of them sound quite good, although there are a few
who ‘screech’ just like migratory birds. For some reason I can never get Huan
to join in.
January 14th and 15th Boring again, no walking, partly my ankle and partly my chest
getting worse.
January 16th Early morning rush hour. I wonder if they were taking themselves to
market? I also wonder how they know where they are going because often, there
is no farmer with them; especially going the other way, towards what I would
imagine is home.
‘We’ also decided that ‘I’
should go to the hospital. Having had a few nights of very bad sleep with pain
in my ribs I agreed. For the first time in my life, I think, I had a CT Scan.
As you can see I struggled
to get on the bed. Huan and I surmised that as the Chinese people seem to have
learned from the Americans and now sue hospitals for the least little thing,
the staff are reluctant to assist, especially if someone is in pain!
I guess in the UK I would have
had to wait for a scan. Here all I had to do was cough up £25 and join the
queue. We had to wait until after lunch for the results so here’s a picture of the hospital, at lunch time.
And a couple outside, spot
the Chinglish in the second one. This is surprising because the word ‘supply’
is spelt correctly more than once.
Once we were back inside and we had collected the results it was
back to the doctor. No fluid in my lungs, no sign of anything broken, all he
could do was suggest I take pain killers.
This was also the day that Huan came down with a bug, sneezing,
coughing etc.
Not to worry, it was my turn to cook. French for
a change, my version of ‘Duck Confit On A Bed Of Vegetables’. Tasted good!
There followed a couple of lazy days, Huan was still not so good and
my chest was still playing me up. We didn’t go out again until
January 18th Nice day for a
walk.
Too warm for this little
fellow to move at all. He does look sorry for himself doesn’t he?
Today’s lunch was green
vegetable filled Chinese bread. The stall owner told us that the other bread,
on the right, was ‘Chinese pizza’.
We still keep up with the
lottery here in Hainan . We can’t win as much
as you can in Europe , but we live in hope of
winning enough to move out of our apartment and into a villa!
We eat all kinds of food
here in China ,
but I have to say we haven’t tried these yet! Huan says she doesn’t know how to
cook them.
Of course, a walk wouldn’t
be a walk without saying hello to my friends!
Something else I haven’t
tried yet, sugar cane. Huan tells me you chew it and then spit it out. Well,
what’s the point then? I’ll just live with my memories of uprooting and eating
sugar beets when we were children at R.A.F. Waddington!
Still my turn to cook when
we got home, today’s ‘dish of the day’ was “Five Spice Roast Chicken Drumsticks
With Fried Potatoes”, and a mixed tossed salad, but you don’t need to see that!
January 19th Weekly drive time, let’s try again for a touristy thing, we thought.
Let’s try the ‘Stone
Forest ’. We did pass some
wonderful scenery on the way there; I’ve decided to show you the panorama.
Sad to say, we failed
again, the road to this spot is also under maintenance! We even ran into trucks
behind us when we tried to go home!
January 21st Bob’s cooking again – ‘Sticky Pork With Gingered Noodles and Chinese
Green Cabbage’ (The recipe called for Kale)
January 23rd I thought I had managed to get away with it but Huan’s ‘bug’ managed to
get me too. Not so good for my chest pains when I started sneezing and coughing
too! Still, on the basis that fresh air is good for you, out we went.
Have you ever seen Chinese
people practicing to go to the UK ?
Here they are practicing how to ‘pull the chain’!!
We’re not sure who this is;
he resides in front of the Fodelai Hotel. I had to crop the picture because of
something we don’t see too much of here, sexual graffiti!
January 24th Aaaaarrrgghh!! It’s back, the dreaded lurgy has returned. Every now and
then I develop fierce itchy red lumps on my palms and fierce itchy blisters on
my knuckles or tops of my hands. Doctors have tried to fix it in the past, so
now, for the most part, I just live with it. I stays a while, sometimes days or
weeks, then disappears for days, weeks, months, sometimes even years.
Bad hands, sore ribs,
Achilles problems! Perhaps I need a service! Ah well, I can still hobble. It’s worth it so see views like
this.
And who wouldn’t want to
see the local tradesmen at work. Here is one preparing ‘Betel Nuts’ for
selling. You can always try it, if of course you like mild narcotics and the
red teeth that go with them!
I wonder what this
gentleman would make of it?
Would you believe it, my
turn for cooking again! ‘Zucchini Rings With Mince Filling and a 'dip' of Greek
Yoghurt with Parsley’. (It’s supposed to be sour cream)
January 26th Walking again, a
beautiful day down by the riverside.
Now if you saw this sign,
you would probably think it has something to do with keeping people off the
grass. I’m afraid that, just like me, you’d be wrong. It is telling people to
use less salt in their food!
We sometimes see some
wildlife, today we found this little chap, who seems to have lost his tail at
sometime.
And in this hole we saw an
enormous rat! Unfortunately he was much faster than my camera, probably just as
well!
Climbing up from the river
was not so easy. I gave Huan a ‘bunk-up’ so she was fine. I’m a little too
heavy for her to pull me so my climbing out didn’t help all my various injuries
at all!
Some of the various modes of transport that we see. Here we have
four on a bike; I think the most we have ever seen here is six. The other
vehicle is like an OAP’s electric car, takes you shopping and keeps you dry in
the tropical rain. And no, I don’t need one yet!
Some of you may wonder what
shopping is like here. Well this is the meat, beef first and pork second.
This is the vegetables
This is the poultry
And this is the fruit, although we stay away from this one!
A few days off again, Huan’s bug giving me too many problems.
January 30th A cloudy day, here’s the view from our bedroom balcony, still nice
though, don’t you agree?
We managed a walk today. This little chap often speaks, he will
respond to your 你好 - Nǐ hǎo, with one of his own. I
think he was grumpy today, must have been the weather.
And what do you think this
is? Well, it protection against friends of our little chap above. Where we park
there is no problem, but if you park just a little bit lower, then your wing
mirrors end up covered with bird poo!
Arrived home, no electricity! Watching the maintenance people and
trying to keep my mouth shut! Eventually, they decided that there must be a
problem with the earthing between the building main breaker and the compound
breaker that feeds it. How surprising! They also decided it could not be fixed
until sometime tomorrow. At times like these I wish we lived in a villa where
at least I could use a standby generator. Not so easy in an apartment.
Stay tuned to this frequency for the rest of this month.
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