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Monday 14 December 2020

Forgetful Oldies, Monthly Needle, Bureaucracy, The (Sad) Lonely Goatherd.

December 8th What a good start to the day! First, when we arrived at the car I had to go back upstairs and collect the SD cards and the emergency torch which I had repaired. Off we went then to our area police station where I dropped Huan off and proceeded to do a circular tour before picking her up again. There she was waiting at the side of the road with today’s second senile moment, “Could I go home and get her passport photographs” as she had forgotten them. Off I went, delivered the photos to her and went off on another circular tour. This time when I collected her, she told me it had been a wasted visit. She was trying to renew her temporary Hainan ID but the machine wouldn’t allow the police to do it, we’d have to wait a few days. Ah well, fingers crossed for next time.

As a result of the faffing around we caused ourselves we were a little late setting off for Haikou for my monthly dose of hormones. There was a plus side though, the weather in Haikou was nice enough for us to sit outside and eat our lunch.





Don’t worry, the birds were not for eating and we didn’t eat any of those fish swimming around. We had seventeen dumplings each, not sure about the significance of the number, if any. Huan had vegetable and I had meat, not bad at all. Here are mine cooking.


While we were waiting I was talking to the birds, who could talk back and also to the fish who, while they could not talk back, were tame enough to come and look at me, and in one tank, nibble my fingers. This one caught my attention though, it’s a Flowerhorn cichlid, and you won’t be surprised to learn that it’s not a ‘natural’ fish. It was bred in Malaysia as an aquarium fish but exists now in the wild too.



Huan insisted I take this next one too, the restaurant staff told us that it couldn’t swim! Huan was rather amused by a fish that couldn’t swim; I suspect it may have been getting on in years.

After lunch we did our monthly Haikou shop, I was a little disappointed at the lack of Christmas stuff. They did have a whole turkey and large turkey breasts but we decided they were not for us. Still, we stocked up on cheese and butter, Italian spices etc.

From there we went to the hospital, our reason for the trip. We then proceeded to make more mistakes! Huan booked my appointment, but when we got upstairs and read the paper it was with the wrong doctor. The cash desk on the second floor wouldn’t change it so we had to go back to the first floor, do the necessary and then go back to join the doctor’s queue again. No worries there, Dr. Cheng knows us well and also likes to practice his English. Prescription in hand, and remembering last month, we headed off to the first floor dispensary that within a minute had my needle ready. They then did a double take and told us we couldn’t take it from there we had to take it from the second floor dispensary. Off we went again, picked up the needle and for the last time returned to the first floor, to the ‘infusion room’. There was a new nurse there, very happy to see a foreigner, my nerves got worse! I didn’t see what she did because, as usual, I had my ears and eyes covered, but I can tell you it hurt. This was probably the worst one yet. Huan told me the nurse said she had to do it the way she did to get through the fat!

I was very happy to escape and get back in the car I can tell you! Due to our late start and our problems in the hospital we had to have dinner on the highway on the way home. At least that was OK. We had a chat with a dog, a red copper Siberian husky. I should say, I had a chat with the dog, Huan chatted to his owner who had a caravan. She had to find out how much it was of course. I don’t think I’d fancy towing a caravan again, I haven’t done it since I was in the army, and even then, it was a very small caravan that my boss only slept in.

Once home we were both very lazy, although I did upload all the dashcam videos and rename them. I’ve given up trying to consolidate them; I need more computing power to do that.

December 9th After a lousy night’s sleep Huan went off to hulusi school and I eventually made myself get dressed and go to the hospital. Today’s therapy was more of the same, only different. As you can see, the electro pads were placed differently. It was quite amusing watching my fingers do a merry dance now and then.

Our weather was not as good as Haikou’s but it was nice enough for me to have a walk around the town. I do enjoy going through the market even if I’m not buying. Today though, I bought chicken livers with their associated hearts, I’ll cook them tomorrow and shrimps sans clothes, I’ll cook them for the weekend.

Nothing else to report really, weekly shopping and an after dinner walk was all we did today.

December 10th No doctor’s visit today, Dr. Li has gone to Haikou so she told me to go straight to the treatment room where I had a repeat of yesterday. I can stretch my arm without pain now so something must be working.

Next up was the area police station to renew Huan’s temporary Hainan Hukou. We were under the impression that her new card would be valid from the expiration date of the old one for another year, meaning I would be able to get a visa for a year. Once again we were wrong! Her new card is valid for a year from today which means my next visa will again be only eleven months. I’ll still have to pay for a year of course. Next year we will try and renew Huan’s card nearer the date of my visa expiration. Don’t you just love bureaucracy?

After lunch I decided to cook dinner early, these were the ingredients. In the bowl are the chicken livers and chicken hearts, the rest you can see.

Laziness set in then and apart from baths, we did nothing else for the remainder of the day. I did try and find a way to use the karaoke machine with the laptop, to no avail and I couldn’t find a way to convert the files either. If the committee insist on me performing for the New Year show I thought I could use the karaoke if I’m still not allowed to play the guitar.

There was one other thing, household maintenance, as in checking all the batteries we have. The ones in the emergency torch in the car exploded so I decided an excel file was needed listing all the batteries, their locations, types and replacement dates. Half done today, I ran out of batteries!

December 11th Today’s doctor was Dr. Gao, gave me the usual small massage. I suggested to her that I have a rest from the electro-convulsive therapy for a week or two and see how it goes. She was not so sure and thought I should still go two or three times a week. However, when I showed her that I could pull the door with her holding it with her foot, and not experience any pain, she relented. That was my morning apart from buying more batteries and almost completing the job. All that’s left now though is watch batteries and as neither of us wear watched there’s no rush for them.

After lunch my first job was escort duty for the ladies who were off to their hulusi class. Taking selfies of more than one person is not my #1 skill, Huan chose this one, I think because I am not in it. That’s what I told her anyway.


From there it was off to the post office for me, we’d had a call to say there was a letter for us. It’s easy to find our letters in the sorting office even though we don’t have a dedicated cubby hole.

The gentleman in the office handed me a letter from Aviva, posted sometime around 11th November, and asked if it was mine. I replied that it was. He then handed me another, posted on 13th November with the same question so I said yes again. Lo and behold he then handed me a third one, this one posted on 7th July which I agreed was also mine.

The Aviva letter brought bad news; my fund has gone down in value by 7.8% since last year. In fact the projected value on my pension date is less than last year’s value! I guess the excuse will be 2020. Next year’s excuse will probably be Brexit!

Both the other letters were cards, both from the same brother and his wife, one anniversary card and one Christmas card. The Christmas card’s on time, the anniversary card is five months late. You can see why I’ve asked the family not to bother sending cards can’t you?

Anyway, I came straight back from the post office, Huan had told me the electricity will be going off tomorrow from half past seven in the morning until four in the afternoon. That meant I had to cook the weekend’s stew today, most of it anyway. The shrimps, in the red bag, will be popped in when we heat it up again tomorrow evening.


December 12th Well they’re punctual, the power went off at twenty seven minutes past seven. My plan then was just to rot away in the house all morning and maybe go out in the afternoon but Huan reminded me about the Saturday market. Arriving there it seemed everybody and his dog was out this morning, no doubt due to the electricity being off in most of Wuzhishan. The market also seemed larger, stretching out at both ends. However, that was because the authorities, 城管, Chéngguǎn, a.k.a ‘Urban Management, had stopped people setting up in the middle of the road. It certainly made navigating my way through the throng much easier. Not much to show you today, we’ll start off with small furry things. They are mushrooms but how you cook them, and whether or not you have to ‘shave’ them first, I couldn’t say.


A little further on was another furry creature, this one advertising a furniture sale. I wouldn’t fancy wearing that suit in this climate!


It’s always nice to be remembered isn’t it? Someone stopped me in the market and asked where my ‘boss’ was, obviously knows who wears the trousers in our house. Someone else who remembered me was yet another furry friend. I wonder if he knows he has a pink tail.


When Huan came home for lunch she told me that the electricity would now not be back on until six in the evening. That meant another walk had to be taken in the afternoon so I headed off downriver. From a distance I spotted this sad looking goat, it even allowed me to stroke it. Its belly was heaving a bit so I wondered if it was having babies and promised myself to look up on Google whether goats stay away from the herd when giving birth.

Before too long I came across the rest of the family, took far too many photos of them, but I’ll share with you the ‘main column’ and the ‘rearguard.



Much further on here’s a couple of the babies, one peeping at me through the leaves and the other having another lie down. I had seen that one lying down a lot on the way but I couldn’t see anything wrong with it.



They may have been heading for this place but I couldn’t stay to see, or follow them any further, the rain was starting.


I retraced my steps and reached the ‘sad’ goat that by now was lying down and looking much the worse for wear. In the UK I would have phone the local vet for advice but I had no idea how to do that here or even if we have a vet in Wuzhishan that would deign to come out and take a look. Some passers by chatted to me but they had no ideas either. By this time it was fairly clear that the poor little creature was dying, from what I don’t know. I stayed with it, stroking its head, giving it a bit of love as it went. I have no idea if I was helping or not. Two of the passers by came back again and asked me if it had died to which I replied, ‘with a tear in my eye’, yes it had. They then walked the other side of the wall so as not to pass it. Obviously I did not take any photos this time round.

My timing wasn’t bad for returning home and I joined the security team praying to the local transformer altar. Punctuality was the word yet again and the power was back on a few minutes before six.

That elicited a big sigh of relief from me, I didn’t fancy walking upstairs a second time today. This morning I counted the steps, there are 114 of them, too many for a doddery old git! Apart from my Chinese revision I had a lazy evening again.

December 13th Sunday again so Huan’s off for her second weekend day of keyboard practice. I say second, but yesterday they had no power so they practiced hulusi instead. I stayed in and did a huge pile of admin work. We have to go to Haikou again on Tuesday, this time to visit the visa office. Remembering that the lady last year had seemed to think we lived in hotels, I printed a whole lot of documentation, just in case they need it. It’s a long list, new passport, old passport, all my visas since 2007, Huan’s Hukou and temporary Hainan Hukou, both our marriage books, three pages of photographs from 2004 to now, all our property books and all my bank books from 2007. Huan tells me that I will still only get eleven months but hopefully they’ll put all this stuff in my file for future reference.

I didn’t finish until after lunch. My next job was to find out why the printer is giving us an error message all the time, ‘nearly out of ink’, when we have a CISS installed. That’s a Continuous Ink Supply System just in case you wondered. I failed, for now. Being too lazy yesterday evening I also had to bring the Blog up to date.

Once Huan was home and we had finished our second day of shrimp stew it was time for an evening walk, much needed for me, the first walk today. She had an ulterior motive though, we had to pass by both of her banks! Along the way I spotted yet another little friend, Huan insisted that we take a photo of him begging, which I did once he stopped trying to mate with my leg!

December 14th Another (almost) lazy morning for me, I did do a bit of work, scanning medical bills and electric bills then filing them. Huan was at choir practice today.

After lunch, Huan was out, at hulusi practice, so I carried out my escort duty again to be sure they arrived safely! My route today was anticlockwise around the river with a short detour to see how the new ‘fishing restaurants’ are coming on. They do have a new sign. Huan says the Chinese is “Tea Story” and the small characters mean “farm”. As far as we can see there is no tea there whatsoever!


And what’s behind the sign? Why, the fishing lakes of course, plus a few restaurants and what appears to be a small guest house.



A little further on I spotted what seemed to be a rather large bee in the sky, with a long tail. As I got nearer I was able to take a few photographs of it and, the ‘flyer’ let me take his photo too. He was rather puzzled that I didn’t know how to fly a kite. I never really knew, even as a child.



Next up is a butterfly that has forgotten what plants and flowers look like, it just kept doing circuits and bumps all around this muddy patch.


And let’s finish the week with another one of my four legged furry friends. This one just wanted to sit under my legs when I had a rest on the steps outside the shop.


That’s it for this week, no shopping yet as we’re off to Haikou again tomorrow. Take care all of you and stay safe from the big bad bug!

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