Sunday 17 January 2010

Dragon's Back








The first weekend without my family here was spent trying to catch up on things I had completely neglected for a few weeks like tidying and cleaning! However, on Sunday, we decided to take advantage of the beautiful weather (18 degrees and cloudless and sunny) and try one of the most popular hikes in Hong Kong, the Dragon’s Back Trail. Hiking is a really popular activity in Hong Kong especially from about November onwards when the weather gets cooler and the humidity drops. While all in England move indoors, Hong Kong emerges outdoors after months in the air conditioned buildings during the humid summer months. There are four popular trails which seem to span most of Hong Kong some on the island and some in the New Territories an some seem to span the entirety of the city! It is an incredible way to see the island and take in the fantastic views of Hong Kong. While the entire trail would take days to complete, they are all broken down in to more family friendly sections, which people can easily do in a day. The Dragon’s Back is a 5 mile part of the Hong Kong trail, which took us up across hills on the south side of Hong Kong Island overlooking the bays and mansions of Shek O on the south of Hong Kong Island and then headed down in to Big Wave Bay for lunch! It took us two hours and we saw some incredible scenery along the way. There was a perfect breeze, the sun shone, and there was a mixture of flat and up and down hills.

It is one of the best things about Hong Kong, that in 20 minutes you can move from endless skyscrapers and crowds in to woods and country parks and beaches, and because the walk takes you across the top of the hills ‘the dragon’s back’ you can see incredible views of the island from both sides of the path for much of the route. We came back determined to go hiking and explore more of these hiking routes!

Saturday 16 January 2010

The Folan's in Hong Kong!

Having Mummy, Tim and Michael fly back with me was such a brilliant way to end my time at home and it was wonderful to be able to show them the place I am living and teaching this year.

What did we do, in a nutshell, we went out for fantastic meals,



we went for afternoon tea!






we went to the weekly Wednesday races at Happy Valley,







they met a few of my friends from the programme,



We went to Hong Kong Park




We saw the Light Show






We went to the beautiful Chi Lin Nunnery in Kowloon and had a wonderful vegetarian feast and wandered around the stunning gardens.







On my birthday, we went up to the Peak after school and did the circular walk high up above the lights and the buildings of Hong Kong. It was fantastic timing as the light was fading and the lights were coming on across the city skyline so when we arrived back and on our way down the view of Hong Kong was all lit up. We went for cocktails in a beautiful restaurant which looked like a log cabin with fairy lights over it.









It was such a lovely way to spend my birthday although their entire trip was such a treat that every day having them here was equally nice! The entire ten days was asplit between sleeping, school and being with my family - exhausting but competely worth it.

It was really sad when they left having got used to having them here five minutes walk away from my flat however, it was a wonderful to be able to have them come over and visit.

Book your trips to Hong Kong please...! I want you all to be here with me!!

Christmas at Home

Here are a few photos from when I went back to beautiful snowy Farnham.

This was a walk I did with Mum the day I arrived home.





Christmas Day!





When the sun came out!






After a whirlwind of four months, as Christmas approached and the lights went up and the Christmas songs started playing, I could not think of anywhere I wanted to be more than home. Arriving back to a snowy Christmas Eve in London, I was met by Mum, Tim and Michael who had all come out ridiculously early to meet me!

Christmas is a wonderful time to be home aside from the obvious, becuase everyone at this time, has some time off and so I was able to see lots of people for much longer than I would have at any other point. To sum up my week, my days were spent eating and drinking! seeing family, catching up with friends, playing board games, watching films, going on freezing, country walks with Finlay!, baking, sleeping and more eating!

For those of you I managed to see, it was just such a treat. I enjoyed hearing everyone's news and I was so sad to have missed being there at the time for it all. I am so aware of how useless I can be at getting in touch and it's hard to keep in regular contact sometimes. However, having caught up on people's news, I am now determined this year to keep in touch much more regularly. There, I have written it now so I must keep my promise!

For those of you, I did not get a chance to see, it will just be even lovelier when we do meet however, judging by the time, we will need days and days free to catch up so be prepared! haha!

I had the most wonderful Christmas at home and I was so sad to be leaving everyone and going back to being so far away again after just having got used to being able to call people anytime, but I was also so happy to see my closest friends and family well and happy in what they were doing. I wish you all the very very best in exams, jobs, finding flats, law courses, applications, essays, marathon training! and I promise to be there more to hear how it is all going at the time. I am so lucky to have you all and miss you all already and want to hear all of your news as often as you can spare the time to tell it.

Luckily, after having such home comforts at my own bed, a lovely heated house, driving, home cooking, seeing friends and family daily, english tv channels etc, a piece of home, in the form of my family, (as well as as much pasta, cereal and tea that I could stuff in to anyone's case I saw!) flew back to Hong Kong with me to stay for ten days..

Happy New Year!

I am somewhat embarassed to be writing this post considering my last one was almost 2 months ago. I have completely neglected this blog and Christmas sort of took over and now here we are in mid January. How did this happen?! The ngelect is certianly not for want of things to write or inspiration though and I have lots of photos of the Christmas season both in Hong Kong and home. How to condense the last month or two in to one post so everyone need not read masses and masses of old information...I will give it a go!

The weeks running up to Christmas were busy since we worked right up until 21st December, some CNETs were working right up to and including Christmas Eve. But, we did get to do lots of fun stuff during this time.




As you can see, the weather stayed warm here, I mean t - shirt warm right up basically until I left, which was bizarre but I am ashamed to say it was actually really nice! I may be abandoning my love of the freezing cold winters for the somewhat milder version in Hong Kong!





These pictures of Admiralty were taken on December 22nd which was actually kind of perfect considering I wanted to take some photos of where I lived home!

Christmas at School

Indeed, my school had its annual school picnic on December 21st, in Yuen Long Park, and although it was cold in the morning, by the mid morning, the children were buying ice creams and we were playing big class games all across the park! It was quite a sight to behold. Nearly 900 students and accompanying parents for the younger years and the entirety of the school staff (janitors included) descended on the park. And on top of which we were not the only school there! Even though it could not have been a less Christmas like event, it was a great way to end the term to see all the teachers joining in on games with their students and just having a great time after nearly 4 months of school without a holiday.



At school, I decided to do a Christmas advent calendar board and count down the school days in December until they broke up for Christmas whilst spelling out Merry Christmas (which they got on the very first day so absolutely no suspense there!) and giving them a corresponding English word for each of the letters (a dodgy y for yuletide...!) Moreover, in memory of that great GHS decorate your classroom tradition, I decided to decorate and wrap the pillars of our covered playground up like a present with wrapping paper and ribbons. Although it looked Christmassy, the children I think thought I was insane by the end of the month, when each morning, I would arrive at school and see that once again, more of the numbers of my advent calender board had fallen/been taken off and the wind/rain/bad decorating skills had meant that the paper was once again blowing across the ground or was flapping wildly in the wind. I must mention here our convered playground is convered only by a roof and 2 walls which does sometimes seem to form some sort of wind tunnel. I would make big sad, ovedrdramatic gestures which bless them they took quite seriously and were constantly coming over to help me and sometimes try and fix it before I saw!! The school still have zero supply of blu tack left after this idea.





I also did lots of Christmas games, assemblys, posters etc since it is not such a big holiday at all compared with in England which, for someone like me, who absolutely lives for Christmas, was a hard concept to get thier head around but it was so much fun in a different way. Getting to teach them things that we take as second nature e.g. about Rudolph the red nosed reindeer!



Chatteris Christmas Party!



Chatteris however, were full to the brim with Christmas spirit and put on a fantastic Christmas party for us which was so nice and so appreciated! Santa (of course!) was there to give us all presents and we had lots of food, crackers, mince pies, Christmas carols etc. It was a really nice evening and so nice to have everyone together before people started jetting off for their Christmas break. This is me and self appointed 'Auntie' Grace, the head of the Chatteris Foundation! and some of the amazing project managers who just look after us so well while we are out here!




I also made my very first gingerbread house which was typically a total mess but it was lots of fun and amazing to see where having more patience, care and a slightly more gentle touch can get you..











My final weekend, I also went to see the Big Buddha again on Lantau Island. It was MUCH cooler this time (the first time I went was in August) and amazing to see. We had a walk round, went to the veggie restaurant there, and also went on a wander around the paths surrounding the Buddha. There are some incredible walks to do on this island and also some really amazing scenery. If anyone is coming to Hong Kong, it really is worth a visit.












Rosie and I also went to see the Christmas lights on some of the buildings down by the harbour during the daily Symphony of Lights show. It is a light show displaying a hige amount of strobe and flashing lights put to music. I'm not really selling it to you but what it amazing is the sheer scale and the panaramic view that going down to the harbour to watch the show, affords you. It is quite impossible to capture the scale and the size of the scene on a camera and at Christmas, there were even more lights than normal. Every evening, quite a crowd of people gather by the harbour to watch the show and the evening we went there were hundreds there to see the Christmas display. It was funny to think about the last time I saw the light show, on our second night in Hong Kong. Although it was about four months ago, it seems like so much longer considering that we were now all in flats, and had completed a term of school. It's so easy to forget how quick the time has passed and how short a time it has actually been since we were here watching it competely jetlagged and disorientated and having barely spoken to each other! Here are some of my not very good photos but maybe it will give you a slight idea!






We also went for a fantastic Christmas dinner in a restaurant in Soho complete (for most!) with turkey and sprouts etc since lots of people did not go home for Christmas, it was a good chance to have some British style Christmas food, for some a chance to have some cultural exchange (Rosie was introduced to the British Christmas cracker!) and for others, a flavour of what was to come...!







After a really unconventional and hectic but really enjoyable lead up to Christmas, I finally left for London on the night of 23rd December and arrived home to the FREEZING cold Christmas Eve in London!