Monday, August 30, 2010

Dancer in Bei Hai Park


Below is a link to a video I shot of a dancer and musicians in Bei Hai Park, my favorite Beijing park so far. After I uploaded this to YouTube, I realized there are lots of similar videos posted there so take a look at those too.

These are amateurs. They aren't asking for money. You will see lots of groups of dancers, musicians, martial "artists," etc. all getting together to do there stuff in public in the parks on the weekends.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gDx0ZzsnyhY

A Day in My Life


So, here is a typical day staying at the Pullman hotel in Beijing and working at our factory. After I've gotten over jetlag with the help of melatonin, I get up about 6:30 or so. I go down to the pool on the bottom floor and swim laps for about a half an hour. Go back upstairs, take a shower, check my messages and see if there is time to get a few emails in before breakfast [it is about 4PM in CA so I can work with people in San Jose (SJ) at that time.] I go down to the breakfast buffet. They have a good selection of European and Asian food for breakfast and pretty good coffee. Sometimes I even run into collegues from Sweden or the US who I didn't know were going to be there; we all use the same hotel because it is close to the factory. I go back upstairs and pack my bag for work.


The walk to the factory takes about 15 minutes. Even at 9AM it's already hot and I'm sweating by the time I get there. There are food carts selling a sort of flat bread with onions that looks pretty good, but I am always way too full from breakfast to try any. The Business Development Area (BDA) is a very large industrial park outside of downtown Beijing (BJ). This is where I work. If you know what a modern industrial park in Europe looks like, that's pretty close.


It's nice to come to a place in another country where you already know people. I know a lot of people in the factory; managers and engineers, but there are always new faces. We have some "black taxis" that hang out in the front of the building in case we need them. I know one of the drivers. Jon always has a warm greeting and a smile though he doesn't speak much English. He was the one who picked me up at the airport when I arrived this trip. I told him I didn't have any Chinese money yet, but I'd pay him the next day. "Mei guanxi," he said, "don't worry about it."


I set up my laptop at the "guest" desk and get to work. I can plug into the company network and access my files just like I'm in SJ, or Stockholm, for that matter. I work on my projects with other team members, have meetings, go to the factory floor and work on manufacturing setups and such. [Sorry I can post pictures here of the factory, but if anyone's interested, I can show you some offline]


About 11:45 I go to lunch in the cafeteria with one of the engineers. The food isn't bad, not great, but edible. All the factory workers get a lunch ticket for every shift they work. Sometimes we go out to eat and there are some great restaurants - which you wouldn't expect it in the BDA.


So, the rest of the day is work until about 5. At some time along there, Sweden comes on line and I sometimes work with colleagues there via email and the network. We also have an in-house IM system that allows voice and texting. I walk back to the hotel. Sometimes I eat in the hotel or take the cab ride into town and do some exploring, get something to eat, then back to the hotel. TV is pretty limited in BJ, but sometimes I have DVDs I can buy cheap there.


On this most recent trip, a colleague from Sweden showed me a shopping area with lots of restaurants right in the BDA. Definitely no tourists there! It was extremely hot and humid when we were there, but we had Hunnan food (everything has red chilis in it) anyway. The was a huge supermarket there and even a massage place. He showed me his favorite Halal restaurant there, too.


Well, that's a typical work day in Beijing.


Sunday, August 29, 2010

Dragonfly


The first weekend I was in Beijing I went with some new friends to a small village in the mountains. Here's a link to the slideshow. http://picasaweb.google.com/104196247008740226494/Cuandixia?authkey=Gv1sRgCIvCwfCP5ZGgoQE&feat=directlink

The second day we hiked up Double Dragon Gorge. Although we didn't see any dragons, we did see these beautiful iridescent blue dragonflies with black wings. Dragonfly is "qingting" in Mandarin. That word appears in various sayings:

Qingting dian shui: The dragonfly touches the water lightly (a metaphor for superficial contact).
[Sorry I can't seem to paste the pinyin with tones marks or the Chinese characters in this blog; still learning]

Saturday, August 28, 2010

Dancing in the Park


This is in the Temple of Heaven Park (Tiantan) in Beijing. On the weekends, in good weather, people get together for a variety of activities. This picture is of a small group of people who were dancing. They might have been learning or just ...dancing. I've seen formal ballroom dance instruction, hackysack players, spike fiddle players (all playing separate songs together), harmonica ensembles, martial arts demos and classes, singers, and many others.

Beijing Traffic


You've problably heard about the huge traffic jam outside of Beijing that is now in it's....I don't know...15th day or something like that. Well, this was nothing like that, but it seems to me that the traffic was a lot worse than the last time I'd been there in June 2009.

Where I am staying and working is far from the city center. I have to take a taxi into town if I want to visit anything of interest. I usually take a taxi to the nearest subway stop and then the subway from there in order to avoid the traffic in the center. Even that took longer than usual; one time it took almost an hour. One night I took a taxi all the way to the center to meet a friend for dinner. It took an hour and a half.

The good news is that they are extending the subway/train system out to the BDA where I work so I will be able to walk to the station and take the train all the way to the city center. I've heard various estimates, but it seems it should open by the end of 2010. In the summer of 2009 they had only the supports for the elevated track done. Now, they have the tracks completed and are running test trains on it. It might be open the next time I visit. Things like this happen fast in China.

Arrrrrgh!


I created this blog before I left on my most recent trip to China in July. The idea was to make some short posts from time to time during my trip with pictures. When I got to China, I found out that all blogs, including this one are blocked. I couldn't access this blog to post anything.


So, I will be posting some pictures and observations that I remember from my trip. I will also post links to some slideshows I've created.