dgirl

Wednesday, July 26, 2006

one week in!


kia ora!

today it is exactly one week since i touched down in nz. the biting chill has taken a bit of getting used to (especially since my jacket didn't make it off the big boat until a couple of days ago!) but really winter up here in whangas is not so bad. in fact yesterday i went for a walk in the sunshine wearing nothing but a t-shirt! (and jeans and underwear and shoes and socks). the mornings and evenings are frosty though and i live in my dressing gown and slippers when at home.

seems to be a bit of work around which is a relief. had a trial run and a subsequent job offer at a bar in town but i just turned it down today because the late nights would have been a pain in the rump i think, and i would have had to give up my new years eve. NO WAY. there's another possibility at the grooviest cafe/gallery in whangarei - on the waterfront... the manager wants me to call as soon as i'm back from my trip down south, so we'll see where that goes. it's definately more in line with what i want... especially looking toward my future plans of having a similar place of my own one day.

so tomorrow am heading down to gisborne to see the grandfolks! yay!!! and from there onward to christchurch, stopping off in welly and nelson on the way. more planes and buses and living out of my pack, but i love it really :)

watched a pod of dolphins swimming up the estuary last night from dad and deb's place. it's so good to be home.

cuidate mucho! d xx

Tuesday, July 18, 2006

sayoonara ode to japan

there comes a time to say goodbye
mine's tomorrow, tomorrow i fly
i look back on all that's been
you've been kind and you've been mean

no hard feelings and no regrets ~
i knew the chances, placed my bets
you showed me a life i'd never have known
an unforgettable experience i'm proud to own

thank-you for crazy karaoke nights
and sprawling views from dizzying heights
for kotatsu and heated toilet seats
for ipod walks along tiny streets

for all the rice and houjicha tea
even the squatties in which i can pee!
for daily confusion and commercial madness
and for friends who radiate radness

i'll take with me all that i've learned
all the memories and money i've earned
you might always mean some heartbreak to me
but i've been liberated too, you see :)

arigatou gozaimashita nippon.

sayoonara xx

Monday, July 17, 2006

the big send-off


feeling a bit like a squashed frog today, but i guess that means last night was a blast!! the beach party was a hit, about 40 people must've showed up and it was so good to see some of them especially. the weather was perfect, despite the thunderstorm warning at about 7pm. nolan's little bbq grill was fired up all night but i forgot to eat... and had far too many rum and cokes... i never learn! :P i brought a big bag of fireworks but i think only about half of them were set off (don't know what happened to the rest) i lost interest when one firework shot out in all directions across the sand, almost taking me out. unfortunately i've lost my camera, my cellphone AND my cool top (yes, of course swimming in underwear was a feature of the night!!). ah well, just things i suppose, they can be replaced. a bummer about the cellphone though because i had lots of email addresses stored on that... :( and no photos sorry due to the missing camera. tomorrow's my last day in japan... crikey. will probably spend it doing boring things like packing, cleaning my room, and clearing out my bank account.

Wednesday, July 12, 2006

china


tadaima! did ya's miss me? ;) i'm pretty dang tired... just got in from china a little while ago and should probly leave this til tomorrow, but i'm so buzzed about my trip that i just HAVE to write about it now. oh m'god, where do i start??!

shanghai was first stop, so i guess i'll start with the highlights from the fastest developing city in china. totally chaotic. and so exciting! as soon as we stepped off the airport bus outside the train station we were mobbed by throngs of scruffy chinese shouting at us and waving hotel flyers in our faces. they followed us for a while although we tried our best to ignore them. we finally sorted out a taxi to our hostel and found out later that we paid about 4 times the amount it should've cost - NEVER bargain over the price of a taxi ride, we learnt that one fast. our adventures in shanghai included visiting yuyuan, a well-preserved olden-day corner of the city. it's a tad touristy of course, but the buildings are striking, and it's home to the most famous tea house in china (very pretty in the middle of a big pond). the outskirts of yuyuan are home to the city's not so fortunate. we took a turn somewhere and suddenly found ourselves in the backstreets populated by shack-dwellers. the local market was in full swing - fruit and veges laid out amongst building demolition rubble. i could see into some dark huts and there were the people - sleeping, drinking, living their lives among the noise, smells and shambles of these back-alleys. i had never seen anything so raw and so real! of course shanghai also boasts a very shiny modern commercial centre (in which we did spend a fair amount of time!), and an interesting waterfront area called the bund - very grand old european style buildings which looked magical lit up for the night. went out one night to a famous nightspot, but i got assaulted in the unisex bathroom by a very drunk chinese guy who grabbed me and wouldn't let me out the door. a bit scary and disturbing so we left (the place was overpriced anyhow). the hostel bar on the other hand was lots of fun and cheap cheap cheap! :) we also visited zhouzhuang,'the no. 1 water town in china'! it was gorgeous: canals, chinamen steering chinaboat gondolas, quaint old houses and shops, tiny narrow streets... again a bit touristy with loads of souvenir shops (but bargaining is so much fun!). the highlight of my day there came when i was allowed a go at steering our boat! wheee! on our way to this water village we got a chance to see some of the countryside from the van. lots of rice paddys. the farmhouses looked very polish (or at least what i'd imagine polish houses to look like!)... seems to be a lot of european influence in china. i spotted a farmer pull his pants down and squat in the middle of his rice field - ew! anyway... on to beijing!

we caught the overnight train up to the capital - about a 14 hour trip, but no worries in first class!! (first class comes cheap over there). it was strange and exciting to be lying on beds, wrapped up in a white linen world watching the lights outside speeding by. beijing seemed more relaxed than shanghai. the people were a bit more laid back, even the poorest of the poor didn't seem so desperate. hardly anyone begged us for money in beijing although the poverty's just as evident. there's so much to do in beijing, i really love that city and want to go back one day. tiananmen square is HUGE - a great wide expanse of concrete. quite awesome really to stand in the middle of such a wide paved space. and of course the history makes an impact too (the little that i know anyway!). we visited chairman mao in his mausoleum - there he lies in a glass coffin... looks pretty darn good for a guy who's been dead for 30-odd years. past tiananmen square we found the most awesome shopping area - local food stalls and shops mingling with the tourist traps jam-packed along bustling narrow streets. so many amazing smells and so much life! also found a stretch of street vendors selling the scariest selection of food i've ever seen (of which i dared tried the deepfried scorpions: blimin tasty, i'm not kidding, - and snake skin: blimin disgusting). we visited the forbidden city which was quite grand and beautiful but, heaven forbid (he he), far too big and therefore a little boring after about 2 hours...krister (swedish guy we befriended) and i whinged like little kids while tamao dragged us from one building to the next. highlight of my day at the forbidden city came when i found a giant pot that i could climb into and did (apparently designed for sacrificial offerings...human i like to think...). tamao ate 4 icecreams in the space of half an hour - china is hot hot hot! ok, so the most amazing experience of the whole trip was hiking the beautiful, crumbling, awe-inspiring great wall. can tick that one off my list of things to do before i die :). it was completely breath-taking. we did the jinshanling to simitai part (4 hour hike)... least crowded open to the public section and the wall in it's natural state: the whole of one side falling down the mountain in some places, plants growing up through cracks in the bricks, watch towers in ruins and open to the sky. all around us were green mountains, in every direction, as far as you could see. i felt like i was somewhere lost in time - in the middle of nowhere. i didn't want to leave!

phew! this is a very condensed version of my trip... it was just such an amazing experience. but to sum up...

strange things i ate: a whole small bird (budgie-sized, head and all - but i couldn't eat it all), roasted bullfrog (tasted like a cross between chicken and fish and likewise for the texture), a duck's head (don't look too close!), peking duck (not so strange and extremely delish!), the aforementioned scorpions and snakeskin, chicken tongues (actually quite nice but again don't look too close), and cow's stomach (vomit-inducing). they eat anything over there!

china really is a totally different world from japan. the people are brash and loud, they are not fashion-obsessed multitudes. poverty slaps you right in the face almost wherever you go. the things i'll remember most about china are all the strange things you can poke a stick up and eat, the delicious smells everywhere, the poverty, the continuous beeping, the noise, the crazy all over the road drivers and bikes, the in-your-face-people, the WALL, b.y.o toilet paper (and the fact that you're not allowed to flush it - in the bin it goes), and the cool travelling pals we met along the way.

ps. i am never flying northwest airline again. i was treated like a drug smuggler on my way out of japan and on my way back in. i and my luggage was so thoroughly inspected its a wonder they didn't stick a camera up my bum.

photos of course, are all here: http://wedged.showcard.co.nz/gallery/album12