April 23, 2008

power outages end in pecans

It's not uncommon to lose electricity for a day or two in China without any explanation, especially out where we live.

But here's an interesting power outage story that ends in pecans...

Last month I went to pay the electric bill for our apartment.  (You've heard about going "paperless".  Well, China has this concept down already.  They don't use paper; unfortunately they also don't use the internet or any other digital format for paying bills--at least not where I live, other parts of China may work differently.  You won't ever receive a bill in the mail for utilities nor will you receive any notification that a bill is due in paper form.  You just have to know where to pay the bills and more importantly WHEN...)

So I went to pay in March, but was told I didn't owe anything.  OK. No worries.

So on the 9th of April I went back to pay my electric bill (at the bank) only to be told that I needed to come back on the 10th through the 20th to pay it.  Frustrating, but not uncommon.  I resolved to return.

Of course I quickly forgot and on April 21st at 9 a.m. our electricity was suddenly just GONE.  At first I didn't make the "lack of payment" connection.  Since power had been out at various times during the week I just assumed that it was a normal outage.  Since it is nearly impossible to tell during the daylight hours who has and/or does not have electricity, we assumed that  our whole complex was cut off.

In the meantime I went and paid our bill which was a whopping $5 (US).  When it got dark outside we noticed that some of the windows in the apartment complex had LIGHT emanating from them.  Electric lighting that is.  Hmmmm.  Christa got curious and began asking our neighbors if they had electricity.  Many of them did (while a few didn't).   A friendly half-Tibetan neighbor took Christa under her wing and started making further inquiries.  She asked around and finally called the electric company for us...

Turns out, paying your bill on the 21st of the month IS a bit too late and our power was cut off. So, after a candle-lit evening, I had to wake up early the next morning, walk down to the electric company and pay the fee $1.50 (US) to get our electricity turned back on.  It was the first time in my life I had my power turned off because I was negligent in paying my bill.  Oh, the SHAME!  It was quickly fixed thankfully.  That afternoon we had power once more.

Our friendly neighbor also had a nice chat with Christa and gave her some pecans as a parting gift.  When Christa asked where the pecans had come from (since she had never seen them here) our neighbor replied, "America." 

(But she had to import them all the way from Xining.  Turns out you can't buy imported pecans in J-town.  But, man, they have a stringent 0-tolerance policy when it comes to tardy bill pay!)

April 20, 2008

indian winter

On Christa's birthday a few days ago it looked like this outside...

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Warm!  Very warm.  I was digging trenches over the weekend in a short-sleeved T-shirt.

But this morning when we woke up all the surrounding mountains were COVERED in snow.  (Yep, I snapped a picture of it, but the camera battery is dead so you'll have to take my word for it.)  I feel like putting some Christmas music on and starting a cozy fire in the middle of the living room.

***

Well, a contract has been signed for our new library space.  They will hopefully begin tiling it this week and putting new doors in.  Sometime today our staff will begin boxing up all the books in order to make the move from the old building to the new.  This is a huge answer to our vertical requests.  Thank you!

***

Sarah got a haircut last week.  It suits her to a tee...

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***
Here is a family shot and a picture of Christa's birthday cake.  I DID NOT bake this cake.  It was a nice gesture from our teammates.  I DID make cookies with the girls for Christa's birthday.  They were yummy.

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***

5 weeks, people!  5 weeks!

April 15, 2008

reluctant spring, tree-woks, and other random stuff

X_to_jz_0025_2 The sun comes out and I pull off my fleece jacket and wonder if I really needed to wear my thermals underneath my jeans today.  It is mid-April after all.  A cloud rolls in, covering the sun, and I can feel my arms getting chilled beneath my long-sleeved T-shirt.  The fleece goes back on.  What's up with this weather?

The radiators in our apartment were turned off in early March, but someone forgot to turn up the temperature outside.  After the sun goes down (and on the frequent cloudy days of late), our concrete apartment turns into a cooler pretty quickly.  If your feet or nose get cold at this time of day they will stay that way until you hop into bed for the night.  I am thankful for the hot chocolate we have on hand.  It is technically spring now I think.

The girls have found a tree near our apartment that they can climb.  Anna is proud of the fact that she can climb near to the top -- a good six or seven feet above my head.  It makes me nervous.  The daily attention we receive in our town is bad enough, but our kids have to make it worse by climbing a tree.  As I watch Anna with broken arm scenarios looping through my head, I hear the locals asking each other over and over again, "Twins?  Are they twins?"  All of these foreign kids look the same I guess.  They smile and gawk at the little white birds up in the leafy treetops.

Zacchaeus, you come down!

This afternoon we looked at a another potential rental property for our library.  We think this might be the one.  As you may remember, the place we were renting had some "foundational" issues.  I'm not speaking figuratively when I say these issues were foundational.  The floor was very literally caving in.  We condemned it and have been looking for a place ever since then.  I wish I had some photos on hand to show you. If we can get this new place rented that will be very good. It will keep us a good deal busier during our last month here in J-town.

Christa has been visiting her Chinese Mus. friend in town, Sophia, pretty often. Sophia is expecting a baby boy during the first part of May so Christa is hoping we'll still be here when the baby actually comes.  Sophia will be giving birth at the hospital here in J-town which has a good reputation supposedly, but makes a foreigner like myself cringe just thinking about it.  Christa gave Sophia a childbirth book (in Chinese) a few weeks ago since Sophia will not have any kind of preparation (childbirth classes, doctor consults, etc.) before the baby arrives.  Epidurals?  I don't think so...

I've been tied up with other preparations lately.  The girls and I have been scheming and plotting in lieu of Christa's birthday on Thursday (17th).  We have a few things lined up, but it will be pretty low-key. 

Thought of the day
: Tibetan clothing just looks cool.  I like the long robes, the colorful patterns, the yak's wool lining, and the curious faces staring at me from beneath it all.

X_to_jz_0030

April 07, 2008

home sweet home

Well, it's home for about 5 more weeks or so.  Our guest apartment is on the left hand side, the window 4th from the bottom (2nd from the top).  I thought some of you might like to see what an apartment complex looks like in this town...

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p.s. You may have noticed the new Countdown Clock in my sidebar.  I'm not actually that desperate to leave here (i.e. counting seconds, minutes, hours is a bit much) but we are getting excited to be coming home very soon.  Very excited!

p.p.s. Notice the huge cell phone (or electrical?) tower just behind our apartment complex.  I sure hope we're not getting cancer by living so close to it.  I often hear a ringing sound in my ears.  That's can't be good!

March 24, 2008

checking in...

Very briefly I just wanted to let everyone know that the Johnson family is doing fine.  There's been a lot of media attention out this way (more than we realized!) and for some of you that may have been a bit alarming.  There were some "different scenes" around town over the weekend, but we stayed away from the crowds and celebrated Easter with our colleagues and were not really affected by it.

Today things were more normal.  I actually helped with some gardening projects at our friends' place and the girls did some shopping.  But please keep up the vertical communication for the situation and the people over here. 

This week we're working on finding a new location for our library (if one is available?) due to the floor caving in.  We'll let you know what happens with that. 

Enjoy the arrival of Spring!

January 06, 2008

pipe dreams (or nightmares)

In the last post I was mentioning how we had an issue with the hot water tank at the Jianzha Estate which forced us to retreat to Xining.  Well, on our way back to Jianzha we discovered that there had been an issue with the coal stove which heats the house.  Evidently a pipe leading from the boiler into the house must have gotten too cold and froze during the night which caused a leak into the garage area. 

Without a functional heating system in the house we decided to make our move to the guest apartment across town.  (We were planning on doing this anyway, but this just bumped up our time table.) So we're once again living in a new location.  On the plus side, my "coal duties" are officially over and Christa no longer has rodent phobia to deal with.  The apartment is also pretty warm and has three-bedrooms.

The challenge is that we don't have a fridge, oven, microwave (can people survive without that?)  hot water, or (GASP!) the internet set up yet.  So we're making due.  Our plan is to go back to Xining tomorrow.  Christa's parents will be visiting for another few weeks.  Then, we (Johnsons) will probably be back one more weekend before we take our annual trip to Thailand in February.

If I've learned anything living here in China: plumbing and I just DO NOT get along.  That's just the undeniable fact of the matter.

November 24, 2007

photos from a pro

In lieu of having my own professional photos to post, here are some photos from the Great Wall, Jianzha, and the family home.  Check out the mad skills of my friend, Jeremy. 

P.S. I took the awesome kung fu shot!  It's amazing what a good camera can do.

Kung_fu_jer

November 22, 2007

home for the holidays - visit recap

After twenty-four hours on the train I arrived back in Xining with just enough time to get showered up and have a nice Thanksgiving meal with my family and other fellow expats in our community.  It was perfect timing.  The irony is that my friends, J & J, left for America on a plane a few hours before I left Beijing on a train.  They beat me getting back home.

It was really nice having friends out for a visit before the holiday.  Their entire time here (other than an unfortunate incident with a KFC spicy chicken sandwich) couldn't have been more perfect.  Unfortunately, I don't have many pictures from their visit (my camera battery died after taking just one photo of the Great Wall) but thankfully Jer took a few thousand photos and has promised to send me some for posting.

Some of the visit highlights which I am THANKFUL for:

  • Climbing some small mountain-like hills behind our house in Jianzha
  • Rat-hunting and making a "kill" with J & J
  • Making the movie "Jianzha Cribs"
  • Visiting Lobsang's monastery and eating tsampa with him at his home
  • Watching Hot Fuzz with the boys in Xining, "By the power of Grayskull..."
  • Ticket to Ride with Christa, J & J.  Christa is still undefeated!
  • Cereal time with Eugene-Jack in Jianzha
  • Basketball time with local Tibetans
  • Visiting the Great Wall (Simatai) in Beijing.  Five miles of unrestored brick ramparts and wall to hike.  We only saw about 20 or 30 people.  The "kung fu" shots were amazing.  You'll see what I mean soon enough
  • Eating at Li Qun's Beijing Duck restaurant in a "hutong" district--with a freezer full of dead ducks hanging just over my right shoulder
  • Visiting a local restaurant owned by a Chinese photographer and "translating" from Chinese to English and back between Jer and said photographer.  And no I don't really know the words for aperture or exposure in Chinese.  We stumbled through
  • Rory's-esque time spent with J & J at the Japanese restaurant and the hostel's cafe
  • The red lever

I guess in some ways you had to be there.  But if you are in the Seattle/Tacoma area, I'm sure J & J would be willing to share some of the tales with you.

In any case, I hope you all have a wonderful turkey-filled Thanksgiving!  We are so thankful for each of you...

We'll be back in J-town later today.  Peace, out.

November 16, 2007

jianzha cribs

Here's a special little video documentary highlighting "our crib" here in Jianzha.  (With apologies to the Brown family for our taking creative ownership of their home.)  You'll notice the stylish hosts, J & J.  Might take a few minutes to load, but it's worth the wait...

November 15, 2007

good times with bros

Well, my time has been a bit more occupied lately.  Two of my good (nay, great!) friends from Seattle, Jer & Josh, arrived in Qinghai on Tuesday.  We've been painting the town red ever since (so to speak.)  Since Jeremy is a photographer by trade I haven't been that motivated to take any pictures myself, but today I did snap a few.  With an English-speaking Tibetan monk as our guide we visited a monastery here in Jianzha.  Here is some of what we saw...

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Not shown: Some awesome 3 on 3 pickup basketball games played with some Tibetan guys over at the library.  And to think we've still got another 5 solid days to hang out together.

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