Saturday, August 11, 2012

A Hong Kong Saturday

Yesterday we ventured to Hong Kong for the day. We had meant to do it earlier in the week, but you would not believe how busy we have been! There is so much to do when setting up in a foreign country, and on top of that not knowing where anything is, how anything works, and without your native language. There have definitely been some challenges along the way.

As a side note, the key update to our house? Well, when day 6 came and went, the director of our school took us to a hardware shop to help us set up an appointment for our apartment to be rekeyed. So we have keys! Although, not from Tommy. We have definitely noticed some people operate on a different time schedule.

We planned on going to Hong Kong, Adam looked up the how to's, and Heather went along for the ride. I'm not actually sure we realized that Macau and Hong Kong are literally two separate countries with their own immigration and custom processes. As we bought our ferry tickets we had to clear immigration leaving Macau and upon arrival in HK, we had to clear immigration and customs; receiving 2 stamps in our passports in the process.

Once in HK, we realized our iPhone did not work, since we're out of the county, we had no guide book, and no map. Ops. Remember Adam used his laid back method of research. Go to one of the largest cities and wonder around. Needless to say Heather held up pretty well with only a few break downs as we wondered the seeder back alleys of HK. We fumbled around, got pots stickers, kimchi, and a couple bowls of noodle soup to fuel us for the day. We found a map and set out. We were going to wonder the streets a bit before heading to Victoria Peak by cable car to see a view of HK and the surrounding islands.

I've said before that the biggest, most bustling city I've ever been to was Paris. Well, that's because I hadn't been to HK. As it started raining, thousands of umbrellas lined the streets; cable cars, taxis, buses, and mopeds zipped around everywhere; shops selling everything imaginable lined every walkway, with dumpling stands and food vendors wedged in between. The strangest thing above all was all the English we heard mingling with a mosaic of other languages as well. As we were looking confused at our map, a women came up to us and asked what she could do to help. I thanked her profusely and she laughed saying everyone is friendly here. At a restaurant, the waitress was so sweet and wanted to see what we bought at Ikea's, while our taxi driver wanted to know what took us so long to come to HK. For such a big city, we were pleasantly surprised to see that we weren't completely lost in its maze.

During an intense rain we hoped on a cable car, using our Octopus cards that our friends Feather and Mike have given us. They lived in China until last year and handed them over to us as they moved on to Albania. Thanks FAM! The cable car, which was the classic old double decker skinny English version, took us through the streets and past many of the outdoor street markets. On its way back we hoped off to check out a wet market. We're pretty sure it was a small one but basically it's where you can buy live seafood, poultry, fruits and veggies. There were fish flopping around out of their containers, people haggling over prices, and lights flashing everywhere.

Next stop, Ikeas. We'll just hop on a couple subway lines, walk left, turn right, and we'll be there! Nearly 2 hours later, Heathers saying lets just go home, we can't find it, my feet hurt, and poor Adam is saying we have to be close. Oh boy, was Adam happy to find Ikeas because that meant my complaining stopped. Anyone who knows me knows that I am not actually a city girl, not in any sense of the word. So, feeling lost in a huge city, makes me feel like the world is ending and we need to get to safety quick. Fortunately, Adam knows this and just continues on, understanding I'll be fine once we're not lost anymore. Which I was.

Ikeas was successful, we picked up more things to make our house a home. It's close to being done enough to give you and after shot, but not quite yet!

The day ended with a taxi ride to the subway, 2 subways to the ferry, 2 more immigrations, 2 more stamps in the passport, 3 buses missing us before we finally caught one to take us to our apartment, and the elevator ride up to the 29th floor.

All in all, we took 2 buses, a taxi, a cable car, numerous subways, and 2 ferries yesterday alone. We never made it to Victoria peak because the rain was so heavy we figured we wouldn't be able to see anything but we figured out HK enough to know we want to go back and do some exploring, this time with a guidebook and map. Next time we'll leave the two giant Ikea bags filled with stuff at home.

Unfortunately, we didn't take many pictures yesterday. We were so memorized by the streets at night, we didn't even take one. But here's a few we managed to remember.

Thursday, August 9, 2012

Our house! (before)

We've been here 1 week today and as odd as it seems, its already feeling a little but like home. But there are SO many things that are different.

People run on a slower pace here. For example, we've been working on getting another set of keys for our apartment for 4 days now. On Monday, it was "tomorrow". On Tuesday, he wasn't there. On Wednesday, he looked at us like he was meeting us for the first time, but said, come back in 1 hour. One hour later, it was 5 more minutes. Finally we got our keys! We went home; they don't work. Today, well go back, stay tuned.

There are no stop lights or stop signs on any of the roads. Did we mention that traffic drives on the opposite side and drivers sit on the right? We've needed to train ourselves to look right, then left while crossing the street; especially since pedestrians do not have the right of way.

Heathers sense of direction grows worse by the moment. She can't go anywhere by herself for fear she'll never find here way back. Remember, Taipa is only 3 square miles. Does left mean left, or does left mean right?

Costs of stuff:

Rent-

Unporportionally high thanks to people moving to Macau to work (humhum). There are not enough places for everyone to live.

>1000 sq feet, 2 bedroom, 1 bath, clean semi furnished apartment $7000-$11000 patacas ($900-$1300 USD)

Food-

Local Chinese joint: 2 sodas, 2 cups of tea (this is in place of water), a big bowl of noodle soup and a plate of rice, meat, and veggies
$32-$50 patacas ($4-$6 USD)

Argentinian grill and pizza:
a caprese salad, a prochutto and jalapeño pizza, 3 tacates, and a meat filled pastry
$360 patacas ($40 USD)

An egg tart- $7-$8 ($1 USD)

A 6 pack of Tsing Tao beer from the grocery store $12 patacas ($1.50 USD)

A bottle of Portuguese or Australian wine $32- $160 patacas

Pastries of all kinds > $8-16 patacas

Transport

Bus: $2.40-$6.40 patacas for anywhere in Macau, Taipa, Cotai strip, and Coloane.

The rough conversion is $1 USD= $8 patacas

A little peak of our apartment pre-cleaning, pre-decorating. This is the before...

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H7IusB33P-I&feature=youtube_gdata_player

Tuesday, August 7, 2012

Sweet ending

After realizing the flat we rented was actually filthy, we spent the day cleaning. Fun!!! As our exhaustion set in, we decided it was time to go get some dinner. It was already dark and we were starving. Oy. Just as we turned off the lights, we realized we hadn't been in our house at night yet, so we quickly peeked out the windows. We didn't go to dinner for another 15 minutes because we couldn't take our eyes off the dancing lights on the Galaxy casino.

We still can't believe this is our life! What a sweet ending to a tough day.

Sunday, August 5, 2012

Learning the ropes

Wow, time has been flying by. We have been crazy productive the last few days and high fiving our way through Macau. So where do we begin? First the most exciting part, we found a place to live. Yahhh! It's on the 29th floor and is two bedrooms for all those who want to visit us. We met with a real estate agent who took us around to places, as all rentals are done through agents. Our building is called Kinglight Garden. There's a supermarket, a couple restaurants, a dry cleaners, and a pharmacy on the bottom floor and its only two blocks from our school. We get the keys tomorrow and we will post some pics soon. We plan on making an Ikea run in Hong Kong on tuesday to make it more homey since they deliver. Oh darn, an excuse to visit!
Yesterday we walked around old Taipa village. Taipa reminds us of an old European town with winding small streets and shops on every corner, except with an Asian flair. This is also a foodies paradise with every kind of food imaginable and we cant wait to spend some more time there. There are sate stands, coffee and pastry shops, Portuguese and Chinese restaurants. As we were exploring Adam also discovered Jerky heaven. Thick slabs of every kind of sweet meat you could imagine (sorry vegetarians), but it was truly some of the best jerky in the world.

































For lunch today we decided to try the Chinese restaurant down the street again. The menu is in
Chinese characters and no one speaks English. Before we went we google translated some words to arm ourselves for hopeful success. Adam learned coca cola (hoe-low) and heather looked up the Chinese characters for noodles and rice. We walked, smiled and said Hello (nay-hoe), we were greeted with good morning (joe-san). So far so good. We sat down, grabbed the menu and then the lady walked up. Adam said hoe-low and the lady held up two fingers. He nodded and she brought us two cokes! Yay!!!! Then she stood there waiting for us to order, we felt rushed, heather grabbed her iPhone and pointed at the Chinese characters for noodle soup and rice. The lady waved someone else over. And they were talking trying to point to the menu. They showed us the sections, and we quickly "eeny meany miny moed" it and pointed randomly at the characters. Ok... Let's see what we get! As luck would have it, heather got ox tail noodle soup with cabbage and Adam got steamed rice with chicken and cabbage! You would not believe how happy we were! We did it!
We bought Macau passes today, which are basically electronic cards that you put money on and they allow you to ride the bus. Every time you get on it automatically deducts the 25-50 cents. Way cool. Armed with our passes, we took our first bus ride over to the Venetian hotel. The Venetian is the largest casino and hotel in the world and it was truly massive. Basically it was like Vegas but on steroids. A little bit of sensory overload, however the trip was completely worth it because we got to check off something from our list...eat an egg tart from Lord Stow's Bakery. (1 top 50 down, 49 to go!) These little bundles of joy are like warm cream brûlée in a flakey pastry shell. They are famous here and really live up to the hype. They were delicious! Again if you haven't figured it out,we love food :) As an added bonus, we even got on the right bus, there and back!


































Some things we've noticed about living here so far:

1. Macau is definitely not China. It has it's own unique and vibrant culture that is east meets west.

2. People in Macau love dogs. They come in every size shape and color, we've seen a few Belly dogs too (sniffle). It's really funny to watch them try and catch theirs dogs poop on a piece of paper before it hits the ground!

3. People in Macau love their pastries and desserts. There are pastry shops on every corner. Thank the Portuguese!

4. We haven't seen any overweight people in Macau. Not one! Everyone is active and old people are always working out in the parks. Also the food portion sizes are smaller. We need to take a lesson from this America!

5. Everything is at your finger tips, even peanut butter. We thought we would have a hard time finding certain things, but Macau has everything.

6. There are Buddhist offerings throughout the streets burning incense throughout the day. It reminds of us of Bali... Ahhh.


7. Smiling and trying to speak the language goes a long ways.

So far, so good! We're really looking forward to starting work this Thursday, so we can meet the other teachers and feel like we're part of the community. With all this excitement, it's easy to forget we're actually here to work! We definitely have higher expectations of ourselves to figure out how the world works over here, since this is our permanent home and not just a short vacation. Although, with such a vibrant atmosphere, we think there will always be a little vacation feeling in the air!




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Saturday, August 4, 2012

Day 0-1 Living in Macau


Yesterday we spent the day saying all of our goodbyes. Heather was a complete mess. You would think the body could only produce so many tears but apparently that's not the case. Even though we were sad to be leaving our friends behind we were also exited to be starting our new adventure. We boarded the plane in San Francisco and took the 1:30 flight to Taiwan. The 12 1/2 hours was somewhat uneventful and actually went by fairly quickly since we managed to sleep through half of it. However the landing into Tawain was VERY bumping due to us landing in a little weather system known as a typhoon. Yes I said typhoon. The wind and rain was incredible and coming down horizontally. However this part of the world must be used to it because people carried on normally as if there wasn't anything happening outside. In fact our second flight was only delayed 10 minutes and we arrived in Macau without incident until....

Lesson # 1 Never enter a foreign country with your pockets empty of any currency at all.
We figured we would get money out of an ATM machine for our taxi ride to the hotel as soon as we arrived to the Macau airport. We thought we would take out $ 100 US which equals $8000 Macau patacas. One card.. Declined. Second card... Declined. Third card... Declined. Damn you wells fargo, we told you we were leaving the country. That's ok, we'll Skype the bank and tell them we need money from our iPad. Dang it, no wifi at the airport. Okay, okay. What to do... Cash advance from a credit card! One try, two try, oh man... We never set up pins. Okay, use a credit card to call collect from the pay phone to the bank tell them the issue. One pay phone, two pay phones, three pay phone, holy cow what the heck! Nothing works! Back to payphone #1. Finally! Yes! The credit card gave us a pin! Phew! Us oh, declined again. Were pushing an hour here, we're so tired!!! Okay, let's find another ATM... Did we say we needed to take out $8000? Oh shoot, we suck! We did e conversion wrong! We only Need $800 pacatas. $8000 is more than three times the amount of our daily ATM withdrawal limit! Okay, so our cards work fine. Yikes.

Lesson #2
If you have 6 huge bags because you're moving across the world, taxi drivers will ignore you at the airport because a) they don't have enough space for all of your worldly possessions and b) they don't speak English to tell you that. So figure out something else, because an hour later, you will still be standing at the curb.

Adam and I have continually high fived our way through Taipa today. Taipa is the island that we work and will live on. It's mostly residential with restaurants and shops supporting the towers of apartments. So far, we're pleased with the greenery and foliage. It's not just a concrete city! It's very tropical with lotus ponds, hibiscus, beautiful flowers, and a couple of nice hills known as Taipa pequenia and Taipa grande. Our high fives are deserved whenever we complete a "task" outside our comfort zone. For example, we're starving. So we walk into a restaurant, not realizing that not only are the menus in Chinese, but they also have no pictures. the women asks us something, I'm assuming, but it's only in Chinese. We have no clue, so we point to our menu and she writes down our order. Then she comes back and says "yum yum". I know, what we ordered must be good! Ahh, but no, I know from my 15 word vocabulary of the Cantonese language that yum, means drink!!! Yes! Except when she realizes I know what's she said, she starts talking to me like I know Cantonese! Then, a
L I do is smile and shake my head. Adam points to a coke and our mission is complete! Food ordered, drink in hand, here comes the high five! Now, how do we pay?

In only 24 hours we realize how different life is in other countries. In the US, we know how to enter a restaurant, how we will be seated, the order in which to order, and how to get the check and pay. Here, as in most countries, it varies a bit. We seat ourself, wave down a waitress, point at the menu, and watch others to figure out how to pay. In time, this will become our normal, but for now, it's totally foreign, along within being the foreigners. We saw two people with blonde hair today, one of those being Heather.
One last thing about Macau. It is freaking HOT! It feels like you locked yourself in a bathroom, turned on the hot shower and wrapped yourself in a wet towel. The air is so heavy and moist. We have never felt anything like this. As soon as you walk outside you are soaking wet. The locals say it is because of the typhoon in Taiwan and is unusually humid. The sky looks overcast and heavy. Hopefully we will get used to this. Everyone says that The weather in October is much nicer so we will be counting down the days. Here are a few pics from our first day.







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Location:沙維斯街,Taipa,Macau