Thursday, October 29, 2009

The Insect Market


So, Kristy and I went to Shanghai twice over my last break. The first time was interesting, spent largely at the Shanghai Museum learning about Chinese artifacts. The second time, we went a little farther afield. We followed the Lonely Planet guide loosely, and found ourselves looking for the insect, bird, and flower market.


This market sells animals, birds, fish, plants, and insects. We have on here in Suzhou as well, but it is much more of an animal/bird market, with only one vendor selling crickets. The place in Shanghai was FULL of crickets. Crickets of every kind. Crickets in earthenware containers, and crickets in large, plastic jars. The Chinese even have little food and water dishes for their crickets, and little scoops for dishing out the "cricket food".

The market is alive with the sounds of the insects, and the Chinese sticking tiny little shovels into the cages to feed the bugs or prod them into some kind of battle-fury. I couldn't really tell which it was.The insect market sold LOTS of mealworms. I assume these are for bird food, but who really knows? I hear they have a pretty good, nutty taste.

The market also had a ton of fish, which weren't really very interesting, birds, turtles, dogs, cats, hampsters, gerbils, squirrels (YES, squirrels). Let me take a moment here: I have seen ZERO wild squirrels since we've been here. I haven't really seen much in the way of birds, either. The ONLY squirrels I've seen have been at these markets in cages. Why would someone want a squirrel as a pet?





Lots of birds, like this guy here. They had nicer cages then most of the other animals (such as those poor squirrels). The Chinese really like their ornate cages, though. The birds ranged from parakeets, parrots and cockatoos, to mynah birds and doves.

There were also bunches of turtles. They didn't look like the ones we see at the grocery store, though. Those are mostly soft-shell turtles. These were mostly water turtles and snapping turtles. I didn't see anyone actually buy any of them, but I have heard that the snapping turtles are pretty tasty.

Sunday, October 18, 2009

Life update


I've been amazed at the weather. We were told that July and August were going to be hot and humid. September and October would be really nice and pleasant and then the weather would turn cold. Based on my experience living in Virginia, I expected the hot and humid to last much longer than just August, but on September 1 the humidity disappeared. On October 1 the temperature dropped probably 10 degrees (think Fahrenheit) to the 70s. On October 3 the clouds cleared and we saw a clear blue sunny sky for the first time in 6 weeks. Prior to that we'd see the sun once in a while throughout the day and only for a few minutes, but it was basically just cloudy, overcast and lots of air pollution. We're not 100% sure what to expect for winter. I've heard it feels very cold because the air is very damp and humid. The temperatures I gather are around freezing, it doesn't actually snow (and if it does, EVERYTHING grinds to a halt - in fact when it did snow, they thought that if they sprayed the streets with water that would help get rid of the snow - hehehe), but the humidity makes you feel cold all the time. There's a Chinese woman who spent some time in Canada and a Swedish woman I met on the trip to Lily Island and both told me independently of each other, that the winters here are colder than in those countries respectively. The winter sounds similar to that of Virginia, but the difference is that back home we have the shelter of our cars and we don't actually spend a lot of time outside! Needless to say, I'm worried and Aaron can't wait!

We're doing well. Aaron had a one week vacation at the beginning of October for the Chinese National Day on October 1 (celebrating 60 years) and then the Mid Autumn festival celebration on October 3. Everything mostly shut down until October 8. We thought about traveling, but when the Chinese have holiday everyone travels, so trains, planes, hotels, etc are just booked solid. So we decided to stay in Suzhou, do some touristy things here and go to Shanghai for a couple of days. We learned how to buy train tickets and out of town bus tickets, both of which involve charades. We also found some cool walking areas in Suzhou. We liked Shanghai. It's a city and it feels like it. We live in a city (6 million people), but it doesn't feel like a city. We haven't done a whole lot in Shanghai because we expect to go back frequently. We went to the Yuyuan gardens and the Shanghai museum (thanks for the recommendation Natalia and Roman). We also wandered around the fish, insect, animal and plant market, the "antiques" market, which maybe had one or two antiques years ago, but now just has a lot of items made recently in the local factory (ie: junk). Our favorite is the way the sales person insists it's from the Ming dynasty - sure it is, that's why you have 50 of them! We also came across a market for everyday goods, it had clocks, shoes, purses, clothes, electronics and so much else. This is where we bought Aaron a new beard trimmer. We got it for 130RMB, which is about $20. We could have bargained harder, but Aaron felt bad and all the other ones that we had found in stores were 300RMB. So now he doesn't look like a mountain man anymore!

Other than that things are going well. I've been substitute teaching a bit at Aaron's school and have 4 more days lined up next week because the principal has to go to a conference. I also started Chinese class this week, which I'm really excited about. In mid-November Aaron has a conference in Shenzen, which is located in mainland China right across from Hong Kong. So we're going to go a couple of days early so we can check out Hong Kong.

A note to those of you who were wondering: I don't know if I made it on TV because we haven't paid for television. We have a tv set, but it just acts as a monitor for dvds.

Wednesday, October 14, 2009

VIP for a day

Today I went on my first outing with other gainfully unemployed women in Suzhou and the odd spouse or two. We went to Lily Island which is in the middle of Yangcheng Lake. Yangcheng Lake is a big lake that is just to the east of us. We can actually see it from our apartment and the street we live on is called Yangcheng Lake Road. It's famous because every year in September and October the "hairy crab" makes it's migration through the lake and it's a very popular local food. Unfortunately I'm allergic to crab so we won't be having any.



Getting back to the trip: Apparently this island has never had so many Western tourists as they did yesterday and the woman who helped organize things at the Suzhou tourist office alerted the media. We became celebrities, the VIP guests, and had our own paparazzi following us, as we "fished" for what are called water chestnuts and made zhongzi (pronounced jongse). So these water chestnuts grow on the underside of this plant in the lake. We were forced to wear these awful fluorescent orange life jackets, because it would be awful if the VIP westerners fell overboard! We were divided into these small fishing boats and then taken out onto the lake. You pick the plant out of the water and then pluck the pod holding the nut off. You then cook the pod, shell it and then eat the nut inside. The nut is similar to a water chestnut hence its English name, but isn't exactly the same.





Then we were taken back to the island where we made zhongzi. This involves taking bamboo leaves and folding them in a way to fill it with uncooked sticky rice. The trick is to fold it tightly enough so the rice doesn't start falling out at the corners. Once you have filled the cavity you have made, you then fold the leaves down and tie it with rope. These then get cooked for something like 7 hours. When they're finished you unwrap the very sticky rice from the bamboo leaves and just eat the rice. It's actually quite good. While we didn't eat our own, they had made some for us. At this point the media decided they had had enough and stopped following us around. They had tried to interview a bunch of us, but they were a bit disappointed when out of a group of 45, maybe 2 of us spoke enough Chinese to converse with. They'll be airing it on the local Chinese news station for the next few days, so we're going to try and go to a friends house to watch it because we don't have TV. It was quite bizarre to have all those video cameras and reporters following us around.