Motorcade

 I’ve seen this happen before but not on the same scale as last Friday.  Lots of police, probably one on every street corner. Roads closed.  It can mean only one thing.   

Some government officials were coming to town and so In true Chinese style everyone else has to stop what they are doing to allow them safe unobstructed passage to their destination.  A huge motorcade probably at least 50 Audis and 4x4s, lights flashing, sirens blaring driving at high speed.  It’s funny, I’ve never seen so many policemen in Changchun before!  I guess it giuves the officials the chance to look out through their tinted windows and say to themselves ‘look at all the policemen doing their jobs’

When seeing this, I couldn’t help getting the feeling that the government must be terribly afraid of the people.  I understand the need for security, and the need for people in government to be able to go about their business.  But for officials travelling to a economics conference, to inconvenience everyone in the friday rush hour…    In the UK this would only happen if the Queen or the Prime Minister was coming to town.

New place

So I’m on holiday for 7 days.  

The move is complete! Finally took 6 strong men about 5 minutes flat to move everything from the 6th floor to a blue three-wheeler pick-up truck parked outside the gate to my apartment complex.  It’s quite amazing watching the guys lift the heavy bags onto their backs, strapping them together with ropes and using gravity to keep the bags from falling.  It really makes sense when carrying heavy things to use your back, you can carry a lot more and the load is more spread across the body.  Cost only 80元 and I got a free ride in the back of their open truck. 🙂

The problem is that for the next week or so I no longer have internet access and when they finally do get around to turning it on, I will be on the dreaded campus network connection. 🙁

   Unlike at a UK university the internet connection on campus is pretty slow and most foreign websites are firewalled. I might buy a new keyboard as the F5 (refresh) key is in for a hammering!   However if I go down the road to my local internet cafe, the connection is fast and 99% of stuff I want is available!   I believe it’s a question of the universities simply saving cash, spending it elsewhere on more important things  – luncheons, banquets, gifts etc… 

Maybe that’s a little cynical but I think it’s not too far from the truth.  Anyway I now live in a place that I previously said I would never live in – a ‘Foreign Expert’s Apartment’.  It’s a nice enough apartment, has everything that one would want except any sort of cooking equipment!  They expect me to buy it for myself which is no problem as I already have the stuff from my last place. The biggest advantage of living in such a place is that there is a never ending supply of hot water – the 30 minute shower is no longer a thing of the past!

The downer is that my movements in and out of the building are probably monitored and that they close the doors at 10.30.  If i want to come back later I have to wake-up the man downstairs.  It seems to be okay though.  The guy downstairs is pretty relaxed about things, and I think that as long as I don’t hold an all-night rave or something, there should be no problem.  

 

Moving

So I’ve just finished probably the busiest week I’ve ever had.  I did over 40 hours teaching on top of my other regular job – that’s over 60 hours 8-O.

Today I get a much welcome opportunity to rest, though I’ll most likely be spending the best part of the day moving to another apartment. I’ve accumilated a ton of stuff – too much to carry myself – something like 15 bin-bags full of things! I’ll probably have to do it in several trips even after throwing a lot of stuff away. It’s just all too easy to pick-up new things here, before you know it, you’ve got enough junk to keep a charity shop in business for several months!

I might just resort to hiring a few workers to move everything, cost about 100元 for everything last time.

Thankfully, my landlord this time has been quite the opposite of the first one.   She didn’t even ask for a deposit and only asked that I leave enough cash to pay for the utilities owed (about 50-60元 a month).  As it turns out I’m actually going to leave a few things behind, either as they are too big or easily replaced, but also as a way of thanking the landlord for her efforts :mrgreen:.

Schedule

weather forecastThe weather’s been pretty much perfect of late, warm but not humid during the daytime and pleasantly cool at night.   

Today I had my first class since June . Throughout the summer I have had various other projects going on, it’s been an interesting time and lots of things are still developing from this.   

The problem is that now that the semester has started,  I am almost overwhelmed with the amount of work I have to do. For the next few months,  I’m not sure if I will be able to do it all. Technically it all fits in nicely, my schedule looks good, but realistically it might not be physically possible – only time will tell. 16 weeks to go!

Popcorn

earl grey popcornSaw this bag of popcorn when shopping earlier today, but it’s not any old Chinese popcorn, it’s Earl Grey flavoured popcorn! 

I wonder who came up with this idea, as real Earl Grey tea is extremely hard to come by in Changchun – I doubt most Chinese actually know what it is, let alone what it’s meant to taste like!  

Actually tastes not too bad, though i won’t be buying it again! 

New Cars

It’s become distinctly autumnal almost overnight, finally the hot humid air has gone replaced a welcome refreshing breeze. I give it 6-8 weeks before it starts to snow again – can’t wait! 🙂

It’s been a while since I took an early morning bus to the centre of town, but this morning, I couldn’t help noticing how many new cars were on the streets. I’d hazard a guess that there are hundreds, maybe even thousands of new cars being driven out of the showroom every day.

There are some real nice motors on the streets of Changchun. I’ve never seen so many BMWs, Audis, Mercedes, and Buicks – you’d be forgiven for thinking that this city was full of millionaires.
In Changchun, the Audi 6 is probably the most popular luxury car, usually in black complete with blacked out windows. Also I am seeing more and more Japanese 4x4s, especially the gold coloured Lexuses (lexi?) and lots more Hondas.

People back home talk about ‘gridlock’ but I predict that within the next 5 years (or sooner) China is going to become one massive car park. Changchun is particularly bad as the road layout was designed in a time when traffic from cars wasn’t a consideration, and so there are many huge cross-road junctions and sets of traffic lights. If you have the money you can just take taxis everywhere – afterall they are cheap enough – and avoid the problems associated with maintaining a vehicle.

However, there is still a huge novelty value to owning a car as many families have never had the opportunity to do so before. Also there is massive social status and face value in being able to show others that you are rich, and I think this is factor most important to some. But in Changchun there is no real need beyond this to have your own transport, it is a small compact city with a half-decent public transport system. I would never buy my own car here.

I also wonder what kind of people can actually afford to buy such cars when the prices are still so high. To put this into perspective, a decent family car is about the same price as a large new apartment, and unlike an apartment, you will never recoup your money if you buy a car.
The average wage in Changchun is only 800-1000元 a month, maybe it is just that people have company cars or cars through finance deals or that they are filthy rich bandits.
For example a new VW Jetta costs 98,000元, Ford Mondeo 199,000元 and a Lexus 800,000元!

Travel Experiences

Back from a trip around the east of 辽宁省 Liaoning Province.  Went a little off the beaten track as well as visiting the most easterly site of 虎山长成 the Great Wall.   Almost running parallel to the wall is the North Korean border and we took a walk down to the very edge to a place called 一步跨 One Step Across.  north korea - one step acrossOn the other side were lots of farm workers moving earth and all wearing the same coloured clothing.me at north korean border  They stragitically planted a North Korean flag in the earth next to where they were working, though you’d have to be a complete cretin to unknowingly cross the border as the river is about 20 feet wide – although there are stepping stones if you really want to take the risk.

great wall It was really interesting and thoroughly enjoyable. Also managed to visit lots of sites that are not particularly well known for tourism and so are still un-spoilt from the droves of giftshops and vendors trying to sell tack.   There’s actually a lot to see in and around the Dandong region If you’re prepared to find it yourself as the lonely planet guidebook is next to useless.

Dandong is cheaper than Changchun, clothes and shoes cost less, and it’s a good place to get authentic North Korean cuisine as well as cheap seafood.

 Got on one of those Chinese mini-bus tours (150元), took all day and saw so much.  As with my previous experience with these tours (if you don’t mind visiting the odd place of not much interest to you) in return you get transportation everywhere, food and free admission.  Indeed I think without going on such a tour it would be almost impossible to see everything, unless of course you have your own car and you know where you’re going, such were the distances travelled. 

All the guide books mention the broken bridge 断桥 (20元)and thenorth korean trawler boat rides you can get along the river (20元)which gets you pretty close to the other side.  It’s interesting but there really isn’t much to see apart from a few rusting North Korean trawlers and the odd person looking back. Did see a couple of soldiers with rifles and some fishermen wearing broken bridgetraditional looking clothing and hats. Of course you’re not meant to take photos – but being China what are rules for! – and everyone does it regardless, much to the annoyance of the North Koreans.  

Went to a dam called the 太平水电站 Taiping Hydro Electricity Station.  It is where the Yalu river is dammed, changing it from a fast flowing waterway into something reminiscent of a Scottish loch. There was some confusion as to whether I could cross the dam along with the other tourists in the bus, as the other side is technically in North Korea. 

The Chinese tourists (or people who look Asian, they don’t actually chbroken bridge bombed by the yanks in the korean wareck papers – just see if you’re white or not!) are allowed to go to the other side to get the  ‘I’ve actually stepped in North Korea’ photo. 

After the mini-bus pulled up at the border point, the soldier asked if there were any waiguoren in the vehicle and that they would have to 下车, everyone else thought it was rather funny and started laughing and it was all in good humour.  I got off the bus and waited in a nearby office. Beforehand I didn’t actually realise that the mini-bus was going to go over the dam, had I known in advance, of coursecranes and old dockyard in N.korea I would have got off the bus earlier!  I think it will probably be the first and last time that a Chinese official has done me a favour without asking for a bribe!  Afterall If he wasn’t doing his job properly I  might now be in some North Korean prison, who knows.

On the other side the road just stops, there is a memoriaend of dam, note the soldiersl to the Korean War or as the Chinese call it ‘The War to Resist US Aggression’ and I thought its was a UN force not just US – anyway; there is also a couple of soldiers standing there too. end of the dam memorial 

 Looking at the pictures, I don’t think I missed out on much! 🙂 Then we visited another bombed-out bridge, left untouched just the central span missing.  The Chinese side bustling with tourists, the Korean side quite the opposite, just fields of crops and unfarmed hills speckledwith huge hundreds-of-year-old trees.the north korean side of the bridge

Had another one of those lessons in  ‘how to argue the chinese way’ on the train from Changchun to Dandong. Being in the hard sleeper was fine until about mid-day when it got too hot for me to bear.  I idiotically assumed that the hard sleeper at 89元  (being the most expensive ticket on that train) that there would be A/C.  So I walked down the train and into the next carriage which was the soft seat section  where there was air conditioning.  So the cheaper seats have air con and the more expensive beds (about 25% more) have none!  

Anyway the plan was to downgrade. I felt a little bit farsical, like something from a Monty Python sketch ‘I wish to downgrade my ticket’ .

The air-con carriage was almost empty, infact the train was only about half full so I hard sleeper thought this would pose no problem.

Wrong again.

  The ticket inspector was a rather dull woman who tried to move us from the carriage saying we didn’t have the correct ticket.  So I offered to buy another ticket, she responded with ‘不可能’ Impossible! ‘Okay then I wish to change my ticket for a different ticket since this seat is empty, so is that one and that‘  Now i’m pointing all all the empty seats.  She just says no and says we must move even though the temperature now in the hard sleeper carriage is hovering at a tropical 37C. 

Then the Old Bill show up, the train police,  three of them all very polite and straight forward – yet they sided with the ticket inspector when it was plainly obvious she was wrong. So it was time to go grudingly back to the kiln for another 3 hours or so,  though I think my point was made. 

But lo and behold not five minutes later, the same policemen came by and said ‘you can go in, no problem’ ‘please come’ ‘come’ even referring me to as their ‘foreign friend’.  They knew that the ticket inspector was wrong, the other people in the carriage knew she was wrong, the nearby farmer’s rabid-goat knew she was wrong, maybe, even she knew it?

I think this is a very good example of the sometimes farcial Chinese attitudes towards ‘face‘ – you’re wrong and you know it, but can’t publicly admit it in front of others for fear of losing face. And from where I see it, face seems to be everything.  I know the same logic extends to some business practices – You’re really a sloppy worker but I can’t tell you this to your face even though it might make you a better worker – so i’ll just sack you .  

Took the coach back costing roughly double the price of the train, but taking 7 rather than 10 hours. In my experience the long distance buses are sometimes great or sometimes a nightmare, it really depends on the roads and on the bus.  Luckily this bus had plenty of leg room (even for me) was really comfortable and was air conditioned!!

 

Travelling

dandong seafrontCurrently away in Dandong 丹东 doing a bit of sight-seeing and generally relaxing.  It’s good to go somewhere new and this place makes a welcome change, however if I thought Changchun was hot and humid then you have to come here!  It’s running at over 90% humidity – things just don’t dry – and the heat is constantly over 30C.  But this aside, it’s a very interesting place, somewhat poorer than Changchun yet considerably cleaner and less chaotic. 

The first thing that I noticed was the amount of bicycles on the streets and the lack of private cars; I could cross the street without having to dangerously weave in and out the oncoming traffic. 

The other thing was the bilingual signage, pretty much everything is in Korean first, Chinese second.  Of course this is because Dandong is on the North Korean frontier; only the yalu jiang separates it from the other side.

Anyway will write more later when I have more time, there is still much to see.  

Neighbours

I think living off campus, out in the community, is a much better way to see how things really operate. Living where I do now has enabled me to witness so many new sites that I
otherwise would have not seen.

Of course there are downs; getting woken up at 4am by the men cutting sheet metal or the guy upstairs who likes to play the trumpet, but the ups vastly outweigh them. It’s a good place to go outside and broaden your knowledge of other cultures and everyone wants to talk to me. Beyond the usual questions you can actually get some idea of how many of these people perceive foreigners and their beliefs, and some of the things I have heard are mind opening.

I don’t mean living in an upmarket, exclusive compound for the rich; though I have done this too and although very pleasant, it’s rather like being in legoland – distant and cut off from reality and I can understand why this is appealing.
Of course most foreigners live in such places or in specific buildings designated for foreigners only, and I think most westerners wouldn’t accept anything less in terms of a basic standard of accommodation, unless you have lived in China for a period of time and are accustomed to the conditions.

The government (and employers) encourage this is to protect the safety of the foreigners, as if anything happens to them the employer is vicariously liable.   But by doing this they inadvertently have created a situation where foreigners and Chinese dont mix.

Sure there are some unsafe places just like any other city but I think Changchun is significantly safer than London. I’ve heard stories of foreigners getting in fights and being hurt- but this is confined to drink related bar-brawls and this happens in any city, and is often to an extent, self-inflicted.
I think having an awareness of what is going on around you (understanding the basics of the language and the culture helps) – probably goes a long way to keeping yourself safe.
However, most people I know have had at least one phone stolen at some time or another. Petty theft and pick pocketing is a problem (as it is everywhere in China) especially so on public transport and in other public areas – but you just have to be vigilant. Also if you leave something somewhere, like forgetting to pick up your phone from the restaurant table, then it is gone. You won’t get it back. The same applies to taxis, shops, even classrooms.

When I get on a bus I adopt a common stance, I take my phone into one hand and move everything else into my other pocket and leave my hand in that pocket. Fortunately (touch wood) I’m yet to lose a phone, though someone took my keys (yes my keys!) when I left them on a table once.
Living on campus has it’s advantages in that work is convenient, I had only a 5 minute walk every morning, but keeping work separate from the rest your life is impossible.
I would find that students would ask me questions like ‘what were you doing last thursday night, I saw you walking past the library’ and other such nosy, but inquisitive questions
At first I thought that someone was following me, but I later came to realise that news spreads incredibly quickly when you are on a campus – everyone seems to know things about you and often they know things before you! Which is spooky, but you soon learn that you are the last person to know about anything that happens!

 
I used to think this was and example of the great Chinese eaves dropping network in operation, the idea of nothing being private. I actually believe it was more a case ‘Chinese Whispers’; the students having nothing else to do but speculate and spread rumour, and being the foreign teachers on campus makes you an interesting topic of conversation!
I sometimes got the feeling that my life was being watched, (It might well have been!)
as people would know things about my movements, but I never found out if this was true or not.

 

Most universities (all in Changchun) have special buildings for the Foreign Teachers to live in and these are subject to curfews (doors are locked!) which to me spells nothing but FIRE HAZARD. At least they don’t cut the power, like the Students halls.
The Chinese teachers also are expected to live in special accommodation on campus, but in recent years as home ownership has become more affordable, many can rent or live in their own place. And I don’t blame them, the Chinese Teachers’ accommodaton can be nothing more than a military style dormitory!

Film City 电影城

Added lots of new stuff to the photo gallery but you will have to quickly sign up to view them though – stops the spammers.

Had a busy few weeks and finally finished working last Sunday. I introduced the game Monopoly to the students and they loved it. Two of them even tried to buy it from me at the end of class! But I won’t sell, no way. You just can’t buy things like this in Changchun.

Took a trip down to the movie city (dian4 ying3 cheng2)on Red Flag Street the other day, if only to satisfy my own curiosity as I pass this place every day.

front of building

Well, I can tell you that a more appropriate translation would be ‘changchun film studios’ as that’s what it actually is! Just a large, red-brick glorified warehouse with a large statue of the Chairman outfront; nothing more to it.
The place is pretty old and dilapidated, a shadow of its former self, but nonetheless still quite an interesting place to visit – I managed to walk around the complex without
buying an entrance ticket (through luck more than judgment, I just happened to walk in the wrong way), and In hindsight i don’t think it’s worth an admission fee.inside the building

If you are interested in the history of Chinese film making, particularly some of the very early TV productions, then you may find this place a gold mine of information, but otherwise, miss it.

There is another place at the very edge if the city, with a similar name; Changchun Film Century City 长影世纪城 which is like a theme park based on films but It’s pretty expensive - over 100元 each. Might go there next week.

Perhaps something more worth seeing is the collection of old aeroplanes and military hardware stored in the courtyard.

Most of it is left over from WW2 and is Japanese or Russian made, also there’s an old Chinese fighter jet rusting away in the car park!

cannon old cannons jet

old plane old war-time plane