The end of another week though a short one at that; a short
work-week actually, with the Moon Festival school closure Monday. School as
always is an amazing place to be. I had students in my after-school-activities
group perform their first newscast that we aired throughout the upper school
the following morning. Next week we start doing one for the elementary school
too. I named it DAISlive and everyone; students and
teachers alike, are onboard with great ideas and contributions. I also got a
bit of a promotion to an academic technology coordinator position and though it
is a lot more responsibility and I will be here for an extra week at the end of
the school year whilst Narda will be going back to
the States five days earlier than me, to stay with her son Chris in Atlanta and
I have to be back a week earlier at the end of the summer, Narda
will hang with her new grand-daughter and family in Adelaide for that week, I
am excited about it all. Being an unemployed teacher back in NYC was not fun,
thrown out onto the ‘you-should-retire’ heap when the US government is saying
we should be working later in life; with what job? one
would ask, I am most lucky to be able to use the past decades of work for this
perhaps my last hurrah. Working with ESL students with a handful of English
words in my computer classes is a challenge – I will go on about this in my
educational blog ~ http://neuage.us/edu/blog.html
Our
first cooler day after lots of nice hot days. We need to appreciate
and ride our bikes as much as possible. We usually go for a bike ride in the
morning before school. Everyone says winter is brutal here and goes from
November until about March.
Playing
the money market, again. Today the US dollar is strengthening against the Aussie dollar.
In the past four minutes the US dollar has gone from .96 to .98 cents. Of
course when it was worth .60 cents before the US dollar went belly up a couple
of years ago we were in better stead; but we will take what we can and today we
have to transfer before the US dollar dives again. It is all quite nerve
racking. The China Yuan just stays the same day in day out. We get paid partly
in Yuan and partly in US dollars. If only I had paid attention in math class
some fifty years ago I would be able to figure out whether I should purchase
soybeans by the ton in China or in the US or in Australia. Of course why would
I do that is beyond reality – my favourite place to exist.
The building in our
area is still going on at a frantic pace. The major project is starting to take
shape – it looks like something straight out of Southern France; believe it
will be a winery. The main building, looking like a cathedral has ornate sides/windows/panels
all happening. And the buildings at Chateau Bordeuax
across the street are starting to have some rooftop shapes that look French. We
may end up with a French village across the street. Of course it will probably
be empty like so much of the buildings are in China. Someone told me at the
conference in Shanghai last week there were about five million migrants in
Guangzhou building – with most of the buildings left empty. Here we have large
housing tracks, beautifully finished with no one living in them. China has
about zero unemployment because there is a building job for everyone. Of course
people cannot afford them so they stand empty or investors purchase them and
leave them empty. It is like they are building ghost towns. Hard to imagine there
are more than a billion people in this country with so much emptiness.
Perhaps if they started building at a frantic rate in the States there
would be zero unemployment too.
We are booking our
tickets to Atlanta and back to Beijing then on to Australia for next June -
August with something in South America after Atlanta for a week. A nice Saturday to spend money.
Here are some photos
I took out of our hall window here at Campus Village this morning:
Our
new winery - a touch of France here in China. Across the street
this was taken from our hall here at Campus Village, Pebble Beach National
Resort in Jinshitan, Dalian China
View out of the hallway window
In the distance one of many large housing tracks with few if any
one living in them, this particular one is Yosemite, and we ride our bikes to there to go
to the Kangaroo Bar and the Busy Bee shop which is similar to a 7-11 store in the States and
Australia only with Chinese products.
Looking toward the hill where Blueberry Cafe - our favorite
Friday night dinning place. On the right the blue roof over the new swimming
pool