Friday, September 28, 2007

China Pictures!


This was our first night at Tsinghua University. They were very excited for our visit!
















A video from about halfway up the Great Wall.





Jess and I: About to pass out, but so happy that we made it to one end of the Great Wall!

Mongolian Hot Pot! I can't wait to find one at home!
This is the famous Tian Nan Men Square. It was beautiful, but overly packed. The blurryness in the background is not the picture...that is the smog of Beijing! No wonder my lungs hurt!









This is the majority of our trip group outside the Temple of Heaven. (I am on the far right)
Notice: 14 boys, 50 girls. This is reminiscent of all of Semester at Sea.

We stopped on the side of the highway to get a look at the site for the 2008 Beijing Olympics.
The stadium is called "The Bird's Nest" and isn't completely finsihed, but getting there.
Note my snazzy Olympics shirt, don't mind that the far right ring is supposed to be red, not white. I guess thats what you get when you pay $2 for a shirt.





This is the view of The Summer Palace from our paddle boat. The smog also affected our view of this.

China!

Well, I think one of the most important lessons I learned from China is that it is nothing like Japan.

My impressions of China began very poor, but I left very intrigued by the country. I loved the food and historical sights of Beijing and the environmental impacts of the population and pollution are really astounding.

Anyway, we docked on Wednesday in Qingdao (“Chingdao”) which is on the northern coast of China. It is maybe 400 miles from Shanghai. Shanghai was in the middle of a typhoon when we docked and we definitely felt the brunt of that. Our day spent in Qingdao was wet and windy! We walked off the ship and explored the city. It was quite an awakening to go from modern Japan to the slums of China. This beach city is small and very run down. Each alley way was lined with corrugated tin shacks. Hardly anyone spoke English so it was tough to get around and we spent about an hour at the bank trying to exchange money, but eventually found an ATM that worked. We were trying to find a restaurant for our friend Kristi’s birthday dinner that night. We were pretty miserable after being refused cabs by drivers because we were white and not feel much friendliness from the people of Qingdao. We did meet a very nice young woman who stopped to help us and knew about 20 words in English, took us up to her office on the 22nd floor, and had her secretary help us figure out that we wanted to find a nice restaurant for that night. It took about 20 minutes to get our point across. Then she had another one of her employees walk us to this restaurant. So meeting these friendly people really helped brighten our view of the Chinese. It was raining so hard that we didn’t end up going back out for dinner and ate on the ship for Kristi’s birthday. The rain did settle and we headed back out for a few hours to the Tsingtao brewery (also pronounced “Chingdao”) so Kristi could have a beer on her 21st birthday. We met a lot of very nice Chinese people here too and had a lot of fun. One family that was eating very adamantly offered us roast cockroach and my friend Alex and I tried them. It actually tastes like burnt chicken skin, not that bad.

The next day was the beginning of my SAS sponsored trip to Beijing. We signed up for these trips this summer, and I got lucky because my good friend Jess and my roommate chose the University trip as well and we were placed at the same University. I am so glad I did this trip through SAS because I saw and experienced way more than I could have if I had traveled independently because the city is huge and it was nice to not have to worry about planning or paying for anything. We had air conditioned buses take us everywhere and two hosts from the University who had everything planned for us. We took a flight out to Beijing on Thursday afternoon and headed straight to Tsinghua (“Chingwa”) University for dinner with the students. Dinner was awesome, the main dish was Peking Duck and there were many other Chinese dishes. Jess, our friend Brett, and I were befriended by Alan. Alan is ridiculously smart. He is doing graduate research at Tsinghua in Biology but now he is working for Yahoo! China and has decided to switch into the computer field, but spits when he talks and always has food in his teeth. He was a hoot.

Our hotel was very nice, but I didn’t know they made mattresses so hard. It was a rough sleep. The next morning we headed up to the Great Wall. This was an awesome experience. It is about 45 minutes outside of Beijing and the surrounding mountains are beautiful. The smog still carries outside the city, but is not as bad. It was a hard hour and half climb up to get to the highest point, but it was so worth it. Each step is worn differently; one will be six inches up, the next a foot and a half. It was a hot day, but after the downpour in Qingdao it was so nice to be inland and away from the storm. Our guide took us to lunch a Mongolian hot pot restaurant which was really cool. Each person gets their own pot of boiling water with a few things in it. They bring plates and baskets of veggies, meat, and noodles and while the noodles cook you drop the meats in for about two minutes and they cook. It was really good and fun to eat. We spent the afternoon at the Panda zoo. The pandas were adorable, but very secluded and the zoo is really run down. But it was cool to see Pandas in China. We spend the rest of the afternoon on the campus of Tsinghua hanging out with students and had dinner with them at a pizza parlor on campus too. It was so great to interact with these students. It was so different from Japan because their English was great and we could actually talk about things like education, government, population, stuff like that. I went bowling with a few after dinner and that was a great time. It was actually sad to say goodbye to Alan and the other people we had met, they were really cool. I already have emails from a few of my new Chinese friends. One of them is interested in post-grad in Communication at UCSB so I plugged the school and am working on contacts for her.

Our next day in Beijing was really packed. We visited Tiananmen Square and Forbidden City in the morning. These were beautiful sights, but it was a Saturday so it was soo packed. In Tiananmen Square you couldn’t walk one foot without being hounded to purchase kites or postcards or Chairman Mao memorabilia. We were able to get an audio tour through the Forbidden City, which were the grounds for the emperor’s palace hundreds of years ago. Lunch was great again at a Chinese restaurant where the main dish was dumplings. That afternoon we visited the Temple of Heaven which was beautiful. Then we got about an hour and a half to spend at the Silk Market and grab dinner. The Silk Market is a five story building with rows and rows of people selling clothes/jewelry/electronics/etc. Needless to say dinner never really happened for most of us. The art of the Silk Market is bargaining, which was fun at first but got really tiring especially because my time was so limited. You have to spend ten minutes bargaining to get the price down, but I became pretty good. It was quite an experience. After that we went directly to a Chinese Acrobatics show. They did tight rope tricks, bicycle tricks and lots of stuff very reminiscent of Cirque de Soleil. This was an awesome day and I was really thankful for our trip coordinator who put it all together because I can’t believe we packed so much in.

Our last day in Beijing, we spent the morning at the Summer Palace where the emperors used to move in the hot summers. There was a large lake in the center and we took paddle boats around and enjoyed the huge park around the lake lined with willow trees. It was a really beautiful area and there were a lot families spending Sunday there. We would say hello to little kids and their parents would make sure they stopped and said hello and goodbye back. It is obvious that learning English and interacting with Westerners is seen as really important in China. They start learning English in preschool now and you can’t get into a University without passing an English test.

While we were in Beijing, our ship sailed down from Qingdao to Hong Kong. So that afternoon we flew from Beijing to Hong Kong. Our 40 minute ride to the ship was awesome. All of buildings in Hong Kong are high rises and everything is lit up. Our next day in Hong Kong was rainy and I didn’t do much of anything you might consider educational. I pressed our tour guide on the bus from the airport to find out if there were any can’t miss sights if you are only in Hong Kong for a day. Her main recommendation was shopping. So I did that. I mentioned previously that I packed light under SAS’s recommendation and wish I had brought more clothes. (My laundry day was supposed to be yesterday, it has been over 20 days!!!) So, I shopped and the bargain hunter I am, I found almost everything on sale. I got seven tops and a sweater for barely over $100 USD. So now I won’t have to wear my sweaty or rain soaked clothes over and over again. Hong Kong is pretty dangerous as far as shopping goes; that is their number one industry. I mean, our cruise terminal was a mall!!!! You couldn’t leave the ship and walk outside without walking through the largest mall I’ve ever seen. (We got lost A lot!) People come from all over, especially mainland China, for the shopping because things are cheap and there is no sales tax.

Pulling out of Hong Kong was another amazing sight. The city is just so brightly lit and every building has some colorful changing lights on it. One whole side of a building was flashing letter by letter “Goodbye Semester at Sea.” It was really cool.

So, all in all I had a wonderful time in China. I feel like I learned a lot about their society, it really is fascinating. It might be close to surpassing Japan as the second largest economy in the world, but I saw so much poverty. Beijing is a massive city and still the overpopulation is obvious by the overcrowded bus lines, and never-ending high rise apartment buildings that are always in view. By the third day it was really painful for me to breathe. I had a coughing fit and after that my lungs really hurt when I breathed. The smog blocks the view of many buildings that may only be ¼ mile away. They have a lot to work on before the Olympics on that front. I heard the athletes are going to have to come to Beijing early and learn how to work in the different air. I did like the yuan though, that is their currency. I spent less than $60 USD in 5 days on food, drinks, small souvenirs, and bottled water (you can’t drink the tap.) Many of my meals where covered by my trip, but not all.

Next I am off to Vietnam. We are docking near Ho Chi Minh City and I don’t have any overnight travel plans. I am doing a variety of day trips and am looking forward to spending the nights on the ship. Traveling really takes a lot out of you and I am probably gonna have to do a little school work during the week. I still plan to see a lot of cool things. I will keep you updated! =)

Tuesday, September 18, 2007

Pics from Japan!!

A night in Shibuya, Tokyo. Before dinner and karaoke.







Before entering the MeijiJingu shrine in Tokyo.










The A-Bomb Dome in Hiroshima.




My Japanese host, Mizuho, and another SAS exchange student at Osaka Castle.










My homestay family: Mizuho's Mom, Mizuho, her sister Saeka, Father, Aunt and cousins.
The Japanese really do peace sign in EVERY picture.


One of my new favorite pictures. A temple in Kyoto on my last day in Japan. These aren't real geishas, many Japanese dress up in kimonos to visit the shrines once a month.

Monday, September 17, 2007

When in Japan...

I am back on the ship for two days after a whirlwind five day visit to Japan. Wow! What an amazing country. I made my way through the country setting foot in six different cities. We docked at Yokohama, Japan on Wednesday, September 12. It took about seven hours from the time we docked till when the ship was cleared as the Japanese officials went through all of our passports individually. That was then followed by a very long customs line. It felt like the longest seven hours of my life. It was Nick’s birthday at home and I made it to a telephone with just 30 minutes left of his 21st birthday. =)

It was raining when we docked, but luckily it never rained in the places I visited when I was there. I spent my first three days traveling independently with four of my girlfriends. After being pointed to the wrong train station and walking 20 minutes in the wrong direction, we opted for a cab to the right station and hopped on the train bound for Tokyo. We got to our hotel in the business district of Tokyo, Akasaka, and were surprised at how nice it was considering it was the cheapest we found online. We navigated the brightly lit alleys and walked into a small restaurant and were escorted to the top level where we sat on mats and had to take our shoes off. I ate some fried fish and drank miso soup with floating shrimp heads (eyes and all). I did try sushi this night, but it didn’t go as well as I could have hoped. And we did sip some sake, for traditions sake of course.

We spent this night in Roppongi, which is the tourist nightlife area. It was fun because we saw A LOT of other SAS students, but we navigated away from this area the next night in an attempt to experience a little bit more of the authentic Tokyo nightlife.

We spent the morning of our second day roaming Tokyo. We visited the Imperial Palace gardens. This large open space with moats surrounding the traditional Japanese palace was set upon a background of some of the tallest city buildings I have ever seen. This contrast of modern and traditional was something I noticed all throughout Japan. We also visited Meiji Jingu, the only shrine in Tokyo, which was built to honor Emperor Meiji who was responsible for the Meiji Restoration in Japan in the 1600’s. It was a 20 minute walk deep into these forests before we reached the shrine. It was amazingly beautiful and we even got to watch traditional blessings of some Indian ambassadors that were visiting. It was a very peaceful site deep inside the most modern city I have ever visited.

Our afternoon was spent searching for the Harajuku district. We thought we were there and then once we stumbled upon it realized that we had seen nothing yet. It is so hard to describe the hubbub in the small streets and the outrageous way the young “Harajuku girls” dress. It looked like Halloween on a random Thursday in September. My best suggestion is to Google “Harajuku girl” and see what comes up. I felt like an ugly American all day in my tshirt and nike shorts and flipflops. I have no problem making this statement about ALL Japanese women: they don’t leave the house in shoes that aren’t heeled and without full makeup.

This night we were very lucky. Our friend Kristi met up with us Thursday morning and spent the next two days with us. One of her friends from home is going to University in Tokyo and so we met up with him and his friends this evening. They took us to a wonderful restaurant on the fourth floor of a building (we would never have found it) where they ordered and we ate and ate and ate. I had three different types of sashimi and shrimp and really liked it. Wow! I know! Then, they took us to a karaoke bar. Karaoke is huge in Japan and so different from Western karaoke. You pay a flat rate, around $8 for a room for karaoke and unlimited drinks. They said they go every Friday and Saturday. You sit on the floor around a table and each room has its own karaoke system and flat screen television. They knew exactly what they wanted to sing and were really practiced. They passed the microphone around and each guy had their personal part that they were good at. Us girls just belted Madonna and Britney Spears, etc. Culturally, the Japanese are very quiet, but when you put them in the small karaoke room, you have never heard someone sing so loud. That was a great experience to get to have!! They kept us out pretty late; I think we walked around the whole city. They said if you go out in Tokyo, you don’t go home until six because the subway doesn’t run between 12 am and 5 am. We couldn’t keep up and went home at four, but had to get up at six to catch our train to Hiroshima. It was really sad to leave Tokyo, but Tokyo is a city I can see myself returning to at some point.

We took the Shinkansen (bullet train) to Hiroshima and spent about five hours there. We walked all through the memorial peace park and the memorial museum. The monuments were beautiful and it was a wonderful way to get some perspective on Japan. It connected it to history and the United States. The museum was intense, they really want to get their point across that peace = no nuclear weapons. A lot of the things displayed were really gory, including any piece of clothing/shoes/items pulled from the rubble and a life size wax diorama of a family right after the bombing (“half dead/half alive”.)

Our group split in Hiroshima, four girls went on to Kyoto, and my friend Allie and I went to Kobe, where our ship would arrive in the morning and where we needed to meet up with our respective SAS sponsored trips the next day. It was sad after our three days of travel together that had gone so smoothly. Allie and I arrived in Kobe at 7:30 pm, walked straight into the first hotel we found and passed out. The next morning we made our way to the Port of Kobe and watched our ship dock. I had about 30 minutes to run in, change, and switch out the clothes in my backpack before I left for my visit to Konan Women’s University and homestay.

This was the most amazing experience. My host, Mizuho, was adorable and spoke better English than a lot of the other Japanese students. All the girls were studying English at the University. Mizuho has plans to begin working at a Swiss hotel in the spring. We had structured sharing activities for the first few hours and then got to go out on our own. There were four Japanese girls and four SAS students that traveled together this day. They took us on the subway to Osaka, where Mizuho lives, and we walked up to Osaka Castle. We really got along well. Most of the homestays were only one student per home, but Mizuho took three students because her house was so large for Japanese standards. Her mom picked us up from the station in their luxury Toyota. Their family was amazing and soo welcoming. They took us out to dinner where we sat on the floor. They ordered a large variety of food and I had a little of everything. I even tried raw octopus! After dinner, Mizuho and her sister took us to a traditional Japanese spa. Wow! This was an amazing experience. If you are self-conscious in the gym locker room, stay far away! Males and females are separated and you start by showering on a stool in a long row of showers. I washed my hair three times over by the time Mizuho was finished. They wash every part of their bodies for a few minutes. After you shower, there are about 10+ different baths to choose from. The first five minutes were really awkward especially since two of the girls were from SAS and I see them around the ship now. But, once I relaxed it was amazing. It is almost like a cocktail party outside, all the women chatting. Mizuho says she goes with her girlfriends once a month. The tubs were different sizes and temperatures and some with jets. Some had televisions above them. My favorite part was the salt scrub sauna. We spent about an hour strolling the different baths. The next morning, her mom’s sister came over during breakfast and we met her two young children who were adorable. For breakfast, we were served sandwiches, salad, and corn soup. Very different! It was a sad goodbye to her family. We had to promise her mom we could back for a “long stay.” We left for the train to spend the day in Kyoto. On the train Mizuho received an email to her cell phone from her Dad saying (in her words) “he wanted to give you a hug but didn’t know if it would be (thumb’s up).” In Kyoto, we met back up with another Japanese student and SAS girl. We walked up this huge hill and visited a temple. I have never sweat so much, it was such a hot day, I thought I would pass out. They escorted us back to the ship and Mizuho got teary saying goodbye. It was really touching. We really got along so well and I became really good at choosing the right words to communicate with her and understanding what she was trying to say.

So that was my whirlwind five days! Japan was an amazing combination of tradition, culture, beauty, modernity and order. We are spoiled that that was the first country we visited. It was so easy to get around and I met some of the nicest people. These two days involve catching up on sleep and resting my body before we reach China tomorrow! O, and febreezing all of my clothes so I can wear some of them again in China…I really should have brought more clothes! I was supposed to attend a family planning neighborhood committee meeting tomorrow which I was stoked about but we just found out it was cancelled. The second day I leave for Beijing to spend three days at a University, meet students and faculty, and see the Great Wall, Tiananmen Square, and the Forbidden City.

Hope you enjoyed my extensive report of Japan. It deserved it!

Monday, September 10, 2007

Welcome to my Blog!

So, I gave in. Despite the fact that living on a floating campus means high priced internet, I couldn’t resist sharing my journey with family and friends.

I left San Diego, CA the morning of August 27 for Ensanada. We boarded the M/V Explorer and began sailing West. It took six days to get to our first stop, Honolulu. We had two days of Orientation with boring unstructured days and the task of making all new friends which left me pretty homesick. As soon as classes started things picked up and I, of course, made many friends. Classes made the days easier to bear but we were unexplainably happy to get off for a day in Honolulu, Hawaii. We had about 10 hours on the island. We made a stop at Walmart to stock up on things we had forgotten. I got myself a $7.87 watch because the last few days I had continuously showed up to class 20 minutes early cause I just had no idea what time it was. Let me tell you, life is weird without a cell phone. After that, we spent a few hours at the beach and then headed back to ship for our 8 day trek to Yokohama, Japan.

I can’t tell you how excited I am to arrive in Yokohama tomorrow. The ship isn’t that big, so sometimes you can go stir crazy but I feel a lot more comfortable than I did before Hawaii. I feel like I’ve been gone for so long, and my trip in essence has not even started.

A little about my home:

- I live in a double room on the Portside (Left) of the ship. It has a window to the water which I often stare out. Yesterday it was my afternoon entertainment as the waves were the largest yet. I have a roommate, Justine. She is a second year at UCLA and we get along really well, especially considering we share a bathroom you can barely turn around in.

- I was seasick the first two days but my body seems to have adjusted well. This boat rocks 20 times more than a Carnival Cruise, you wouldn’t believe it. Last night, all of the pool water (7th deck) splashed out even soaking the 4th deck. The pool was soon empty.

- I have classes almost every day we are at sea. There are no weekends on board. I hardly know what day it is. Our calendar follows and A-B schedule. A1, B1, A2, B2, etc. I am taking a core global studies course which everyone takes. This is a very eclectic course, all of the professors have their turn lecturing about different aspects (cultural/historical/technology) of the places we are visiting. We just took our first of four midterms for global studies. I am also taking Global Media, China in the Modern World, and Population and Development in Asian Societies. The teachers are wonderful and really stress learning based on field observations.

- The food is very dorm-esque. We get pretty much the same thing everyday with a tiny new spin on it. My diet is primarily salad, pasta, and vegetables. If there is protein that looks tasty I jump on it, cause it doesn’t come around too often. =)

- I have made a great group of girlfriends and we have a lot of fun. They definitely make being away from home easier.

- I still check email daily so feel free to write, ninaburke@sbcglobal.net. I am a pro at getting and sending emails in under 5 minutes. =)

Tomorrow, we dock in Japan. My plans include Tokyo for 2 days, Hiroshima, Kobe, and Kyoto. My last night will be a home stay with a family of a University student in Kobe which I am Very excited about!!

The next time I write I will officially be a world traveler. Cheers!