The Outer Temple of the Summer Palace

We'll start this post from the very begining, which is a very good place to start because it has to do with breakfast. Cahty Lee and I walked the streets to find a nice woman selling fried dough (not from the same vendor that Andrea got sick off of the other day even though I thought that fried dough was just fine and wasn't anywhere near death like she was). This particular dough came with a bowl of tofu, soy sauce and... other stuff... to be honest we weren't even sure it was tofu, but I digress. After getting said items and a baggie full of tofu stuff to go, we pranced over to Cathy Lee's school, the Petroleum College, only to be met by throngs of sophomores dressed in military fatigues. They were sitting on either side of the main walk way so that we had to walk, very conspicuously through them. There were easily 200 to 300 of these kids staring at us. A few of them clapped... Cathy Lee claimed she felt like some sort of foreign diplomat, while I just felt creepy.
After breakfast and farting around back at my apartment for a while, came lunch. We picked up Andrea who lives only a few doors down and chose a random place off the street that looked heavily patronized, which, we were told, is a good sign because that means that their food isn't so shady. (Only in China, by the way, would you ever question why you were puking all day long after eating something from a wok that looked like it hadn't been cleaned in 10 years... poor Andrea) Ordering at any restaurant tends to go something like this: we sit down, they give us a menu, we scan it for characters that we recognize and find none, we ask for jauzi (dumplings) at which point our waitress today goes to yell our order down to the cook in the basement and then EVERYBODY in the restaurant laughs, we then get the sinking feeling that something special is being put into our dumplings, we eat them anyway because we are so happy to finally get a plate of something we recognize.
Moving on, we caught a cab to one of the outer temples of the Summer Palace. (Quick side note: the Summer Palace is where the old Emperors would vacation in the summer.) After getting our tickets, we enter and I could have sworn I was at EPCOT. It was bigger than the China at EPCOT and looked older and was filled with Chinese people. We have yet to see any other foreigners during our stay in Chengde, but we are meeting up with some tonight so cross your fingers that they're cooler than Andrew. This place was beautiful. The jem of the temples was the 35 ft, copper statue of the Goddess of Mercy that was housed in one of the temples mid-way up the mountain. We unfortunately couldn't take picture of the statue but she was awe striking with 13 sets of arms all with eyes in the center of the palm. Climbing to the topmost temple we ran into a cute little band; a septet of gray old men playing funny little instruments while people individually went up to the altar with insence. Past the topmost temple there was a wooded area where we found a nice mushroom to shade ourselves under. Soon, a gang of 15 native Chinese students around the age of 18 started shouthing "hello" at us. We responded "hello" back. Laughter ensued while they added things like "how are you?", "ni hao ma?", and "hello" again. Acknowlidging their presence ment that we wanted them to come over, apparently. Completely surrounding us, they tried chatting us up for a while, but after realizing that we didn't have much else to say after "ni hao ma?" (how are you) and "mamahuhu" (so-so), they decided pictures would suffice. We thought at first that we were to take their picture but soon realized that we were the center subjects of the photograph. After the group shot, one gentleman had his girlfriend take a picture of himself with the three of us and got much grief from her after putting his arm around me for the pose. Lots and lots of laughter... and they left.
Before I sign out of this post for the day, I would like to share with you the second most coolest things I've seen in China so far... and that is a talking bird that said "ni hao". At first I thought he was saying "hello" (stupid) and then realized that since I was in China, the bird would undoubtedly speak Chinese. Don't worry, Cathy Lee has video proof of this phenomenon and will be showing it to you as soon as possible.
And now, to get ready for our date with the other foreign teachers. We're hoping their not missionaries but if they are, we're playing along and telling them that we're in the Bachelors till the Rapture club.
I say goodday!

1 Comments:
OH No, Cosgrove!! didn't anyone ever tell you that "soy" makes your boobs bigger...and the key ingredient in tofu is SOY!! that's what my theory is at least why my boobs are so large, I was lactose intolerant as a baby, and had to drink soy milk. Although there are a lot of asian people that eat tofu and don't have any boobs at all. So.......
August 30, 2005 9:11 PM
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