Showing posts with label Hong Kong. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hong Kong. Show all posts

Monday, 23 July 2012

Ask the gecko...


There was a gecko in the sink on Saturday morning. That was the first sign. An omen if you like.

It was 37.5 degrees on Saturday which I think is about 220 degs Fahrenheit. It felt like it anyway.

It was hot all week. Very hot.  Within minutes of taking a cool shower, beads of sweat quickly form on your body and start forming mini vertically-flowing rivers down your chest and stomach.

Within an hour, you are dripping perspiration onto the marble floor.

The tactic is not to dress until the last possible moment before leaving the flat. Even putting on a light cotton tee shirt feels like putting on a chainmail vest, boiled in vinegar.

It’s only about 40 steps down from the flat to where my new bike is parked under a banyan tree. By the time I reach it there are already dark patches all over my shirt.

When cycling it is essential not to exert any effort at all and this is particularly challenging on my shiny new Ferrari-red Chinese bike. Several sizes too small (but the largest in stock) and priced at a competitive $850HK (about £60) this bike has all the component parts of a decent bike but is in fact, complete crap.

The saddle is extended so far up on its stem to accommodate my long legs that the pedals end up behind my knees  meaning  that you feel you are pedalling backwards in some sort of agonising contortion. The pedals are also sloped downwards so that if you have to put any real pedal power into it your feet just slide off and bash painfully on the ground. The wire cables that connect the brakes and gears have sharp points that regularly stick into your ankles and calves like deadly mosquito bites. There are 126 gears but not one of them is any help for going uphill. 

Needless to say, by the time I park up using the stand that still allows the bike to fall over in a light breeze I am soaked in sweat. Apart from the effort of cycling on the bike from hell there has been the additional finger exertion of dinging the bell ($2-50 extra, by the way) about 200,000 times at stupid bloody tourists ambling aimlessly along the concrete paths that connects Hung Shing Ye beach to the main metropolis and ferry port at Yung Shue Wan.

For the first time ever in Hong Kong ,I elected to sit inside the cabin on the Lamma Ferry, opting for air conditioned comfort rather than a harbour breeze and acute dehydration.

Swimming in the sea does not offer much relief either. The water is like dirty brown washing up water. Thick with a frothy surface of scum and a huge deposit of general litter introduced from the Western Lamma channel by a persistent onshore breeze. Plastic bags, nappies, plastic cups, crisp wrappers, drinking straws, a cigarette lighter and other unmentionable flotsam and jetsam. Like swimming in a warm liquid rubbish dump.

Being China no one cares too much and families frolic and play in the surf happily ignoring dirty nappies floating past on the tide.

And then after Mr Gecko appeared everything started to change. He was a plain tan colour with bulgy eyes and it took me a few minutes to catch him as he raced around the sink like Chris Hoy around the Olympic velodrome.  I finally caught him under a whisky glass still unwashed from the night before.

Hopefully Mr Gecko had not been drinking the dregs but he did seem a bit shocked and disoriented when I dropped him onto the flower bed outside the French windows.

I don’t think he is one of our regular pair of geckos who hunt on the white wall outside the French windows. I leave the light on for them to attract bugs and I have to say they have fattened up quite nicely since last November when I first saw them. I am not sure if they are a mating pair but they seem tolerant if each other and both are quite aggressive if another gecko turns up on their patch. Elaborate tail twitching is the key indicator of a gecko in a strop based on my months of detailed observations.

Anyway, that Saturday evening, returning to Central on the Star Ferry ,the light was extremely strange.  There was talk of a typhoon and there was a huge deluge while we were celebrating a recent payment from the South China Morning Post in a very nice Mexican restaurant called Brickhouse. The sea the next day was cool, clean and clear and there were tiny fish rising around the beach.

Then it started raining. And I mean really raining.

On returning to the flat the official Typhoon warning for tropical storm Vicente was set at number 1. This basically means that there is a huge tropical storm building in the South China Sea but it’s a long way off so just don’t plan any solo crossing of the harbour on a breadboard and bring the washing in. By Monday the storm had intensified into a typhoon and had changed course to the north and was heading straight for us. The warning went up to 3. This means it’s going to get windy so tie down your potted plants and don’t make any long trips by ferry unless you fancy staying for while. Now we wait for 8, which is lash everything down (including yourself) and pray for help, or even worse, 10, hide under the bed until further notice.

This only goes to prove that if you want to know about Hong Kong weather- ask a gecko.


Wednesday, 11 January 2012

Lamma life and Lamma dogs

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Sitting in the garden of our modest flat, I am enjoying the mid-morning sights and sounds of Lamma Island. The deafening, grinding, drilling noise as two octogenarian Chinese gentlemen struggle with a pneumatic drill which they share to dig up the narrow concrete pathway that connects the traditional three storey houses of Wang Long Village.
To my right, the sound of Abba’s "Dancing Queen" pounds out at some considerable volume from the home of our trans-sexual neighbour with the amazing new breasts. She parks his/her bike against the picket fence of our garden, so we often exchange shy glances across the tropical plants. She is a helper for a family and can be heard scolding the small child in her care with a deep threatening voice.
Inevitably, the unique symphony of noise is embellished by the wild howling of someone’s dog. Even if you are a committed dog lover, you will hate most of the dogs on Lamma Island.  They are all descended from the same feral pack of wolf-like mongrels with pointy snarling faces and curled up tails.  They come in about three different shades of shitty brown and prowl the streets in packs, cocking their enormous legs on small children and crapping where the hell they like. Quite sensibly, owners of these vicious beasts do not even attempt to train or discipline them for fear of being eaten alive.
Often they are left all day on the balcony of their owner’s flat pacing backwards and forwards in the heat going more and more insane and barking madly at any sight or sign of human or dog life.
There was enormous controversy recently when it was discovered that some heinous member of the Lamma community was distributing toxic poison for the dogs. Cruel and evil yes, but if you were living in a flat next to three of these beasts barking and howling all day and night, weeing on your children and defecating in your bed, you might feel sorely tempted into extreme measures too.
There are no cars and no high rise buildings on Lamma Island. If you ignore the three towering chimneys of the coal fired power station (and the copious amounts of dog poo) it is a pretty green and tranquil place compared to most of Hong Kong.
Its 3000 residents are an eclectic mix of Chinese fisherman, Filipino maids , ex-patriot teachers and writers, bankers, vegetarian women of a certain age and just some general intoxicated low-life that were washed up on the beach when the tide went out about 25 years ago.
Lamma life revolves around the ferry that transports residents from the ferry pier at Lung Shue Wan to the high rise concrete and glass chaos of Central district. It is usually a 20 minute journey that costs about £1-40 and remains my favourite boat trip in the world. Crossing one of the busiest shipping lanes in the world,  past anchored container ships awaiting cargo and then depositing you in the heart of one of the most vibrant and cosmopolitan  cities in Asia.
It’s like getting on a boat in a remote Breton Island and 20 minutes later having crossed the English Channel, arriving in the middle of Piccadilly Circus or Canary Wharf.
Hope all is well with you guys.  I am very sorry that I will not be joining you for the top of the table clash on Monday night. It will be a tough and tense game and I will try and stay up for it but 4am is not my preferred time for listening to football.