Facing East
Friday, October 12
Actually I will be facing west.
This is just a reminder to those of
you who haven't heard it 20 times already.
We will be leaving tomorrow for
two weeks in Hong Kong and Macao. The itinerary retraces much of the route
I took last Christmas day: Newark Liberty to Chicago O’Hare to Tokyo
Narita. If we get on the right plane, the final leg out of Tokyo will take us
to Hong Kong instead of Bangkok. Either way, we will be 12 time zones
away. Different time, different day, different season.
I am looking forward to seeing O’Hare
and Narita again.
Joanna, as most of you know, is
the sensei on this trip, so under her guidance I expect to find my
way back in one piece, if not entirely sober, on the 27th.
Back in Asia
Sunday, October
14
Hello, all.
I'd say I can't quite
believe I'm here, but that wouldn't be quite accurate. I just wouldn't have believed
it if somebody had told me when I was a kid that some night I would be eating
chicken feet at the restaurant next to my hotel in Hong Kong.
Right now, I’m sitting in
the living room of our 22nd floor suite at the 88 Hotels and Serviced
Apartments—so called, I guess, because it’s at 88 Des Voeux Road in Hong
Kong.
I’m in Asia, 12 times
zones away, so I got up bright and early at 10:30. It’s fun to make connections
at airports, especially at Tokyo, where you zip right through. So fast, in
fact, that you have time for not one, but at least two Kirin beers between
flights.
But even so, thirteen
hours from O’Hare to Narita and another four and a half more to Hong Kong can
make you a little numb.
We left home at 7:30
Saturday to board a 10:15 flight out of Newark. Remembering my misdirection
last December on the outset to Bangkok, I called ahead to make sure that
American Eagle does indeed fly out of the same terminal as American, from which
I had booked our tickets. You may remember the fun I had last time, when I
showed up at the Continental desk with a Continental ticket and was told that
United was handling the flight from another terminal. So I remembered to be
careful this time.
Good thing, too, because
we had plenty of time for a leisurely breakfast. Even so, we had to wait until
nine—well, I did; Joanna was just being patient—so I could get a mimosa with my
crab omelet at the seafood restaurant concession.
We drank coffee and read
the Times until the blue laws kicked
in in our favor.
The flight was delayed
maybe half an hour getting out of Newark. We were told that a mechanical
problem at O’Hare lost some time while they changed planes. So our plane was
behind schedule coming in from ORD.
No problem, though, even
for a worrier like me. We had a two-hour window at O’Hare. No flashing lights
this time, so I was in another terminal, or maybe I wasn’t paying attention. It
was lunch time, even in Chicago, so I had a pint of Sam Adams lager at a bar
near the gate.
I can’t believe I watched
“Men in Black 3” and “Captain America” both all the way through in the same
day. Four hours worth of movies without a single naked lady, but it’s amazing
what you can do when you spend 13 hours confined to a seat in the middle of the
row.
I got up for maybe three
walks when I was able to hang around the window at the back of the plane. The
clouds were thick yesterday so I didn’t see much on the ground—just some lakes
in Canada.
I haven’t had a smoke for
more than six years, but I still get nicotine withdrawals from time to time. It
is usually at a time of inconvenient confinement—like when I’m driving or
penned in a seat somewhere—that they are going to hit hard. They make me squirm
and I either have to endure it or get up and move around. Maybe Buddha was with
me, because the fits were mild yesterday.
At Narita, we stopped at a
miso soup shop and sat at the sashimi bar for a couple of draft Kirins. I tried
to get some money from the local ATM so I’d have a few yen in my pocket, but it
turns out they weren’t ATMs at all, but international pay phones with video
screens. The cashier even gave me a U.S. dollar in change, so all I have are a
few 10-yen coins and another that is written entirely in Japanese and has a
hole in it, so it looks official.
I slept most of the way
between Tokyo and HKK.
Passport control was very
efficient. Joanna taught me to say “thank you” in Cantonese—mgoy—to which a
uniformed immigration lady laughed and said, “No big thing; you’re welcome.” (Sounds
like: “M’sai hot heh.”)
The cab let us off about a
block from the hotel, and we checked in sometime between 11 and midnight
Sunday. So that was a good 28-hour day of travel.
We hit Tsui Wah, a
restaurant open till two right next to the hotel. We had boned chicken feet in
something like a mild wasabe sauce, pork tendon with noodles and fish soup, and
mai fun (rice capellini) with preserved mustard greens and shredded pork. I had
a couple of Tsingtaos and two Heinekens, so I was feeling no sign of fatigue.
It was after one and I could have kept going.
Joanna found the food a
little hot for her taste. She only sampled the chicken feet, for instance.
There was a bottle of chiles in oil on the table, and I haven’t had that for
ages. I had white rice for dessert to cool my tongue.
Then we went for a walk.
We passed the escalators to the Mid Levels. If we get bored, we’ll ride them
and see what the Mid Levels are.
We are near the base of
Victoria Peak and have a reservation on the 18th (whatever day of the week that
is) for dinner at the Cafe Deco at the top.
Gotta go now. I’m in Hong
Kong.
Harry
October 14
Welcome back to Asia, Grasshopper! The
food already sounds great!
Enjoy!
Larry
October
14
Confucius
say send postcard!!!
Karl
Hopping
a Ferry and Several Bars
Monday, October 15
Time to catch up. I have been very busy following
the footsteps of Jean-Claude Van Damme and Dolph Lundgren. I have also
developed strange sleeping habits.
I didn’t wake up Monday morning at 10:30 after all.
But more about that in a few lines.
We started out looking for congee. That’s not an
eel but slow-cooked rice soup which is traditional for breakfast here. The
place had been recommended to us by one of the waiters at Tsui Wah. It was
right down the street from the hotel. Of course, we couldn’t find it.
We asked a vendor on the street who said it was
next to the 7-Eleven. The lady at 7-Eleven said it was a couple of doors down.
There it was: old chairs, plastic tabletops, discolored walls. We knew the food
was going to be good. And so it was.
We had gai lan (a kind of Chinese broccoli rabe)
and congee with chicken and “century egg.” That’s an egg that has been aged in
the shell until the yolk turns a deep forest green and the white becomes
transparent brown, almost like coffee. Don’t scoff if you haven’t tried it.
Like snails and ants’ eggs and pork tendon, it’s delicious.
The house also kicked in a small plate of fish
balls. They are popular here, but not one of my favorites
The clock on the wall as we were finishing
breakfast read five to 11, but that didn’t seem right—not if I hadn’t rousted
before 10:30. Turns out the clock on the microwave oven in the suite is more
than three hours fast. It was close to three when I sacked out and wasn’t quite
7:30 when I got up. I had about four hours sleep.
Coffee is difficult to get here, because so few
people drink it. As it was in Thailand, it all seems to be instant. But I had
coffee at the hotel before we left. Joanna doesn’t touch the stuff—well maybe a
little decaf now and again, but then only cut with hot water. If I don’t have
at least two cups in the morning, I start having withdrawals—headaches and
chills—sometime in the afternoon.
After we were suitably nourished, we scouted the
ferry terminal for Macau (Yes, spelled over here with a ”u.”). On the way we
bought Octopus cards. They’re sort of like the Oyster card in London, good for
buses and other mass transit, but the Octopus is also good at 7-Eleven and
McDonald’s. So we turned around and of course there was a 7-Eleven. We bought a
soy milk and I paid for it with the Octopus. I had seen that done recently in a
Hong Kong crime movie so I was eager to try it.
The ferry terminal is in a shopping mall and took
us a while to find. The signs kept sending us in circles until we saw one
little sign that pointed up one more flight of the escalator.
the Macau service is jet powered. In the background of this shot are some of the towers of Kowloon. Real estate is so valuable here that they just pile apartment on apartment. Like New York, only more so.
Being in that part of town, we decided to stroll
down the skywalk to the Star Ferry terminal and take ship for Kowloon. We
didn’t explore much there because we’re going to be staying in Kowloon next
week. The ride alone is spectacular, different, but as much fun in its own way as the water ferry ride up the river in Bangkok.
Here is a snapshot of Hong Kong from the Star Ferry.
And another shot of Kowloon.
And Joanna's view of Harry's nose from the Star Ferry.
The walking and sea voyage wore us out so we dragged back to the hotel and slept until late afternoon. Then we got up and went to the party district, Lan Kwai Fong. I think this area is a setting in “The World of Suzie Wong.” It is full of bars and was decorated for Halloween, with effigies of witches and vampires, plastic limbs and skeletons hanging up with the prayer flags.
The walking and sea voyage wore us out so we dragged back to the hotel and slept until late afternoon. Then we got up and went to the party district, Lan Kwai Fong. I think this area is a setting in “The World of Suzie Wong.” It is full of bars and was decorated for Halloween, with effigies of witches and vampires, plastic limbs and skeletons hanging up with the prayer flags.
Before we started bar hopping, we stopped at a
restaurant called Yung Kee that specializes in goose. We shared a goose leg and
a plate of choy sum, which reminds me of broccoli, and finished with a sweet
soup made with black sesame seeds. They had three kinds of beer—Tsingtao and
Heineken, both of which I had had the night before, and a third whose name I
didn’t catch so I ordered that one. It was Carlsberg, which I haven’t drunk in
ages.
So far, all the beers I’ve encountered have been
light lagers and pilsners. Most of them are familiar to me. But just about
every bar has taps, so there is more draft beer available than there was in
Thailand.
I tried to stop at every bar in the Lan Kwai Fong
neighborhood, but that just wasn’t possible in one night. I do remember
lighting a joss stick at a small shrine outside the Baby Buddha bar. The shrine
and the name are unrelated, we were told.
The photo of Joanna is outside one of the bars we didn't try. In the background you may notice several men suspicious of having their photos taken.
We walked up a dark alley and then climbed down a
set of stairs to find Le Jardin on a landing. It was clean and almost sleek, and therefore not a distinguished bar,
but the location on the stairs was terrific. I had a couple of half pints and
Joanna and I were given complimentary membership cards in Le Jardin Club.
We cabbed back and passed out sometime between
eleven and midnight.
No comments:
Post a Comment