D300
4
Jun 09
Xiao Long Bao in the steamer
6
Apr 09
Liked the result.
1
Apr 09
Busy, and busy planning for Shanghai!
Madness right now. I’m just trying to finish my first chapter of my M. Phil. thesis on Joseph Conrad. So my desk looks something like this again, although this is an older photo from when I was doing a proposal for a different academic project (and, surprisingly, it’s my second most popular photo on flickr. Messy desks seem to resonate with people…). But work like this really eats into the photo time, you know? I’ve got to get it done this week, though, especially because I’ve decided that next week, during Easter, I deserve a break, and I’m heading off to Shanghai.
Never been there before, although I’ve been living in Asia for ages, and in China for between 5 and 8 years (depending on your definition of China: I lived in Taiwan for three years before moving to Hongkers). So I’m totally excited at the prospect.
This means I get to play my favourite Flickr game: plan-your-trip-by-using-our-search! (I outlined it in yesterday’s post). And there are some crazy photogs in Shanghai. I’ve stumbled across these folks already: lifemage, theshanghaieye and tommyOshima.
Still working out the details, obviously want to take in the Bund and the view of Pudong, but not 100% sure about what’s available in Shanghai, so I’ll be doing more research on this during breaks from my other research. If you have any ideas or recommendations of what to do in Shanghai, give me a shout out in the comments section.
Gear wise, I’ll have to travel quite light, and I’m toying with the idea of just hooking up my Nikon D300, a 50mm 1.4 and a 20mm. Only. No zoom, no macro. Not even a flash, maybe. Just want to unencumber and focus on getting great people and street shots with these to tack-sharp, creamy-buttery-bokeh nikkor lenses.
9
Mar 09
Bad weather at the Big Buddha
Po Lin is kind of out of the way for me, though, and since there’s not really too much going up there for locals, I haven’t been back in the four years since then. Enter the Year of The Goat, and the year has just been one damn thing after another. Bad luck, according to our more superstitious frineds and relatives: I’m a Horse and my wife is a Goat, and apparently, this isn’t the greatest year for either of these two Chinese zodiac characters. The advice from my grandmother-in-law was that the only way you can cure this is through a visit to a couple of specific temples in Hong Kong. You guessed it: Po Lin is one of them.
So this put the idea of a trip out there firmly into our consciousness, but it still wasn’t exactly a burning issue for us. But after finding ourselves at alittle bit of a loose loose end last weekend, we decided on Saturday that a trip back to Po Lin, more for a look around again and a ride on the Nong Ping cable car than anything about the luck changing, may not be a bad move. Even with the bad press surrounding Nong Ping, the tourist village up there, and especially the cable car, which has been plagued with some Very Bad Things since its opening, climaxing in the time that one of the gondolas came right off the cable and crashed to the mountain below. Luckily empty at the time.
Plus, Nong Ping had to a tourist trap, right?
So, we wake up on Sunday morning, look out the window (our bedroom has a view right across the channel to Tung Chung, and the cable cars going up the mountain) and we see grim weather. Coffee and discussion in bed follow, and we nearly stayed in bed and waited for more auspicious weather. But in the end, we decided to head out, no matter what the weather was like, so long as we left early to avoid the crowds.
Weather didn’t improve. We didn’t exactly have the best view from our gondola on the way up to the temple:
Seems like we weren’t the only ones headed up there with a view to getting good things:
Speaking of details, this is a floor detail of the main temple:
All told, it’s worth a visit. Just try not to get taken in by the prices up on the hill there, becauce they are very different to those down the bottom, and get in early to avoid the tour groups, which tend to go up there for lunch. You can read more about the place in this wikipeida entry:










