The Mediterranean Cruise (Part 7 of 13)

Episode 5 – Italy / Napoli / Sorrento

Naples is a seaport and a hub. Besides from all, it is famous for its Mafioso (this part looks like a synthetic truth though lots of people swear by it). Actually the most impressive thing is the lemon. These fruits are growing wild in this region. The soil is rich from the volcano nearby. They grow exceedingly beautiful grapes here and the wine is supposed to be first class. I did not stay long enough to taste the juice of Bachus.

We travel to Sorrento. This is a typical tourist heaven with all the brand names compacted into one street. Me and Danny just found a spot and sat on a bench at the town square watching all the girls walked by. People have a different understand of Italians. They always say Italian men are good looking and Italian women are good looking till they are 21. I think it depends on the region. In the south of Italy you can expect people with olive oil skin, dark complexion, heavily built bodies with a shorter statue. Whereas the people from the north inhabit blue eyes, fair hair, milky complexion and they have lanky built bodies. But one thing for sure, the Italian language sounds harsh and brassy compared with other Latin origin languages. This does not help in the scoring of the most beautiful people.

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From Russia with Love – St. Petersburg

We were on a 12 day river cruise from July 26 to August 6 to Russia, starting from St. Petersburg, going through the Russian internal waterway, visiting the towns and cities along the way and ending in Moscow.

This is the second time we visited St. Petersburg.  The last time was in 1995 when we took the cruise to the Baltics.  The city surely looked better. There were less pot holes but more cars on the roads, the public transportation vehicles were less dilapidated, and the number of young vendors selling pins and medals in the streets was much smaller.  It did appear that there was a change for the better.  Putin no doubt has done a credible job, even though Russia is still poor by comparison.  We understand that unemployment rate is 6% but it is not evenly distributed.  While there are jobs in the big cities as in St. Petersburg and Moscow, people elsewhere are still hard done by.   Wealth is in the hands of a very few.  Pension age is 55 for women and 60 for men.  The average life span of a Russian man is however only 59.  No wonder we did see a lot of elderly women selling small baskets of fruits and flowers from their own back yards to make ends meet.

On the other hand, the palaces tell another story.  Anybody who has visited them do not have to dig very deep to get to the causes for the 1917 revolution.  We saw three of their most famous palaces, The Hermitage, Catherine’s Palace and Peterhof and had a glimpse into the past glory and decadent life style enjoyed by the Czars and their families.  In our minds, the Russian palaces are unrivalled in the world.  “Glittering with gold” is to be taken literally as the palaces are plastered with gold leaves everywhere. The numerous paintings and artifacts displayed in the Hermitage which used to be the Romanovs’ winter palace and is now a museum are not only national but world treasures; the amber room in Catherine’s Palace dazzles and boggles the mind and the many glorious and magnificent fountains in Peterhof provide us with an insight into Peter the Great’s vision as an architect of the Russian Empire.  We come up short with words to describe with justice the richness of these palaces and hopefully the pictures and videos will do a better job.

From Russia with Love – Hermitage video

From Russia with Love – Catherine’s Place video

From Russia with Love – Peterhof video

The Mediterranean Cruise (Part 6 of 13)

Episode 4 – the Greeks never left – Mykonos

The island of Mykonos is famous for its windmill and nice beaches. The houses are all painted in white as it is the only color allowed by law. There are not much vegetable on the island and the boat is the best vehicle to reach other ports and islands.

It was a quiet village and the whole island is supported by tourist trade. We walked around the town and visited the little boutiques. Upon one of them, a lady came out and spoke to us in English. As the conversation developed, we discovered she was a Western alumnus who graduated around the same year as me. She was born in London, Ontario. She visited the island of Mykonos and met her husband and they stayed on the island and opened a souvenir shop. It was a wonderful feeling and we enjoyed it thoroughly. While the conversation was carrying on, a customer closed by heard our conversation and she confessed she was also a Western alumnus a few years of our senior. That also called for more celebration and we walked out of that shop with a whole load of fragrance soap. There were extra pieces in the deal and yet we questioned did we need that much soap? It is still an unknown whether we go a good deal or we got taken.

Mykonos has wonderful sunshine and it would produce extremely useful solar power for its inhabitants. But there were very little use of solar panels.

We met an old lady who put a water dish by the wall. She gestured to me that was for the cats. Greek people believed in pets, especially cats and dogs. 

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The Mediterranean Cruise (Part 5 of 13)

Episode 3 kusadasi (Ephesus), Turkey

The Turkish people inherited the buildings built by the Greeks. The theatres, multi-usage forum, the library, all bore the Greek influence. There were a lot of copycats around in the old days. Who copied whom was unknown but everybody claimed their stuff was the best. Such were human nature.

At one gate there was a human head carved at the epic. Some archaeologist claimed it was the head of Medusa, the lady who could turn everything into stone if you dared to look at her face front. Then a few years later, another archaeologist claimed it was the boy friend of Emperor Hadrian. The image was left on the gate in memory of the boy friend. I totally agreed with the later. Anything scandalous will produce juicy stories that people love to hear. We should support this commercialism totally.

All the walking around created the problem of lack of washroom facilities. There are free facilities yet there are also ones which require a small cash donation before you can use them. This becomes a royal pain since you might not have the exact change and you felt blackmailed if you have to pay too much. The best thing is to buy a bottle of water or a cup of coffee and then use the washroom. Both coffee and water would induce you frequent visit to the washrooms more. So it is the chicken or the egg scenario.

Episode 3 (cont’d) – Istanbul, Turkey

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Red Deer River, Alberta, Canoe Trip Photos: 2010 & 2011

For those who are interested in following up with our recent water and land adventure, here are the complete set of all three albums, captioned, from Bonbon Hu, Edwin Tse and Vincent Lee, respectively.

For comparison, I am also including two albums from our last year’s trip on a different section of the Red Deer River in May, 2010.
A few background notes:
– 2010 May, we had 4 canoes, 8 people.  We camped first night in wilderness, river side; second night at Big Valley, then drove down to Drumheller, due to bad weather, to camp at commercial site.
– 2011 July, we had 10 participants: Vincent Lee, Sigmund (son), Ariane & Ian (daughter & hubby from Vancouver); KC Li (DC), BB (Van.), Edwin (Montreal), Leslie & Helena Chang (Hong Kong) and Kevin (son, a WYK grad., flew in from London, England where he is studying).  Quite a collection of widely scattered boys and girls.
The central “glue” is, of course, our WYK65 scouting fellowship.
Our personal defences, down; our mutual tolerance, at highest …; fun was what we were after; fun was what we HAD!- We were out there for 4 days and 3 nights, along the mid section of the Red Deer River.  Started from where we left off last year (Big Valley), ended at the same site in Drumheller.- We had 5 canoes, used 3 vehicles, 5 tents, used 2 fixed campsites, and 1 wilderness site (not pre-determined).- In May 2010, water level was very shallow and clear, often we had to get off the boats to push.
  We had rain, high wind, and were cold after sunset.
This year, due to heavy rain in the spring and early summer, we had deeper, muddier and faster flowing river.- This year, we were extremely lucky to have had very good sunshine and great cooling wind; no mosquitoes while in the water; minimal to moderate numbers on land.

ALBUMS (Please click the images)

2010, May.  Red Deer River Canoe Trip:  Content Bridge to Big Valley to Drumheller.

(1)  Taken by VPC .

 

 

(2)  Taken by BB:
2011, July.  Red Deer River:  Big Valley to Drumheller:
(1)  Taken by SIGMUND, Caption by VPC :
(2)  Taken by EDWIN the Artistic Photographer, Caption by VPC:
(3)  Taken and Caption by BB  
Hope you have as much fun going through them as we had taking them!

Fresh from Russia

We visited Peterhof (Summer Palace for Peter the great) today and here are some photos taken. The place is well known for its garden.

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廬山 真面目

There was a saying that people longed to see the true face of Lushan.  We saw it.  But it begs the question of whether it’s better to see Lushan in a veil or to see it in its bare face.
 
We hit one of those 175 days when the mountain is not covered in mist or clouds.
 
But I have to say that we were lucky we didn’t hit any collapsed bridges, crashed road accidents nor encounter any collapsed buildings.  We only hit a collapsed highway which our tour operator bypassed by looping around Zhejiang, the neighbouring province, when we had to see San Qing Shan in Jiangxi, the province we were visiting.
 
Enjoy this bare face of Lushan in the Jiangxi province.