I decided on this short trip a little while ago. Ruth and Stephen were thinking of visiting,
and David was also going to be there at about the same time. Since I can stay at the Tai Po House, the
expense element isn’t a huge consideration.
9/20/2011 Tue. Anne
couldn’t come along because her school term is just starting. She dropped me off at Newark at about 1:45
pm, check-in and security were relatively easy.
The flight took off on time, and is 3 hours in as I type this. This is a rather crowded flight, but I do
have an empty seat next to me, so by my reckoning this should be a good
trip. The young couple behind me has two
young children (a toddler and a baby) that are doing a great job of
relay-crying. I don’t want to be too
harsh, but they seem as frustrated as the rest of the passengers are … it’s not
easy traveling with young children, that’s for sure. Good news is flight should get in about 40
minutes ahead of schedule, so I should land at around 6:30 pm Wednesday.
We did land at around 6:40 pm, and the mother of the two
kids thanked her neighbors for tolerating the crying – not that we had much of
a choice.. Even though the gate is
located at the far end of the terminal, and it took about 20 minutes to get to
immigration, I was out in about 25, the checked piece of luggage appearing soon
after I got to the carousel. Tim and Alyson
picked me up.
Dinner was prepared by Ling.
9/22/2011 Thur. I was
very tired last night and went to bed at around 11 pm. Woke up at 3:30 am or so and haven’t been
able to go back to sleep. It’s now 5 am,
I will try.
Most of the day was spent with David, who is also visiting
Hong Kong for a week. First we met up at
Mongkok East MTR Station and had yum-cha breakfast at Jade Garden. Then it was a stop-over at Causeway Bay to
visit our phone service providers: him to get the phone recharged, me to get
the data service to work. We then went
to Taikoo Shing to have coffee, first by ourselves, then Jane joined us for
more coffee.
Dinner at Tai Po House, prepared by Ling, who seems to
relish the task.
9/23/2011 Fri. Woke
up relatively early to go to Tim’s office for some blood work, then to a nearby
Fairwood for a rice dumpling. The Café
de Coral on Jardine Crescent is closed due to building renovation, but Fairwood
did a reasonably good job.
The one-way travel cost from Tai Po MTR to Causeway MTR
takes about one hour, and costs the equivalent of US$2. A trip from South Amboy to NY Penn is over
$12. Public transportation costs are low
in Hong Kong, but housing prices are very high, with small apartments located
in the outskirts easily costing $1000 per square foot.
We met up with George and Manna Leung at Chiu Chow Garden at
the Tai Po Uptown Plaza for lunch. We
actually sat at the Peking House run by the same group but ordered from the
dim-sum menu. The Leungs then came by
the Tai Po House to visit for a couple of hours. They seemed to enjoy the surroundings very
much.
Tim came to Tai Po for dinner, and we ate at Chiu Chow
Garden again – not too many choices around here.
9/24/2011 Sat. The
alarms I set failed to ring, so I woke up a bit late and had to rush to get to
the University MTR station by 8 am. Met
up with Ling and Wally and took the Tsui Wah Ferry to Tap Mun (Grass
Island). Our intention was to hike the
length of the island, a 6+ km trip that should be relatively easy to do, and we
had close to 4 hours to do it. However,
we didn’t have very good maps, and couldn’t find the right path. We managed to hike that distance, but didn’t
reach the destination we wanted to get to.
Thus we were all a bit disappointed, and Ling complained of tired legs,
not having been this active for a while.
Overall a nice few hours. The
ferry ride at 90 minutes (including stops) felt a bit long coming back. The weather also cooperated, mostly cloudy,
and the threat of rain materialized only during our return trip.
Ferry from Shatin to Grass Island.
Trail on Grass Island.
Interesting Rock Formation on Grass Island.
Feral cattle abandoned by departing villagers roam the island. They are quite tame, though.
We bought groceries at the Tai Po Market so Ling could cook
up dinner; she doesn’t seem to mind doing the chores. Tim brought Whitney along.
9/25/2011 Sun. I
typed up last several days events early this morning. Last night I just collapsed at around 10 pm,
and woke up at 5 am this morning.
Tim picked us up at around 9:30 am. I drove his Cayenne to the Aberdeen Boat
Club, scaring him quite a bit in the process since I tended to drift to the
left, not being used to right-hand-drive cars.
Turns out this was the least exciting thing that happened during the
day. In any case, we met up with Mr
& Mrs Leung and did the obligatory boat ride to Lamma Island for lunch.
On the way to Middle Island after lunch the boat was
involved in a collision. Ah Yau managed
to miss or misjudge an on-coming small boat and we collided with it. The thump and jolt made us think that things
were quite bad. Tim was seething as Ah
Yau not only missed this most basic of navigational rules, he also insisted the
other guy – who was to our starboard - should have stopped.
Anyway, this got the Marine Department very excited and they
sent two launches to investigate. While
the department certainly has the right to investigate the accident, and perhaps
to cite Ah Yau, they sure took their time doing so. We were held up for close to two hours to get
the proper paperwork in order. It turns
out the damage wasn’t that bad, basically a long scratch on the front side of the
boat, and most of that came off with some buffing.
When we tried to weigh anchor, we discovered it was stuck on
the sea bottom. We were in about 20 feet
of water, and Ah Yau dived in to investigate.
It was caught on an underseas cable.
This is a very popular anchorage right by Deep Water Bay, so we were
quite surprised there were no prominent signs posted – certainly not the kind
we are used to in the US. Ah Yau and Tim
eventually put on scuba gear and wet suit, and with Perry using a line to lift
the cable, managed to free the anchor.
Ah Yau did the scuba diving.
Quick, but quite impressive. Most
people would just cut the anchor and ask professionals to retrieve it later.
During all this commotion, Ling served cake, and we went on
Middle Island and had coffee there. When
we got back to Aberdeen, Tim got a message asking him how bad the damage
was. News travels fast.
We killed a couple of hours in Tim’s apartment, and then
went for dinner at the Kowloon Tong Club as guests of the Leungs. Not a bad day spent with friends (they were
actually more like friends with our parents).
Docking this boat takes quite a bit of skill.
With Mrs. Leung.
Geared up to untangle the snagged anchor.
The scratch is not nearly as bad as the sound of the collision. The color of the boat appears dull because of reflection.
9/26/2011 Mon. Lunch
at Okinawa Bridges with Tim. I then took
buses to Wan Chai Ferry Terminal and Tuen Mun to visit David and his mother,
whom I got to know quite well during my year in the LA area. Mrs L looked quite healthy, although she is a
bit more stubborn and doesn’t want to move around much. David and I had a simple snack at Café de Coral
in Tuen Mun Center. I then followed his
suggestion and took Bus 261 to Sheung Shui MTR Station and then MTR to Tai
Po. Hong Kong does have an amazing
transportation network. When I got off
the mini Bus at Lai Chi Shan, Alfred and his family just arrived. Dinner was a hotch potch of home-cooked, store-purchased,
and Tim brought along a sweet and sour pork dish. The latter was quite good, restaurant
quality.
9/27/2011 Tue. Josiah
screams quite loudly and managed to wake everyone up at 4 am this morning. I got back to sleep, but Ruth couldn’t do so. Morning was mostly spent on various paperwork
that I needed to sort out. Lunch was
take-out and home-cooked lightfare.
At Wally’s instigation, we all went to Golden Computer
Center in Shum Shui Po to look at various electronics stuff on sale there. I was quite tempted to buy a tablet, but
decided not to do so as the name brand ones cost the same (or more) than what
we get in the USA, the non-name brands are probably more miss than hit, and –
most important of all – I don’t need one.
Dinner at Peking House in Tai Po Uptown Plaza. Ling & Wally, Ruth & Stephen, Alfred,
Naomi, Toby and Josiah, and I got to eat together before I return to NJ
tomorrow.
9/28/2011 Wed.
Instead of car service costing around HK$500, I decided to take a taxi
to the airport at half the cost. And it
worked quite well.
The flight was quite full, and I didn’t get the empty seat
next to me. Nonetheless, there were no
continuously screaming kids, and I managed to catch a nap here and there. Anne picked me up at the airport.
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