Showing posts with label China. Show all posts
Showing posts with label China. Show all posts

Saturday 29 October 2011

Day 59 - Lak

Random memory: HCMC, bia hoi. Playing asshole as a drinking game. Jake making a rule that people must accept whatever's offered to them, which leads to myself, James and Seb smoking the vilest cigars known to man.

***

Discovered in Mui Ne that my hard drive has a virus, and all my files on there were lost. Angry, frustrated for a few minutes. Up to Beijing is online. Most of those after that, in fact, all of those after that are still on SD cards, which I have saved. And files are also copied to S&N's hard drive. Not so bad. Only thing missing is my compact card, which I know Dom has. And one SD card is corrupted - from Battambang through PP, HCMC to Mui Ne - but I think it's recoverable. Always have a back-up.

***

Lying in a long house in Lak, enclosed in a mosquito net. The family who live here have been preparing breakfast for themselves since about 5am. At 6.45, some one them tries out all their ringtones. SOme things are the same the world over! The wind is blowing strongly outside, S&N are still asleep.

Spent the 27th doing nought. The others slept late, so I didn't disturb them. Got a little lost wandering around town, did our laundry, called in to Tuan. He invited us back for pool later.

When we call in, there's a hotpot of fish on the go, and a bottle of Johnnie Walker. One of our drivers, Spencer, lost a bet, and buying the bottle is his forfeit. Several shots are consumed, then some beers. Some more whities arrive - Max and Lisa whom I recognise from the bus, an American Guy [that was his name], and James from England. Conversation flows. Lee, from Mui Ne, drops by as well. Turns out he's doing the same trip as us (5 days to Hoi An), but a day later. All the while the music is fantastic - Whipping Boy, the Frames, Radiohead... did they know I was coming?

Made a racket on the stairs in the dark at the hotel, am sent to bed by the owner.

***

Yesterday morning we were greeted by our drivers/guides/interpreters/mechanics. Spencer is mine, a speed-loving stoic type, though he comes out of himself after a beer and some cards. He takes coners skilfully and with apparent ease, and appears to be in charge - himself and Tuan were in college together.

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Spencer outside the train station

Seb rides with Uncle Sinh, an older veteran, full of tiny details and wisdom. He cackles often, though is mostly silent at the dinner table. Late fifties?

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Uncle Sinh with Peter

Nicci is on Peter's bike. A family man, he is full of smiles and laughter, teaching her snippets of Vietnamese - "this is the 'yessir' road". Yessir being scary.

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Peter with Nicci

We stop at Dalat train station, the crazy house (a mixture of Dali and Escher, in Alice in Wonderland), a flower farm, elephant waterfall, a 'happy water' (rice wine) house, a silk factory, a silkworm farm, past a floating village... lunch is delicious, dinner more so. I have to stop myself over-eating, everything tastes so good.

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Silkworm cocoons

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Silk

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Sinh and me at Elephant Falls

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Lunch with a view

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Silkworms

The roads vary from rough trails of rocks, to potholed dirt tracks, to smooth tarmac. All the while I am entranced by the reflections in the back of Spencer's helmet - scenery rushing by, being hoovered up into a vortex behind my grinning visage. When I lower my visor, there are reflections of reflections.

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Sitting on the back at 60kmph, there's plenty of time to take everything in. Swathes of coffee plantations, lush greenery everywhere. As we pass through small hamlets, piglets amble across the road like stray dogs. We pass Lee and a Dutch guy several times - Less on a day trip, the latter on his way to Saigon.

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Peter and Uncle Sinh

We arrive at Lak, in a 'tourist' village - the only place where foreigners are allowed stay in homes in the highlands. It is a small peninsula jutting into Lak Lake, and we sit on the shore with a beer and watch the sunset. Simple pleasure.

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***

I must narrate a conversation I had with Crystal in HCMC, while discussing religion. She explained the communal view of life in China. That the view of the individual self does not matter, except in the eyes of the community. There is development nor encouragement of the sort of self-entitlement that exists in the west. It sounds like the only way a society that dense and crowded can get by, but the more I consider it, the more I prefer it. The greater good. It was something about the earnestness with which Crystal explained it.

It's most obvious in Asian road behaviour - constant flouting of the rules, but nobody gets angry. As long as the general greater good is preserved, all is well, and no horns are used in anger - zero road rage.

***

The Vietnamese countenance is one of innocent vulnerability. I find it hard to see how Americans, Japanese, French, etc., all came here with a hard enough spirit to not only dominate, but try to completely obliterate these people. The children are cute nd friendly, and the women attractive. There's something innately becalming and joyful toi them, so much so that it baffles me they suffered civil war.

***

Homestay is an odd term for what we did last night. I mean, we definitely stayed in a home, but zero contact with the family. Overnight we heard a neighbour's party, pigs squealing, baby crying, someone testing their ringtones, but no visibility bar the silhouettes through the dividing sheets.

When we went for breakfast, there were elephants loitering outside. At the first stop of the day, a hill overlooking the village, we could see an elephant crossing the lake. Second stop was a brick factory (at long last!). It was actually quite fascinating - from wet clay they have a giant play-doh machine that squeezes out a long brick shaped tube, which is then spliced by wires. The bricks are left to dry in the open, then in a shed, and finally they oven baked, turning them red.

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We paused at a burnt out church next, and Spencer told us of the Catholic dictator Diem, and the self-immolation of Buddhist monks in 1963, protesting their lack of freedom of religion.

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Two pythons next (less said the better), before a visit to a coffee plantation, and a strong blended cup. After that was the highlight of the day - a shower in a waterfall in the jungle, and a swim in a pool of the Serepok river. Amazing! Just the waterfall was a breath-taking experience, but to swim as well. Felt like I was Mowgli. Saw the Dray Sap falls then - massive, before heading on to Buôn Ma Thuột for our hotel.

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Coffee berries

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Me as Mowgli! With Uncle Sinh, and Seb behind

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The turquoise pool is where we swam

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Dray Sap Falls

Dinner of frog and more, though Nicci wasn't feeling well. Watched some footies afterwards with the lads to socialise a bit. Man U vs Everton (1-0) and Chelsea vs Arsenal (3-5). Back to the room to do nought, but hear Michael D Higgins is now President of Ireland. Happy days!

Saturday 15 October 2011

Places I've stayed

Apple Hostel, St Petersburg (http://www.hostelworld.com/hosteldetails.php/45374)
Godzilla hostel, Moscow
Briz chalet, Listvyanka
Sant Asar hotel, Ulaanbaatar
Guru Travel ger camp
Xihua Jade Hotel, Beijing
365 Inn, Beijing (http://www.hostelworld.com/hosteldetails.php/16667)
Shua Yaun hostel, Xi'an (http://www.hostelworld.com/hosteldetails.php/5599)
Fenghe Xi'an IYH, Xi'an
Jinjiang Inn, Chengdu
Cloudland, Kunming (http://www.hostelworld.com/hosteldetails.php/12661)
Urban Age, Bangkok
@Hualomphong, Bangkok (http://www.hostelworld.com/hosteldetails.php/40577)
Rosy Guesthouse, Siem Reap (http://rosyguesthouse.com/)

[those with links are ones I'd definitely recommend]

Sunday 9 October 2011

Day 39 - Kunming (airport)

Slept lightly last night, knowing I'd have to wake early. Meant I woke at every coming and going in the room, which was a lot! At 2.30am, the guy who had previously locked me out of the room got up and /fed/. This was not eating, it was feeding. Nuts or something. Rustle, rustle, crack-ack, munch, munch. Repeat for about 20min. With the light on. Chinese couple having a domestic at 5am outside the hostel. Get up.

***

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Holy crap! I'm in Thailand! How did that happen?

***

A Chinese post-mortem: I liked China, loved the Chinese people, but I'm not sorry to leave. Definitely a country I will return to - even just to Yunnan, to see Lijiang, Dali, Shangri-la... After that there's Hong Kong, the Yangtze, Shanghai, the lesser parts of the Great Wall, the Ming Tombs. I kept missing my step while wandering China because I as so pre-occupied looking at everything around me. Even once on the bike.

Have to be careful on the roads though. To drive, one needs a mixture of confidence, daring and bullying. And it's impossible to bully anyone as a pedestrian, so you need a tonne of confidence!

Don't travel during festivals. Don't store vital info in Google Docs or Dropbox.

***

Bird & flower market in Yunnan - also the dogs, chicken, cats, etc. market.

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Chinese hand counting:

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Met a lovely couple while checking in for the Bangkok flight. Paul & Sue, from England. Very pleasant to talk to. Chatted with them while waiting for immigration to open. They've spent a month in Yunnan, coming up to a year away. Both left their jobs under reasonable circumstances (gov't cutbacks) at the same time, so they rented out their house and just took off! So admirable. Both in maybe mid fifties. Met in India, returned there several times. Lovely people.

***

Found hostel easily. No kitchen, no common room. Friendly girl behind the desk called Pla. Get the feeling the other lads in my room are party people. Saga of laundry. Took a wander round a nearby park. Reminds me of Central Park - big pond, pedal boats, skyscrapers all around. I think I'm sick of cities. The cars, the honking, the men shoving photos of girls in my face. Laos is calling to me. Chiang Mai is inaccessible at the moment, though an American (MIchael) at the airport recommended Chiang Rai as less touristy. N&S are heading to Cambodia on Tues, think I'll join them. Meeting them for dinner in a bit.

In an Irish bar at present - Guinness is delicious.

***

Part of me wishes I was in Beijing for the cycling... if I knew everything, I could plan much better!

Saturday 8 October 2011

Day 38 - Kunming

Just back from Wales vs Ireland. Devastating. 22-10. Watched it in a Samoan bar, which took me two hours to find. Real estate agents are great for directions. But in the end it was a Chilean girl who was working in a mexican restaurant who walked me there.

First Irish encounter - a loud, obnoxious Limerick girl called Emma. Don't think she knew much about rugby, except being about to identify the Munster players. Clapped and shouted and generally intimidated the rest of the café. Destroyed the atmosphere. One Welsh guy. Better team on the day.

***

Think I got a bit too much sun yesterday. Forehead and left arm. Wandered through the park today. Saturday morning, so crowds out doing their choreographed dance, and the men sitting around tables playing some rapid variant of dominoes. After the match I drop by the museum of Yunnan province. Why do bronze sculptures hold my interest, but crafty shite bores me? Clothes, jewellery -I don't care whether it's past or present.

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***

Skyped LC. She seems upbeat, taking each day as it comes. Skyped with CW also, she's off to Rome on Monday. I'm actually a little jealous!

Friday 7 October 2011

Day 37 - Kunming

Read first half of Time Traveller's Wife yesterday evening. Dumplings and Yunnan cheese for dinner (Yunnan being the province of which Kunming is the capital). Somewhere between French toast and pizza.

***

Rented a bike this morning, set out for a park beside Yunnan Lake. On the shore, I admire the steep hills opposite. I consult the map and realise there are roadways to the top, where there is a temple. Ah, the liberation of cycling! An antidote to the countless days I've spent on trains. I cross the causeway, stopping to take a photo. The water is green. Not pond scum green, but radioactive green. American-river-on-St-Patrick's-Day green.

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I press on, heading along the far shore. Frequent map consulting. As ever, I have underestimated the scale of things. I am pouring sweat before long. I round a corner, and at least half the mountain lies ahead still. I grimace. A Chinese woman gives me a thumbs up.

I get frequent hellos and 'ni hao'. They're not used to white madmen ascending their hills. On the way through Kunming, a man with his three daughters overtook me on a scooter. All three screamed "hello!". I kept pace about ten feet behind for 30 seconds, and then they shouted 'goodbye' as I began to drop.

The climb reminds me of the last day of the Ras de Cymru, but now I've nobody to race. I reach the end of the road, lock the bike, and buy a ticket for the Dragon's Gate. It reminds me of Skellig Michael somewhat. An ancient religious site, on the edge of a cliff. Though this one is surrounded by forest, and contains a multitude of halls, temples, pagodas, and a miniature stone forest (v. missable).

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I stop by Nie Er's tomb on the way down to gather my thoughts, and people stop and stare. Now I sit by a temple lower down the hill. It's so peaceful. Incense burning, a pond with fish and terrapins, and no crowds. Bliss. IN the temple itself, there is a big laughing Buddha, and six other gods, huge, ornate, vivid - each one stamping their feet. People kneel and pray, monks stroll about, and there is fresh fruit on the altar. I take no photos. In a further building, the walls are covered with hundreds of statues, looking like something from Dante.

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***

I left writing about cycling in the city until I got home safely. Descent was fun - no good brakes, and roving pedestrians meant the front blocks were down to a sliver by the bottom. Cycling in traffic was far simpler than expected. Drivers (cars and scooters) use their horn frequently, but only to warn of their oncoming presence (like a cyclist's bell) rather than in anger ,frustration or threat. I could weave easily, overtaking some over-laden scooters. One lady was transporting a bed! Mattress and all! On the back of a moped! Astounding.

Exhilarating to be back on a bike. Fuck trains, cycling's the way to see the world. But I need a bike with the saddle at the right height.


***

Roche won a stage of the Tour of Beijing! Deignan second - super!

Thursday 6 October 2011

Day 36 - Kunming

Early morning arrival in Kunming (06.30). Chinese system of queueing at the taxi rank. Starting to get used to the sensations of China. The acrid cigarette smoke that permeates everything. The smog of the cities that clings to the back of your throat. The crowds that push and heave. The splat of phlegm hitting the pacement. Delightful.

***

It's funny how my body clock and calendar have shifted over the trip. It's October, but without the seasonal cues, I have no idea what month it is. The day of the week is nearly meaningless, and I have to constantly double check the date. Time is flying by, but each day brings a ream of new experiences. Gotta live in the here and now!

***

Balls.Viet. consulate is closed until Monday, and apparently don't offer express visas. Abandoning the plan, am heading to Thailand next. Flying to Bangkok on Sunday morning. It's unnerving, yet exhilarating! This is freedom! To head to a different country on a whim.

***

This has been a day off so far, just planning. Haven't left the hostel since I returned from the embassy.

***

Emails from Brigitte, Brendan, Blaithin, Orla, Nicci. A Skype call home. I love knowing the people I know.

Wednesday 5 October 2011

Day 35 - Chengdu-Kunming train

Took two immodium last night before sleeping, terrified the hotpot would hit me at a bad time. Say goodbye to the others, taxi to the train. Carriage seems quiet. Had a clear out as soon as the train started moving. Incredibly cathartic. Now to Kunming!

***

Cǎo ní mǎ [Tsao nee maah] - Chinese for "fuck your mother"

***

"Yoghurt explosion" and "bed pollution" will forever make me giggle.

***

Have noticed the lack of graveyards in China and Mongolia, also Russia. Saw a few small plots of steles (maybe 15m2) from the train window. Are Buddhists cremated?

Makes me think that the acres of graves at home are wasteful. Monuments to those that are gone, a sign of love and respect. In the Mongolian ger tents, they have a shrine to dead relatives, for private reverence. Perhaps this is better? But then we would be missing O'Connell's tower, Parnell's rock, Grandaddy's grave - nice for a visit and a prayer, so maybe one wouldn't want a constant reminder of the loss in the home. Or is it a constant reminder of the memory? The life.

Poor L. Hope her dad will be okay.

***

As I've come further east on my journey, one of the things that's noticeably worsened has been the traffic and ability of drivers. In SPB and Moscow, drivers often sped down the main drags. In Irkutsk, Sergei would protect us while we crossed the road. By UB, traffic lights had become only a guide line. The group was often split when some didn't make it across the road. In Beijing, the bicycles were everywhere, haphazardly using road, cycle lane and path, rarely with lights. In Xi'an, zebra crossings were negotiated one lane at a time.

One thing has been consistent: the taxi drivers are all lunatics. In UB and Chengdu we witnessed it from the passenger seat. But it must be a universal truth.

I've been warned that Vietnam will be even worse.

***

Chinese countryside rolling  by again. Small homesteads, allotments, corn. First solo leg of my journey, Chengdu to Kunming. I'd be more prepared for it tomorrow, but it has been foisted on me today. First pang of loneliness while shopping for one yesterday. Might try Skype home once I'm in Kunming hostel. Will take a day or two to recuperate, do laundry, get my visa for Vietnam, send a few emails and hopefully back things up online. Then on to Lao Cai and Sapa as quickly as possible.

Travelling alone is odd after a month of company. There's nobody to share experiences with. Is there a point to solitary joy? Yes, but I wonder how long I can be asocial for. Half the point of this journal is to share my experiences with others and future me.

Shower goodbyes to Dom and Kelly this morning. Almost perfunctory, formal. A hug and a handshake, "enjoy your travels", and then gone. What else is there to do, to say? Is it ever really goodbye when there's email, Facebook?

Missed Andy and Jake. Group goodbye for Seb & Nicci, Ali & Scott on a train. Only half of Team Swiss. Motleys in the morning, Brigitte at 5am.

No. Goodbyes of these magnitudes are never easy. Keep it short and sincere.

***

Paddy fields! First sighting of the trip! Makes a change from corn. Lots of vegetables too - green and lush looking. Simple life out here no doubt. Everything is relatively cheap compared to home, but I wonder what the standard of life is like for the natives. So far I've spent most of my time in cities, where everyone has the trappings of wealth, like mobile phones. Only in UB was poverty really thrust in our faces - neglected children roaming the streets.

***

The Chinese drive like Dubliners cycle.

***

Gambai - Chinese toast, means 'empty glass'
Ne hau peow liang - you are very pretty

Tuesday 4 October 2011

Day 34 - Chengdu

Fuck. Today was supposed to be a happy day. Pandas and relaxing in the afternoon. Instead tonight will see the last night of our trio, thanks to National Day-Week. My onwards travel to Kunming was intended for the 6th, but only standing tickets were avilable. On the 7th, there was seating tickets, but for a ~24hr journey; either option sounded hellish. A hard sleeper was open for tomorrow, so I had to take it. 250RMB, departing at 08.24 to 06.29. Yay.

Morning had started out so well too. met with 3 Germans and an American/French-Canadian couple to share taxis to the Panda Research base. Hair-raising drive, but discover two are from Mainz! Buddesheim (?). They teach me some Chinese single hand counting.

Nice and early (07.45) at the Panda Home. Wander for a bit, before following the noise of the crowd to see the yearlings breakfasting. More at rough tumble play in another enclosure.

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Wonderful to see such gentle giants up close, munching only a few feet away, in a moment shared with a select few dedicated souls. The more playful pandas are entertain to watch, and their ambling run is almost comical. There are a few babies sleeping in a cot in the nursery, a cuteness overload. The red pandas are also on show, and we stop to watch them for a little while.

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We wander around the parkland, relishing the fact that we're out of the city, shooting the breeze about television programmes past and present.

***

Decide we want a quiet afternoon at the hotel, just need to book the trains for Thursday. There is a ticket office across the road, which is where we realise our difficulties. Dom & Kelly want to get to Chongqing, a 2 hour train journey. The agent offers seats for an eleven hour one. After some hours of panic and internet research, a return trip to the office yields standing tickets for the 2hr train. Two hours is nothing after our 15hr epic.

Meet the German lads (Jens, Frank - brothers from Mainz - and Nick) for dinner. They have similar problems to D&K, and a return trip to the office also nets them seating tickets for a train with "no tickets".

Dinner of a hotpot, washed down with several beers. Rabbit kidney is the adventure of the meal - quite tasty!

We go back to the hotel to get a deck of cards and a recommendation for a bar. There we are surprised by Emerald, who is no longer able to meet us in the morning, and so has come to wish goodbye. We had bought her a small panda teddy earlier, but she showered us with gifts. For me and Dom, tshirts, for Kelly a green scarf. For each a bookmark and postcards, and a dangly thing for a phone.



We all have some vodka, and make Emerald's a large one, before taking her out for some dirnks. We were hoping she'd take us to a cheap student dive where we could have some banter, but instead we ended up a a club. We sat outside, and were served warm, expensive Heineken (30RMB). Myself and Dom took a look inside, where the bouncer was wearing a stab-proof vest, and the door had a metal detector! We drank up quickly.

Nearly forgot - Kelly taught a drunken Emerald to say "fuck off Brian!". This was her greeting at the club, and as we saw her home (Dom feeling guilty about that vodka), she said it was a 'beautiful sentence'.

Quick beer in the hotel, then bed.

Monday 3 October 2011

Day 33 - Chengdu


Off the train just before 6am, brandishing our hotel name and address (in English), we get a taxi at the rank. 40 minutes later, we're back at the rank and 25RMB down, the driver not really knowing where to go [had to draw a picture and make train noises to get back to the station]. We get a bus instead, and with the aid of Kelly's map, find our hotel. Relieved to find they have our reservation. Sleep.

***

Emerald arrives at 3pm, having been to several other Jinjiang hotels in the city. She is apologetic, even though it is our fault. We wander around a nearby market area, and she takes an immediate liking to Kelly, clamping her arm within her own.

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This dude bounced the doughballs off a drum,
then they would ricochet off the wall and into the pan.
Smooth.


We sample some local foods for brunch, including the intestine powder and sad jelly. Not particularly appealing, but nice to sample. We also have a piece of a sweet bamboo-like plant, which one chews to extract the juice, then spit out the solid remainder. Emerald also recommends areas further afield to visit, such as Lijiang.

We potter about for a while, to the central square, before Emerald insists on bringing us to the shopping district. We obviously have no money for this, and the whole area is uninteresting to us, but there is no deterring her. She also has yet to let go of Kelly! She wants to take us to the financial distract next, but we persuade her to bring us to an older part of town, which is rather touristy. There she buys a tacky flashing heart for Kelly, while Dom and I devise the best way to escape her over-friendliness. Which sounds mean, but she's a very intense individual.

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Kelly in the central square
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More staff dancing



She also failed to provide the promised accommodation, trying to change hotels for us instead, to somewhere closer to her house. There's an almost sinister cuteness to it all, like the offer to go up a mountain for 85RMB. We've resolved to flee Chengdu as soon as possible.

It seems a rather bland city anyway, with nothing to give it character, bar the panda reserve. Heading there tomorrow morning with some fellow whiteys that Kelly conveniently befriended in the lobby. New blood! Should make Chengdu more bearable.

***

Haven't shaved since Beijing. Growth is sparse, slightly patchy. Hair is increasingly mane-like.

***

Haven't seen any rugby yet, but Mammy, Laura and Irene have been great for keeping me updated. If I've got the tables right, there's a pair of southern-hemi QFs, and a pair of northern. Leading to one northern SF, and one southern. And therefore a final of north vs south. Ireland's in with a chance of reaching the final!