The
white bark pine I've been admiring since I've been here is
called Pinus bungeana. I never heard of it before. I
didn't see a specimen of it in the Type collection I've been
photographing. I finally found one tree in the botanical
garden that had a label on it. Beautiful tree! I've been in
love with it since I saw it in the Emperor's garden at the
Forbidden City. I took a photo of the one right behind the
restaurant. It's such a perfect example.
More flowers appear daily for the holiday. People have
already thrown trash into some of the displays however.
The curly haired conifer guy, Aljos, reclassified three
of the specimens I already photographed today. The specimen
labeled Sabina vulgaris erectopatens is really
Juniperus convallium. Juniperus zaidanensis is
really Juniperus przewalski. Not that I would have
known that.
Carol and I got cucumbers with garlic and hot peppers
today for lunch. I loved the cool feel of the cucumber
crunching in my mouth. Delicious. Got some noodle soup too.
It was even the kind I wanted: greens and tomatoes in a
clear broth. I had it the first week I was here. We still
haven't scored the potato and green chili thing we saw
people eating in the alternative restaurant.
Apparently the problem with István's laptop is the
AC adapter. Of course, since his computer is obsolete nobody
can find one that fits. I hate computers.
When we went to the Olympic Hotel yesterday to book the
Tibet trip we saw some French fries on a table in the
restaurant and immediately sat down and ordered three plates
of them - with ketchup. Also noticed the menu featured iced
coffee. Ice coffee!!!!! Woohoo! Had to have that too.
The washing machine got stuck on the rinse cycle
yesterday when my laundry was in there. It rinsed for an
hour but when somebody finally got it to move to a spin
cycle and I unloaded the laundry my jeans and one shirt were
covered with detergent. My underwear and socks didn't get
really clean either. I hung everything up to dry but it
wasn't totally dry by the time we got back from the Olympic
Hotel. Today the washer and that restroom next to it have no
water.
[9/30/2000 - the next day]
The whole neighborhood had no water. None at the
guesthouse, none at the herbarium, none at any of the
restaurants in town. Pretty dismal. I went to the front desk
to talk to the guy who runs the place. He ran upstairs to
get a grad student (ecology) who speaks English to explain
to me that it's not just us it's the whole area. A pipe
broke. They're working on it. And he tells me "Everything
will be all right tomorrow."
Big red buckets of hot water were delivered to our rooms.
Just as I was discovering this and undressing to wash Carol
came by to tell me the red bucket water is hot. We rejoiced.
I never enjoyed a sponge bath from a bucket so much in my
life.
Oh and we finally scored that potato and green chili dish
at the alternative restaurant. The green chilies were great
but the potatoes weren't really cooked enough. Now that I've
tasted it, this dish has potential. It's one of those local
specialties I could probably figure out how to make at
home.
This morning our usual restaurant was still without
water, but we had water at home and at the herbarium. Carol
and I went to the local bakery for breakfast and sampled
those hard fried cruller type things that are a Beijing
regional specialty. The bakery had no tea - no tea! I think
this means they too had no water. The rice gruel looked
unappetizing and the hot soy milk everybody drinks here in
the morning tastes terrible.
On the good news front, we finally got a replacement AC
adapter for István's laptop. Carol has gone to fetch
it now while I put the stuff we're not taking to Tibet in
the storage room next to Qin's office. I finished making my
CD of the type collection about 10 minutes ago. Talk about
coming right down to the wire. We are going to Tibet
tomorrow morning for 9 days. The herbarium is closing today
at noon for the national holiday tomorrow and will be closed
for three days so this seemed like a good time to go
traveling now that we finally got the permits for Tibet.
I can't wait to find out if any of the restaurants have
water and are serving lunch. Else it's gonna be dry hard
crullers with no tea for lunch too.
Rosalie has fled to a luxury hotel in the city. Carol and
I plan to go visit her this evening to admire the lights for
National Day then come back to our little hovels, which at
least have some water now...
Oh,
and the sun is out and the air dry and cool for the first
time in a week. I can actually see the building on top of
Incense Burner Peak as well as the cell phone towers on the
Xiangshan mountains.
When we get back here after our vacation, I only have two
more days to get some work done before I leave for home. Who
knew a month would not be enough time?
By the time Carol got back from fetching the repaired AC
adapter and we left to meet Rosalie at the The Palace Hotel
for our night of shopping and checking out the lights, it
was after 4:00 PM and we ran into a little traffic. But we
got there.
Beijing
at night on the eve of National Day is a madhouse. Vendors
selling Chinese flags are all over the place. Food stalls
with every kind of snack you can imagine and a few you
couldn't possibly imagine line the street and people are
packed in so densely around them it's a challenge to see
what they're selling. Meats cooked to order, vegetables on
skewers, squid on a stick, deep fried fat on a stick,
donut-like pastries including those Beijing crullers.
I
saw people eating fried lotus root on a stick but never
found a stall selling it. I think it was impossible to check
out every food stall. One had pancakes that they spread with
bean paste and wrapped meat and/or veggies in. Another had
something that looked like chocolate pudding. I got corn on
the cob on a stick - roasted over a brazier - delicious -
and a cruller. That kept me filled up until dinner.
Beijing's is famous for its street food so it's not
surprising they would celebrate National Day with booth
after booth of street food. What was surprising was that
they keep the retail stores open until the wee hours and
everyone goes shopping.
Power snacking and power shopping. What a combination. We
browsed in a huge foreign language bookstore full of
everything from gorgeous art books to the latest in western
management theory. The edition of The Dream of the Red
Chamber they had there was divided into three volumes
instead of five like the Penguin edition so I wasn't sure
which volume I need in order to pick up the story where the
second volume of the Penguin edition ends. Since I'm not
that close to done yet, I guess I can wait 'til I find the
right edition for the next installment.
The holiday lights and flower displays truly were
impressive. My favorite light thing is these poles with a
spray of fiber optics coming out of the top. They look like
alien communication antennae during the day but when they're
lit up at night they look like fireworks. Different parts
light up in sequence exactly like fireworks exploding. I'd
love to import those to the USA for 4th of July.
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