Saturday, 31 December 2011
Phnom Penh calling!
Wednesday, 23 November 2011
Today is for education!
That is just what I try to teach and explain every day, and then I found this high quality example on the video sharing platform some days ago.
I think you deserve to see and learn as well.
I do excuse some parts of the language used in this news clip, but there is no way I can change that.
Tuesday, 22 November 2011
Music clip of the 22nd 11enth.
Thursday, 17 November 2011
Bali Blog.
Since the last post, my routines has for sure changed. At this moment I'm sitting at a beach hotel in Seminyak on the southwest coast of the Indonesian island Bali. But this is also a change of routine from the previous four days. Since we -me, a colleague and 13 young students- arrived in Bali on the 12th, we have been living on an organic farm on the northeast part of Bali. The farm was run by one family, who has decided to go completely organic and offer room to visitors who would like to experience the traditional Balinese farming life. The farm was placed between the rice paddy fields in a rural district and only accessible by foot over narrow pathways between the rice fields.
At the farm we were sleeping in small typical stilt cabins, which during daytime was open to all sides, and at night time got closed by rolling bamboo curtains. There were some electric plugs there, but no internet. For the students this was maybe the biggest challenge and even bigger than the one cold shower and the one not flushing toilet, which furthermore also was with out a roof and placed quite central not far from the small houses where we all slept, ate and spend the time when we were not doing hard manual labor in the fields.
To be honest, I was quite nervous myself how I would adapt to this environment, and I was certainly thinking how the students would adapt. Coming from the highly developed and quite sterile world of Hong Kong, where every possible facility to ease human life is available, and where facebook is a more natural mean of communication than the face to face dialog, I for sure had my doubts and was just waiting for the mutiny to start. To this fear came the real hard labor we were doing under a merciless burning sun. We were digging holes in the ground and planting banana trees. 33 was the number. And not that we were only digging the holes, we were as well digging out compost behind the pigs and the cows stables, transporting it in buckets and sacks to fill into the holes around the new banana trees.
But no mutiny came. The students stood the distance and also helped each other keeping up the spirit and a positive atmosphere and work ethic. Best of all, they came to me in the evening and said how much they enjoyed their opportunity to try out this kind of life., and even when the task for the next day was announced -turning a plain grass field into flower beds to growing carrots- there was no angry response or any argument, that this was to hard and they would not do it.
Sorry, but I have the next task on in a few minutes, so I have to stop for now. We have to go to the beach for 3 hours of hard surfing.
Friday, 11 November 2011
It is Friday the 11th of the 11th and tomorrow is the 12th of the 11th. And so what?
Bali Blog.
It is Friday again and that is nice, no mistake about that, but this Friday has been a bit weird and so awful busy.
It is now 20 minutes past 6 in the evening, and I am still sitting here at the school while some of my film students are filming at a kind of music carnival. It will go on until about 8 PM I think. Then after that I have to get home and sort out some clothes for the coming week. Just some shorts and t-shirts, underpants, flip-flops, some old shoes I wouldn’t mind to loose, and some other light stuff. This has to go into my bag pack, and then next morning at 6:30 I will be heading to the airport to catch a plane for yet another work trip.
This time I will join a colleague and 13 of the young year 12 students on a trip to Bali. We are going to spend about 8 days there, and will be working on an organic farm in the north of the island, but will as well get some time at a surf school at the beaches in the south.
We will be blogging from there and from the other destinations in Southeast Asia, where our year 12students are working on different projects in the week to come.
If interested the link is here:
What a hard life it is!
Friday, 4 November 2011
Thursday, 3 November 2011
Todays little youTube!
Unfortunately it wasn't me who made this little film about peoples wishes and visions.
It is a nice and positive little document from a very busy and crowded area; Mong Kok.
Go and animate!
Well, all of that isn't quite right. It takes way longer and you have to hope that not a lot of other students or teachers have the same idea at the same time, coz then it is a killer.
I managed to make a wee 12seconds animation about some pool balls talking, and as I hit the button saying publish it was with a slightly uneasy feeling. It all just sounded too good to be true; "create an animation in two minutes?"
Like it? Create your own at GoAnimate4Schools. It's free and fun!
Tuesday, 1 November 2011
Old style LP Cover Design of the day!
Monday, 31 October 2011
Music of the day!
At their concert here in Hong Kong in August, Red Hot Chili Peppers didn't disappoint any by playing this old song as one of the extras.
Weird Music clip of the day:
In the late 90ies, Bjørk was one of my absolute favorites, and I remember sitting late at night at a friends house watching MTV and wondering what on earth was going on in this video.
Today I am more experienced, but I still have no clue.
But it look nice.
Thursday, 20 October 2011
Far east in -on Okinawa?
Or should it be aloooo.
Cant really tell but we are somewhere far out in the ocean east of china.
We`re in- or on- Okinawa island.
Since this summer where our holiday trip had to move house, Okinawa was one of the destinations we wanted to visit, but could`nt coz the time limit of the move and holiday, but who can get everything right?
So now i`ts autumn and we`ve got visitors again, they are always in it for some new experiences, so now it was finally the time for visiting those islands.
Now we are 4 days into the visit, but I cannot show any pictures yet. I only want to tell you that there might be a chance for some photos - and stories- later, when we are back and have some more relaxed time.
I would seriously like to be more relaxed when writing on this blog when travelling, but it always seems to be a hazel to my travel partners, and therefor to my self, coz who wants to be left out being boring, or worse: `no you are not writing this one on the blog`!
If the next post is in Danish or German, you should know why?
By the way: the islands around Okinawa is just stunning.
Saturday, 1 October 2011
Happy Birthday China!
Today is Chinas Birthday. The first of October 1949, Chairman Mao Zedong proclaimed the Peoples Republic of China.
In Hong Kong this will be celebrated with a big party with a huge fireworks at Victoria Harbour at 8 PM.
I doubt we will be going to see that though. Imagine more than 1 million people trying to get there and get a spot with a good view.
We’ve done this before, once from a restaurant just at the waterfront, and once on a Party Junk direct on the water in that very same Victoria Harbour.
Instead to celebrate this Birthday, I decided to post some pictures from some of our travels to “the mainland”, as it is called here in the “Special Administrable Region” of Hong Kong.
No doubt that there are many issues about China that can be discussed and things that should be improved, but one thing I would like to mention; travelling in and through this huge nation is exciting and there is one thing to mention, one thing where China as a travel destination beats the most of the Western countries; It is still a very safe place to travel.
Dali, Yunnan Province.
Longsheng Rice Terraces, Guangxi Province.
Lijiang, Yunnan Province.
Dalian, Liaoning Province.
Xiamen,Fujian Province.
The Great Wall, Beijing.
Qingdao, Shandong Province.
Hangzhou, Zhejiang Province.
Yanji, Jilin Province.
Harbin, Heilongjiang Province.
Wednesday, 28 September 2011
Poetry in the time of online tools.
Once I've said that I never known any software or application that in it self could create art or some sort suggestive narrative.
Then I did try a new experiment today using googles online translation.
I'd written some sort of neo punk cross trash poetry in Danish.
That I fed into the translator and let in turn it into some form of English. Then back to Danish and then yet another turn to English. A third generation online translation, a translation without any reflective effort to transfer a desired meaning from one language to another.
Anyway I kind of like the brutality of the words and the way odd pictures invades my mind, out of nowhere other than a cold electron brain.
Here it is, I call it:
Through patches to survive
I breathe, exhausted
striped
anchored.
The stench from a store boot
breathing resistance
and hidden under a filtered tenderloin
background light is green.
discomfort
when I can again be a man?
Angry young man?
"You do not get it, do you?"
Variability is ready substitutes.
Nix of confusion Lies
tubers clusters with the wording and dissonance
scratchy
a fanfare of pride
Cut along the fence
and deprived of the awareness of our daily bread
hands sew earwigs in butter with wire.
Sweat!
Yes, I sweat.
Eventually, it was winter again
But strangely half and hollow
to see fresh snow transform into an Jesper Klein on the accelerator in the chest freezer.
A wood chipper
a murmur,
pointers car flips and cook,
words, which grows
believe my word on Thor, so great.
A combined hedgehog part of jellyfish arthritis and splat them off
Windshield wiper just could not take it anymore, man
And bread -
"Did you really broke?"
"Yes!"
"What do you eat?"
"No, dammit, what I mean is whole lot collapsed!"
Saturday, 10 September 2011
Audio Visuals of the day. Category Music Video.
The music today is from New Zealand, and again inspired from my good colleague Mr. Dufty. Yes that is the "kiwi' one who sits right next to me -on the right side- in the office, and who always has either music bumping out of the loudspeakers or the noise of some obscure Rugby Union game. Both mostly to origin from down there, on the other side where the national symbol -a bird without wings- is named after a fruit, and there is more sheep than anything else.
Except fresh air.
One of the good things by working in an international environment is, that you get to know so many new things that you might never had encountered without, like for example this band; "The Datsuns". Get to know more by clicking here, or there I mean, click on the name.
Great song and video -audio visual- but I seriously do excuse the bad language, but think this is as well one of the characteristics of those "kiwies", the use of bad and foul language.
Tuesday, 6 September 2011
Election in North Korea.
I found this interesting and fairly well research blog about the secret nation of North Korea.
Thursday, 25 August 2011
Coming soon to a screen near you.
Awesome music, explicit dynamic editing, extreme talented; David Fincher.
Correction.
Wednesday, 24 August 2011
Comics as movies!
Tuesday, 23 August 2011
Advertising!
Music clip from back then...
Saturday, 20 August 2011
Notes from a house moving experience
My good friend Mr. Dufty told me that change is always good. He can be right, but there is always so much work related with the kind of change, which came to our lives on the 25th of June.
On the 9th of August. Our house was all packed up and put into boxes and stabled meter high in the living room.
There was only a couple of small things left to do before the removal guys would come the next day.
Left in the kitchen were some small plates, some cutlery, a toaster and the water cooker. As I got out of the bed that morning, I found Catriona in the kitchen trying to boil some eggs for our breakfast in the water cooker.
I couldn’t stop giggling, but had to ask why she didn’t use the toaster so we could get fried eggs.
Later the same day, I had to go to the new address to met some folks from IKEA who was due to come to set up the bunch of things we’d bought.
The former occupant had moved out 4 days before and we’d been there to take over the keys and settle the lease contract with the agent and the owner. The house had been cleaned, but needless to say, I found some dirt along the wall where a cable hider had been mounted. The only thing I could find to clean that up was some antiseptic tissues I had in my bag and a paintbrush I found left in a plastic bag in the Japanese shed on the roof top, so I found myself on my knees on the floor, cleaning old dust away with that before the new furniture could be installed.
Later that evening we traveled to the Hong Kong Asia Arena and enjoyed the opening of The Red Hot Chili Peppers new world tour.
A great concert was the event that settled our last night in Tai Wan Village.
Solutions and numbers!
My brother is a clever man. Again he could knack the Quiz about the Japanese sign posted recently.
Though he suggested it was the logo of a removal company, he was only partly right. The right answer is that the logo is from delivery company. But I guess that removal or delivery company is so similar so it counts. My brother has won a breakfast in our house, when he come to visit.
Yesterday I found the visitor counter on this number down here, and I just wonder who was the number 16.000.
If it was you, please let me know.
Thursday, 18 August 2011
Getting online again.
I know that it is pretty much the same like from the old place, even we are a bit further away from the water and at a different angel. Before we were facing east mainly, now it is mainly south.
Anyway, tonight the internet and telephone provider will come to our house, so I hope that our services will be relocated by later this evening, so I finally can work from home again.
Let's see.
Wednesday, 17 August 2011
Another view
Now it is a fact. We have not only got another view on the outside world, we have got a new house to live in.
Last week we got packed all the boxes and practically filled the whole living room with all our stuff.Wednesday the 10th at 9 in the morning, 8 guys from a removal company showed up at our old address and that was the end - or culmination - of a long and annoying task that had started on the 25th of June, on the first day of our summer holiday. Yes, that was the day our landlord showed his greed in a meeting we had with him about a renewal of our lease.
He demanded an rent increase of 45 %, and because we wouldn't accept that, the first 2 weeks of the holiday was spent on house hunting.
That was not an easy task, as all lease prizes has gone up rapidly in the last 6 months here in Hong Kong, and I guess that was also the ignition that started the greed to rise in our -former- landlord.
What we saw of houses in those two weeks that was on the market for the budget we were willing to pay, was for sure depressing and I will not even start to describe it. Only can I say that some nights when we finally got home from the hunt, we were absolutely depressed and disillusioned.
We were even ready to move away from the area we have been living in for the last 4 years and which we really like, but a lot of other people like it as well, and that is also a reason for the expensive rent.
Anyway to cut this short. We had an amazing lucky stroke after the first week, and now we have moved into a similar house as the one we had before, with a rooftop and a view -even it is not quite as nice, it is still a view and it is still nice. It is a bit similar to the former one as it is the same bay we are looking at now, just from another angle.
I promise to post a photo of that view soon. First of all I have to take one -photo- and second we have to have our internet and telephone sorted, but that will hopefully all be done by the coming week-end.
What I can do though, is to show a picture of the kitchen, we've kind of managed to put together from various items , found in a range of different shops and on top of that, a picture of my first cocked breakfast in that place.
Did I eventually mention that we got that place for the same amount as we've paid the last four years. That is the best thing that came out of all the stress.
Thursday, 4 August 2011
Sunday, 31 July 2011
Music of the day!
And then the same song covered by the amazing band from Helsinki "The Leningrad Cowboys".
Japanese diary. Vol. 2 "Breakfast, Osaka".
Got woken up at 8 am by a gentle knock on the door.
The first thing on my mind; “Where am I?”
I found myself on a futon on the floor, lights coming from a narrow gab between the curtain and the window frame, and then it knocked once more, this time a bit more persistent.
Oh yeah, now I got it, I’m in a hotel in Osaka, Japan and yesterday evening we’d ordered Japanese breakfast in the room at 8.
I got up, threw on my shorts from where I’d stepped out of them on the floor next to the futon the evening before and managed to get to the door without stepping on Catriona, who had dug herself deep under the duvet, on her futon on the floor just next to mine.
Outside the door I was meet by a bowing Japanese lady standing in front of a push wagon containing 3 different trays with a number of black plastic bowls, small and big. She mumbled away in Japanese and entered our room while balancing one of the trays –also without stepping on Catriona, who still was covered up under the duvet- and then placed the tray on the low table in the room. Still speaking away in Japanese she went to collect the next two trays, which she also arranged on the table. Then she left walking backwards, still bowing and talking, towards the door and left.
Now Catrionas face peeped out from underneath her cover and it was obvious that the smell from the trays on the table was gently dragging her out by her nose, and soon we sat there, on the floor at a low table in a Japanese style room, ready to try a Japanese version of breakfast.
What was it then?
Well, first of all there was a big bowl of plain rice, some Miso soup, slices of grilled salmon, some white imitated fishcakes, omelette roles, different kinds of pickled vegetables and a marinated salted plum. And of course, a pot of tea.
That was a really good start to a long day, spent walking around the streets in the Osaka city center.Thursday, 28 July 2011
Japanese diary. Vol. 1. Osaka
The first impression of Japan was in Osaka as it was the first stop on the Japan 2011 tour.
Being the 3rd biggest city in Japan, here the impression of the crowdedness of the large Japanese cities was evident.
After getting installed in our hotel in the southern center of the city –a typical Japanese room, a ryokan, with rattan on the floor, a low table and two futon’s rolled out on the floor- we headed out to investigate the closest neighbourhood and find a bite to eat.
The difference from the crowdedness we know from Hong Kong was obvious. Hong Kong has less space for much more people, which forces the buildings in the air, here in Japans 3rd largest city, they seem to have more space so the buildings were much lower and laid out in small narrow streets. But like in Hong Kong, the major roads and train tracks were constructed like elevated bridges over –and between- the houses.
On street level the traffic was much less so that pedestrians and bicycles had an easy time in the narrow lanes. My first thought was, that it reminded me a lot of Holland, with small cramped houses and loads of bicycles zigzagging in and out between pedestrians and cars.
It was nice just stroll through those narrow streets and breath in how the life went by in an Osakan neighbourhood. Loads of small restaurants, eateries and bars were in the area around the hotel, and all over there were people going in and out. Outside the eateries there were written menus, but these didn’t help us much as they were mainly in Japanese. What did help were the big displays many of the eateries had in their windows, of the different dishes made of plastic. In that way the hungry visitor can visualize the dish they might feel like eating. For me these plastic “sculptures” of food had the exact opposite effect, and was rather repulsive.
Maybe it was the large number of options or was it rather our insecurity about this whole new experience that made us rather too indecisive to go anywhere of the places, but ended up in a little inn, that served typical “Osaka” octopus balls.
After that we literally hit the floor.Tuesday, 26 July 2011
First pictures from Japan!
Back in Hongkers and trying to get our heads sorted after the Japan experience and forward to the house move which will have to take place in about 2 weeks.
Here the first little treat. The Mortensens in Kyoto.
And one of the amazing "Shinkansen" bullet trains -we called it "the duck train"- we'd been using a lot in the last weeks. A terrific means of transportation, which took us with over 300 km/h from city to city in Japan.
Osaka - Fukouka - Nagasaki - Hiroshima - Kyoto and back to Osaka. In between we used other trains on smaller lines to smaller cities, but that has to wait for a little bit, now we are starving and there is nothing in our house, so we have to face it and leave to town to find some food.
Sunday, 24 July 2011
Our last hours of Japan
It has been a very nice experience to travel around in Japan and just now I feel a bit sad that it is over for now, but anyway, for us in Hong Kong Japan is not far away and we can always come back to explore more.
For others who wants to visit Japan on a trip, the best advice I can give is to apply for the Japan Rail Pass. This gives you unlimited access to most of the Japanese rail system, and to the fantastic "Shinkansen" trains, which connects most of the major cities.
They are comfortable and very fast, about 300 km an hour. When I get home I will post the link where you can apply. Only visitors living abroad can apply and get this train pass and you need to show your visiting visa stamp in your passports to get it at the station.
The prize can seem overwhelming when you see it for the first time, but I can assure you; it is worth it.
There will be more when I am back home, first I have to digest the best sushi experience I have ever had.
Thursday, 21 July 2011
Japan 2011
Thank god that we'd been a bit lazy and hadn't booked the trip yet, and so we spend the first holiday week on house hunting. And as it was looking the most desperate, we got a lucky stroke and found a place not that far away from where we are now, the same kind of apartment with a roof top and a view onto the water, and the best thing; to the same rent as we have been paying for the last 4 years.
With that settled, we could start concentrating on the summer trip to Japan.
Tuesday, 17 May 2011
3 boys trip to Yunnan tour 2011. Vol. 1.5
Albrecht has never been to Mainland China before, so he was very excited.
I have and I like it, but I feel that I need to go a lot more and need to learn the language.
The third one in our little boy’s tour group, Greame who is a colleague of mine and Albrecht’s English teacher, has been there quite a lot, he even lived there for numerous years in different parts, and yet he is from Australia, he speaks and reads Putonghua –or mandarin- nearly like a home grown Chinese person. And this fact can make a visit to China so much more prosperous.
Us three boys started our Yunnan tour in the Capitol, Kunming
That this trip was to be Yunnan was kind of my fault because I have always wanted to go to Kunming.
Why?
Sorry but I really cannot tell why.
In fact I do not know for sure why, maybe it had some romantic reason, that I thought that in the rural south west of China, I could find some of those mental pictures which is hidden somewhere deep in side my mind, like the images I saw for me as a child when my mother told me about China for the first time.
Maybe it has to do with Tea., as Yunnan is one of the major producers of Tea in China, and always when we go to our local Tea Shop, all the best Tea Cakes comes from Yunnan.
Anyway I do not know why, but the opportunity came this year as we have young Albrecht living with us. He has never been to China and Catriona wanted to go home to Scotland to visit family, so I decided that I would take Albrecht on his first China mainland experience, and in that case, one place is as good as another, right?
So I kind of made the decision:
“Hey Albrecht, at the Easter break we’re going to Yunnan”.
“Where is that?”
“In China!”
“Is it close to Beijing, I would like to go to Beijing?”
At this point I had to play it a little bit tactical, as I’ve been to Beijing –it was nice, certainly- but I didn’t want to go there again, not this time, I wanted to go to Yunnan because I’ve never been there.
So the tactical manoeuvres started.
“Beijing is nice, but it is not like the real China, it is the capital and therefore a lot different, more like big and international and not so, hmm, Chinese, I guess.”
I could see on Albrecht’s expression that the tactics had done the trick.
“But I would really like to go to Beijing!”
“I guess that you will get the opportunity at a later time.
Yunnan is in the southwest part of china with borders to Vietnam, Laos and Myanmar to the south and Tibet and the majestic Himalaya Mountains due west.
The Capitol, Kunming, was an important location for airline traffic in the early years and especially after World War 2, when civilian aviation was growing and more and more far east destinations became reachable for flights from the old world. After the jump over the mighty Himalayas the planes needed a rest, or more correct, to be refuelled for the next leg of the journey, and this was in Kunming. “The Hump” it was called back then and this expression is still to be fund in various places and descriptions in and about Kunming, and it is the name of a very nice and friendly youth hostel in the centre of the city.
Though we didn’t stay at this Hostel, it became a sort of base for us, the time we stayed in Kunming. Not because we could meet other travellers or eat western inspired food there, no, it was because of a formidable rooftop terrace with the most stunning view to the city centre.
That they also did serve a pretty good coffee and wasn’t fussy about you hanging around for a couple of hours on the rooftop, either to relax or just killing time waiting for train- or airline departure, makes The Hump a place to visit, should it happen that some of you readers plan a visit to Kunming.
Next time a bit about city feeling in Kunming and th beginning of our trip further west towards the cities Dali and Lijiang, and you can meet this fellar and a couple more like him.
Wednesday, 27 April 2011
Back to base!
This easter mainland trip is about to end. After a week of touring a bit around the Yunnan province, we are back to the starting point, Kunming. Sitting at the good and nice rooftop at the Hump Youth hostel in the center, all the images of the past week are flashing through my mind.
We just arrived back at Kunming this morning on the over night train from Dali. It was a pleasant way of travelling. Over night trains in China is a good and cheap alternative to spending nights in hotels and you get somewhere else doing it. Some times the trains is too full and crowded, but there is always a bunk for you to sleep. This train though, was not full at all, and so we had the 6 bed compartment to our selves.
Now it is just about killing the time until the flight will take us back home, to Hong Kong.
I guess I then have to make some effort and upload some photos from the last week, as it has been a really good experience, and we've been out in the rural country side, visited villages and places where the real and true life of Chinese peasants could be observed.
So stay tuned for that.
Tuesday, 19 April 2011
The Mainland
Tuesday, 22 March 2011
Originals and Covers!
Once again it has been my brother who has thought about the paraphrase I posted last time, and this time he was absolutely right with the answer.
It is The Beatles and the album is Abby Road and was released in 1971.
So thank you to him for participating and congratulation, he has won!
But what is it that he has won?
What can you in fact win in this online competition?
To be completely frank with you, then it was never my intention to promise any prices in this competition, but he gave me an idea himself in a e-mail he send me recently.
So here it is; the “Prize” you can be rewarded to, if someone (other than my brother) ever is going to reply to this competition, then you can win the right to suggest a cover song, and I will post it as part of the cover song series on this blog. Because this was what Henrik did in his e-mail. He suggested that I should put up Kate Bush “Running up that Hill” and compare it with a cover by the Dutch Gothic Band “Within Temptation”.
Yeah, and why not?
Kate Bush:
Within Temptation:
Then it is that I want to add another cover of this song, and this one is my personal favourite.
Placebo: