Bill Siggins
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Wednesday, 4 July 2012
Monday, 2 February 2009
uh oh, I've fallen behind -- I'm back from Xi'an
It all happened so fast it seems. We've been back from Xi'an for some days already and I didn't report on the New Year's dinner, the family's health or the road trip home.
Oh well, here are some pictures to compensate and get a jump start on the update.
Yes, those are chicken feet in the stew.

Sister YY fell and broke her knee, but seems happy enough. It's Chinese New Years after all.


I counted 17 homemade dishes for the New Year's feast.
As the foreign son-in-law I contributed my specialty -- cream cheese and caviar on a cracker. They liked it.
Our main cook, bro'-in-law MM, finally gets to try
some.
Oh well, here are some pictures to compensate and get a jump start on the update.
Yes, those are chicken feet in the stew.
Sister YY fell and broke her knee, but seems happy enough. It's Chinese New Years after all.
I counted 17 homemade dishes for the New Year's feast.
As the foreign son-in-law I contributed my specialty -- cream cheese and caviar on a cracker. They liked it.
Our main cook, bro'-in-law MM, finally gets to try
Sunday, 25 January 2009
Saturday, 24 January 2009
Baba's annual tribute
ZZ is the grandson and most like his Yeye(grandfather) who raised him for many years. ZZ is smart and ambitious and learned many life lessons from his Yeye.
From a big hall in the back of a park where the ashes of hundreds are stored in their own cubicle, we walk Baba to yard made for offerings.
On a concrete tableau we set out his photograph beside nice things to snack on and burn money in his memory. Beside his little alter we draw circles with an opening to the north. Here we burn money to other generations and relatives who have passed on. I made an offering to my mom too. I think she understands that her son is really a Chinese son-in-law.
Life a good daughter (she's a great one actually), FF cleans out her father's cubicle, dusting off all the little things that keep him company, including some games.
More on this later.... The pictures really tell the story.
We made it 'home' to Xi'an
It's good to be back and I feel more comfortable than I ever have. My Chinese has improved again this year so communicating is a bit easier. This year will be smallest gathering in years. The oldest daughter is in the U.S. and the second oldest is in bed
with a broken ankle and knee. That leaves the youngest son, his wife and daughter, the oldest grandson and FF and I. Of course Mom, the true matriarch of the family, is the center of our love and concern.
Friday, 23 January 2009
A super highway to Xi'an
The road -- make that Super Highway, is amazing. It's new, it's fast and it's expensive in more ways than one. The two very different provinces we travel through -- Shanxi and Shaanxi, are the crusty, ancient heartland of China. (Xi'an, the city of our destination, you'll remember was the home of China's 'first' emperor.) It's winter so there's no green; it's all classic China-yellow earth. I hesitate to call the landscape barren, because it is all occupied and cultivated or mined.
Okay, back to the road -- a four-lane divided highway. Our little convoy of two G
While the rolling countryside is interesting and impressive, the highway engineering is amazing. We travel across the longest and tallest bridge I've ever seen. It must be several kilometers long and its supports 30-storeys tall. Another bridge hits you following a steep mountain descent. In the rising mist from the valley far below the far end of the bridge disappears and there's an illusion that you're on a runway to another dimension. Alas, it leads only to kilometer-long tunnel that takes you through the next mountain instead of over it.
There's very little traffic for such a huge expensive project. My theory is that this is what the World Bank funds with its infrastructure loans. The Xi Yun Highway is the best highway this side of the autobahn and yet the towns and villages flanking it appear to have little hope of ever scrapping out of third world status.
Okay, we're almost there. So far it's has cost us about $50 in toll fees.
Off roading in Shanxi Province
Got off the super highway to take in the sites of Hancheng. A dirty, dusty coal mining town in Shanxi Province. Its market street is vibrant and blaring and full of life. There's everything, from satellite dishes to over stuffed PLA army coats.
The city has 1,000 year old buildings and temples. Its environment sold out for the prosperity of bigger cities like Beijing and Shanghai.
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