Tuesday, April 27, 2010

Off Again!

Leaving in minutes for Didi's wedding in Australia.  Cool, huh!  However it means I have no time to blog today and may not be doing so for the next two weeks.

Afterwards, next week, Baby Jane wants to take me out into the Outback to hunt for gemstones.  Mmmmm!  The Outback and me?  I do crave the total silence and those endless blue skies but I'm not such a happy camper when camping.  Joyce is going.  She loves doing `the ruff-stuff'.  Molly was supposed to but pulled out at the last minute.  No reason given!

And since I won't be blogging today, let's try another random photo experiment; go into my photo program, shut my eyes and click on whatever!  OK, let's see what comes up this time:


How cool is that!  Our HK friend Jessica and me bumping into each other in Townsville, NQ, last year.  You will recall that Jessica is most probably the world's luckiest traveler.  In fact, why don't I find that post and link to it here.  "Coincidences."

Have a terrific fortnight everybody.

Monday, April 26, 2010

Faded Grandeur!

There's a blog out of New York that chronicles "faded grandeur" and I think I should send photos of Dragon Garden to the lady-blogger.  However, in the meantime, I'll post some of them here:

CEILINGS


 

DOORS AND WINDOWS




LIGHTS



AND ABSOLUTELY MY FAVOURITE SHOTS


Sunday, April 25, 2010

Dragon Gardens

Do you recall how, back in 2006, developers were about to rip down Dr Lee's Dragon Gardens in Sham Tseung in HK's New Territories, in order to extend the row of high-rise apartment buildings along the waterfront and how Dr Lee's granddaughter Cynthia Lee, against a great deal of family opposition, came racing back from Canada to try to save it?

 Cynthia in the top garden
talking about her plans
for the place.

And - what a hero! - she did save it, but now there are all sorts of problems with handing the place over as a gift to The People of Hong Kong, and so Dragon Garden lies languishing out there over the water while the HK Government dithers back and forth about finally developing a Conservation and Heritage Plan that allows them to accept the gift.  Sad, very sad.

Dragon Gardens are most famous for being the estate "in Bangkok" where James Bond goes several times to fight Christopher Lee in, I think, "Man With the Golden Gun". Or was that another film? Let me go into youtube, purveyer of all things, and see if I can find it for you:

Wow, do you know how many James Bond clips are in there?  It's frightening.  Some other time, maybe.

Anyway, while the HK Government dithers, Dragon Gardens is locked off from public view and it's been over four years and Cynthia now comes back to HK at intervals to document the decay ...

The increasingly rotting 
wood paneling!

... and on her latest visit - this week - The Canadian Consul asked if she could show the place to a group of interested Canadians who want to help with her fight, and because I wanted to see the place so badly Jason kindly faux-ed me up as a Kanak, but then Keith wanted to come too, and then the Redoubtable Walkers, and then Lee K., and so we all Kanaked-Up and Other Cynthia ...

 The Second Cynthia! 
Now there's a mix-up 
waiting to happen!

 ... got us all invited as well.  Thank you Cynthia and Other Cynthia!

And thank you too to Dr Lee and his wife who spent their Twilight Years building this spectacular garden:

An Inspiration to All of Us
who want to build a garden after we retire!

However, let me show you a bit of this Inspirational Couple's Dragon Gardens so you can see what was almost lost and could still be if the HK Government doesn't properly get it together and soon!

I'll show you the cave first since one thing I really want on my One-Day Dream Estate is my very own sacred cave:



 Kwan Yin,
Goddess of Mercy,
She Who Sees The Tears of the World.

Nice, huh! I'm definitely copying this idea, only with a much bigger Kwan Yin.

As for the rest, I also LOVE the idea of little tea pavilions scattered all over:




 And the Dragon the Gardens are named after:

All recycled. 
Dr Lee was way before his time.

And the Contemplation Garden dedicated to Dr Lee's good friend Dr Sun Yat-Sen:

 The quote, 
attributed here to Dr Sun Yet-Sen, 
reads "All Are Equal Under Heaven", 
but, as someone pointed out, 
it is actually a quote from Confucious.

And the copy of the Yuanmingyuan totem pole:


And, right atop the hill, the Mausoleum built by Dr Lee for his wife after she died, although I don't think I want to copy this idea:


But I do want to copy the mighty mosiacs!  In this area, all the traditional decorative bits, usually painted, are actually in ancient tiles:

Spectacular!

This entire area is especially beautiful:

 
Although these days the surrounding high-rise is increasingly intrusive:

In the background, the mean developer's 
encroaching developments!

And this is the only unimpeded view you get these days:


I think I don't want that for my One-Day Dream Garden.

Although I definitely want the acres of pristine rainforest.


In there, Cynthia Lee has documented the presence of so many rare butterflies and dragonflies that live and breed in there, and one species that isn't found anywhere else on earth, to bolster her chances of having this gift accepted by HK.

But, without a doubt, my favourite place and what I want the most after a sacred cave, is to be found there on the side of the hill in the jungle:

Right away from everything!
 A very special place.

It's the source of the natural spring with exceptionally pure water that used to run through the property, but doesn't any more because the HK Government built a highway above which cut it off. Very John Steinbeck, isn't it!, although you'd have to have read all of Steinbeck's novels and not just the popular stuff to know what I'm talking about.

This out-of-the-way place is where Dr Lee spent most of his time after his wife died. Yes, despite all the elaborate buildings all over his estate, as a very old man he spent long stretches of time in a primitive little tea house up here right by what John Steinbeck saw as "the source", drinking tea and thinking and with only two important items to fuel his contemplation on The Meaning of It All:


 Wouldn't it be nice to find out what it means;
that word so important it's carved in stone!

I love this place. It's a nice idea, isn't it? A simple spot for easing yourself out of this life and into All Eternity; Contemplating at The Source.

Mind you, you'd have to find land with it's own natural spring to do this one!

Beautiful, beautiful estate with so much I want ... but I have to tell you there's one more very important thing I also want to have:

 Cynthia's caretaker on the estate.

What a hoot! A genuinely funny and charming fellow. Like, when Cynthia was publicly praising him for going to so much trouble to source the exact same antique mosaic tiles for when they get around to doing the repairs, he said, very humbly, "Just doing my job!" then privately told me "I found them in the attic."

And then he showed me these little wonders also sourced "at great trouble" in the attic:

From Washington to Nixon, 
only NOT!

He thought they were just cute little toys so he welded them onto an upstairs table - in the process damaging one so threw it out - and only later discovered they were American Presidents and meant to be ordered chronologically ... but now discovers he's invented a game everyone wants to play: spinning the glass lazy-susan around to figure out who should go where and also playing "Spot the Missing President", which no one ever can solve.

It was very compelling and thus a bunch of "Us-Kanaks" ended up sitting around the table trying to solve it all ... and people actually had to come find us to tell us that the tour was over and the "Thank you, Cynthia" was starting downstairs and so we should leave now! 

So that was the tour. I know I've left out a great deal and I do intend to do another post showing "The Faded Grandeur" of the Interiors, but I hope I've given you some idea of what Cynthia Lee, Superhero, has so far accomplished with this fight.

So, once again, thank you so much ...

Cynthia and Cynthia ...

... for the enormous honour of letting us be Canadians for a day and allowing us to see this:


Dragon Garden!

Saturday, April 24, 2010

Brief Round-Up!

Keith is off today for his Annual P&T "Magical Mystery Tour" Big Day Out.  Again, I can't wait to hear what they came up with this year.  Previous years, the stories are in here and I'll find them for you. Here!

And tomorrow I will be posting about yesterday's trip to "Dragon Gardens" and meeting my hero Cynthia Lee:

Cynthia Lee, Superhero!

... but in the meanwhile I just want to check something.

Twice recently I've been told that a particular totem pole is an exact copy of the one that used to stand in front of the Yuanmingyuan, the Summer Palace of the Chinese Emperor, and I want to put them both side-by-side to see if they are alike:

The Yuanmingyuan 
totem pole at Dragon Garden.

The Yuanmingyuan 
totem pole at the New Yuan Ming Palace 
in Zhuhai, China.

Yeah, they're alike, except the one at New Yuan Ming Palace is much bigger.

Not bad for a copy of something that no longer exists, wrought simply from a long dead poet's description.  That must be some poet!

And I also want to show Lady R. a photo of somebody she should add to her collection of "Grey Chic Ladies" who do "Old Lady" exceptionally well:


It's a topic of unending fascination to ladies of "our certain age", who see the 'old age train' there in the distance, know it's heading our way and aren't quite sure how to handle it.  Lady R. and I, and recently Lindy and I, talk endlessly on the topic: How We Intend to do OLD!

Well, that gorgeous lady above is my exact choice.  When I grow up, I want to BE her!

And tonight I'll come back and tell you exactly how the P&T tortured poor Keith this year.


Later:


Well, I'm very disappointed.  Keith has just walked in and it seems this year they took the teachers to the same wetlands bird sanctuary they took them to four years ago ... before they actually started working on it and it was still a swamp.  Now however, it is what it's meant to be so it wasn't the usual screwy mess-up as past occasions.  However, it wasn't a total failure-of-failure because, afterwards, The P&T organised a wonderful "Korean-style" BBQ picnic that consisted of fried tofu and that well-known Korean dish ... Spaghetti.  And then they all went off to find a patch of shade so to read the papers.


Don't you just LOVE Keith's P&T!

Friday, April 23, 2010

Keith's Dream House. For Robert!

Robert wants to see the house Keith says he wants to buy for his retirement - when he wants to live off the grid and grow his own food and be a total hippy again - and here it is:


It's been abandoned for decades and needs a lot of work and although his plans make me go "Ahhhh!", I just long to get my hands on it so I can do things with it.  Nice shape, huh! Lots and lots going for it.

It stands alone on a rise in trees beside a beach that doesn't have currents that pull in garbage, the only beach in the area that doesn't.  And the only way to reach it is by boat or a three hour hike across that mountain you can see in the background.  And on the beach itself is this little Tin Hau temple ... let's see if I can find a photo?

The view from Keith's dream house.

Everything in the temple is exceptionally clean and well cared for but there isn't a soul around for an entire three hours hike, so I'm guessing someone boats in every day to take care of things:


And I think the reason for all this care and attention is this huge oven on the other end of the beach, which definitely isn't used to make pizza. 


All in all, putting everything together, I'm guessing this is a very important site where the Tanka fisherfolk come to cremate their dead and I'm really concerned - or so I'm claiming - about the feng shui of only ever seeing folks in mourning.

So, even though I'd sincerely LOVE to do up that house, I'm not going much at all to encourage Keith to track down the owners in order to buy it.