A Chinese Holiday — Nonstandard. October holiday is a Holiday with Chinese Characteristics.

Talking about Chinese language:  a “Holiday with Chinese Characteristics” really means that it is nothing like a holiday at all . . .

According to the state-run Xinhua news agency, Chinese tourists made 428 million trips last week during Golden Week.  See: http://blogs.wsj.com/chinarealtime/2013/10/12/vote-should-china-scrap-its-holiday-schedule/?mod=WSJBlog

This is too crowded.

We have something called “makeup days” where the Saturday and Sunday prior to the holiday, and Saturday and Sunday after the holiday are work days, which are used to make up for the time off during the holiday.  So I”m not exactly sure about these computations, but it seems that we work a five day week, then a weekend – 7 days. Then we have a holiday of about 10 days, including a weekend, then a 5 day week, a 2 day working weekend, then another 5 day week = 12 days working in a row. If you include the 10 days vacation, then we have 7+10+12 = 29 days. Our routines are disrupted for about a month in order to create this feeling of a national holiday. Of the eight days actually off (not including the weekend, four days are made up. I’m not complaining, but there might be a better way to do this.

If the government wants to give us four days off, maybe we could get two four day weekends: Take Monday and Tuesday off before National Day and then Thursday and Friday  off after National Day. There would be four days off, but they would be grouped together better.  There would be a one in seven chance that National Day would fall on a Wednesday.In that event, perhaps one in seven years, we could have Wednesday off.  In the best scenario, we would have Sat/Sun off, then Mon/Tue (Sept 29/30) off, then the Wednesday (Oct 1) Then Th/Fri, then a regular weekend. That would be a nine day holiday and no disruption of our weekends. On  six  of seven years we would have simply two four-day weekends.

People could take a day or two off prior to the 4 day weekend, or after. There would be many destinations where a 5 or 6 day break would be suitable. Well, just thinking out loud. 🙂

 

Chinese Made Simple

In China, the term “waijiao” denotes “diplomatic relations” or “foreign teachers” .  These are so closely related that it is very difficult for me not to get them mixed up.  Chinese is very easy in one way,  you don’t have so many sounds to learn.  You just have to keep  track of the tones . . . In this case: wai4jiao1 and wai4jiao4 (diplomatic relations and foreign teacher respectively).

Incidentally, if you are a student of the tones, you will note a difference between what was said, what was written, and what you will find in a Chinese/English dictionary.  While Chinese seem to have no trouble understanding each other, they often disagree on tones and stroke order.

Vice Governor Chen Yiqin welcomes Foreign Teachers and Investors

On September 29, 2013 Guizhou Province hosted a reception ceremony welcoming the foreign  teachers and foreign investors to Guizhou.  Executive Vice Governor Chen Yiqin told the foreigners that Guizhou appreciates our efforts to help build the economy here in Guizhou.  A fine banquet was provided in a demonstration of thanks.

A Woman is a Flower

I recently visited the Guiyang Botanical Gardens off Shacong Nanlu with my friend Yifei, an incurable camera addict. Yifie was the primary photographer in my “Shopping With Chef James” video http://www.tourguizhou.net/shopping-with-chef-james/. I am told that in China, a beautiful girl is often referred to as a “flower”, the same as in the West.

IMAG2468 IMAG2469  Which photo shows the best flower? I couldn’t decide, so I posted both:

 

The Trouble with Rats . . . Update #2

Well it was just about am month since putting the last rat to sleep.  This ground floor older home is vulnerable, but I just can’t bring myself to put out poison.  I caught a big guy about 3  days ago and killed him the same way, dropping the live trap into a bucket of water.  It was a very heavy animal, and I’m sure that if I let him go free that he would have beat up on the neighborhood cats. After killing my first rat a month ago, the second one was much easier. This rat was caught on a potato.  I am baiting the trap with French bread and peanut butter. Both potatoes and peanut butter are proven rat baits.

Note: Complaints about my rat picture led to it’s deletion. I have inserted a more popular rodent:Mickey

The Trouble with Rats . . . Update #1

Over three weeks ago I posted under “The Trouble with Rats” http://www.tourguizhou.net/the-trouble-with-rats/ .

I detailed the issues in dealing with the rats in my old house.  I never wanted to kill anything, but I finally got frustrated and had to drown a rat to finally get rid of it.  I am happy to report that I haven’t seen a rat (or evidence of a rat) in my house for over three weeks.

The rat that was drowned wasn’t the same  rat that crossed my living room.  That rat was never to be found again.  I baited the trap with all kinds of cool stuff, such as potato, lunch meat, cheese, and peanut butter.  I never caught him.  Now I think maybe it was my imagination.  The trouble with rats is that when you see them, you see a lot more.  Any noise, or movement in your house is immediately attributed to rats.  A bird chirping outside the house sounds a lot like the squeak of a rat. If you walk past a mirror and catch your image moving in the mirror, your brain immediately thinks that the movement might be a rat.

Perhaps the reason the rats haven’t returned is the public nature of the execution of the last rat.  I dropped him and the rat trap into a bucket of water in the back yard.  Any rat that observed this probably told his little rat friends:  “Don’t mess with Jack. He’s a killer.”

Anyway, I am aggressively trying to catch another rat, with a carefully baited trap.  There are no takers yet, but I’ll be ready when they come . . .

China connection to Traverse City (Jack’s Hometown)

TCAPS board ready to approve Chinese students deal

BY MICHAEL WALTON mwalton@record-eagle.comTraverse City Record-Eagle

TRAVERSE CITY — An international exchange potentially involving hundreds of students and millions of dollars for local schools appears a step closer to becoming a reality.

Traverse City Area Public Schools board members said they expect to approve a memorandum of understanding with Weiming Education Group, one of China’s largest private schools, during a meeting Monday night. The agreement could bring up to 200 Chinese students — and an infusion of up to $2 million tuition dollars and extra state school aid money — to TCAPS annually for years to come.

“I haven’t heard any one voice of opposition (from board members),” board President Kelly Hall said. “I anticipate it will pass and be strongly supported.”

TCAPS officials are lauding the proposed partnership with Weiming as part of district efforts to prepare students for an increasingly globalized world. The agreement also will generate more revenue for TCAPS, and allow the district to offer more classes and programming options to all students in the district, officials said.

The TCAPS-Weiming partnership, if approved, likely will begin with dozens of Chinese students enrolling as junior and seniors at TCAPS’ high schools in the 2014-15 school year, district officials said. Some seniors also could enroll at NMC.

Weiming will pay $10,000 annually in tuition per student to TCAPS under the proposal before the board. The district also can collect the state per-pupil foundation grant for the Chinese students during their junior year.

But two school districts in Kent County experienced bumps in the long road from China that suggests true student numbers — and the associated revenue — are not easily pinned down.

Rockford Public Schools and Kentwood Public Schools began to work on similar agreements with Weiming about 18 months ago, Rockford Superintendent Michael Shibler said.

Each district was prepared to receive 20 students from Weiming for the 2013-14 school year. Instead, far fewer showed up.

Rockford ended up with only two juniors and three seniors after selecting 20 host families and budgeting for their tuition payments.

Recruiters from other high schools in the United States plucked the other Weiming students. Shibler said Weiming officials never told Rockford officials about the recruiting practice.

“Initially, I was very disappointed,” he said. “I was never aware this even existed.”

But Shibler is still pleased with his district’s agreement with Weiming, which he said at its core is about developing mutual respect between youths in China and the United States.

“We are a global society now,” he said. “We do need to develop strong relationships with other countries.”

TCAPS Superintendent Stephen Cousins said he’s are aware of the competition between districts to attract Weiming students and their families.

The memorandum before the TCAPS board doesn’t spell out a minimum number of Weiming students who’ll head for Traverse City.

“They’ll judge TCAPS based on the merits of our program and we’ll get the students whose parents feel we’re the best fit,” Cousins said.

TCAPS officials did look into Weiming’s background, including the institution’s credit history and business practices. Everything checked out, said Paul Soma, TCAPS associate superintendent of finance & operations.

TCAPS leaders also were impressed with Weiming’s institutional philosophy, Cousins said.

“They actually have, as part of their corporate goals, that they would increase the understanding between the Chinese and American cultures to improve the working relationship between the countries,” Cousins said. “That was important to us.”

Back in the USA

This is a quick shot of living in the USA at my friend’s Betsy’s house.  We were barbequing brats and drumsticks.  It shows a quick picture of a back yard, mower, sprinkler, and a BBQ in progress. For all you Chinese that think the meat is burned, that is t he way it’s supposed to look.