For those of you reading this via rss feeds, I have a whole new look here at Aussie in the Orient.
For those of you reading via this actual site, this notice is irrelevant- feel free to carry on as you were.
PS. Does anyone know how to get the header image to line up inside the header background?? Or is it only overlapping on my screen?
Monday, June 02, 2008
New look
Wednesday, May 28, 2008
Visa-palooza, 1984 style.

However enough is enough.
It has been known for some time that the Chinese Government has been restricting the issuing of Student (X) visas, Tourist (L) visas and Business (F) visas, supposedly to maximise security prior to the Beijing Olympics- sometimes cutting down the length of time they are issued for, and at other times refusing to re-issue them at all. Already several of our friends have already been essentially deported (one friend was literally told "You must leave the country within ten days", which left no time to pack up his apartment or even find a new home for his cat).
Now, I understand that many small business people are working illegally on L and F visas, and, while I know it is the only way many people can afford to make a living, it is still illegal. So if you get your visa cancelled then, well, there's not much you can do about it.
Chinese officials "are concerned that certain undesirables may have come into China and may be residing in the foreign community here, and that some of them may represent risks to the Olympics games," said Peter Humphrey, managing director of ChinaWhys Co., a Beijing-based risk-management firm. Mr. Humphrey said the government may also be motivated in part by a desire to improve tax collection by cracking down on foreigners working without permission.However, recently the police have been waiting outside popular 'hang-outs' for foreigners in Shanghai (supermarkets selling imported products, international schools, etc) and demanding to see their visas. The Chinese government has for years requested that all foreigners carry their passport with them at all times, however, in reality this is just a really good way to lose your documents (not to mention having them- and your identity- fall into the wrong hands of a pick-pocket).
-Source
Now the police are not just demanding to see our visas, but actually carting foreigners off to their local police station to check that they have registered with them, as all foreigners must register with the police within 24 hours of landing in China- NOTE: every time you leave China, eg. for a holiday or on business, legally you must re-register when you return. So, even if you have registered with the police before, if the date on the registration papers does not match the last date of entry to China in your passport you can be liable for up to a 5000rmb fine (US$720), and can be detained in police custody for up to 30 days. Many foreigners don't know this, and the police don't tell you when you register with them the first time.*
FOREIGNERS in Shanghai should carry their passports with them for random checks by police, according to the Exit-Entry Administration of the Shanghai Public Security Bureau.A spot check is one thing, and although I resent being selected for inspection based only on my skin colour (yes, 'Foreigners' really means 'Caucasians'), my visa is all in order**, so I wouldn't mind too much if they stopped me for that. But being carted off to the police station like a criminal is another thing completely.
-Shanghai Daily
And the stories are getting more and more bizarre.
Last week, my friend K*** was on the treadmill, using a guest pass at her friend's gym. The gym is located withing the compound of a very expensive apartment complex in Shanghai, well-known for housing ex-pats with incredible housing packages from their employers. At the time K was the only non-asian-looking person in the gym, and in walked two police officers in full uniform (and with legitimate ID) who proceeded to walk straight up to her.
The police officers questioned K as to her name, address and telephone number. She told them her name and phone number. At this point they told her, in English, that they wanted to "invite her to a party" the next day, and that they would pick her up from her apartment if she'd tell them the address. Thinking that this was more than a bit unusual, K lied and said that she lived in one of the buildings in the complex, but that she'd rather not say which apartment number.
The police officers kept pushing her to tell them: "It's ok, we're police officers, we only want to invite you to a party... we'll take care of you...", but they were talking between themselves in Chinese, saying "It's ok, we have her name and number, we can find out where she lives".
They turned back to K and told her that they would pick her up in the complex at Building #4 at 6pm the next day, and drive her to the party. They also told her to bring her friends. And her passport.
Needless to say, she never turned up.
The real question is why the lies? The police have the power to cart people off for questioning, so why bother with the story?
As Phil said, living in China is starting to feel very slightly reminiscent of a certain World War II regime...
* Although the Arrival card everyone must fill out at customs when they enter China does say "failure to register with the police department within 24 hours of arrival can lead to you being deported", so there is really no argument in your defense.
** For the benefit of Big Brother- I have a Z visa entitling me to live and work in China. And I am registered with my local police station.
*** Name withheld for obvious reasons.
Saturday, May 17, 2008
Update on the Earthquake and EV71
Stories are starting to come out of Sichuan that would bring tears to the eyes of anyone. Some are simply sad, whilst others have the ability to fill you will a renewed sense of hope for humanity (as large-scale disasters often do).
Truly horrific:
Rescuers found Gong in the debris of an Agricultural Bank of China branch in Beichuan County after she had been trapped for 73 hours. They soon found it was impossible to remove the stone from her leg and set her free.And then the others:
The only way to save Gong was to amputate the leg, the newspaper reported. But surgeons could not do the operation as the space was too small. Rescuers then handed a saw to Gong, who cut off her right leg. -Shanghai Daily
XIANG Xiaolian, a 13-year-old girl, murmured: "The boy clawed me out with his bare hands," as she lay in bed at the No. 1 Hospital affiliated to the West China Medical University.So far, the death toll is at 21,500 people, with very real fears it will reach over 50,000 people. I just cannot fathom that number, especially when day-to-day life in Shanghai is going on much the same as normal.
Xiang was in class at Xuankou Middle School when the 7.8-magnitude quake hit Wenchuan County on Monday.
Xuankou is a boarding school, and more than 1,200 teachers and students fled to the mountains after the quake. How many were killed is not known.
"The whole building swayed as we were in chemistry class - the teacher asked us to run from the third floor classroom," recalled Xiang, who was buried underneath a concrete slab and lost consciousness.
Time passed, and when Xiang re-awakened, she could sense light but fainted again. The next time she awakened, it was dark. "I knew it was night then," she said
"I missed my parents," said Xiang, adding that "I had to see them again before I died." Xiang fell into a coma.
Xiang was awakened by the voice of Ma Jian, her classmate.
"Xiaolian, where are you?" the boy shouted in the open air. "You must hold on," Ma encouraged her as he clawed at the rubble with his hands.
Xiang cried:" Don't leave me, Ma Jian, at least, not until after I die."
"I will not, you are the youngest in our class," Ma replied, digging.
Each time Xiang fell asleep, Ma would call out to her to wake up. After about four hours, Ma freed her. By then, his hands were badly hurt.
They both cried as she was freed, and Ma carried her on his back, out through the school gate. The wall suddenly collapsed.
"If it had been a few minutes later, neither of us would have escaped," said Xiang. -Shanghai Daily
Here in Shanghai people from all groups in society have been wonderful about donating blankets, clothing and money. Yesterday, a colleague and I were walking through a local market when all of a sudden deafening music began playing through the loudspeakers, and all the shop owners and customers lined up in the main entrance way. Rebecca and I were just about to leave anyway, so we strolled passed them to see what was happening. When we approached the front of the line we stopped and turned around. There was a TV crew, and people were proudly lining up to put 100RMB notes in an elaborately decorated donation box, clearly displaying their generosity for all to see. At this point we felt that we could not just walk out of the mall (seemingly) uncaring, yet neither of us felt comfortable to join the line and have our 'generosity' calculated and deconstructed by all. We ended up skirting the crowds, and sneaking out behind the cameras, getting dirty looks from people in the line- none of whom knew that we had both donated money to the Red Cross the day before... in sealed, anonymous envelopes.
On the other front mentioned in my last post: Hand Foot and Mouth Disease. So far, there are no cases at my school, and I cannot find any more information about the number of cases in Shanghai as all news reports of EV71 ceased when the earthquake struck (reporters are busy covering other stories). We are keeping our fingers crossed that the extra measures the school is taking will hold away the virus, though there is absolutely no guarantee of that. In the meantime, 10 out of my 17 students have been off sick with a nasty flu, and with only 7 students it has seemed like somewhat of a holiday.

Tuesday, May 13, 2008
Eathquakes and viruses
Ok, so the very fact that I am posting this should be enough to say that I am ok, and neither Phil or I were affected by yesterday's earthquake in Sichuan province.
In fact, neither of us even felt it, although many people in Shanghai's high-rises did notice tremors from the quake. Sadly, the quake has killed many children (1000 at present but the tolls are still rising), as the 7.8 magnitude quake struck in the middle of the school day, collapsing schools and burying the children alive.

At the moment however, my school is actually more concerned about the death toll from Hand Foot and Mouth Disease (more specifically the EV71 strain which differs from the more common strain infecting children worldwide).
PLEASE NOTE: The following information on this post is intended for your personal interest only, and should not be substituted for advice from trained medical practitioners!
SHANGHAI Center for Disease Control and Prevention has detected enterovirus 71, or EV71 in 18 patients suffering hand, foot and mouth disease.Every morning, the concerned parents of my 2-3 year old nursery students question me at the door of our classroom. They want to know what measures we are taking, and should they keep their children at home.
Shanghai Daily 12 May 2008
HFMD has infected 24,934 children on the Chinese mainland, of whom 39 died in the provinces of Anhui, Guangdong, Hainan, Hunan and Zhejiang, and Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region.So far our school has taken the following measures:
Shanghai Daily 13 May 2008
- All children wash their hands with anti-bacterial gel when they arrive at school;
- No parents are allowed to enter the classroom;
- No games, toys or books from home will be allowed into the classroom;
- The children eat lunch and snack provided by the school;
- There are no swimming classes, and no borrowing from the library;
- School assemblies have been cancelled;
- Extra curricular activities involving staff, parents and families have been cancelled.
This post has been updated with more info on HFMD:
Hand foot and mouth disease (HFMD) is quite common in China, and indeed in the rest of the world. Cases of HFMD crop up nearly every year at my school, and while the affected children stay home and their class is quarantined (plays in different areas, does not attend school functions, etc), it is not very serious. However, in those cases, the HFMD syptoms are caused by the more common Coxsackie A16 virus. The Enterovirus-71 (EV-71) is more serious, and while the initial symptoms are the same, the EV71 virus can cause viral meningitis, and, less commonly, encephalitis (both of which can be fatal). It is the EV71 virus that has caused the recent deaths in China.
Hand, foot and mouth disease is mainly a childhood disease, occuring rarely in adults, unless they have weak immune systems. It is not uncommon among infants and children, and it spreads easily through contact with mucus, saliva and feces. It is characterized by fever, sores in the mouth and a blistery skin rash.
It has an incubation period of 3 to 7 days and it usually starts with general listlessness, poor appetite, and a slight fever, often accompanied by a sore throat. One or two days later, painful mouth sores develop, starting as small red spots that blister and turn into ulcers. They usually appear on the tongue, gums and the inside of the cheeks.
The non-itchy skin rash usually breaks out on the palms of the hands and the soles of the feet and develops over 1 or 2 days, starting as red spots that can be flat or bumpy, sometimes with blisters. Some children also get the rash on their buttocks. In some cases no rash is present, only the mouth ulcers, and in other cases, the mouth ulcers occur with no rash.
In a few cases it can lead to high fever, meningitis, encephalitis, pulmonary edema and paralysis.
Paralysis is more common in infants under two years of age, while meningitis is more common among infected 2 to 5 year olds.
Unfortunately there is no vaccine and no cure, and there is a high rate of death among children seriously ill with the disease.
Hand, foot and mouth disease is not to be confused with foot-and-mouth disease, which affects cattle, sheep and pigs. -source
Definition
Hand-foot-and-mouth disease is an infection of young children in which characteristic fluid-filled blisters appear on the hands, feet, and inside the mouth.
Description
Coxsackie viruses belong to a family of viruses called enteroviruses. These viruses live in the gastrointestinal tract, and are therefore present in feces. They can be spread easily from one person to another when poor hygiene allows the virus within the feces to be passed from person to person. After exposure to the virus, development of symptoms takes only four to six days. Hand-foot-and-mouth disease can occur year-round, although the largest number of cases are in summer and fall months.
An outbreak of hand-foot-and-mouth disease occurred in Singapore in 2000, with more than 1,000 diagnosed cases, all in children, resulting in four deaths. A smaller outbreak occurred in Malaysia in 2000. In 1998, a serious outbreak of enterovirus 71 in Taiwan resulted in more than one million cases of hand-footand-mouth disease. Of these, there were 405 severe cases and 78 deaths, 71 of which were children younger than five years of age.
Hand-foot-and-mouth should not be confused with foot and mouth disease, which infects cattle but is extremely rare in humans. -Source
Friday, May 09, 2008
Teach them well...
This morning a three-year-old boy in my Nursery class pulled up my t-shirt, and gazed wide-eyed at my stomach and, in the kind of voice you'd use to ask why someone had just sprouted another head, exclaimed:
"Wow! What's that?"
I wish I could say that I had an awesome tattoo on my stomach, or even a piercing or a wicked scar, but no.
He was referring to my white belly flab.
To add insult to injury, I've actually LOST 9kg this year. To be fair the child's mother is a svelt gorgeous South Korean woman, who wouldn't know what belly flab looked like if it smacked her in the face. However, something tells me that I should perhaps stay on the diet...
Thursday, May 08, 2008
Sunday, May 04, 2008
Tai Lake
Phil and I just returned from a long weekend with our friends Carolyn and Brian at Tai Hu (Tai Lake). Although rather polluted, the massive lake and associated islands near Suzhou were a welcome step back into nature. The village on the main island on the lake (the true Island, as opposed to the others linked by bridges) was quite rustic and undeveloped. It was filled with fruit trees, and the only mode of transport was motorbike (with a 4-passenger trailer contraption attached like a golf cart) or bicycle. It was such a pleasant change not to be surrounded by cars!

















Tuesday, April 29, 2008
Ah, the serenity.
Unfortunately, this literally is a rather peaceful place to sit and have lunch by Shanghai standards.
PS. 10 points for guessing the movie reference in the title... common Aussies!
Sunday, April 20, 2008
Vax on vax off
As a foreigner, it is difficult to communicate in Shanghai at any given time. Often, even if you do speak Chinese, people will look at your appearance (i.e. your skin colour), and assume they won't understand you before you even open your mouth. Other times you have the problem of mixing dialects and other Shanghai-centric slang to overcome.
However, English is becoming more and more common, and these days if you go to a place catering to foreigners, you can be fairly certain you will be able to use English with the staff.
This serves me well, but it is still a problem for the many, many thousands of foreigners living in Shanghai from non-english speaking countries.
The other day I walked into a beauty salon which caters to foreigners almost exclusively. The salon offers massage, facials, waxing, and manicure/pedicure services. The woman who had walked in off the street in front of me, walked up to the counter and in a very thick accent (Russian?) said:
"I vant a vax please."
The receptionist behind the counter stared at her blankly.
"Excuse me?" she stutters.
"A vax. VAX. I vant a VAX!"
"A... I'm sorry... a.... what?"
"VAX! VAX VAX VAX! You know, a VAX!"
More stunned mullet looks ensued. At this point I felt I should help her out.
"She wants a wax."
The receptionist had a lightbulb moment: "Oh, a WAX! Well why didn't she say that?"
Friday, April 18, 2008
More inappropriate Chinglish
My beyond-awesome fellow-nursery teacher, Kelly, bought this lined Hello Kitty exercise book in a stationary store here in Shanghai. Keep in mind that it is a children's exercise book:Yep.
Monday, April 14, 2008
Art Art Art
I have finally got my art website updated with a whole heap of new paintings in the Acrylics and the Series sections. Go check it out... I'll wait right here.
Thursday, April 10, 2008
Justice is Blind
Phil's new assistant, Alex Cheng Loew, ran back to take this photo after they spotted it in the drop-off zone at Jinan International Airport, in Shandong province, China.
Phil titled it "Justice is Served", but I prefer "Justice is Blind":
Friday, April 04, 2008
Life in Shanghai as a Mastercard ad:
Life in Shanghai as a Mastercard ad:
Taxi to the bar: $1
Drinks and food for you and 8 of your friends: $200
Taxi home: $2
Discovering that together you can sing the theme song from Fraggle Rock in 4 different languages: Priceless.
Saturday, March 22, 2008
Friday Photo- Geometry
This weeks Friday Photo theme is Geometry- which, incidentally, I got to choose as I was the showcased photographer from the Touch theme- YAY!
These are my entries for this week:
Monday, March 17, 2008
Tuesday, March 11, 2008
Lonely Hearts
I have to admit that we get a kick out of reading the wacky personals printed in the free classifieds magazines here in Shanghai. It is somewhat of a Saturday morning ritual to go to a cafe and read the latest 'attractions'. Sometimes you have to admire the honesty of the ads, though at others we simply cannot believe our eyes!
These are a select few from last week:
Successful man wanted
Pretty Chinese girl in Shanghai is looking for a successful man in millions of people to be her boyfriend (No black). I am tall, well-educated, and realistic, and I like dance, travelling and luxury life.
He must be healthy, rich and is able to pay euro 2500 a month. And must pay before.
Father My Children
I really want to have a baby but then i will have to find a father for my baby first. So is there anyone who is ready for a family and a kid? No divorced men or men who already have kids. I want this man to experience all this with me for the first time not looking for the ones who have already done this with their ex-wives or gfs, cause i feel that is not fair to me...He has to be honest,know how to respect women and is confident that he can be a good father.Well, no much worries or hurries, sure that we will start from friends to see where it goes... and i am QUITE serious, hope you are as well...
looking for a husband
I want to marry this end of this year so looking a man 28-40 years old above 170CM .If you want to marry please send to me my MSN ***********@hotmail.com
seek wealthy generous man
Seek wealthy man for friendship. He must be wealthy (company owner,president,vice-president,banker etc) generous,age above 40. I'm chinese girl,attractive sweet smart,speak good english,i don't send photo.
looking for husband
Chinese girl 26 years old 165Cm work in shanghai as a property consultant. now looking for a husband 28-40 years old. NO MARRIAGE NO SEX if you like send to me.

Sunday, March 09, 2008
Duh!
Another one of those 'Duh' moments happened when inspecting my new scooter helmet on Sunday:
I mean, you literally can not see through the visor with all that writing on it- just how stupid could someone be?
Friday, March 07, 2008
Friday Photo
I've joined the Friday Photo group on Calliope's blog. It's really just a way to get me thinking about actual photography again, rather than how quickly I can snap something, only to then just relegate it to the deep dark recesses of my computer.
Every week there is a new theme, and this week's theme is touch. Here are my entries:
Saturday, March 01, 2008
An old joke...
Why don't blind people parachute?
Paraglider and dog rescued from tree
A 42-year-old man who became entangled in a tree while paragliding with his pet chihuahua east of Melbourne was rescued by emergency services after a five-hour search.
The paraglider set off on a routine flight with his chihuahua strapped to him from Donna Buang Summit Road, near Warburton, just before 5pm (AEDT) yesterday.Because it scares their Guide Dogs.
But shortly after take-off the pilot became entangled in a tree and called 000 from his mobile phone.
Police search and rescue officers climbed the tree, placed a harness around the man and carried him to safety an hour later.
Yes, I know the joke is a stereotype, but I couldn't help but think of it when I read this article. I mean, who paraglides with their pet chihuahua?