Wednesday, December 06, 2006
Monday, November 27, 2006
I tried to walk back to our hotel with these guys, but I screwed up...I went the wrong way. So I got in a cab to go back to my hotel, and 5 yuan later, my cell phone had been left inside and I didn't have a receipt. I went inside my hotel and tried for thirty minutes, passing the phone back and forth between me and the receptionist, to get them to ask over the radio who just dropped a foreigner off at my hotel, but they refused. Then I called my own cell phone, and one the second try the cabbie answered. I asked him to come back and he said ok, then some other stuff I didn't understand, to which I replied I'd give him some money for his troubles. I was planning to give him about 20 yuan, around 4 times the base cab rate, which seemed more than fair. After about 15 minutes he returned with his face completely changed and demanded 300 yuan ($38) to give me back my own cell phone. I yelled and yelled and eventually, for some reason, he said we should go inside and talk with the receptionist, as if she could make me understand why I would pay him more. And, in fact, she was of no help to me (her customer). I ended up paying 80 yuan ($10) for the privelege of getting my own cell phone back. Since then, in all situations, no matter how rushed I am, I always, always, always get a receipt. If you have the receipt, you can call the cab company. If they don't help, you can call the police, which usually just the threat of can scare any cabbie straight. But without a ticket (and when the cabbie returned, he took off his medallion so I couldn't figure out the cab number) I was more or less helpless. I was told it could be worse, other folks had just had their phones stolen straight out (and mine later would be in about a month), but nevertheless after this I cursed Chengde as full of cheats. The vendors trying to sell us tea and water at sky-high prices just furthered my distaste for everyone in the town except the folks I met at the dance hall.
EAP China! Robert Klein.
But luckily help was on the way! After some French-Chinese translation we ran into these two locals home from college. We told them we wanted to go to a non-brothel discotheque, and they happily obliged by taking us to one of the shadiest looking places I've ever see. The place was located on the roof after a five story climb up outdoor stairs. And it was legit! And it was awesome!
EAP China! Robert Klein.
We had dinner across the river (which was widely viewed as the worst one we've had in China...I think the honor goes to the meal at the gers in Inner Mongolia, but everyone else was too drunk to care. As I was there, I ran into a group of four French high schooler and high school graduates who had been in China the last few months, and we swapped numbers to meet up later. They called me in a mild panic and told me to meet them here. They though it was a discotheque, but it's actually little more than a brothel.
EAP China! Robert Klein.
That's right folks, it's time for another EAP trip, this time to Chengde and the Great Wall at JinShan Ling (in Hebei province) and SiMaTai (in Beijing). That means, of course, that I'll probably have long gaps in between posts which will make following the trip unneccessarily difficult for my readers, but I'm sorry, I'm studying!
That being said, here's the Olympic stadium under construction as of July 27, 2006. Originally, the plan was to finish all the Olympic venues a year early, in 2007 just to show how much Beijing had it together better than Athens. But everyone decided to hold their horses and now some of the venues will be completed as late as early 2008.
EAP China! Robert Klein.
This is the southern reaches of the XinJieKou neighborhood, where the closest subway station to BNU (JiShuiTan) is located. This is another great spot to buy clothes, though in a few year I think it will all be torn down (now it's mostly hutongs) to build stores like this. The just built a pink monstrosity of a supermarket across from the subway station. It's godawful.
EAP China! Robert Klein.