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in china photography traveling

temple of heaven

so… after 2 years in china, we finally decided to visit beijing last week! it was a good choice to wait for this long, i think. after the olympics, a lot of historic monuments were at their finest in years, and we were able to enjoy everything without the crowds – or the olympic paranoia. so, we hopped on a D train late last thursday, and off we went. friday morning the sky was cloudy and it had just rained, but there was lots of wind which cleared out the clouds in the afternoon (and after that we had nothing but blue skies in beijing. how lucky is that?)

our first stop was the temple of heaven (天坛 or tiāntán), @ tiantandongmen metro station, line 5. it consists of 3 main groups of buildings that were once used by the emperors to pray for good harvests, in a very big park.

temple of heaven

The Hall of Prayer for Good Harvests (祈年殿) is a magnificent triple-gabled circular building, 32 metres in diameter and 38 metres tall, built on three levels of marble stone base, where the Emperor prayed for good harvests. The building is completely wooden, with no nails.

temple of heaven
temple of heaven

The Imperial Vault of Heaven (皇穹宇) is a single-gabled circular building, built on a single level of marble stone base. It is located south of the Hall of Prayer for Good Harvests and resembles it, but is smaller. It is surrounded by a smooth circular wall, the Echo Wall, that can transmit sounds over large distances. The Imperial Vault is connected to the Hall of Prayer by the Vermilion Steps Bridge, a 360 meter long raised walkway that slowly ascends from the Vault to the Hall of Prayer.

it's that great!

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The Circular Mound Altar (圜丘坛) is the altar proper, located south of the Imperial Vault of Heaven. It is an empty circular platform on three levels of marble stones, where the Emperor prayed for favorable weather. It was built in 1530 by the Jiajing Emperor and rebuilt in 1740.

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meanwhile, oblivious to the hordes of tourists around them, thousands of people spread around the park, singing, dancing, playing odd instruments, practicing kung fu and tai chi or just doing their thing. it was mighty impressive. i caught this choir practicing, their singing could be heard from far away:

amazing, isn’t it? i was stoked! excuse my lame video skills, and if you know which song they’re singing, speak up! i can only catch “ni shi shei?” but not much more… (our “taiwanese refugee” TC says it sounds communist though…)

et voilà!

Categories
in china just life

updates, a promise and a curse

hello little blog, i missed you, as i always do when i go through a dry spell in posts. there have been projects to finish, trips to far away cities, restaurants visited, emails piled on mailboxes, friends sleeping in the couch and many many pictures…

so there is much to tell – and i’m starting to think that i’ll be leaving china before i have time to tell it all. soo… here’s the deal: one post (at least) per day till the end of the month. ok? ok! :) there, much better.

first things first, the weather forecast:

shanghai weather curse

why does the bad weather always comes on the weekends around here?! i’m starting to think there a shanghai curse nobody told me about…

Categories
in china

2 years in shanghai!

2 years in china!

2 whole years! and not only did we survive, but i can honestly say i’m enjoying every minute of it :)

Categories
in china photography

spring… in black and white!

well, yes. i loaded the holga with a roll of shanghai gp3 some weeks ago, only to forget all about it and go trigger happy on all the spring action happening around me… of course, spring isn’t as gorgeous when the film is black and white…



but i plan to take revenge this weekend, when we go to the botanical garden again!

this particular roll of film had a bit of horizontal scratching in some frames, and since it’s my first time with it, i wonder if the lab messed it up… or the quality is inferior and prone to scratching… or whether the holga is doing it, though it hasn’t happened before. anyway, it’s cheap (6rmb, €0.60!) and therefore good for experiences, and it’s called shanghai :) for sure i’ll be taking some with me when i go back.

Categories
in china rants

get your act together!


i don’t do a lot of posts where i complain, but the cats saga is taking its toll on us. our return tickets were long booked on british airways, but if we knew it’d be such a nightmare to ship the cats home, i think we’d have chosen a more pet-friendly airline. say, lufthansa, where your cats fly with you in the cabin, saving you half the trouble.

the service on ba has been appallingly clueless. first they don’t fly the cats in cabin – only cargo. that’s fine, i guess. so what do we need? we call london, we call lisbon, we call shanghai: nobody’s got a straight answer, always ending up forwarding us to somebody else. in shanghai, they forwarded us to the logistics person who is supposed to know these things, but doesn’t have the foggiest idea… first we’re told they can’t ship them to lisbon, to which we reply “but why, if the flights we are flying in have cargo service as well?”, then they suddenly can, then we need extra documents – documents which the entity supposed to issue says we don’t need…

what are these people doing?! so far, this has been the most stressful issue of the whole move. we don’t want to leave them behind, and we surely don’t want to take them to the airport and suddenly realize we’re missing a paper! how hard can it be to figure out these procedures and get a clean algorithm, step by step?!
this is all i want. kthxbye.