Category Archive China

ByGD

Forbidden Panda

People behave badly at Chinese zoos. China just doesn’t have the same standards for animal welfare, and most people aren’t as familiar with wildlife as we are in the U.S. It’s out of ignorance not malice that people feed animals through the bars and toss rocks into enclosures to make animals “do something.” That’s part of what we need zoos for – to educate people about animals.

Despite the low standards that so distressed me at the zoo in Qingdao, I got in trouble for using flash near the pandas. I didn’t mean to – my camera was set to auto, and the building wasn’t at brightly lit as I thought. But when my flash went off, a security guard came over and told me I would have to leave if I did it again. We protect what we value.

ByGD

Freedom Fliers

May Wind 五月的风 is located in May Fourth Square on the waterfront in Qingdao. The park and its sculpture are dedicated to the The May 4th Movement which protested the Treaty of Versailles’ transferring the German concessions in Shandong (including Qingdao) to Japan rather than returning sovereign authority to China.

This sculpture is a rare Chinese celebration of freedom. But the kites flying above it represent freedom everywhere.

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The Games We Play

Movies always show groups of old men sitting around playing board games in the park, but I had never seen it in real life. Then I ran across these old men in Qingdao. I had to have a picture, but I didn’t want to walk up to them and interrupt their game to ask permission, especially when I knew it would involve dealing with language barriers and probably result in an awkwardly stage photo anyway.

So I told my daughter to hold pose for an picture, then zoomed behind her to capture the oldsters across the street. I’m pretty sure they never noticed, but my kid was on to me instantly.

“You just pretended to take a picture of me so you could take one of those old men, didn’t you?” she accused. Caught out, I refocused and took a second picture, this time of her face. But she still disapproved my deceptive little game.

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Lamp post At The End of the Chinese Garden

Coastal Chinese cities are a far cry from Narnia, but I still half-expected Mr. Tumnus to trot by when I spotted this lamp post in a garden in Qingdao.

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Glimpse of the Sea

Qingdao and Seattle have a lot in common. One of my favorite things at home is turning a corner and getting a perfectly framed view of the mountains, Puget Sound, or Lake Union. Qingdao gets that, too.