The hills around Mui Wo are dotted with concrete grave sites. Twice a year around the grave clearing festivals of Ching Ming at the beginning of April and Chung Yueng in early September, the Chinese people visit the grave sites of their ancestors. They burn incense and offerings of paper models of things that the dead relatives liked having around them…all sorts of things including paper computers, microwaves, mobile phones, hell bank notes etc. Invariably these burnings sometimes get out of hand. The hills around are scarred from many fires. There were two particularly bad fires in Mui Wo this year. One started on the lower slope of Lin Fa Shan mountain early one afternoon. The one helicopter they employed to dump water on the fire was totally ineffective and this fire burned up to and over the top of this 750m mountain, eventually burning itself out a couple of days later. The second fire was a little closer to home. I joined other locals and the fire brigade with fire beaters to put this one out. The result of this fire is a rather scarred hill top just on the edge of our valley. We have been involved with tree planting on these former fire sites both locally on the hills above our home with the school children who come to Ark Eden programmes and in Discovery Bay with the DB Green Group.
We are members of the Royal Geographical Society of Hong Kong. As well as this enabling us to go to some superb lectures our membership has given us the opportunity to attend RGS day trips. The last one we went on proved a little more ‘exciting’ than we anticipated. It was meant to be a walk up the Tai Mo Shan, the highest mountain in Hong Kong to study the geological formations of the mountain. It turned into a wild walk on Hong Kong’s highest mountain during a T3, with winds gusting at 100k+ and driving rain. Typhoon Naguri was closer than the RGS organisers realised!
We do like to take the opportunity to house sit for friends generally as animal sitters. The week after we came back from NZ we stayed at Kate and Gary’s to look after Rosie the dog and also Theo the teenager. We were doing quite well caring for both of them until one day we went out for the evening locking the door as we left. Unbeknown to us Theo, who had taken Rosie for a walk had gone out without his key or his phone. We got home a couple of hours later to find a sorry looking pair waiting for us on the doorstep. Talk about feel bad – although probably not as bad as Theo felt! He was very civil about it though…even cooking our dinner as he had originally planned to do while we were out.
We also stay in Soho, the restaurant district of Central, looking after Mister Goodcat a possum look a like friend. His owner Nissa, is a model who travels quite a bit so she is often looking for people to look after her very affectionate apartment moggie. He was very pleased to see us when we arrived the second stay and promptly settled down inside my briefcase. He spent most of the day smooching next to us, which later became a problem because he decided that it was appropriate after a day of sleeping to play all night. Mister Goodcat became Mister Badcat….but he is so cute that one cannot stay cross with him for long!
We seem to have had many opportunities for cultural outings over the past couple of months. Through our association with the Kiwi Society we were invited to help out at a NZ Art Exhibition as care takers of the work during the day. Being volunteers enabled us to attend a talk about the works by the artists as well as the exhibition opening.
We also had invitations to see Te Vaka, a great Polynesian dance group. On another evening Louise went to a reception for Raewyn Hill, a NZ resident choreographer who choreographed a dance based on photos of rugby players taken at the 2007 Rugby 7’s. As well as performing, dancers had their photos taken in the same athletic poses of the rugby players and these photos were placed side by side with the rugby photos. It was very clever! On the same evening I went to a reception with the NZ Rugby 10’s team.
We had not planned to go to the Hong Kong Rugby 7’s this year but by chance on the day itself we managed to score a couple of tickets to the Friday night session. It was great to have had the chance to experience the Hong Kong 7’s and to watch the Kiwi’s playing who of course eventually went on to be the winners of the tournament.
Witi Ihimaera was also in Hong Kong for the Hong Kong Literary Festival and according to Louise gave the most wonderful talk and readings at a function at the New Zealand Consular Generals home on The Peak.
We had a day trip to Macau where we experienced the fake opulence of The Venetian Casino (for about an hour as we wandered through NOT stopping in the smoky gambling halls filled with Chinese mainlanders). We then taxied to the small village of Coloane to lunch at a local Chinese/Portuguese café and experience the more traditional side of Macau.
Well by the length of this update I can see that I really need to write them more often! There are many other experiences that I would like to share but I will save these for the next instalment.
We would love to welcome visitors to our Valley to experience a little of ‘our’ Hong Kong, so family and friends, don’t be shy! In any case we also look forward to hearing all about what YOU are doing wherever in the world you are.
Grow well
Dr Merrin
Tuesday, May 27, 2008
EcoLog07 - Hong Kong Cultural Experiences
Sunday, May 11, 2008
Thanks Mothers
A big thank you to all the Mothers! I am sure you had a great day!
A special thank you to my mother!
Parts of the world celebrated Mother's Day on Sunday 11 May. I say parts of the world for a couple of reasons.
Mother's Day is not the same day all around the world. Different cultures or countries have chosen to celebrate on different days. Some people also realise that celebrating mothers on only one day is no where near as powerful as celebrating them every day.
Now, have you taken time to celebrate ALL Mother's?
When was the last time that you paused and acknowledged:
- Mother Earth?
- Mother Birds?
- Mother Dogs and Mother Cats?
- Mother Whales, Mother Cows and Mother Lions?
- Mother ... the list goes on ...
So lets pause and acknowledge ALL Mothers whenever we can on any day.
Grow well Mothers!
Dr Merrin
Thursday, May 1, 2008
EcoLog06 - From Winter we Spring
My last update on a ‘green’ life in Hong Kong was written in early February just when it was starting to get a little cool in Hong Kong. Actually it was bloody cold! Little did we know that most of February was to herald the coldest and longest winter in Hong Kong for about 20 years!! As you can imagine our little house at the top of the valley is not built for the cold (or the hot weather for that matter). We spent most of February huddled over a heater, wearing ski jackets and practically all the warm clothes that we’d brought to Hong Kong (which we never thought we would need). We were actually very lucky to have a heater as the cold snap caught many by surprise and all of the shops in HK had sold out of all the heaters that they had ordered for the whole season in a matter of days.
On some days the top temperature was 10°C …and that was inside our house. We needed to stop the gales blowing in through the cracks in the windows so you guessed it we had to rely on a little Kiwi ingenuity. .This amounted to buying a roll of bubble wrap and covering all of the windows and/or stuffing the gaps with newspaper to increase the warmth factor. I’m sure this approach did make some difference but it really was hard to tell some days.
Needless to say during this cold snap we still did not have a hot water system installed for a shower. As you can imagine this resulted in a few tears of frustration and stamping of feet from Louise, who was beginning to wonder why the hell we had left our lovely home on the hill in Wellington with all its mod cons. Thankfully I can now report that we do indeed have a hot shower in our little abode. With the help of a friend who spoke Cantonese we managed to enlist the services of a local electrician/plumber. Up the valley he cycled initially to install the electrical wiring. A few Cantonese phone calls to and fro and we established that he could also install the plumbing. So Sunday 2 March became a very auspicious day indeed! Voila….we now had a shower… There was one heart stopping moment a few weeks after installation when the water pressure (such that it is) dwindled to nothing. More tears from Louise! Being a good keen Kiwi man I managed to find the source of the problem (this being an air bubble in the pipe from the water supply) and soon all was good again. So for all of you, our friends and family who have been waiting for this modern convenience before you came to stay, I can now report that there is no excuse anymore. Oh course the 30 minute walk up the valley may still faze some of you but just think of the exercise value.
Now that there is a shower in the bathroom, Louise was of course on a mission to ‘decorate’ said bathroom. Actually ‘decorate’ seems a little far fetched. What she was actually trying to do was ‘create’ a bathroom. Off she went on many a reconnaissance mission to source the relevant accessories. The result is not the most stylish bathroom in the world but pretty good under the circumstances. She managed to source a shower caddy, trolley, wooden hooks, shelf, toilet roll holder and a mirror and two rather cool bamboo floor mats, which prevent one from getting ones wet feet as you walk ‘through’ the shower to get to the toilet. The mats were found in the Causeway Bay big GOD store…yes ‘Goods of Desire’ a great place to go if you want to add a touch of flair to…well any room in the house actually!
Actually the addition of a shower caddy suspended off the wall was a bonus in other ways! Prior to installation we had been having some problems with a visiting soap eating rodent. We thought that we had sufficiently covered all of the holes in the wet area (kitchen/bathroom) but a sneaky rodent was coming in and gnawing away at my soap! Not to mention rifle-ling through the rubbish bucket looking for other tasty morsels. Eventually a stop was put to his visitations by covering all small entry spots to the kitchen/bathroom outhouse with metal gauze.
As the cold winter period drew to a close I really started to notice nature changing in the valley. The pomelos in our garden finished soon after our return from NZ. They were replaced by some lovely large grapefruit on the tree growing next to the steps up to the house. The flesh of these is quite orange in colour but they are definitely on the sour side of the spectrum. Lovely to be able to pluck fresh citrus fruit for breakfast for several months of the year though! We had planted tomatoes and basil interspersed with marigolds as companion plants, prior to our NZ holiday. The cold slowed down the tomato crop but once it warmed up again we were able to continue to pick tomatoes right up till now. Have just pulled the last plants out and have replanted more tomatoes and basil, plus aubergines, parsley, lettuce chives etc. Just call us Tom and Barbara Good - aka Merrin and Lou living ‘The Good Life’ Hong Kong style. Actually I do love to head off into the wilderness that is our garden armed with a slasher and hoe, clearing paths and creating viewing platforms.
The valley is a wondrous place to be at times. To be woken up in the morning by the dawn chorus is quite special. There are also the ‘night birds’ who seem to spend all night calling to their mate and the owls hooting to theirs in their roosts near the house. As the temperatures got warmer I also noticed the return of the insects with different varieties taking it in turns to make their presence felt. When all the fruit trees in the garden were flowering a few weeks ago, the drone of bees was the most prevalent sound during the day. Now it is the drone or should I say high pitched screech of the cicadas. Wasps, hornets and beetles are also flying about but fortunately these do tend to mind their own business. The large and small snails and slugs are also about now and the other day there was a rather large worm trying to share my shower. I did however manage to encourage it out through the drainage hole in the floor. The butterflies are also many and varied around our home. They come in all shapes and sizes from really big brightly coloured ones to small white cabbage and common yellow butterflies. We also had an influx of brightly coloured tiger moths….actually hundreds of these flying around and settling in the trees around our home.
Last week we saw our first snakes of the season near the house. First we saw a Red Necked Keelback slithering up the bank near our vege garden. Later that same day another Red Necked Keelback (it may have been the same one) decided to curl up in the little drain hole of our patio next to where Louise was washing the dishes (outside in the basin filled with water boiled from the kettle – as you do). She noticed it when she went to place a bucket practically on top of it. Now this one was a little too close for comfort! Mind you, when it realised that this large thing next to it was trying to squash it with a bucket off it went down the wall. Lou then walked to what she thought was a better viewing spot only to disturb another snake also less than a metre from where she now stood! Talk about palpitations! Not sure what variety this one was but we did manage to take a photograph of it to try and identify it in the snake book.
A few days later when I was leaving to go to an early morning meeting. He opened the front door to find another snake similar to the brown one curled up on our doorstep! Needles to say out came the camera again (for identification purposes). As I was in a rush to catch a ferry into Central I left Louise to usher it off the threshold. This she managed to do by giving it a gentle poke with a ‘long’ stick of bamboo. We haven’t seen any more snakes quite as close to the house lately, just a few down the valley as we are walking home! Not so keen on the fact that the snakes come quite so close to the house but really there is not a lot that we can do about it. One just has to keep a wary eye out and ‘believe’ that they are more fearful of us than we are of them!
Of course, the most unwelcome critter at the moment (and one which definitely makes their presence felt) are mosquitos. We currently have daily competitions to see who can kill the most. It really is unwise to leave the door open on the damper days…especially in the early evening. One of our most useful Christmas presents was a mossie net for the bed. When we first started using it we did have a problem with rogue mossies sneaking in through the gap. Once inside they would have a feast! These little blighters even know how to bite you through the sheet! After a few nights of having to turn the lights on in the middle of the night to act as the great white mosquito catcher Louise fixed the problem by sewing up the gap!
We haven’t got any resident animals of the domestic variety (apart from our resident geckos). Stumpy the gecko (tailless due to some trauma) was one of our favourites for a while, but he eventually went to the big gecko place in the sky. Over the last couple of days the flying ants (these winged ants come in waves at certain times of the year) have been making a nuisance of themselves by coming into the house through every crack and cranny (of which there are many). The only good thing about this event was that we could watch gecko TV…i.e. watch the geckos scurry up the walls catching and munching on the winged ants. The bad thing about these nuisance insects (those not caught and munched by geckos) is that they drop their wings overnight and then you end up with a colony of ants inside!
If we feel the need to get close and personal to domestic animals we can go to Jenny’s and say hello to Charlie the pig, Cherry the cat, the 2 turtles and 5 dogs that make up her menagerie. We sometimes volunteer to take the five girls for a walk (Jenny’s dogs – Radar, a collie bitser, afghans Yuki and Carmen, Pepper a small fluffy something?? and ‘Belle the Beautiful’ - a pug who is the smallest dog but makes her presence felt the most). Belle is the self acclaimed star of the family!
We also always stop and talk to the self styled guardians of the Valley. These are the seven cats that reside around the ‘pink gates’ at the entrance to the valley (which is also where our letter box is - about 10 minutes walk from the house). They are wild cats but all have been caught by the cat’s protection society, taken away to be de-sexed and brought back to their ‘home’. They do not belong to anyone in particular but are fed by many people. All are a tad timid except for Mama and Boy (the names we have given them). My guess is that Mama is actually Boy’s mother (they are very similar in colouring and natures). She is the most gorgeous moggie who always stops for a chat and a roll. She sees us coming and runs up the path and jumps on the 1.5m high concrete pad for her chat and pat. Boy has also become more confident and he too is often hanging out with his mum lolling in the sun and waiting for our attention as we cycle by.
On that note of cycling – bye
Grow Well
Dr Merrin
Monday, April 21, 2008
Earth Day - Yes it is another one today!
Happy Earth Day to you!
Earth Day has been celebrated since 1970. Find out more about Earth Day and the Earth Day Network at http://www.earthday.net/
Now this one day may be called Earth Day however I make every day an Earth Day – why not join me?
If every day we chose to take on one new way of supporting a sustainable Earth then by the end of the year that is an amazing difference you have made. I have focused on changing one thing I do a week, so that is 52 things by the end of the year. That is a very good outcome for us all.
Choices are simple and I would encourage you to take on at least one new item in your daily life today and then to tell others about what you are doing.
· Business cards – printed on paper not plastic, non-laminated using recycled paper with vegetable based inks. Well… that is 4 things all just in your choice of business card printing.
· Electronic Invoices – Send invoices out electronically, pay online and store the receipts electronically.
· Lights – turn on only those that you need, replace bulbs with more energy efficient ones.
· Appliances – Turn them off when not using them. Not just on standby – flick the switch.
· Air-conditioning – In summer set the temperature a degree or two higher (you can cope being warm – just take off another piece of clothing). Better still turn off the unit and put on a fan. Even better open the window and let the breeze blow through.
· Painting – If you are repainting your apartment then choose an eco paint. We used a clay based paint and it went on easily and did not smell at all.
· Cleaning – For your clothes, the dishes and the bathroom look for the eco options. They work just as well, are less harmful for you or your helper to use and they do not pollute the water with chemicals.
· Transport – Reduce the use of your own car. Take a bus or train when you can rather than a taxi. You can even try walking those shorter distances. It keeps you fit and you may meet a friend along the path.
· 3 R’s - Reduce, Reuse and Recycle. There are thousands of things you can do here. Separate out the recyclables from your rubbish and take them to the recycling station.
· Purchases - Choose to buy items with less packaging. Your oranges and banana’s do not need to be wrapped they come in a perfectly natural wrapper!
· Food – Eat less meat and become more vegetarian. I love a good steak though have stopped eating meat everyday. If you just choose to have one meal a day that contains meat rather than 3 meals containing meat then you have made a significant difference to how many methane generating animals have to be grown.
· Air travel – only travel by plane when you have to. Have a teleconference instead. Offset your travel with a carbon programme (http://www.plant-a-tree-today.org/)
· Take time to look at the natural beauty around you. Yes take time to talk to the animals and smell the flowers. It is Earth Day so say hi to you fellow planet mates!!!
Make every day an Earth Day
Grow Well
Dr Merrin
Thursday, April 10, 2008
The Walking Tree Man in Hong Kong
Well you know how much I love trees
(oh you do not - then you have a read of a couple of the other posts here)
Today I have had the pleasure of seeing a tree that walks!
Then being hugged by a tree (see the photo of me with Cliff in costume)
Yes Cliff Spenger is The Walking Tree Man and he has walked for the first time in China. It happened as part of the Earth Day celebrations going on at Cyberport in Hong Kong. What a buzz for me to be able to arrange for Cliff to be part of it. He was in the opening ceremony with top Hong Kong models.
If you want to see what Cliff really is about then check out his website http://www.walkingtreeman.com/video.htm
Cliff is on his way to join another great friend of mine, Paul Coleman - The Earth Walker (http://www.earthwalker.com/), in China. Paul has walked more than 45,000 around the planet and helped inspire the planting of millions of trees.
Together they are going to make an interesting combination in China.
It is such a pleasure to be able to spread the environmental message with guys like Cliff and Paul.
If you know of some one else that would love to share their environmental message in Hong Kong then please connect them with me.
Grow well
Dr Merrin
Thursday, March 13, 2008
The Power of an email signature - What is yours?
You know the Power of Words … so
Have you ever looked at how you sign your emails or letters?
I am not talking about offers, promotions, give-aways, etc I am looking at the intention you put into the simple part of signing off with your name.
(The offers, promotions and call to action are very important too and there are many sites talking about the marketing space in your email signature thought that is not the focus of this article)
For many years I signed my emails like probably many people with
“Regards Merrin”.
That sounded a little regular for me. So I changed my signature to
“Cheers Merrin”
back in 2001.
It made me feel a lot more happy about sending the email to the person. You know I do like a good beer so with each email sent I knew I was closer to another celebration.
In 2006 I got an email from a friend and he signed it
“Go well, Alan Stewart”.
I thought that is really cool. It both says to the recipient and to Alan to Go Well.
As you have noticed I love nature and personal development. My wealth dynamics profile is a STAR. When I learned that Stars like to stand out from the crowd I realised why I liked my email signature to be different. (Learn more about Wealth Dynamics Profiling and the STAR profile)
So in 2006 I started signing my emails as
“Grow well, Dr Merrin”.
It has been amazing to watch the change.
One is the personal power it gives you every time you sign your email. I am reminding myself to develop personally and also to appreciate and promote the health of the world’s natural environment. All that in my Signature.
Oh, by the way I put the Dr part in there to remind me of where I have come from in terms of my formal training as a land surveyor and geodesist.
The second area that I did not expect is the way it engages the email recipients to ask you questions. I have had why “grow well”?, what are you a Dr of?, can I use your signature too?, and love the signature!
So how about taking a little time to think about how you sign your emails and you too could be surprised by the difference it makes.
As the saying goes "Your wealth is in your words".
Grow well
Dr Merrin
Monday, March 10, 2008
The Joy of Spring
Take time to go and look closely at the plants in your garden or your nearest park.
Look closely at those plants that look just like dead branches. I mean get up really close to them and look for signs of green buds on the ends of the branches.
What you will find is the amazing transition from a twig to a leaf or a flower.
Walking the valleys and hills around Mui Wo we were amazed by the variety of the blossom and flowers that are emerging at the moment.
Spring reminds me that you can not judge a plant by its looks at one time of the year and expect to know all its glory. That twig can later provide you with wonderful fruits!