BF and I are back home in the US to spend time with our kids. They are all back from university and it is so nice to be with everyone again. Absence really makes the heart grow fonder. We wish everyone a happy and safe holiday.
Friday, December 21, 2007
Wednesday, December 19, 2007
Hairy Monkey
She has visited several times the Hutong home of an 80 year old man who makes paper balls. She has taken other expats to introduce them to him. She takes pictures of the visits and sends them to him in the mail. He has lots of photos on the walls of his home including her visits.
With an air of charming naivety, the hairy monkeys are enormously popular among old Beijingers. However, for various reasons, the folk art is facing extinction, as in today's Beijing, only several artists are well acquainted with the techniques of making hairy monkeys.
The creation of hairy monkeys was quite an accident. In the late Qing Dynasty (1644-1911), there was a drug store named "South Qingren Hall". One day, two assistant chemists in the store, while fiddling with some Chinese medicine, worked out a small monkey-like toy with a shed cicada skin, a hairy white magnolia bud, a bletilla striata (the stem of a kind of plant) and an akebi (another kind of plant).
Their accidental creation caught the attention of the shopkeeper, who then suggested selling the four Chinese medicines in a pack as raw materials for making such toys. Hairy monkeys then became popular as a folk handicraft, but were limited among the small number of folk artists and the banner men ("Banners" is the military organization of the Qing Dynasty).
Monday, December 17, 2007
Saturday, December 15, 2007
Walk on the "Wild Wall"
I (BF) went on a hike December 5th with the Wednesday hiking group led by Leslie W. She took us to a small village 2 hours from Beijing at the bottom of a trail that led to the wild great wall. This is a part of the wall that has not been renovated for tourists to walk on (in other words, you take your own chances). We had an encounter on the road to the village. We were stopped on the road as a crew was filming a soap opera up ahead. We waited five minutes then went along. We arrived at and toured the small village; it being autumn we saw many signs of readiness for winter.
A local family who rents rooms invited us into their courtyard. The stick bundles are hand tied. That takes a lot of strength. They also had green lettuce drying and freezing for later stir fry’s. I love the corn cribs and the stacked stacks.
Signs along the way are interesting. They are typical. But we are on the trail as are many others in fairer weather.
We walked up and seemingly around a u shaped portion and the path was narrow and the views spectacular.
Here we come upon a tower and we have to step down these improvised steps to continue on the wall. We did have to climb over some topsy turvey paving stones. Here is the road ahead. It seems like a long ways. It was interesting how I had to pay attention to looking up and out at the beauty around me. I was easily intent upon my footing and always moving forward. How much I would have missed had I not stopped. Needless to say, I was almost always at the end of the line.
Now we go off onto the path to the village. We all look so prepared and not a bit tired. (P 33). I must tell you though that after all of that downhill walking, I legs were shaking at times even on this gentle (?) path. After a time, we came into the village and saw some interesting sights. A man was pruning bushes for his firewood harvest. This is his cart. We saw men running electrical wire. Apparently a foreigner is building a hotel nearby and this will help service it. These Chinese are so practical. Why use a pole when a tree is right there and handy.
The sun is setting and it is getting chilly. That might have something to do with my not exerting myself so much, but, whatever the case may be, here is a picture of the sun on the wall behind us. You may have to look closely, it is just below the topmost ridge in the middle of the picture (trust me). The last story is the best. The driver located a basket maker in the first village. He inquired if there was one and someone called his house. He was not at home, so they called his daughter. She said he was at the mill grinding corn. He agreed to meet the driver and sell him some of his willow baskets for 25 Yuan each (3.33 USD). He is nearly 80 years old. We were thrilled. The stone pieces on the right are a chicken feeder and a pig feeder or trough. Leslie had contracted a man in a village she had visited in the spring to make a few of these. When she went back to collect them, they had sold them to foreigners afraid that Leslie had forgotten. The driver talked to the villagers in the last village and although they didn’t have a basket weaver they did have some unwanted feeders. I believe the chicken feeder cost 30 Yuan and the pig feeder, 60. We auctioned off the chicken feeder as it seemed to be the most popular. I was persistent and won the chicken feeder. It is a cool little thing. It weighs about 50 lbs. It took half a day to carve it and a full day to carve the pig feeder ( thus the price difference). The stone is special from a specific place. It is very dense and hard. People compared Mao to it as in both have a propensity not to budge after being set.
It was a wonderful day.