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Expo 2010 Shanghai China (中国2010年上海世界博览会) is being held on both banks of the Huangpu River in Shanghai, from May 1 to October 31, 2010. It is a World Expo in the tradition of international fairs and expositions. The theme of the exposition is “Better City – Better Life”. The expo Logo features the Chinese character 世 (‘world’, Chinese “shì”) modified to represent three people together with the 2010 date. It is the most expensive Expo in the history of the world’s fairs. The Shanghai World Expo is also the largest World’s Fair site ever at 5.28 square km.

We had an open Saturday so we decided it was a good day to visit the World Expo as a family. We walked the two blocks to the ferry pier to catch the direct ferry to the Expo. We were on the 9:20am boat to the Expo.

Emmy & Elle on the Expo Boat

The Napu bridge from the river

Nepal Pavilion – Our first pavilion was Nepal. We had decided we would spend the day in the smaller pavilions with no lines.

Sri Lanka Pavilion – We left the Nepal pavilion to walk by some good smells in the Sri Lanka pavilion. We grabbed some samosas that were being sold on the outside which were very tasty. We decided we need to visit Sri Lanka and get more samosas. We enjoyed an early lunch of Sri Lanka food.

Pakistan Pavilion – Our next stop was the Pakistan Pavilion. We waited about 10 minutes to enter this one which was our first wait of the day.

Oman Pavilion – Oman Pavilion was shaped like a boat. The Oman was the favorite so far into the day. The pavilion had a cave feeling with a stream running through the floor. The girls loved the stream as they pretended to jump from rock to rock. My friend, Susan, took her family to Oman. She had amazing photos from her trip.

Israel Pavilion – We moved on to the Israel pavilion. The line wasn’t too long, but there were no fences to help people queue properly. The Chinese have no idea about queuing and have no issue with personally space. Therefore, for 20 minutes, we were pushed to the front. New rule, no pavilion without fences. In addition, we were not impressed with the Israel Pavilion. It felt like an advertisement of the technology of Israel.

China Pavilion – We were near the China pavilion, but we didn’t go to it. You need a “pass ticket” to get in line for the China Pavilion.

Qatar pavilion – Qatar Pavilion will rank as the favorite with the girls. The ladies were painting henna tattoos on the arms/hands of people that were interested. The painting is done for weddings and celebrations. The paint is a plant that leaves a “stain” on the skin. It looked like chocolate, but had a very strong smell. The girls had to wait for the base to dry. Once it dried, it flaked off their skin to leave the beautiful dye design on their arms. Elle was given a fancy one down her arm while Emmy was given a simple flower. I have to add that Emmy was very mature about her small design compared to Elle’s design. She accepted the fact that her lady did a faster, smaller design with grace.

Morocco Pavilion – As we got in line for the Morocco Pavilion, Elle was skipping up to the end of the line. The Morocco man managing the line let us go in without waiting…maybe he liked Elle’s skip.

Since we had an early lunch, we needed a snack. There was a Chinese fast-food restaurant so we stopped for a dumpling break. The dumplings were expensive at 10rmb for three – I pay 1rmb for one on the street. They were mama hoo hoo (not the best). I think we will stick with the street dumplings.

We next did the Asian joint pavilions which included the Maldives, Timor-Teste, Kyrgyzstan, Bangladesh, Tajikistan and Mongolia. We went to them all as we have Expo passports that you stamp for each country.

Maldives Pavilion – I figured this was as close as I would to getting to the beautiful islands of the Maldives.

Timor-Leste Pavilion – Elle enjoyed the traditional boat at Timor-Leste.

Mongolia Pavilion – Mongolia had the Nomadic tent and interesting items from the country.

Turkmenistan Pavilion – The Turkmenistan Pavilion was pretty at night. They had a runway that looked like it was for fashion shows. Elle thought it was perfect for showing off her new arm design.

We took photos with Haibao whenever we saw him. Haibao is the mascot of the Shanghai Expo 2010. It means treasure of the sea. It is based on the Chinese character for man or person, “人”.

We were all getting hungry for dinner. Elle wanted to walk back to Sri Lanka for the samosas and beef rolls. That was a yes vote by the family as the food had a good spice to it. After dinner, we went back to the Qatar pavilion. The girls wanted to add to their designs. This time, the women gave Emmy a fancy design on her hand. She had to hold her hand out until the plant dye dried.

United Arab Emirates Pavilion – We finished the night with the United Arab Emirates Pavilion. The girls had taken photos with the men before dinner. They had said to try back after dinner as the long may be shorter. When we went back, it look like the wait was around 45 minutes. We debated about waiting as the day had cooled off with rain. No one had a jacket and the three girls were a bit cold. As we were deciding, the man we took photos with earlier told us to come with him. He walked us to the front of the line. Once we got in, we were given the VIP treatment – first to enter the shows and move from room to room. The UAE Pavilion had interesting segments of movies in different rooms. It took about 30 minutes to view this pavilion.

After the UAE Pavilion, it was time to go home. It was 9pm, everyone was tired and it began to rain more. We walked out the gates to find a taxi. We were on the Pudong side, therefore, the ride home was short. It was a fun day seeing the Expo as a family.

Average Rating: 4.7 out of 5 based on 219 user reviews.

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Eleri has outgrown her bike, but we know that it is best to master the two-wheels with a smaller bike. We learned this from our mistake with Emersyn. We had bought her a bigger bike before she learned how to ride two-wheels. The hardest part of learning to ride two-wheels is the start which is more difficult on a big bike.

Eleri began her two-wheel adventure on a beautiful day in March. Jim took the training wheels off her bike and she was set to go.

Elle ready to go

Elle was beginning to get it, but she DID NOT want Jim to let go!

And, then Sophie came down to play…and Elle was done – too distracted. Elle went skipping off to the sand pit with Sophie.

Today, a beautiful Sunday, Jim took Elle down to try again. She had it down in about five minutes.

Elle also mastered the start all on her own!

Next to master two-wheels or at least try was Brenda. Emmy wanted me to learn to ride her rip stick. I can’t say I mastered it today, but it was fun.

Emmy showed me how it was done – she makes it look so easy!

Average Rating: 4.4 out of 5 based on 286 user reviews.

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Spring forgot to come to Shanghai, therefore, we went in search of the sun for Spring Break. We found the sun in Phuket, Thailand. Emersyn had a week off which turned into nine days due to the additional days given by the Shanghai government for the opening of the World Expo on May 1st. Eleri missed school, again. She had Spring Break the beginning of the month.

As it had been raining all week, we were all ready to leave Shanghai Saturday morning even if it was a 7:30am flight. With a stop over in Bangkok airport, we arrived in Phuket around 3pm. This year, the Jenkins Family – Jennifer, Scott, Sean and Sophie- were traveling with us. We had decided to rent a car to give us more freedom. The only problem was that Jim left his driver’s license on his desk in Shanghai – a fact he discovered at the rental car desk! I always leave my driver’s license in my California wallet – the only place I drive. After long discussions with the rental car company, we all moved to one large Toyota SUV with Scott as the driver as he was the only one carrying a license. We were a bit crowded with all the luggage and 8 people on the way to the hotel, but after that it worked out better.

We checked in, dropped our bags and changed the kids into their swim wear for a swim. We ordered pizzas and ate dinner at the pool while the kids had fun swimming. We had the pool to ourselves and the kids loved the night swim. The parents enjoyed Jim’s “poor man” margaritas concocted from the tequila picked up at Duty Free and the lime soda from the local store. It was a nice way to kick-off our holiday.

When we travel to Phuket, we stay at the JW Marriott at Mai Khao Beach. The Marriott is on the Sirinath National Marine Park. The turtles are hatched on this beach and go back to the sea mid-April. The pool has a fun slide along with shade for the adults provided by the many umbrellas.

The pool

I bought inner tubes from Decathlon for 19rmb ($3) knowing they makes the slide faster and more fun. The whole family had fun on the slide. Elle’s photos of her eyes close and her mouth open was the standard. The open mouth was because she was always screaming coming down!

We spent most of our time at the pool. Elle could reach so she got to swim without water wings which made her very happy. She needs to work on her swimming. She has always been a fish in the water, but a fish that can’t swim. By the end of the trip, she was doing back summersaults in the water. I don’t think her actual swim stroke improved much, but she had fun.

We generally arrived for pool side fun around 9:30am. We set up camp for the day. Jennifer and I enjoyed starting the day with a little light reading – People Magazine!

We like to go down to Bang Tao Beach to have dinner at the Lotus Restaurant located along the beach. Since we had a car, it was easier to arrange off-resort fun. We did a quick stop at the Jim Thompson Outlet as we wanted to be seated to catch the sunset. While we shopped, the clouds and rain moved in to darken the sky, therefore, no beautiful sunset for us. The sun did peak out at one point to give us some color.

The restaurant had a band that Sophie and Elle enjoyed. They were the only two dancing the night away!

The Marriott has a Kid’s Club that offers a number of activities and is a great place for the kids to get out of the mid-day sun. Pool side adventures began with the kids (except Elle) deciding they wanted to be hamsters in a ball.

Starting

Running

Falling

The resort offered free scuba lessons for one hour…which turned into 2 hours. Emersyn and Sean enjoy the opportunity to drive in the pool.

We also did a day adventure on the John Gray’s sea canoe tour. We left the resort at noon for a drive to the local pier. Our family did this trip a few years back with the Szatkowski family. After arriving on the boat, we had an hour ride to enjoy the beautiful scenery and eat lunch.

The canoes hold one paddler, the guide, and two passengers. The guides paddle you through the many caves to discover the amazing hongs – inland lagoons. The timing of passing through the caves is based on the tide.

After a few caves, the crew gave the canoes over to the unexperienced. Jim and Elle paddled to the nearest shore in search of sea shells. Emmy and Sean took a canoe out together. After the canoeing, Jim went for a quick swim.

The guides made “offerings” with their boat team. The girls enjoyed doing this creative activity. The offering is a special offering that is done once a year as part of the Thai tradition. After a tasty Thai dinner, we paddle through a cave to release the offerings. At the time of passing through this cave, the tide is high. We must lie down flat in the boat to pass. The waters have plantkon that glows when you pass your hands through the water.

We arrive back to the resort after 10pm, but it is a fun day spent enjoying the beautiful nature of Thailand. After our big adventure trip, we enjoyed some relaxing pool time the last few days. The kids loved to blow up their rashie (sun shirts) in the bubble pool.

The swim-up bar is a fun place for a drink and an ice cream.

Our last night we drove back to the beach for dinner. The kids had fun playing in the sea while the adults relaxed with a drink.

We end the night with a beautiful lighting storm over the sea.

After dinner, we took the kids back to the pool for their last night-swim. They have fun having the pool to themselves. I took this photo before the night-swim for the anklets the girls are wearing. On the John Gray trip, the guides made these for the girls out of the water bottle caps. The three girls wore them the entire trip…recycle and reuse!

Another fun family holiday seeing Asia. This was a relaxing trip we all needed after being on the “move” for our last few holidays. We are blessed to have the opportunity to see Asia while living in China.

Average Rating: 4.4 out of 5 based on 161 user reviews.

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It has been over three years since we have been to a Chinese wedding. One of Jim’s employees, Nina, was having a Shanghai wedding including a church service. We didn’t go to the church service due to kid activities of the day.

We arrived to reception in a hotel banquet room at 5:30pm. The bride, Nina, and the groom, Russ, greeted all the guest with a photo. After taking a photo with the bride and groom, we handed over our red envelope, hongbao (红包)(red pocket) full of cash as a gift. I do have to comment that the hongbao makes gift giving very easy – especially when you don’t know the couple very well.

Brenda, Nina, Russ & Jim

We entered the banquet hall to find our table. We noticed our names were the only “different” ones at the table.

We sat down to our table and remember that wine is not a standard at the wedding. We had coke, sprit, orange and a beer to enjoy for the night. Hum, may need a glass of wine when we get home!

A common item left on the table for all the guest! Luckily, no one was using them at our table.

The food at this wedding was not as interesting as our last wedding in December 2006. We had normal Chinese food…a lot of food, as usual for Chinese. This dumplings were made by the bride and her friends. They are traditional dumplings from her home town.

This cute little guy was a guest at our table. He was 12 months old and a very happy fellow. I do have to comment on his red cheeks. It is common for ALL children to be overdressed. He came in with 4 layers of shirts/sweaters and a coat. In addition, he had 3 layers of pants. I always wonder how long it must take to change a diaper.

After dinner, we watched a nice video of the bride and groom. There were many speeches in Chinese so we clapped with everyone else. There were even games such as guess the song. The prizes for the night were Hello Kitty small stuff animals – a popular item here. After the final toast to each table…that was our cue to exit!

Average Rating: 4.8 out of 5 based on 153 user reviews.

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Emersyn’s school, Concordia, has fun dress days and today was Hat Day. We bought these silly hats in Thailand when we were there over Christmas. It was a late night when we were walking back to the hotel and I saw these silly hats being sold on the street. I knew it would be perfect for Hat Day at Concordia.

Silly Face to go with silly hat

Average Rating: 4.9 out of 5 based on 277 user reviews.

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Emersyn’s class has been studying magnets. I joined the class on a field trip to the Maglev, the Magnetic Levitation Train which runs to the airport.

The Shanghai Maglev Train or Shanghai Transrapid (上海磁浮示范运营线) is a magnetic levitation train (maglev) line. It is notable for being the first commercial high-speed maglev line in the world—during a test run in November, 2003, a Maglev vehicle achieved a Chinese record speed of 501 km/h (311 mph). The journey was designed to connect Shanghai Pudong International Airport quickly to the outskirts of central Shanghai where passengers could interchange for their final destinations in the city centre. Construction of the line began in March 2001 and public service commenced on January 1, 2004.

The line runs from Longyang Road station in Pudong to Pudong International Airport; both stations provide transfers to Line 2 of the Shanghai Metro. At full speed, the journey takes 7 minutes and 20 seconds to complete the distance of 30 km. A train can reach 350 km/h (220 mph) in 2 minutes, with the maximum normal operation speed of 431 km/h (268 mph) reached thereafter. A one-way ticket costs ¥50/$7 or ¥80/$12 for a round-trip return ticket.

First, we went to the Museum in the basement. The museum was very interested and well done – not always the expectation in China.

I was in-charge of four children for the day as we had five parents from the class to help.

Colin, Felix, Emersyn & Ruth

Some of the displays were interactivity.

Emmy seeing how fast she can peddle

I thought the following information was interesting – my blow dryer uses more magnetic field.

Next, we rode the maglev to the airport to have lunch. Most of the students had not been on the train, including Emmy. Another interesting fact I learned at the museum is the glass on the train is a special deception glass for the view. If not, the outside scenery would be going by too fast.

We enjoyed our packed lunches at the airport and returned on the train back to the station. It was a fun field trip that I enjoyed with Emersyn,

Average Rating: 4.5 out of 5 based on 265 user reviews.

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Eleri is off from school all week for spring Break. Emersyn has Thursday and Friday off for school conferences. Jennifer Jenkins decided it was a perfect time to go see the Giant Pandas in Chengdu. She organized a “Mom and Kid” trip through the travel agent, Country Holidays. She invited us, the Humes and the Bishops on her adventure. Only the Lyons made the decision to go for the adventure. We planned the trip to leave first thing Thursday morning to return late Saturday night. Then, we had the day on Sunday to catch-up on life before school on Monday.

Day One – April 8:

We left for the airport at 6:30am on Thursday. Jennifer moved to Yanlord in December so it is easy for us to travel to the airport together. We were flying out of the new Terminal 2 at Pudong Airport. These fun statues are in various places in the airport. All was on schedule as we left Shanghai on time – an amazing thing in China.

Sophie, Elle & Emmy

We arrived in Chengdu after our 3-hour flight. Our tour guide, Ken, picked us up at the airport and we were off to the first stop – good spicy Sichuan food. After lunch, we drove 20 minutes to the Chengdu Research Base of Giant Panda Breeding (成都大熊猫繁育研究基地). The Research Base is a non-profit research and breeding facility for giant pandas and other rare animals. The Chengdu Panda Base was founded in 1987. It started with 6 giant pandas that were rescued from the wild. By 2007, it has had 110 panda births and the captive panda population has grown to 62.

The Base is a beautiful park with bamboo trails through out the paths. The Park is over 100 hectors with plans to double the size in the near future.

Upon arriving at the Park, we walked in with bus-loads of school children on a field trip. The hardest part was avoiding the children as they all wanted to yell “hello” to us – not a common site for them to see laowai (foreign) kids. The pandas don’t like noisy so it was a loud day for them. Our guide did a good job of taking us around the Park to avoid the masses of children.

Children everywhere

The pandas are kept in large areas to roam with the feel of an upscale zoo. The pandas spend most of the day eating and sleeping. The scientific name for the Giant Panda, literally meaning “cat-foot black-and-white”, is a bear native to central-western and south western China. The Chinese name, dà​xióng​māo (大熊猫), means “big bear cat”.​ Though it belongs to the order Carnivora, the Giant Panda’s diet is 99% bamboo. Other parts of its diet include honey, eggs, fish, yams, shrub leaves, oranges, and bananas when available. The Giant Panda is a conservation reliant endangered species. It is estimated about 300 Giant Pandas living in captivity and about 1, 500 individuals living in the wild.

We saw the various pandas throughout the park. The next stop was the baby pandas about 6 months old. They were having fun playing. It was a cool day so the pandas were all out playing. In the summer, the temperature in Chengdu is hot and humid.

We saw the red pandas which looks nothing like a panda. The Red Panda, “shining cat”, is a small mammal and the only species of the genus Ailurus. Slightly larger than a domestic cat, it has reddish-brown fur, a long, shaggy tail, and a waddling gait due to its shorter front legs. It eats mainly bamboo, but is omnivorous and may also eat eggs, birds, insects, and small mammals. It is a solitary animal, mainly active from dusk to dawn, and is largely sedentary during the day. Endemic to the temperate forests of the Himalayas, the Red Panda ranges from Nepal in the west to China in the east.

We watched a video on the animals about their habits and breeding. The most interesting is when the baby panda is first born, it is pink, furless, and blind. The cub is not fully developed at birth. Cubs weigh only 90 to 130 grams (3.2 to 4.6 ounces), which is about 1/900 of the mother’s weight. Giant Panda cubs weigh 45 kg/99lbs at one year and live with their mothers until they are 18 months to two years old.

We took a break for ice cream (for the kids), soda (for me) and coffee (for Jennifer). After our panda break, the children had fun feeding the fish and the swans. The bag of food was 2rmb. We also had this beautiful peacock looking for food.

Brenda, Jennifer, Sophie, Sean, Emersyn & Eleri

Running as walking is not part of Elle

We left the Research Base around 4pm for a 2-hour drive to Ya’an. All the kids had their backpack full with activities and itouches with movies…except Emersyn. Unknown to me, Emmy & Jim decided to delete all the movies off her itouch to put her music on it. She informed me of this on the way to the airport…too late to do anything about it. Well, she did a lot of reading!

At the gift shop, Elle and Sophie found these panda claws and slippers for their souvenirs. Sean and Emmy picked out a keychain and book markers. It is the first time I realized that Emmy has outgrown the “childhood stuff”.

The car ride

We arrived in the remote city of Ya’an around 7pm. We decided to eat prior to checking into our rooms at the local Hongzhu Hotel. We walked into the stale smoke filled large dinning room with no one in it. We sat down at a large table with the “dirty” table cloth filled with cigarette holes. Hum, looks like dinner might be interested tonight. With expectations set low, we did have one good dish, dumpling soup. The kids liked it so we ordered a second.

Now, up to the room to see what our 3-star Chinese hotel had to offer. A basic room with two beds. We had an extra bed added to the room which was a bamboo board slat bed. Hum, Elle and I will share a bed. Jennifer and I enjoyed a glass of wine in our room while Emmy & Sean were reading a book. Sophie and Elle were busy being the ayi – they opened all the hotel free items. They put the shower caps on and began to cleaning Jennier’s bathroom. Jennifer reported the next day, her bathroom was soaking wet and they used most of the towels. She said she should have known as Sophie has been banned from bathroom play. Sophie and Elle are the cutest little “Troublesomes” together.

Day Two – April 9:

We started the morning with breakfast at the hotel…no one ate much. We wanted to be at the Bifeng Xia National Park ( 碧峰峽) when it opened. As we waited for the gates to open, Elle and Sophie went to the little gift shop. They came running back to the van with the wide eye expression asking if they could have panda hats. Well, there was no way I was saying no to those sparkling eyes. The hats cost 25rmb/$3.50. Now, the girls had their hats and their paws. It was determined they could be pandas for Halloween. They found a cute panda purse…yep that will work for Halloween candy. We will just need to find/make the panda body – they will be cute pandas on October 31!

We entered the Park to catch a large golf car to the main center. We did pay extra to have the children help with daily chores of the panda. The kids had to put on their brown jumpsuits before beginning work. Elle was so cute in her suit as it was five sizes too big.

Ready to work

The first job was to sweep the leaves down the hill. As Jennifer and I watched them, we realize our children have never raked leaves or swept large areas. I guess living in high-rise on the 29th floor would explain it. They would pass a small load of leaves down the hill to each other. After watching them and realizing we could be here all day, we recommended to the kids to bring the leaves down in one large load so they were not re-sweeping the same area. Hum, for some reason they thought they were doing just fine!

As they swept, Jennifer and I took photos of the pandas near the work street. We noted this Park was a larger and a more natural park than Chengdu. The areas the pandas were kept were larger with room to roam and the pandas were dirty – true to nature. They were not fluffy white pandas – I guess bathing is not part of the work experience.

After the children finally finished sweeping, they gave us no other assignments. We were told to come back around 10:30am to feed the pandas. We walked around to view the various pandas in the park. The young pandas were fun to watch as they were busy playing like children.

We walked back to the pandas where the children had clean the walkway. We had paid a “donation” of 1, 000rmb for 5 minute of photos with the pandas. It is a complete rip-off, but everyone we talked to said the same thing…you just do it as it is an experience you only get once – so we did it. The kids got geared up in their hospital gear to keep the pandas safe from any germs/virus the children may be carrying.

Next, the children we given the opportunity to feed the pandas as part of the work experiences.

Elle feeding the Panda with help from Ken, our guide

It was 11:30am, time to leave the pandas and get back into the van for our next adventure – LeShan Big Buddha. Our choice for food was to go back to the hotel for lunch – a big “NO” from Jennifer and I. We offered the option of a McDonald’s (if we could find one) as we were short on time. Jennifer and I changed the itinerary set by the travel agent. If we squeezed in the Big Buddha today, we would save three hours of drive time. The original plan was to drive back to Chengdu today and drive 2 hours to the LeShan and back in one day. If we go from Ya’an, we travel in a circle pattern. Everyone settled into the car with snacks and Easter candy set by Scott’s sister, Aunt Sue. Sean and Emmy were busy with a mean card game of war in the back of the van. We arrived in LeShan looking for lunch when Ken spotted the Chinese version of McDonald’s. Jennifer and I would prefer to find the real thing, but time was not on our side. Elle asked if we could use the “pass through” method like we do in Nebraska. Hum, she doesn’t even know the proper terms, but we explained to her there are no “drive-through” in China. The China McDonald’s place had just open 3 days ago. Jennifer wanted to order one hamburger to see if it was real meat. No it was not, so we moved to plan B of chicken nuggets and chicken sandwiches. The chicken sandwiches had an interesting spicy. In general, the food was mamahuhu(not so good), but we were hungry.

Grand opening with flowers

Next, we boarded a boat to view the LeShan Giant Buddha. Everyone had to put on life vests that would provide no safety for the two little pandas if they fell over.

Emmy, Sophie, Elle & Sean

The Leshan Giant Buddha ( 乐山大佛) was built during the Tang Dynasty (618–907). It is carved out of a cliff face that lies at the confluence of the Minjiang, Dadu and Qingyi rivers in the southern part of Sichuan province in China. The stone sculpture faces Mount Emei, with the rivers flowing below his feet. It is the largest carved stone Buddha in the world and at the time of its construction was the tallest statue in the world.

Construction was started in 713, led by a Chinese monk named Haithong. He hoped that the Buddha would calm the turbulent waters that plagued the shipping vessels travelling down the river. Apparently the massive construction resulted in so much stone being removed from the cliff face and deposited into the river below that the currents were indeed altered by the statue, making the waters safe for passing ships. At 71 metres (233 feet) tall, the statue depicts a seated Maitreya Buddha with his hands resting on his knees. His shoulders are 28 metres wide and his smallest toenail is large enough to easily accommodate a seated person.

After docking, we passed on walking to the bottom since we didn’t have the time. We walked to the view at the top, about 200 steps. It was a good view to see the head up close.

Interesting photo Emmy took of the Buddha

Down the hill and back to the van. Ken, our guide, asked Jennifer if we would be interesting in eating closer to tonight’s Face Changing performance. That was a big “NO” as we had prepaid for Shangri-la buffet dinner. We hit traffic into Chengdu due to construction, but we still had an hour to eat. The kids enjoyed the Western food and the dessert buffet complete with chocolate fountain including marshmallows. Many times the chocolate fountain in China will only have fruits to dip in the chocolate – just not the same.

We arrived to the performance only 10 minutes late. The show was in an outdoor setting of a large tent. Tea and peanuts were served to enjoy during the performance.

The performances were various acts ranging from traditional Chinese to shadow puppet and stick puppet. The final performances was the Face Changing.

Traditional Chinese

Shadow puppet

Stick puppet

Face Changing

We got back to the hotel around 10pm. The kids had fun building forts with the blankets and pillows in our room while Jennifer and I enjoyed a glass of wine in her room. It was after midnight when we tucked everyone in, but no worries as we had plans to meet for breakfast at 9:30am – a well needed sleep-in.

Day Three – April 10:

After a full, restful sleep, we had a buffet breakfast downstairs – a big difference from the Ya’an Chinese breakfast – everyone ate! Our guide took us to Jinli Lu (Street) – a shopping street.

The kids found the bow & arrow stand to shoot 10 sticks for 15rmb/$2. Emersyn wanted to buy a small wooden one to take home with her own money – 100rmb/$15. I said we would think about it and maybe on the way out since it really doesn’t meet my safety standards. We did buy it and she loves it…I don’t.

Jinli Lu reminds me of a small Lijiang with the buildings, ponds and green areas. There was even a wishing tree similar to the wishing house in Lijiang.

Wishing tree

Sisters

We left this street to go to another shopping street. It was a busy street similar to Nanjing Dong Lu in Shanghai. We asked our guide to take us back to Jinli Lu. We enjoyed another hour of shopping & walking around before an early dinner. We are in the heart of Sichuan food so we were looking forward to a good meal…but, it was not. Oh well, we had a great time. Our flight left 30 minutes late – typical for China.

Average Rating: 4.8 out of 5 based on 171 user reviews.

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It is one of those days at school. It begins with Emersyn’s school Easter party – after Easter! Jennifer Jenkins (Sean’s Mom), Kim Frasier (Justin’s Mom) and I are the Class Room Moms. We have organized the food and games for the party. The party is from 1:30 to 3:00. No rain so all is going according to plan.

The Class

Our first game was to hide eggs with puzzle pieces (which meant we had to find every egg or the puzzle wouldn’t work). The children would find the eggs and put the puzzle together back in the classroom. Once the puzzle is together, they would have to guess where to go from the clues on the back of the puzzle. Our clues took them to the library to a book. The note in the book brought them back to the classroom for a bag of treats.

We hid the eggs in the Founders Garden. We had the kids sit as we explained the game. Everyone got up to find the eggs and Emmy took a head dive off the top seat (rock walls to the left in the photo below). I was standing right next to her when she did this. She hit the ground with a huge thud. I was expecting a bloody mouth, a broken nose or a goose egg on her forehead. She had a scratch on her nose – one little scratch. All three of the Moms were amazed. I asked throughout the night if she had a headache or felt bad – no.

Scratch nose

Egg search

Working on the puzzle

After our egg/puzzle game, the children made a cross for the classroom working together. It came out great. No photo – oops! The kids enjoyed snack brought in by parents of the class.

While I was finishing up the Easter party, Mr. Nie went to get Elle at school. She finishes at 3pm. After school, we had scout meetings tonight. Elle’s Daisy troop is earning a “it’s a girl thing” patch. Our Junior girls helped with nails, make-up and tattoos. It is an easy meeting for us leaders – whew! Scouts finish at 5:30.

Elle getting her nails done by Megan

We went for a quick burger at the Blue Frog as Jennifer and I have tickets to the High School Musical, Aida. Wow, what an amazing performance and it was high schoolers putting on the production. A couple of the girls can really sing. The musical ended at 9:30. It was after 11pm when the girls got to bed. Tomorrow we leave the house at 6:30am for out Panda adventure!

Days like this always keep life fun and interesting!

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It is one of those days when the Shanghai skyline is completed fogged-in to create a “Gotham City”.

Average Rating: 4.7 out of 5 based on 194 user reviews.

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The 2010 World EXPO is opening on May 1, 2010 for a five month run and Shanghai has been on a tear when it comes to beautification. Over the last year streets have been torn up and resurfaced, sidewalks re-done, and trees and flowers planted all in preparation. This is in addition to the constant building construction and infrastructure updates that are ongoing. To meet the labor demand many construction workers have been brought in from the countryside to work. What you will see on any given day during break time at a site is workers sleeping – often times right on the sidewalk!


Average Rating: 4.8 out of 5 based on 164 user reviews.