For those of you who don't know Coleman was asked to consult for the oncology marketing group for a six month assignment here in China. He is still with Eli Lilly (the same company he has been with for almost 7 years). They officially asked him the first week in December 2008. Later that week Coleman and I went on a house-hunting/check-it-out trip for about a week. We then came home for a couple of days. The packers came and took our stuff, we flew to Utah on Christmas Eve to be there with family, and then we flew to Shanghai on January 9th 2009. It was a whirlwind but a great blessing. We love our house and American neighborhood here in Shanghai. We love our driver and Ayi (maid/cook/nanny). And we love being here. It has been a great adventure for our family!
In Guilin we went into the Reed Flute Cave (that is where James is standing). It is huge and has more animal/vegetable shaped stalagmites and stalactites than you could ever want to see. Really it was amazing. We saw some of the most unusual and beautiful mountains, hills and caves that I have ever seen in my life.
After we got up as far as a bus could take us we began to walk the winding stairs to the top. There are about 20 different ways to get there, so we were careful to follow our tour guide that we had had the whole week. All the kids were troopers. Grace was in a sling and all the kids did great although it was not uncommon to see Coleman with a child on his shoulders and Grace in the front pack. We saw several things on our way up that were quite entertaining.
Dried rat is a common food specifically in this area, and many men there put dead ants in their wine to give them strength. We also saw more of the snake bile wine that is very common for this area. There are actual dead snakes in the wine bottle.We had a delicious lunch (sans snakes and rats) half way up the hike at this little town nestled into the mountains. You can see a part of it in the picture. There we ate a rice and meat mixture that is cooked inside a bamboo and you cut open the bamboo and eat right from there. We also had dim sum of some awesome food that tasted like it had been at least partly cooked over an open fire. There are many back-packers in this city and the air smells so good it reminded me of being in a ski resort.
We had earlier that week seen the type of "doctor/hospital" each little town has. It is nothing more than a medicine man's little store with jars of all sorts of herbs and animals. (I did buy something that you put on your head for headaches. We'll see how it works.) Some of the very wealthy could get on a bus and travel 2 1/2 hours away to a bigger hospital but that was very rare of anyone to do that - especially not for anything like childbirth, yikes!The fireworks go the whole week of Spring Festival (the week starting with Chinese New Year). The first night at midnight they go off - and we learned an important fact - the big fireworks explode about 8 stories off the ground. How do we know? Our room was on the 8th floor of the hotel and at midnight the fireworks were deafening. Coleman got up to see what all of the noise
was about and the fireworks were literally exploding outside the window of our hotel room. Someone had lit off a battery of them from the ground below! Everything goes during Spring Festival! The fireworks start again at 6 and 7 am to get everyone up to show that you are not lazy. That is the day that all the families are together and if you sleep in then your family will think you are lazy and that is not good! Especially if you want a red envelope with lots of money in it. This is what parents and grandparents give out, and some children/grandchildren really get more
than others depending on how they approve of them and everyone knows what the other kids got. When the kids grow up and get a job earning real money then they give to their parents and they may or may not get any more envelopes. We are getting accustomed to the hard beds in hotels and everywhere in China!! We ate enough chinese food during our stay in Guilin that, toward the end of the trip, we found a "Papa Pizza" "where the people are honest" and we were in heaven. We ordered enough pizza for that night, breakfast the next day and then hit it again the next night. Guilin is not like Shanghai where you can get a lot of western food, but there are a couple of restaurants that were closed for the holiday. There wasn't even cold cereal in the supermarkets - but there are always good chips and candy - and that has saved us!
While in Guilin, we went on a fun cruise down the Li river and our tour guide told us that the people on the different mountains travel to the next one by going down to the river and then taking the river to the mountain they wanted to get to. It was way too rugged to try to navigate by foot and the local buses did not go there. It really hit home when she said that. It is so beautiful because it is untouched, but untouched because it is so dangerous!
After the cruise, they dropped us off in this cool little city called Yangshuo. It reminded me of being in a city in the Alps. On the street there was a man making animal shapes out of syrup that tasted a lot like honey. He would melt down a block of some hard candy in a little pan in front of us and then pour it from his pan into any shape we chose on a on a wax board. He stuck a stick in it so we could hold it and did the whole thing in about a minute. Here is the dragon that he made for us. He had a wheel with about 20 different animals you could pick from. He was go good I'm sure he could have done anything we wanted. Our tour guide said she always used to save her money so she could get one after school when she was a little girl.
On our trip to Guilin, we also saw buddhas (not pictured at left! that's actually Coleman and Grace in front of Elephant Trunk Hill), Ling-Ling and Ping-Ping the pandas, learned to paint at a famous art gallery and bought a beautiful painting of Guilin. We enjoyed the 33 seater bus (because that's all the tour company had left due to the holidays) just for the nine of us (our 7 +tour guide+driver). We went to a place on the river called Elephant Trunk Hill because you guessed it it looks like a huge elephant getting a drink from the water.
Ellie was standing there and a man started to cut out her profile using a regular pair of scissors and thin piece of paper. It was amazing!! It was very accurate and we gave him some money and she kept it. Later we went to a gallery where everything was cut from paper and bought an intricate dragon "to protect our house". The craftmanship is amazing. They can not make a mistake or the whole thing is ruined.
Our trip to Guilin was very memorable and a great way to start our time in China.
We came back a couple of days before the end of the holiday week and hit the Shanghai Aquarium. The aquarium was very nice and not cheap. (Especially because a family pass was for two parents and one child. Each additional child was just buying more tickets. It is little things like that that keeps reminding me I am not in Indiana anymore.) We saw some of the most amazing things! We started out seeing all the venemous and deadly underwater creatures so it was hit from the start. We saw animals in sizes that I had never even imagined. We had an upclose look at a swordfish. We saw these Japanise Spider Crabs the size of Adam, and big tanks of sting rays and sharks and turtles and fish that were all huge!!!
Whenever we pause for a few minutes while we're out, a group forms around us. We feel like rock stars...This is true for every place we go in Shanghai and elsewhere. People are crazy about the baby, and they want to take our pictures - especially the three younger with their fair skin and blue eyes. They always count the kids and can't believe we have five. Then they inevitably give us the thumbs up. One woman said to me "you must be very happy because you have five children." When we are walking along and I see them counting I just look up and say "wu ge" (pronounced woo ga, it means five, as in five children) so they don't have to ask how many I have. On the airplane I swear people were coming to the back of the plane where we were sitting, pretending to need to use the restroom just so they could talk to us :)
The picture of Grace shows the booties made for her by our tour guide's mother while we were in Guilin. The kids are so adored and are often given gifts - mostly candy.
If I ever go out to get a massage (cheap!) or something with Grace they will put a blanket or towel on her. I take for granted the fact that I go from a heated car to heated house, and it's not even that cold outside. It's been in the 50's and 60's since we have been here. My kids have ridden their bikes and played on the playground every day we have been here. I have to beg James to put on his coat! So they make me feel like I am the negligent parent because my kids only have on two or three layers.
They amaze me sometimes. I can show my driver a phone number to a friends house that I have been to before and it is 15 minutes away and then I just show him the same number and he takes me right there. He runs errands for me, carries everything in from the car, is so good with the kids, and such a sweet and helpful guy. He works seven days a week and is always grateful for any small kindness I show him. We really love Hans! (His americanized name-most chinese have "american" names that they use when working with the ex-pats.)My compound is so beautiful. It is so well manicured with beautiful flowers and trees and fountains that my boys play in and ruin. There is a serene fountian to the left of my house and I am continuously reminding my boys not to play in it or throw things off the balcony into it. Here's a not so great picture of my house. It is a good size at over 5,000 sq. feet (which is really big for China). It has all hardwood floors or tile. I have no carpet in my house so it pretty but loud!! I have yet to be in a house in China with carpet - only rugs. Most chinese homes outside of the big cities have dirt floors. We even have a nice fenced in yard and a playground down the street. Most Shanghainese are in apartments. My good friend has five kids and lives on the 6th floor of an apartment and there is no elevator!!







Wow! Sounds like you guys are really having an adventure!
ReplyDeleteMindi
Rachel, It's so good to hear from you guys and see the wonderful pictures of your cute family. What an exciting life you have right now. We'll enjoy hearing about your adventures and checking on you through this blog.
ReplyDeleteWoWee! Thanks for the great post--we feel like we are there! Grace is SO big, and so beautiful like your others. No great surprise--we remember telling each other (when you guys got married) that you were bound to have beautiful kids since you were both so good looking! Keep the great pics coming!
ReplyDeleteRachel, my name is Cheri Mickelsen and I am in the Indy 2 ward. My sister and her family live there in Shanghai also. I'm not sure if you have met her already, but her name is Elizabeth Eggett. I could exchange some contact info if you would like. I hope you enjoy this adventure! :) My email is mickelsens@sbcglobal.net
ReplyDeleteRachel! Good to hear from you! I love your pictures, and it sounds like you guys are having many fun adventures! Take care and tell Coleman hi for us! BTW, do you think I could get an ayi over here? :) Enjoy!
ReplyDeleteWow! What a great adventure and amazing photos!! I love that you are squeezing everything you can out of this terrific adventure :-D
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ReplyDeleteThank you for sharing your adventure on a blog. It has been FOREVER since I've seen your family, it has grown and changed so much. It is good to see you and hear how well you are doing.
ReplyDeleteWe are having a few adventures too, less traveling distance but some days it seems very foreign (inner-city PA). My blog is lajendi.typepad.com if you'd like to catch up.
-Jen Pocock
Hello Gerstner Family, It has been a long time since i've seen you all. I found your blog (somehow) and I'm glad I did! It is so exciting to see you are all in china and doing well. Thank you for sharing your experiences.
ReplyDeleteDave and I are living in Utah with our 2 kids near my family and doing great.
our blog is www.dallinsarah.blogspot.com
we are pretty new to the blogging world ourselves!
-Heather Johnson
SO fun to read your posts & see your pictures. Thanks for sharing! Your kids are adorable, and I can tell they are doing good with this new adventure.
ReplyDeleteNow I'm going to ban Matt from green hats--but I don't think I can give up loving cut flowers :) Take care! Carrie