October 2008

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Beijing Temple Fair

  • Photos Taken at the Changdian Temple Fair in Beijing, February 2007.

November in Ningxia

  • Photos taken on my trip to Yinchuan and Guyuan, November 2006.

Guyuan, China

  • Check it Out
    These are photos taken on my recent trip to Guyuan, Ningxia.

Cherry Blossom Festival

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    A park near my house had a cherry blossom festival today. I spent an hour or so there this afternoon with my camera. Enjoy.

Terra-cotta Warriors

  • Xian_2006_072_small
    Photos taken of the Terra-cotta Warriors, near Xi'an, China. These figures were cast and buried around 200BC, and were undiscoverd until 1974.

Saturday in the Park

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    Photos taken in and around a Beijing park on an early spring Saturday.

Cambodia 2006

  • Looking Out to Sea
    Photos taken during my visit to Cambodia in January.

Kashgar

  • Double Wide Yurt
    An album of photos taken in and around Kashgar.

To Xanadu

  • Recitation
    A selection of photos taken on our trip from Beijing to Xanadu, October 4-6, 2005.

Neighborhood Stroll

  • Pensive Child
    This is an album of photos of various people and scenes that I pass daily as I walk or ride my bike between where I live and where I work.

National Day 2005

  • Catholic Church on Wangfujing
    These pictures were taken in an old "Hutong" section of Beijing, and on Beijing's main shopping street on National Day 2005 (October 1).
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October 14, 2007

Fore!

My friend has written another funny article for "That's Shanghai" titled The China Handicap.   Here's the hook:

Serious golfers say they love the game "because it offers a great lesson in the game of life." They claim it teaches patience and improves mental toughness. Yadda yadda yadda. I thought it was nothing more than an opportunity to get some fresh air and learn new swear words.In fact, golf is very unlike life, mainly because of the "handicap," a numerical calculation of one's playing ability, or in my case, the lack thereof. A "low handicapper" is a very good golfer, and in a competition with a "high handicapper" he must spot that less-gifted person a certain number of strokes on the round. The theory here is that it evens the playing field and allows golfers of unequal abilities to compete as equals.I don't get it. Why would unequals think that they could compete? If you can sink a 40-foot putt on an angled glass surface with a wicked crosswind, while I cannot get a ball downhill through a one-foot pipe and into a manhole, well, I conclude you are the "better" golfer and deserve to "win." The handicap, therefore, is irrational. I blame this on post-modernism, which was embraced by golfers long before Western universities.Then I got to thinking...the misunderstandings, misinterpretations and bad decisions I make in China are uncomfortably close to my stunted driving, chipping and putting prowess. And like my golfing partners, my Chinese friends shake their heads sadly and just hope I don't maim someone with an errant shot.So what if I were allowed a "China Handicap"? Something that makes me equal and able to compete on a more even basis.

Go here to read the entire article.  It's worth the effort.