Everywhere we go we find architecture. In Shanghai, we found slaughterhouse architecture.
In 1933, the Shanghai Municipal Council built the largest slaughterhouse in Shanghai.
A brutalist concrete building with Art Deco elements, the design included 26 "air bridges" connecting a rectangular outer building with a circular inner building.
The gap between outer and inner is open to the sky.
The bridges were designed with varying angles and widths to ease the movement of livestock.
Once the slaughterhouse closed, the building was abandoned, but has now been renovated for mixed use including among others a Starbucks, dance studio, doggie day care, drone store, restaurant, furniture store, and a rooftop garden shop.
The raw concrete, stark lighting, and Escher-like quality make the renovated building a magnet for architecture buffs and photographers. But the vision to see these possibilities beyond the filth and stench of an abandoned slaughterhouse is a miracle.
Yours in appreciating an architectural lemon turned into lemonade,
Kelly
Tuesday, December 11, 2018
Monday, December 10, 2018
#748 Finding Pho
In Ho Chi Minh City, we searched for Pho.
We found it served outdoors.
We found it served in bistros.
We even found it served in a rooftop not-so-Secret Garden.
Yours in finding Pho,
Kelly
We found it served outdoors.
We even found it served in a rooftop not-so-Secret Garden.
Kelly
Saturday, December 08, 2018
#747 Exploring Yangon by Train
We love train trips! So we decided to explore Yangon, Myanmar by rail.
We met our train at the Yangon Central Railway Station, the largest station in Myanmar.
Using the ticket booth map, our excellent guide described the Yangon Circular Railway. It's the local commuter line, a 28-mile loop with 39 stations.
At 200 Kyats each, our tickets cost about 13 cents.
We rode in one of the newer train cars from China.
The rules: No smoking, littering, or public displays of affection.
We rode the west side of the loop from the central station and jumped off at a stop near a local fruit market where bananas were unloaded and young Buddhist monks stepped gingerly across the tracks.
Yours in riding the rails,
Kelly
We met our train at the Yangon Central Railway Station, the largest station in Myanmar.
Using the ticket booth map, our excellent guide described the Yangon Circular Railway. It's the local commuter line, a 28-mile loop with 39 stations.
At 200 Kyats each, our tickets cost about 13 cents.
We rode in one of the newer train cars from China.
The rules: No smoking, littering, or public displays of affection.
We rode the west side of the loop from the central station and jumped off at a stop near a local fruit market where bananas were unloaded and young Buddhist monks stepped gingerly across the tracks.
Yours in riding the rails,
Kelly
Friday, December 07, 2018
#746 Renovating Myanmar
We first visited Yangon, Myanmar in 2006. We returned twelve years later.
In 2006, the gleaming Shwedagon Pagoda brightened a dark sky.
In 2018, the Schwedagon Pagoda, under renovation and covered in form-fitting bamboo scaffolding, still brightened a dark sky.
In 2006, the massive reclining Buddha had pink feet.
In 2018, the massive reclining Buddha, under renovation and covered in form-fitting bamboo scaffolding, had black feet.
In 2006, the clock tower was in serious need of renovation.
In 2018, the clock tower renovation was complete.
Yours in appreciating Myanmar's renovations,
Kelly
In 2006, the gleaming Shwedagon Pagoda brightened a dark sky.
In 2018, the Schwedagon Pagoda, under renovation and covered in form-fitting bamboo scaffolding, still brightened a dark sky.
In 2006, the massive reclining Buddha had pink feet.
In 2018, the massive reclining Buddha, under renovation and covered in form-fitting bamboo scaffolding, had black feet.
In 2006, the clock tower was in serious need of renovation.
In 2018, the clock tower renovation was complete.
Yours in appreciating Myanmar's renovations,
Kelly
#745 A Day With Makers In India
India has a long tradition of skilled craftspeople making functional items with their own hands. We visited a village outside Kochi to learn more about their amazing skills.
Weavers make cotton fabric they sell to the government for schoolchildren's uniforms.
We boarded a shikara boat and headed into the backwaters.
There we met a toddy tapper. He climbs palm trees to collect the sap, makes a natural brew, and sells it to local toddy shops.
Fish farmers demonstrated catching their crop with handmade nets.
Local chefs made a traditional lunch, served to us on a banana leaf.
We saw palm fronds, in the hands of experts, woven into panels traditionally used in home construction.
Coconut husks, processed and expertly spun, make strong natural rope.
Locally harvested reeds are dried and woven into beautifully crafted smooth mats.
Our day with makers ended with milk-makers at a dairy farm where chopped local forage is the input and site-produced bio-gas fuels the operation.
Yours in appreciating those who make,
Kelly
Weavers make cotton fabric they sell to the government for schoolchildren's uniforms.
We boarded a shikara boat and headed into the backwaters.
There we met a toddy tapper. He climbs palm trees to collect the sap, makes a natural brew, and sells it to local toddy shops.
Fish farmers demonstrated catching their crop with handmade nets.
Coconut husks, processed and expertly spun, make strong natural rope.
Locally harvested reeds are dried and woven into beautifully crafted smooth mats.
Our day with makers ended with milk-makers at a dairy farm where chopped local forage is the input and site-produced bio-gas fuels the operation.
Yours in appreciating those who make,
Kelly
Friday, November 30, 2018
#744 Indian Seagull
As our ship sailed into the Kochi harbor, the bright yellow sign at the Hotel Seagull caught my eye and I snapped a picture.
That picture was the start of a wonderful relationship.
On day 2 of our stay in Kochi, a dinner group formed around the idea of eating at the Seagull's waterfront restaurant. Our mode of transit: the chaotic tuktuk.
We were all smiles after devouring our Seagull meal.
Our excellent host that night was Rajesh.
When I showed Rajesh the photo of his yellow sign, he raved and asked me to email the photo.
On day 4, another dinner group formed around the idea of revisiting the Seagull.
When we arrived, Rajesh's big smile let me know something was up. He motioned me to follow him, away from the restaurant hubbub, behind the scenes, and into an office toward a large desk. There amid the clutter, a color copy of my Seagull photo was under glass, on display.
Pointing, Rajesh exclaimed, "Your photo! Your photo!" as my photographic pride skyrocketed.
Yours in photo connections,
Kelly
That picture was the start of a wonderful relationship.
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| Hotel Seagull |
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| Tuktuk driver, Me, Abby |
Our excellent host that night was Rajesh.
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| Abby, Rajesh, Bob |
On day 4, another dinner group formed around the idea of revisiting the Seagull.
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| Mariah, Tom, Judy, Bob, Kelly, Marni, Mary, Abby |
When we arrived, Rajesh's big smile let me know something was up. He motioned me to follow him, away from the restaurant hubbub, behind the scenes, and into an office toward a large desk. There amid the clutter, a color copy of my Seagull photo was under glass, on display.
Pointing, Rajesh exclaimed, "Your photo! Your photo!" as my photographic pride skyrocketed.
Kelly
Sunday, November 25, 2018
#743 On Safari
On the farm where I grew up in Missouri, one of my jobs was searching our 80 acres to check the livestock, i.e. cattle. At Botlierskop Game Reserve in South Africa, we spent three days exploring 7,500 acres to check the livestock, i.e. not cattle.
Each day in the early morning and late afternoon, we set out from the lodge with our Semester at Sea friends on game drives in search of animals.
We found all the animals.
Yours in South Africa,
Kelly
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| Rhino, not cattle! |
Each day in the early morning and late afternoon, we set out from the lodge with our Semester at Sea friends on game drives in search of animals.
We found all the animals.
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| Bontebok |
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| Impala |
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| Buffalo |
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| Hippo |
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| Giraffe |
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| Elephant |
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| Lion |
Kelly
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