1) Tea upon arrival
I enjoyed a little tea
culture in Beijing
when I arrived. I had woken up at 4 AM
to catch a plane and didn’t sleep much the whole night – for fear that I would miss
my flight.
There is nothing like a
little sit down and a proper tea service to set you right, and get you going on
the day.
I’ve learned a bit about
Chinese Tea Culture, which is very complicated. Tea Culture is about how tea is made, the
water temperature, the snacks you eat while drinking tea, and what you talk
about while drinking team (you can talk about tea or ideas). Tea houses, I read, were originally places
for scholars to share their thinking.
I grew up drinking black tea
with milk and sugar, like a proper Irish-American girl. My Auntie taught me to give the water a “good
boil.” Except at high altitudes, I’m not
exactly sure what boiling the water for several minutes did to it.
In China I have fallen in love with several
new kinds of tea -- white, jasmine,
yellow, puer and quality green tea are among my favorites. ( I had of course
had green tea before coming to China
but tea is very serious business here and the green tea is nothing like I have
had in the US.) I am also quite fond of tea made from rose
buds and chrysanthemum. I don’t make a
good pot of chrysanthemum tea yet. I
still make it too bitter. I think my
issue is the water temperature.
Chinese tea is not made with
boiling water – it is just below boiling.
The tea is saturated with water and then that first batch of tea is
tossed out. The next batch and the next
and the next are the quality tea to drink.
It is a bit like wine tasting.
The color, the smell, the temperature all matter in true tea
culture.
Like 99% of the buildings in China,
this one is designed after a dragon.
Unlike 96% of the buildings in China, which say they are inspired
by dragons, this one actually does look like a dragon. IBM is in the head of the dragon. I heard that this office has excellent feng
shui.
3) Olympic Park
Every morning that week we
walked from the Intercontinental to the IBM offices. It is actually a nice walk (except when you are
carrying a laptop and all your training supplies.) On this side of Olympic Park are nice views
of the Bird’s Nest Building and the Cube Building,
which housed the swimming and diving competitions. I really do love both buildings. Every weekend the Olympic mall is packed with
Chinese and non-Chinese tourists, who come to take their pictures with these
two iconic buildings. I think for
Chinese nationals that they hosted an Olympics will carry on as the point of
pride for years to come.
4)
The Ling Long Pagoda
This
broadcast tower was built for the Olympics and was the home for many Chinese
and international broadcasters during the Olympics, including the Today Show
broadcasting from the ground floor. Ling
Long means “Delicate
Tower.” It is really a very beautiful structure. It has six pods and open spaces in between. I’m not really sure what it is used for
today. At night it changes colors. Next to the tower many people fly “night
kites,” which have flashing lights on them.
Very cool to watch --- but impossible to take pictures of.
Two
days down – one to go. Kathryn, Caroline and I finished coach training and one day of workshops. Time
for a much needed photo break at the end of the day.
Great blog, Bevin! You look fantastic too. Brings back fond memories of the 'Jing - thank you!
ReplyDeleteThanks Park. 'Jing is starting to grow on me.
ReplyDelete