It was a learning experience as I used my camera phone and the system burped an unhappy burp when I tried to mail it to my home PC. It is a truncated video but should still provide some entertainment value.
We are students in Ms Kathleen's class who want to share what we learn in our classroom and explore the world beyond our classroom. We hope to journey in our adventures with our classmates, family, and friends around the world.
Thursday, June 14, 2012
One last look at our room...
As we prepare to end the school year, I took one nostalgic video of our classroom before we move to our new building. It has changed a little from April,as all good rooms should do, to reflect the ever growing progress of kids.
It was a learning experience as I used my camera phone and the system burped an unhappy burp when I tried to mail it to my home PC. It is a truncated video but should still provide some entertainment value.
It was a learning experience as I used my camera phone and the system burped an unhappy burp when I tried to mail it to my home PC. It is a truncated video but should still provide some entertainment value.
Monday, June 4, 2012
Hot Pot and Sichuan Opera
The area we live in is famous for its hot cuisine. One of the popular
cuisine is a hot pot. There are many " 火鍋”(means " fire pot" )
restaurants in Chengdu. There is a pot in the middle of table and you
put whatever you choose such as meat, chicken, fish and
vegetable,(literally, whatever!) into boiling broth and you eat as
they cook.
You can choose a broth base, hot chili pepper, chicken, beef, and fish
head, etc. We ordered “Red pepper oil" and white base. We have young
children so kids eat white broth base, which is not hot. As you can
see, "Red pepper oil" is beef base broth with very spicy chili oil and
hot pepper floating! We ordered slice beef, sausage, backchoy, Chinese
cabbage, mushrooms, ground shrimp, etc.
The restaurant is famous for its show as well as its hotpot. Sichuan
is known of the opera. And one of the operas has "face changing "
man. We could enjoy this wonderful face changing man while we were
eating the hot pot. Jay could see the man who changed his faces many
times in front of him. But we don't know how the man did!! Literally
the man could change his face/masks while you are blinking! I heard
it's a national secret and our Chinese friend who took us there even
didn't know how to do!! It's simply entertaining!!
cuisine is a hot pot. There are many " 火鍋”(means " fire pot" )
restaurants in Chengdu. There is a pot in the middle of table and you
put whatever you choose such as meat, chicken, fish and
vegetable,(literally, whatever!) into boiling broth and you eat as
they cook.
You can choose a broth base, hot chili pepper, chicken, beef, and fish
head, etc. We ordered “Red pepper oil" and white base. We have young
children so kids eat white broth base, which is not hot. As you can
see, "Red pepper oil" is beef base broth with very spicy chili oil and
hot pepper floating! We ordered slice beef, sausage, backchoy, Chinese
cabbage, mushrooms, ground shrimp, etc.
The restaurant is famous for its show as well as its hotpot. Sichuan
is known of the opera. And one of the operas has "face changing "
man. We could enjoy this wonderful face changing man while we were
eating the hot pot. Jay could see the man who changed his faces many
times in front of him. But we don't know how the man did!! Literally
the man could change his face/masks while you are blinking! I heard
it's a national secret and our Chinese friend who took us there even
didn't know how to do!! It's simply entertaining!!
Tuesday, May 29, 2012
Panda Breeding Center
We finally made a trip to the Panda breeding research center.
We were told that we needed to be there at 9 am in the morning at the reservation, when the Pandas would be fed. At that time, the pandas are most active and after breakfast, they tend to take naps or go back to a building where all the air conditionings are on if it's hot.
So, Jay and his brother woke up early and we arrived before the pandas’ breakfast time.
Do you know what pandas eat?
Bamboo or bamboo shoots are 99% of the diet of giant pandas. So, this place has a lot of bamboo. But I learned that they eat 20-40 kg of bamboo or 50 kg of bamboo shoots every day so the research base buys bamboo from a nearby bamboo farm and the bamboo in the research base is just to supplement if they need more. The pandas in this research center also eat apples, and steamed panda bread (which include a lot of vitamins)
The digestive tract of giant panda is very short; food doesn't stay in the digestive tract for a long time. Therefore their absorbed nutrition is low. Most herbivorous animals can digest 80% of their food while the giant pandas digests less than 17% of their food.
Wild pandas spend 16 hours per day looking for, and eat bamboo, captive pandas spend generally 10-12 hours (50 % of each day) to eat.
We could see pandas being very active, playing with each other and eat bamboo with both hands.
This is panda poop! Depending on the kind of bamboo they eat, the color is different. This is one of kinds. Each adult giant panda produces 10-20 kg every day. The research center turns "the waste" into wealth such as paper and art and crafts by recycling these poops!
There are red pandas as well. Jay saw 22 pandas that day!
We were told that we needed to be there at 9 am in the morning at the reservation, when the Pandas would be fed. At that time, the pandas are most active and after breakfast, they tend to take naps or go back to a building where all the air conditionings are on if it's hot.
So, Jay and his brother woke up early and we arrived before the pandas’ breakfast time.
Do you know what pandas eat?
Bamboo or bamboo shoots are 99% of the diet of giant pandas. So, this place has a lot of bamboo. But I learned that they eat 20-40 kg of bamboo or 50 kg of bamboo shoots every day so the research base buys bamboo from a nearby bamboo farm and the bamboo in the research base is just to supplement if they need more. The pandas in this research center also eat apples, and steamed panda bread (which include a lot of vitamins)
The digestive tract of giant panda is very short; food doesn't stay in the digestive tract for a long time. Therefore their absorbed nutrition is low. Most herbivorous animals can digest 80% of their food while the giant pandas digests less than 17% of their food.
Wild pandas spend 16 hours per day looking for, and eat bamboo, captive pandas spend generally 10-12 hours (50 % of each day) to eat.
We could see pandas being very active, playing with each other and eat bamboo with both hands.
This is panda poop! Depending on the kind of bamboo they eat, the color is different. This is one of kinds. Each adult giant panda produces 10-20 kg every day. The research center turns "the waste" into wealth such as paper and art and crafts by recycling these poops!
There are red pandas as well. Jay saw 22 pandas that day!
Monday, May 28, 2012
Dear Class,
This is a picture of me by the pool at the Yacht Club. I am visiting my grandparents in Springfield, Illinois because it is my Grandma's 70th Birthday. Springfield is the capital city of Illinois and also where Abraham Lincoln (our 16th president) grew up.
We got pictures taken on Monday morning of our cousins, families, and our family. It has been super hot and sunny here during our trip. It has been 90F over most of the weekend. We went swimming every day. My cousins names are Will, Carter, Brandon and Charlie. I love it here in Springfield.
Wednesday, May 23, 2012
News from Japanese Kindergarten class
We had a rainy day today but we still had recess outside. We performed in the assembly this morning, "Chicken Soup with Rice - September through June". Charlotte's mom came in last week and we made Calder Mobiles; we also saw a play "The Very Hungry Caterpillar". We are going to the Tilth Garden tomorrow.
Sunday, May 6, 2012
Transportation in China
Today we would like to talk about transportation in China.There is one subway line which opened last year and goes north and south in the city. Three more subway lines are under construction throughout the city now. It's still not really convenient to go many places by subway. So people ride bicycles, scooters, electric rickshaws, buses, taxis, and personal cars when they go places. Imagine, there are 14 million people living in the city so there are so many of those vehicles on the roads. Bicyles are more for daily transportation than recreation, as they are in America. People ride bicycles to go grocery shopping. Many of the bicycles have electric motors like scooters so you don't have to pedal. We use taxis a lot since they are convenient and cheap. The first meter starts at 8 yuan (1.3 dollars). Taxis in Chengdu are green.In America, almost every household has a car or two. But not in China. Having your own car is still a luxury. Because driving is very difficult in China, many foreign companies make their employees use Chinese drivers. We will have our own car and a Chinese driver. In China, we are not allowed to drive with and international driver's license and it's also quite a different way to drive from the States. If you don't know how to drive in the Chinese way, it's very dangerous to do so.In major cities in China, there are big concerns about air pollution. In our city, Chengdu, it's a big concern also. As an effort to reduce carbon dioxide, private cars are only able to drive 6 days a week on certain roads. The day the car is not allowed to drive is determined by the license plate.In China, cars seem to have priority on the road--not like in America or other countries. We need to be very, very careful to cross the road even if we have a green sign and we are crossing a pedestrian cross walk. The cars will not stop for pedestrians. Instead, they will beep their horns and continue driving at us! We are the ones who have to avoid being hit by cars. The most scary thing of all are the scooters and bicyles because they sometimes drive in pedestian roads and we can't hear when they are approaching from the back because of their electric motors.
Here is a photo which shows a scooter, a bicycle and a car, all
driving on a pedestrian path (sidewalk).
It's a busy place!
Thursday, April 26, 2012
The First Two Weeks...
Dear Charlotte,
Thank you for writing me. I really liked your letter and
the photo where you are riding a mermaid horse.
It is warm here in Chengdu. It's about 30C. I am
wearing a short sleeve shirt and no jacket! I just moved to our new apartment
and I like it! My bother, Kosei, and I share a room which has bunk beds! In my
apartment, I can watch Chinese programs, Japanese programs, and American
programs. Today I watched "Madeline" in Chinese, but I didn't understand it at
all! Kosei and I pretend to be Chinese and speak to each other in creative
Chinese!
Here are the answers to your questions!
1. Did you see any panda bears?Not yet but we are going to see them next week. I will let you know soon and take pictures.2. Did you see any ice?No3. What does your building or house look like?This is our building. We live on the 11th floor. The apartment complex has a lot of apartment buildings, a couple of playgrounds, ponds, restaurants, coffee shops, indoor and outdoor swimming pools.4. Are you having fun?Yes, I am having fun! I am really looking forward to going to my new school next week!5. What is the food like?The city I live in is famous for spicy food. It is a type of Chinese food called Sichuanese cuisine. But there are a lot of non-spicy foods that I can eat.This is 麻婆豆腐. This is so spicy that your tong feels numb!For this, you put meat between flat, steamed buns and eat it like sandwich. It's so delicious!This is a soup with green vegetables, tofu and ginko nuts.
6. Did you eat with chopsticks?Yes, but it's difficult because they are very long. But I'm getting better every day.
7. Do you have a car or taxi or bus?We don't have a car here yet. We use taxis to go anywhere. In a few weeks we will have our own car.
8. Do you have ice cream there?Yes, I eat ice cream often.
9. Did you bring all of your toys with you?I took some small toys in my suitcase. All of the other toys will arrive by air and sea shipments soon.10. Do you have new friends yet?Yes, I do. I made new friends at my Japanese school, which meets on Sundays, and the sports activities for international students. Their names are Kaichi, Take, and David. My regular school will start next week and I will make more new friends from many different countries.
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