
We hiked all the way to the top of the mountain near their home and at the summit, we were presented with a nice view of Xiamen.




David posing with the LAMBORGHINI MURCIELAGO LP 640 - this certainly beats the Matchbox version!
While we were expecting to see cars - this is a car show after all - I was surprised to see the other car 'assessories': models parading with the latest models!Maybe US auto dealers should consider this marketing ploy to rev up auto sales - well, maybe not!
David is blessed with an outgoing personality, he enjoys meeting new people and likewise, folks here are happy to see him. In a sea of humanity - there were thousands of attendees - this sweet model (we did not get her name) asked to have her picture taken with David. As it turned out, she was the Lamborghini model.
Video from mountain looking down.
Our good friend and host Rabin arranged for transportation - he drove as well as functioned as our tour guide. He is most generous - we are blessed to have met him at one of many English Corners we serve weekly here in Xiamen. Rabin works for a local bus/coach manufacturing company as a network administrator, and we certainly have lots to talk about regarding technology. He speaks and writes well in English.
Close-up of a Round House.
As the video shows, it is a busy place where local goods and goodies are displayed for sale - this is how they supplement their livelihood, selling their wares. The ground/first floor consists of individual rooms serving as kitchens - daily living for these vendors/dwellers is a never-ending cycle of selling their wares, punctuated with meals prepared in their respective kitchens. They have running water with drilled wells terminating in individual faucets, each strategically situated in front of their kitchen, sustaining their water needs.
Gerda with local Hakka dweller/vendor. She displays her wares in front of her kitchen area - see door to the left of picture.
Business is thriving - we bought some souvenirs to support the local economy!
The lab has about 60 desktops, mostly Dell Optiplex 486 and Pentium-based desktops running Windows 2000 Professional . Internet connectivity is good.
Picture taken during break - these studious students stayed to work on their assignment.
Another first in my eighteen plus years of teaching: I was supplementing my teaching in Mandarin! I am not naturally inclined to teach/speak in Mandarin - my mother language is English but because of my upbringing in Singapore, I do know some Mandarin, Teochew, and Hokkien and they do come in handy as I try to narrow the communication gap for some of my Chinese students. They are extremely bright, with many expressing strong interest in improving their command of English. So, I see this as a Win-Win situation: we both get to improve on our non-native language.
Future leaders of China.
Another future leader.
Background: Department of Computer Science. While I could walk to work (my Dean, who lives on the eighth floor in our building does), I prefer to take the bus - it is only 4 stops from where we live.