Fu Jia Zhuang

After several weeks of planning to go for a walk down by the coast on our mutual day off and continually being foiled by the weather, Maggie and I got our chance to get some fresh air yesterday. Though we had intended to do a bit of a hike along Bing Hai Rd. (滨海路), from Tiger Beach (老虎滩), we ended up in Fu Jia Zhuang (付家庄), a resort community between Tiger Beach and Xing Hai Sq.

I knew the area a little, as I’ve spent the last two weeks teaching there, but had not had much chance to explore it. Now having poked around a bit more, it’s where I’d like to live for the rest of my days.

Ok, perhaps that’s being a bit dramatic. But honestly, the area is its own little world. Completely coated in lush green vegetation, largely isolated from the city’s pollution, and featuring one of the nicer (if not nicest) beach in Dalian – the place is top notch. Oh, and even on Dalian’s hottest days, it’s said to be 3-5 degrees cooler, which was true yesterday.

Though the rest of the city was basking in the mid-June sunshine, Fu Jia Zhuang was covered by a cool fog. It made the walk along the beach a bit eerie, but otherwise, it was a nice break from the heat.

The beach, unfortunately pebbly, was loaded with Russians and Chinese displaying far too much flesh for my simple conservative standards of what those of large body-types should be seen wearing in public. Pushing 300 lbs. of rather lobsterish Russian flesh into enough material to hardly create a cozy for my mobile phone… it’s just not right.

We left the beach and ran smack into the middle of a wedding photo shoot. Taking wedding photos is a bit backwards to what we’re used to in the West. They’re done weeks, sometimes months (or even a year) out from the wedding, not after the ceremony, as is common at least in Canada. Along with the standard collection of bridal dresses, there are an assortment of random other costumes. Yeah, costumes. We walked in on the soon-to-be-wed couple wearing full-camouflage (with matching skull-shaped dogtags) standing atop a jeep.

We continued up Bing Hai Rd. passed some amazing houses, whose steep pricetags have kept empty (something there’s no shortage of in Dalian). Though well out of the price range from my paltry earnings, I did take a moment or two to consider calling an agent and inquiring the price. It just seems weird to see houses in China. Like ones that don’t use plywood and stacked bricks for their roof.

After snapping some macro-photos of some bees, we hopped on the 702 and headed back to Olympic Square where we caught the English language showing of Poseidon. Y’know how we all find our grooves in life… well, tragic and suspenseful maritime movies must be Petersen’s – adding this one to The Perfect Storm and Das Boot (The Boat). The movie was pretty “Hollywood”, but I expected nothing less, and enjoyed it.

We met a nice couple of Canadians in the theatre, and after the film the guy said that the movie was complete Hollywood crap. I couldn’t disagree, but who are these people that go to see a big budget summer action movie and are expecting anything else? I don’t get it.

We capped the night off with Maggie’s friends (and my co-worker Pam) at Noahs For Your Ark Bar (if anyone can explain the name, please comment). Hanging out with Maggie’s friends is always quite the contrast from hanging out with mine. When we’re with mine, she is usually silent and trying hard to understand the laowai speaking at regular (in ESL that reads WARP) speed. Ditto me when I’m with her group. However, it’s a great chance to practice my Chinese skills (and bask in the compliments of how GREAT my Chinese is – I love Chinese compliments… who says the sincerity of a statement need affect the quality of one’s ego boost?)

9 Responses

  1. I miss those days of hiking bin hai road in Dalian. Fortunately for me, the over 200km of coastline in Hong Kong make up for it:) hehe

  2. Yeah, I miss them too! It was nice and nostalgic to read about the beach and Binhai Lu. I agree with your comments about Poseidon — when I saw it, I just expected it to be an action-adventure movie with cool special affects, and it delivered on that score, IMHO.

  3. @Dezza: Rub it in… next you’ll be commenting on how much more money you make! Jerk. Haha. Well, at least I can walk around the city without feeling like I’ve got a hot, wet towel wrapped around my entire body. Though I do have the mid-July Ontario humidity to think about in less than a month.

    @Chris: I had this same opinion when I went to see the last Star Wars film. Everyone dubbed it horrible and a waste of celluloid… but I mean, it’s Star Wars. C’mon. It’s about people with magic powers that save the universe from a horrible evil. We’re not talking high art here. People build things up too much in their minds I think. And again, it’s easier to criticize a creative endeavor than undertake one.

  4. Hey Stuart, it’s a Canon A620. You can read my little post about it here and get a lot more info about it here.

    It’s a pretty decent little camera. Considered a prosumer camera, it’s not an SLR by any means, but it does alright. It can go full manual, use aperture or shutter speed priority, and it’s also what I film all my vBlogs on.

    I’m getting more and more eager to get a digital SLR, and maybe by the end of the year I’ll sort out how to afford it, but until then… this one will do.

  5. “The beach, unfortunately pebbly, was loaded with Russians and Chinese displaying far too much flesh for my simple conservative standards of what those of large body-types should be seen wearing in public.”

    Haha, I have the same feeling with you. But one time I travelled to Shan Ya,located in the south of China, along the beach I saw a batch of beautiful girls and handsome men with real muscle, what a enjoyable scene!

    So maybe you didn’t choose the right time to see the right person at the right place.

  6. Haha, well… south of China is a big difference (and distance) from Dalian. My favourite place on the planet is Thailand and there’s no shortage of beautiful soft sandy beaches and water as warm as a tub with no people at all – the way I prefer it.

  7. Pingback: Adventures of the Humanaught: Life In China Blog » Blog Archive » Dalian Is A Beautiful City

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