Wednesday 1st
November, 2017 1815
Tuesday
evening's meal went better than anticipated. I fed Annie, Sunny and
Gill. The ham turned out perfectly, I actually found off-season
pineapple in BHG so made a sweet sauce for it and - bonus – decent
potatoes right at the far end of the markets around the corner.
Even the
pastry for the apple pie turned out decently. If only all my culinary
efforts could be thus!
At the end of
a long day today I am looking forward to having tomorrow off. I may
have a bash at making mince and vegetable pasty type things for Annie
and myself for our dinner after the pastry success and now knowing
where to locate mashable spuds.
I will also
need to pack an overnight case. I have now received instructions re
the speaking competition and actually I am quite pleased. Whenever
Kevin went as a spectator he always left on Friday afternoon and
returned after closing on Sunday.
No idea if it
is simply Gansu or the format has changed but there is a meeting of
judges and laowei questionmasters on Friday evening, we are being
billeted for Friday night only and will finish Saturday night. I know
it is too much to hope that the hotel will be one which serves
western breakfast and to be fair I did assume with my living locally
I would be expected to stay home at night. It will though mean I will
more than likely be fed Friday dinner, Saturday breakfast (I will
pass on that), lunch and probably a closing dinner Saturday evening –
after which I will probably have to get my own taxi home.
Irrespective,
it is indeed an honour to find I am definitely one of the only two
foreigners asking questions. I realise I was the only choice my
school could have asked because Annie is essentially disbarred due to
Peace Corps rules (they sound more and more like the Salvation Army
to me, the more I hear!) but the fact is our uni was chosen as one of
two in the whole of Gansu province (and there are ten in this city
alone). The UK is 243,000 square kilometres in area and this province
is 426,000 – that offers some perspective on what it means, at
least to me.
Even better,
unlike Chizhou, the contestants are only asked one question after
their speeches, not one from each foreigner. That neatly avoids the
questionmasters confounding each other by occasionally coming up with
identical questions! We shall toss for odd or even numbers.
So I shan't
lose the entire weekend, Sunday is mine. I just wish I had a decent
blazer or jacket that fitted but shirt and tie will have to suffice –
unless I wander to the underground market tomorrow and they have
anything that fits.
I confess that
to some extent I was dreading the ordeal (although not the fact of
being in the spotlight) before but now am quite anticipating it with
pleasure. It is not often here I get to meet western faces or even
new Chinese ones.
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