Tuesday
12th
February, 2019 1645
I
actually woke early this morning having retired early last night. The
planned Metro trip was for mid-morning but after my UK connection
failed I started watching “Criminal Justice” on YouTube. All five
one-hour episodes!
So
I left home at 1500.
Today
being (I assume) a normal day for those with normal jobs (ie not in
education) traffic was light and to my relief there was no problem
obtaining a trolley and I had all the time in the world to
investigate the Metro.
Whilst
I consider it a great leap forward (to pinch words from Mao) for
Lanzhou, it is but halfway to paradise. Plenty of things they either
don't have or I couldn't see, such as Bisto, Oxo, vanilla essence and
parmesan (although there was fresh available but have you
ever tried grating parmesan? You need biceps like thighs!) but I
bought other things not on the list.
Pork
breakfast sausages, frankfurters, what I hope are oven chips (soon
find out), spring rolls, my “goldfish” flour that worked so well
in the bread machine in Chizhou (annoyingly the smallest bag was 5kg)
and a few other bits and bobs. Sadly no tonic water because you have
to buy a whole case. Nothing against that, the problem was I already
had about 20kgs to carry. I am not 32 any more. Guess where Alice
will be coming with me when she comes back?!
Plenty
of other things I never bought but wanted to but am constrained by
the limited freezer space I have. One huge item was part-baked
baguettes! If I only knew if I was staying here for the next three
years I would buy a chest freezer tomorrow, they only cost about
1,000¥.
Metro is definitely a monthly visit from now until I leave Lanzhou –
proper steaks, any spice you want (I bought a big tub of ground
ginger), tortillas, all manner of items that enticed me and with
enough storage I could have spent a month's salary. But I didn't!
Now
though, if I don't want to cook I can host a meal simply by bunging
things in the oven.
One
thing I did notice though, both in the taxi and in-store was my
eyesight. I have in the past worn bifocals but ultimately decided I
didn't really need them. Today I could hardly focus (hence maybe I
missed some items I wanted). I am rather hoping the reason is because
most of the day during the holiday I am sat in front of a screen. If
I ultimately do need spectacles in China I am fearful.
You
know the optician's chart with letters ever-decreasing in size? Well
not here. They decrease in size but they are all Es – facing north,
south, west and east. And I recall Kevin ordering bifocals in Chizhou
and being presented with a pair of glasses with the lenses perfectly
split in half with a straight line across halfway and two disparate
lenses used so there was no transition, either distance or reading,
instantly.
I
am convinced I have “holiday eyes
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