Tuesday
21st January, 2020 1110
Coronavirus
is the latest thing. Anyone would think it's new but fifty years ago
there was always a large bottle of it in my Dad's bread van. I
remember in 2009 when I holidayed in Nanning at the height of the
H1N1 outbreak. Airports were scanned by heat-seeking missiles and
anyone with a high temperature was abducted and quarantined and when
I went to a hospital to buy some pills thermometer was shoved in my
lughole without so much as a by your leave. It gave cause for concern
when I flew back to the UK in case I was incarcerated for the
incubation/infectious period, however long that was. Do they have a
bar in quarantine? I find myself with the symptoms of contamination –
cough, shortness of breath etc – but I blame that on being forced
to smoke unfamiliar cheroots.
Alice
is home and I asked her last night where she had put the chamois
leather as I couldn't find it anywhere and she had, after all, moved
everything just to confuse the hell out of me. Inside the big black
suitcase, came the reply. No it wasn't. You mean the fur hat? No. It
was clear she had no idea what a chamois was so I sent an image of a
used one. Oh, I threw that away, I thought it was rubbish. No dear,
my cleaner uses it on my office windows. Isn't life wonderful?
I
went to BHG yesterday for my last shop of the lunar year. It was bad
enough then but as the days pass it will become ever worse until on
Friday, new years eve, it will be carnage. I did that once
inadvisedly in Chizhou and it took me over an hour to get chicken
breasts for the animals. I bought everything for tonight and
tomorrow's meals. Another lasagne for Jody on Wednesday and stuffed
peppers for Adriana tonight. I bought four huge red capsicums and
then Adriana cried off! Great. Now I'll need to try and rearrange the
freezer to fit two in for another day.
Nearly
all the recipes for the above are vegetarian, have you noticed? Not
that I don't occasionally have something veggie (cheese and tomato
sandwich, packet of crisps, carrot and lentil soup etc) but I could
swear at sea they were stuffed with meat, or perhaps meat and rice
combined. So that's what I shall attempt, pork mince, rice, chopped
mushrooms and garlic with a bit of cheese on top. And Linghams chilli
sauce just to make them special. Not sure I can eat two though.
1915
Ok,
yes even I have felt the pinch on the pork prices since the swine flu
thing - not that I eat that much of anything but every bit I get
minced up seems to cost at least £6
these days – but the fruit???? Tonight ten strawberries (admittedly
quite large and genetically modified probably), four lemons and two
bananas cost me £4.50!!!
No wonder I hardly ever eat fruit.
I
don't know what it is about this city. It's the biggest day of their
year on Friday when at midnight they welcome the year of the
ratatouille, yet apart from the supermarket there is no sign of its
impending arrival. Obviously I do not expect to see Christmas trees
and fairy lights but this year I'm not even seeing the couplets they
normally stick on the outside of the doors to their homes. It's
almost as if they don't care. Even at the train station the other day
there was none of the England v Germany Wembley stadium crowd I have
come to expect, the only sign being on the train ticket sites that
trains are sold out for sleeping berths.
Doesn't
bother me in the slightest because I shan't be whooping it up but it
does rather resemble a city where ambition dies. I am sure there will
be the odd firework let off at midnight on Friday and copious plates
of food served on Saturday in various homes but other than that it
really seems to be a non event here.
Of
course, there is a north-south divide in China, just as there is in
the UK, here in the north they favour noodles, in the south, rice but
here there is just no build up. It simply seems subdued, sedate,
uncaring even. On the night I shall probably have some baby bangers
let off nearby which, if I am in bed I shall in all likelihood not
even hear and it will be in stark contrast to that foolish night in
Chizhou where I wanted to get closer to the “action” for once.
I
booked a night at the Dong Rong hotel close to the station and never
got a wink of sleep until I went home the following afternoon because
fireworks went off non stop for almost twelve hours.
This
really is the strangest of cities, and not in a good way.
No comments:
Post a Comment