Waiting for the ferry

December 14, 2009

Tiananmen Square at night

December 13, 2009

Hainan – bamboos and light

December 12, 2009

Dark Classroom

December 11, 2009

on the second floor

May 25, 2009

This is us, on the second floor. The shutter has jammed on our Cannon,
so the pictures of the beautiful Xinjiang spring are not taken: there
are cuckoos and warblers and flowers on the fruit trees.

… and the big question: can I post inline photos with mutt?

DuShanZi

April 20, 2009

It’s a modern town, with petrochemical factories down the slope, and it’s also wealthy. The supermarket in the mall is almost a deli with Italian wines and very expensive things in tins from France. And seafish on ice. I think about 60,000 live here: it’s quiet at night and the air is mountain-fresh.

Xinjiang

April 18, 2009

It’s been a bit of a change moving from Hainan all the way up to the NW. We spent four days on the train – and three nights, one with Gareth in Xi’an – but really it wasn’t too much of an ordeal, just one long doze, watching the countryside get drier and drier and seeing spring kind of folding up and disappearing. But the flowers are coming out now and the blackbirds sing in the tops of the popular trees in the evening. We’re still eating a little too much of the local nan breads.

See and download the full gallery on posterous

Breakfast

March 6, 2009

A sweet cake and a glass of green tea at the side of the road.

Finnegans Wake 1.1

February 25, 2009

riverrun, past Eve and Adam’s, …
 
As well as flowing and arrival(these in McHugh), there is return (Fr. revenir). The church is Adam and Eve’s, but we are going backwards into sleep and into history: into sleep, into night, “past eve’n”; and “past even Adam”.
 
Hmm. “History … is a nightmare from which I am trying to awake.”
Wot’s dat den?

barefoot running

February 24, 2009

I’ve been running without shoes for about a year and a half and I like to think I’ve made a lot of progress: I’m up to 58km a week and in January I managed a 5000m in 19:54 … in bare feet of course. The last few weeks I’ve been wearing my sandals a lot of the time, mainly because of building sites and viscous little angular stones all over the place. Anyway, I was reading an old article over at the The Science of Sport on Running Technique just the other day, and they were discussing heel strike versus mid-foot strike running techniques … just try running with a heel strike in bare feet: ouch! And I think the human body has spent most of it’s evolutionary time running barefoot.

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.