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11/20/08

Permalink 12:40:36 pm, by yu888 Email , 1286 words   English (US)
Categories: News and Comment -Yu, Food, City Happening, Living in Shanghai, Events

Friday Newsletter (cross post from Facebook)

Link: http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=2435642101

Hi All,

I know, its only Thursday but if I add more stuff, this newsletter will be too bloated so i am sending this off now to prevent overload. :)

Welcome everyone, to the first cold week of the coming winter season. Bundle up and get those layers on! The weather gets colder from here on out though a short break is expected this weekend (hope hope hope). Time to make sure your apartment and home heaters work and if you need tips, my old article has been updated via a new entry on my blog about keeping our uninsulated apartments warm here in Shanghai. Link Here

Charity announcements:

Help save the lives of babies in need of critical life saving medical procedures. Two of the co-founders of this foundations are friends of mine that I have only the utmost respect for in that they truly work hard for what they believe in, saving children’s lives, one at a time. Please check out the BaoBei Foundation and donate to a good cause… Give the gift of LIFE! http://www.baobeifoundation.org

Helping Hand Shanghai is distributing an environmentally friendly re-usable shopping bag that can be bought to benefit a choice of Shanghai charities: Shanghai Sunrise, Charity Carnival, Second Chance Animal Aid or Roots and Shoots. Just go to the link for more details: http://www.helpinghandsh.com/ .

Membership of our little group is now at 727! Wow, consistent growth is cool. Thanks all for your support and feedback!

Another tip- it seems that the PSB is cracking down and updating the temporary residence permits system so it may be necessary for you to stop by and renew your registration. See the linked Shanghai Daily article for more info: http://www.shanghaidaily.com/article/?id=380142&type=Metro

New Wine Bar! Introductory article here: Cuvée openes its doors to the serious wine enthusiasts! Read Discussion Here

Tryptophan-tastic week coming ahead. For those non-yanks in the room, its American Thanksgiving this coming Thursday so I must at least make a mention of the fact that many thousands of Americans in Shanghai will be celebrating what is known more colloquially as “Turkey Day” this coming Thursday. For those interested in celebrating with the ShanghaiExpat crowd, there will be some limited seats available at Malones to dine with the founder and staff of Shanghaiexpat at Malones. 300rmb will get us a buffet dinner of all the traditional turkey AND ham you want along with some great trimmings and free flow wine beer and drinks. Yes a little pricey, but this is a bit better than the regular deal at Malones or any of the other ho tels and such, like Westin, the Marriot, and several others also hosting turkey day celebratory dinners.

Sorry to start it out on such a nationalistic note, but Thanksgiving is a big holiday back home and as I do not have my family here to celebrate it with, I am hoping to celebrate at Malones with all of you… or some of you anyhow. ☺ A list of other Thanksgiving Dinner venues can be found HERE!

CHRISTMAS TREES! In the US, Thanksgiving kicks off the holiday season and so Chrsitmas trees come to mind. There are a few sources for REAL trees this year! Rosa Gallica is selling trees ranging from 1.5m to 2 meters, and wreaths as well. They have two locations, one in Ferguson Lane at 376 WuKang Rd, and another in Pu-jersey (Pudong) ay 594 BiYun Rd. Royal Fir Christmas trees is again importing Danish trees this year and they will be available for delivery starting around Dec 3. Call Maggie at Shanghai Blue Fish Trading for info and orders. (21)50454088/33781590. Prices fo trees will range from 500 and up at both vendors. Trees may also be found at various flower markets around town including the CaoJia Du Flower market and the Hong Qiao Flower market, both in Chang Ning District.

A few food tips as the holidays means EATING!!! Yellow Valley Cheese is here! A LOCAL source that is foreign owned and operated that makes delicious Dutch styled cheeses (much like Gouda) A fair Trade supplier using controlled sources for milk in Shanxi Province, Yello Valley Cheese is now available through City Shop, Baastian’s Bakery, and Slice! They also have a WEBSITE: http://www. cheeseinchina .com .

Another Dairy tip: TongChu Organics is now selling Asahi branded pure milk! A safe and high quality milk that is closely controlled by Asahi. You can contact TongChu Organics for delivery of Asahi Milk as well as their usual selection of organic produce, juices and more. Website: http://www.tongchu.com.cn or email steve_liang@tongchu.com.cn .

Another book swap will be happening Saturday, November 29 from 1030-1230 at my Saturday Coffee Meeting in Zhong Shan Park. Pop by with English or French books to trade or donate. Books will be swapped or sold to benefit the community and proceeds will go to the Red Cross. Member Pierro has been making this thing work so far so I ask folks to support this effort in any way possible as truly, foreign language books are hard to come by here in Shanghai. Swap will happen at the Coffee meeting at CoffeeBean and Tea Leaf in Cloud Nine mall, first Floor near Citibank. The mall is located at Zhong Shan Park Metro station.

That evening, you can opt to go to Shanghaiist’s Beer Tasting. Hosted by Southern barbarian, you can come enjoy unlimited tastings of American craft beers (Brooklyn Lager, Brooklyn IPA, Rogue Dead Guy Ale, Acme Pale Ale, etc) and select Yunnan finger foods from Southern Barbarian's menu (alt/Pepper Fried Yunnan Goat Cheese, Seasoned Crispy Potato Pancake, Barbecued Chicken Wings, etc). All attendees will be given scorecards to rate each beer — the results will be published on Shanghaiist.

((ad)) Polluted water from your tap? Bring in a sample to get tested! Directway, proud supplier of water safety products here in Shanghai will happily test your tap water or even filtered water against pure drinking water at the showroom located at 509 Beijing West Rd in Jing An District.

Come in to check out a simple but effective line of water filters good for your home here ins Shanghai. Drink pure drinking water, bathe in chlorine-free softened water today!

DirectWay is a proud supporter of the ShanghaiExpat! Clean drinking water? Chlorine-free showers? Reduced Detergent use for laundry for eco-friendly washes. Preview the whole line of fine Water filters on the web site at: http://english.obusiness.cn/yhhnj/en/water/productlist.jsp ((ad))

(PUBLIC SERVICE ANNOUNCEMENT) Get your flu shots. United family Hospitals is offering this imported flu vaccines from Italy, now through December 13 every Saturday hosting a “fast track clinic” from 830am-5pm. No appointments needed. Special offer price is 88rmb. More info at www.unitedfamilyhospitals.com .

Of course the regular events are still happening:

Regular events include the Saturday Coffee meeting at Cloud Nine Mall at Zhong Shan Park, every Saturday from 10:30a-12:30p at Coffee Bean and Tea Leaf; and lunch that follows the coffee meet. Contact me if you have any questions as I do host this event every week.

Sunday Coffee Brunch is held at XinTianDi’s Coffee bean outlet from noon-3 every Sunday afternoon. More info on that: http://www.shanghaiexpat.com/MDForum-viewtopic-t-28351.phtml

And of course the regular Wednesday Night Mixer where expats and locals alike can come to mix and mingle, meet old friends, make new ones and enjoy discounted drinks from 9-midnight at Malone’s American Bar and Café’s 3rd floor bar called The Loft. Happens weekly. Malones is located at 225 Tong Ren Rd near Nanjing West Rd.

Hope everyone has a great weekend! Stay warm!!! ☺

Cheers!
Ed

Cross posted on Facebook

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11/19/08

Permalink 12:12:15 pm, by msittig Email , 117 words   English (US)
Categories: Metro

Get out of jail FREE

Another reason to get a public transportation stored-value card:

Months after the arrests, a retired detective working for Mr. Jones’s lawyers drove to a city jail located on a barge moored in the East River in the South Bronx, where Mr. Jones had been held after his arrest, and retrieved his wallet. The MetroCard was still inside.

Mr. Jones’s lawyers then asked New York City Transit to use the card to trace his movements the night of the shooting. The results supported his account, showing that the card had been used on a bus, and later on a subway roughly five miles from the shooting, just as he had described.

From the New York Times.

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11/18/08

Permalink 03:37:59 pm, by yu888 Email , 194 words   English (US)
Categories: News and Comment -Yu

Staying Warm in your SH Apartment Revisited

Staying Warm

Just a quick link to the article I wrote last year to help everyone stay warmer over this coming Winter. As I had my family here all winter, we fine tuned our process a bit using three oil-filled radiator heaters and found it mostly unnecessary to us the AC blowers to supplement heat except during that freak snow storm week where it was absolutely needed.

AND, just a word of warning, do make sure your wiring and circuit breakers in the apartment can handle the power load needed for all the heat. Otherwise you may be experiencing power outages at some very inconvenient times, leading to a very cold place if you don't notice for awhile.

One additional tip not mentioned on the linked article, while I do recommend getting the largest heater you can for a given space, be aware that the units with wattage ratings over 2200w require thicker gauge wires and a different power plug. As simple plug adapter may not work in some older households as those units draw 15A or more of current to operate and may max out some older household power circuits or blow fuses.

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Permalink 08:29:24 am, by msittig Email , 14 words   English (US)
Categories: Metro

WALK STAND

Hey Shanghai, here's an idea:

Clipboard01
Original photo by Shanghaistreets / Brad Ferguson
Remixed by Eric @ SinoPenn

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11/12/08

Permalink 12:37:48 pm, by msittig Email , 330 words   English (US)
Categories: Metro, Taxi

News bits: too many to count

01436512
Civilized commuters in Guangzhou

City residents give suggestions to the Metro company: install change machines at public transportation hubs, and build more bathrooms to deal with the increasing passenger load. http://news.sina.com.cn/o/2008-11-12/081114717386s.shtml http://news.sina.com.cn/o/2008-11-12/074714717061s.shtml

Cabbies get a chance at their own feedback with a new hotline set up especially for cab drivers to relay their opinions up to city authorities. This news comes on the heels of reports of taxi strikes in Chongqing, Yongdeng and Hainan. http://www.shanghaidaily.com/article/?id=380328

Daniel P shares the results of an informal video game poll of Shanghai subway passengers: lots of PSPs, less DSs, and plenty of gaming on mobile phones. http://danielprimed.com/gaming/culture/observations-from-the-shanghai-subway

An editorial says there's three things that the Shanghai subway system should learn from Guangzhou's: glass safety doors separating the train from the platform at all stations, polite passengers that respect other people's private space and "stand on the right, walk on the left" when on the escalator, and forbidding any food from being consumed on the subway. http://news.eastday.com/c/20081110/u1a3974382.html

That doesn't mean nothing is being done, though: white collar office workers are volunteering their time to stand at the foot of escalators and remind people of the "stand on the right" rule. These volunteers were recruited through Online.sh.cn and the blog of the Huangpu District Nanjing East Road Area Youth Center White-Collar Club. http://news.ifeng.com/society/2/200811/1110_344_870528.shtml

Despite the freezing weather, many real estate offices are sending their agents to subway exits to ply their wares. Often they are the last vendors to leave at the end of the night. http://www.sh.chinanews.com.cn/PageUrl/20081110144075.html

Finally, November saw a joint explosives response exercise at the People's Square metro station. The operation was a cooperation between the city's police and firefighting forces. http://news.sina.com.cn/c/2008-11-10/023014703489s.shtml

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11/09/08

Permalink 03:25:20 pm, by msittig Email , 121 words   English (US)
Categories: Trolley

Line 21: nostalgia for disappearing electric buses

A nostalgic video of one of Shanghai disappearing overhead electric bus lines, or "trolleys". Mostly nighttime clips of Line 21, which ran from Jing'an Temple to Fengzhen Rd along North Sichuan Road and was replaced completely by standard diesel buses in January of 2005:

Most of the few remaining electric bus lines are in Yangpu District.

A new tram line is being built and tested in the Zhangjiang High-Tech Park area of Pudong, right behind my apartment, which may signal the return of overhead electric lines to Shanghai's streets. If the test is successful, new lines may be built through Lujiazui or along the Bund. I'm chronicling the construction of the Zhangjiang Line in a continuously-updated photo essay on the Zhangjiang Garden BBS.

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11/04/08

Permalink 02:06:20 pm, by yu888 Email , 1392 words   English (US)
Categories: News and Comment -Yu, Food, Living in Shanghai, Health

Shanghai Water – facts, issues and solutions

I have been talking about the use of safe water filters for bathing and drinking for the past year or so but never once have I posted a blog entry about it because I try and keep my business and personal stuff separate. But last week an expat customer, who also reads my blog, asked me why I didn’t post things about water filters and such to my blog if I truly believed in clean water. I thought about it and realized that it was a good idea and it should not be seen as only commercial as I do what I do because I want the community to have the best possible info about things I have learned and I believe my posts on the Shanghai Expat forum reflect this. So this gave me a good reason to collect all the info I have already posted and written in various places and put it in article form so that this blog entry can be a collection of facts I have collected about water in Shanghai as well as about my family’s solutions to the issues.

So, about Shanghai Water:

According to the World Bank and various other UN and international sources:

• 436 of 532 rivers in China are polluted
• 13 of the 15 major cities along the 7 main water source rivers are affected by severely polluted water.

And according to the State EPA in China:

• More than 90 percent of urban rivers are seriously polluted in China
• 75 percent of the lakes are eutrophicated due to fertilizer and pesticide run-off
• The sewers do not match among the vast majority of cities
• In more than 600 cities, only over 270 have sewage treatment plants, but more than 60 percent of these are not running or not used
• 360 million of the rural population having no safe water to drink
• Pesticides, fertilizers and domestic sewage exist almost everywhere thre is water in China. Almost 25 million acres (150 mu) of China’s farmland has already been polluted and out in the countryside, environmental protection facilities do not exist.

How does that translate for us here in Shanghai? Well, the HuangPu River is our main source of tap water here in Shanghai. It and all its tributaries collect water along with pollutants from upstream along the Yangtze River, and all this gets dumped into the ocean. We are near the mouth so near the end of that process. Shanghai is one of the 15 of 17 major cities affected by severe pollution in our water source.

The Good news is that Shanghai DOES have a municipal water system that make tap water essentially Potable, disinfecting the water that services those tapped into its system. If it were not for the heavy metal content, it would be potable and drinkable in many parts of the city.

Another piece of good news is that Shanghai DOES have up to date sewage facilities that pre-treats and treats its wastewater and sewage before dumping it back into the river downstream from the water system in take.

So, the water that comes from the tap here in Shanghai is treated and disinfected typically does not have biological contamination…none that is likely alive anyhow, due to the high chlorination of the water. However, other contaminants still exist, ironically including a common carcinogen, the chlorine used to disinfect the water.

Water for Washing

As more that 80% of household water use is for washing, cleaning and bathing, most water filters found are geared towards getting the water clean enough for those uses. Contaminants such as rust, silt, and sediment are common in Shanghai water but these contaminants do not grossly affect the health of humans when used to wash with. It may not be the cleanest water to do your white laundry in, but it will not affect one’s health.

Ironically, it is Chlorine, the chemical added to disinfect the water, that is easily absorbed by human skin when washing or brushing one’s teeth and is considered carcinogenic. Luckily, there are many chlorine filters available in the market to remove this chlorine from your tap water and your shower water. Bathing and showering in chlorine free water helps keep skin less dry and allows less use of shampoo and conditioners, and in my wife’s case, she realized she was using a lot less body lotion as well as chlorine can really dry skin up. Our solution was the ShowerBaby shower head, which while not the most attractive looking hand held shower head, certainly does its job and is well worth its weight in gold, or at least cost savings of skin and hair products!

A tap faucet version called the Waterbaby does the similar thing and while we initially bought one to basin bathe our son when he was first born, we found washing and brushing with this water was much more refreshing than with normal Shanghai tap.

Water for Drinking

Other than particulate contaminants that are fairly harmless, there are more pollutants to be concerned about when one starts to consider actually drinking the water. Organic and inorganic compounds, spillovers from farming and industry upstream, are certainly a great concern. And of course Heavy Metals, which are not filtered out by the Municipal water system, nor by many local in-home filters.

70% of the world is covered in water, around 70% of the human body is made up of water. One could argue that Water is Life. And yet more than 300 million rural Chinese citizens lack access to clean drinking water. We are quite lucky as actually, Shanghai Municipal water is generally pretty good in terms of being disinfected, as it leaves the plant, but as it travels through the old infrastructure, it picks up rust and other stuff in the pipes so by the time it gets to your home, many secondary sources of pollution and contamination have access to your water so it is best to drink properly filtered water...and a carbon filter is NOT the answer as it does NOT remove heavy metals. A Carbon filter only removes particulate matter, and certain chemicals AND changes the taste, but other chemicals and heavy metals get through. Only a purifier utilising steam distillation or a reverse osmosis filter (commercially available options anyhow) will remove everything including the heavy metals properly for drinking.

Our family’s solution was in fact to install an Atlantis Drinking Water Purifier. It is a 6-stage water purifier designed for the lower quality incoming water from the Chinese tap system. Its SIX stages remove different pollutants in stages, ultimately stripping it clean of almost everything, then reintroducing minerals and softening the water prior to it being dispensed for consumption. We utilize the water from the Atlantis for all forms of consumption including drinking, cooking soups, rice and even pasta, as water is absorbed into these foods when cooking and one would not want heavy metals in any of this food.

Ultimately, a few of my quick tips on this:

• Always drink properly filtered healthy water – that which does not contain heavy metals or organic chemicals or organic pollutants, and that which DOES contain some healthy minerals and is preferably mildly alkaline rather than the acidic water found in many RO systems that do not remineralize.
• If one has a good filtration system, ALWAYS service your filters regularly. Please note that Activated Carbon Filters needs to be replaced every 3-6 months regardless of volume of use as Carbon Filters pick up organic pollutants that can infect the filter and then leach back into the drinking water if allowed to sit too long.
• Boiled Tap water only helps disinfect water but does not remove many pollutants including Heavy Metals. In fact , in most cases all it does is raises the concentration of contaminants as healthy water evaporates in the process.
• If drinking bottled water, please make sure the machine is cleaned and disinfected regularly and that the bottles are finished as close to every 3 days as possible as that is the point which the bacterial level will exceed drinking water standards.
• If you suspect your water quality at all, have your tap water AND filtered water tested. Directway can do a visual test via electro-precipitation to give you a visual of what is in the water. A more detailed lab test can be done by labs such as Pony Test or the official Shanghai Institute of Quality Inspection.

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