December 2006


I’m filling in for a friend as editor of magazine in Beijing while he’s away. The job has some perks, not the least of which is getting to see my words in print! Best of all is the walk along the canal from SOHO Newtown at Dawanglu to Jianwai SOHO. If that seems like a lot of SOHOs, they are up to number five now, and the developer is gathering a bit of a following. Alas, we are moving to a fancy new office tower in January and the canal will not be as accessible. It might also be really cold then too!

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This year, I really want to make it up to . The ice festival there has been luring me for years, but I can never find anyone willing to go with me. All I ever hear about is how it gets to minus 20 degrees C and your face will freeze just going out. Yeah, well when I was kid, I went out every day in winter in weather just that cold to shovel snow off my driveway that would drift up to my waist regularly. Of course, I’ve spent most of the rest of my life avoiding places like that, favoring beaches in Thailand for my Januarys, but as long as it’s not a permanent arrangement, I love it!!

Growing up in Ohio, I’m no stranger to snow. The memory that sticks out most is “The Great Blizzard” of 1978. I used to get up at 5 am to deliver the morning paper around my neighborhood. The stillness, beauty and otherworldliness of that time made it worth the early hours and very the heavy paperbag slung over my shoulders, half the papers in front, half in back. Saturdays were not so fun because I’d have to return home and do the route in two trips. The ice and snow added an extra touch of fun, as invariably I’d hit a piece of ice at some point, my feet would fly out from under me and… wham! … saved from real harm by papers on my back, but the wind knocked out of me none the less.

One cold January morning I got up and went to the front porch, which I had helped to enclose by then, to look outside to see what kind of weather I could look forward to that day. The papers hadn’t arrived yet and the windows were all frosted over, so I went to look out the glass sliding door in the back, but all I could see was white. Opening the door to look out didn’t change a thing. Pure white against the pure black of night. I stuck my hand out in the maelstrom and it disappeared from view, quickly freezing as well. I decided then and there that I didn’t care what anyone said, I wasn’t going out in that. I needn’t have worried, as the storm had buried the whole of the Miami Valley in snow. Although only around 40 centimeters of snow fell, the winds whipped up snow drifts up to 8 meters tall! Our cars where completely buried on the driveway and the drifts went all the way up to the roof! Needless-to-say, the next few days were some of the best ever for building snow forts, complete with tunnels, and as school and work were out of the question for everyone for the next few days, I had a blast! The forts actually lasted until spring, and the crabapple tree was in full bloom before the last remnants finally melted away.

So, on the rare occasion we get a genuine snow storm in Beijing, I rejoice. The kids and I are out in no time building giant snowmen and having snowball fights. And although I’m happy with the relatively mild winter in Beijing, I have to wonder… what’s the point of winter without snow?

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What better way to spend an evening in Beijing in celebration of the King of Thailand’s birthday than the grand ballroom of the Kerry Center Shangrila Hotel? Those of us who arrived promptly and were adept at buffet line maneuvering were able to taste nearly all of the offerings from local Thai restaurants. There were far more people than expected so some of them ran out of food early, but there was still plenty of delicious Thai goodness for everyone.

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