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FSO: A beach in early fall/autumn

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 A cold weather meant a deserted pontoon where kids and adults play in Summer.

A deserted beach.

Thursday, May 8, 2014

Landscapes of my Town [Friday My Town Shoot Out]

We all live in different parts of this earth. Some in sunny flat regions, others high up in the mountains. There is so much to see and discover. Let your imagination run free, and share with us where you live and what landscapes define the place you live in.
What landscapes and geological formations are present in your town, city or village? Share with us and link up below! 
 

Letter Z for Zandu balm

Cry of oppressed women

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Cry of oppressed women 妇女的哭泣

 



Published May 2014
www.3a.co.nz
Ann Kit Suet Chin Chan/Chen Jie Xue 我是 陈洁雪


Women face many kinds of oppression through the centuries. The author takes you to a journey of modern day oppression.
This story traces the life of Nadine, a girl born to Indian parents. It embodies the issues of a Kiwi girl, Nadine, growing up in conflicting cultures and getting lost in her environment.
Nadine grows up to overcome her problems to help women who suffered from physical and mental violence, domestic violence, rape, pornography, swinging, incest, bullying, sex with minors, sex slavery and human trafficking.

Every book, every volume you see here, has a soul. The soul of the person who wrote it and of those who read it and lived and dreamed with it.
― Carlos Ruiz Zafón, The Shadow of the Wind

Ann is the writer of Diary of a Bereaved Mother, Goodbye my baby, From China to Borneo to Beyond, and Mail Order Bride. Indeed each of these books has a soul. Ann gives a voice for the bereaved and the oppressed


I am the writer of:
1: From China to Borneo and beyond. 海外华人的中国魂: 从中国,到南洋,到更远
2: Diary of a Bereaved Mother, Goodbye my baby 丧儿记: 丧失儿子的母亲的一本传记 
3: Mail Order Bride 邮购新娘

FSO: Bridges in an old gold mining town

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this weeks Theme is "Bridges". What gets the people and vehicles across the divides in your town? Old, new or in between, as well as in disrepair, reclaimed by nature or sparkling new. Show us the bridges of your town - literal and metaphorical.


http://mytownshootout.blogspot.co.nz/

FSO: Celebrations

Alphabe-Thursday letter A


Sonkran festival

our Maori sculptures from New Zealand.

Alphabe-Thursday letter B

Alphabe-Thursday letter c for caterpillar

Alphabe-Thursday letter D for donation drive

Our world, outdoor wed: Where the car fails to go

FSO: Scavanger Hunt:High above, Facing Straight and Down Below

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 we had a bad storm, looking up.
 looking forward at the beach

 Looking down and see the fallen branches

http://mytownshootout.blogspot.co.nz/

Jun 13: Scavenger Hunt:High above, Facing Straight and Down Below - Show us these three plains wherever you are. Take a shoot looking up (sky, ceiling, tree branches, etc), then a shot facing straight, and lastly one looking down (earth, grass, floor, etc). Optional: If you know how, you can even post a vertical panorama and stitch all three shots together! (Mersad)

Save the world: Refugees.

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www.aucklandrefugee.org.nz

 Our family's first involvement with refugees was in the mid 70s, a Vietnamese boat landed at the mouth of the Rejang River. The police presented Father with a letter written in Chinese.

The family was a Chan, and he addressed Father as cousin, claiming that they were the branch of the family who went to Vietnam. He heard that Father had become a big official, and asked if Father could sponsor his family to Sarawak.

Unfortunately, Malaysia's policy was to send the boat people away. Father was unable to help. He gave them some money. We never heard of them again.

When I came to New Zealand, through church, we befriended refugees from Vietnam and Cambodia.

Now I teach students, children and adults. I teach students from Somalia, Afghanistan, Sudan, Ethiopia, Kenya, the latest were 2 men from Tibet.

My life have been enriched through these connections. As long as there are wars, there will be refugees.




http://reducefootprints.blogspot.com/


our world/outdoor wed. a rainbow colour " flower mill."

Alphabe-Thursday letter F for fungus

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xylogenous means growing on wood, so I take it that the Chinese Ear Fungi is xylogenous.

I went for a walk to a park next to Mt Albert Grammar school. I came across this tree stump which has some Chinese Ear Fungi growing. I have never been here, so I walked rather slowly and clicked as I went along.

This fungi is eaten by the Chinese and has a rubbery texture. You can buy them in dry form, soak it to reconstitute and it expands about 5 times its size. Not many people like it as it feels slimy and rubbery. I used to pick them when I was a child in Borneo.

I remember reading how this Chinese man made his fortune in New Zealand by shipping them to China. The Kiwis, Pakehas and Maoris laughed at this China man, but he had the last laugh. He laughed all the way to the bank.

So now, I will be keenly looking at tree stumps and hope to make my millions.

Wood ear fungus

The first commercial sale of edible fungi in New Zealand was in the 1870s, when Taranaki merchant Chew Chong sent bags of dried wood-ear fungus (Auricularia cornea) to his homeland, China. The fungus was in demand for the crunchy, chewy texture it added to food.

Wood ear fungus grows naturally on dead trees in lowland forest. Tonnes were harvested as settlers cleared forest for farming, and exports to China continued until the 1950s. In the 2000s, the fungus is now mostly imported to New Zealand from China, in dry form. Taiwanese growers had started cultivating a closely related fungus on sawdust blocks in the 1960s, and it became uneconomic to harvest it in the wild. A small quantity is now grown in New Zealand for the domestic market.

Alphabe-Thursday letter F
http://jennymatlock.blogspot.co.nz/search/label/Alphabe-Thursday 

FSO:Open Theme Friday:

Alphabe-Thursday: G for grass

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This grass is called Sabah Snake grass . People claim that it cures cancer. When people are frustrated with the hopelessness of medicine, they go for traditional medicine. 

This reminds me of my Dad warning my Mum, "don't anyhow introduce people to take herbal medicine, when some one dies, then there will be big trouble

Photo: My cousin Lee Lee 's grass."Photo: What can I do with this ? Any ideas this plant is for what medicine ?



search/label/Alphabe-Thursday


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