Left Taiwan briefly on another visa-run, this time to Hong-Kong and Macau. I hung out in HK while Angela and her folks went to a Wedding in Shanghai, and then met up with them in Macau, which is a short ferry ride from HK (pt2). Hong Kong city was predictably bustling, but also surprisingly multicultural, but perhaps thats just in contrast to Taipei, where white folk and (gasp) Africans still frighten small children with their rarity. The area in HK (actually Kowloon, across the bay) where I was staying is full of Indians, Pakistanis and Africans hawking suits, knock off watches, curry, hashish, massage, "massage", electronics etc etc. Needless to say I indulged greatly in the curry...:P

I stayed in the (in)famous ChungKing Mansions which consists of several floors of small shops selling luggage, clothes, internet access, electronics and (more) curry, with layers of packed cheap accommodation above. The room I got was about as small as you could get without being a capsule hotel, but it was clean enough, and I had my own shower. The view from the stairwell is uniquely Hong Kong I think, along with the smell (if only I could photograph that) and microclimate (always raining).

I ditched my stuff and headed out of town, to discover the strangely paradoxical thing about HK - its about the most densely populated place on the planet, but its really easy to escape the city and be in wild hills with roaming water-buffalo. The city just stops when the hills start (see panorama). So I went and explored the boulders in the nearby
Twen Wan area. Very nice coarse granite on a hilltop with a pleasant breeze to take the worst of the heat. Lovely.

In the evening me and some whisky went for a donder down the Kowloon waterfront, from where you can enjoy the famous view of central Hong Kong at night.


Spent the next couple of days wandering the town staring at unfeasibly tall buildings, almost dying of heat stroke hiking round the "Monkey Mountain" area (sadly lacking in monkeys apart from by the road, and they're all feral rhesus and long-tail macaques, the indigenous population having been previously hunted to extinction), eating more curry (I recommend the "Khyber Pass Mess Club" in Chung King. Says its private, but just go in - its just a licensing dodge), and twisting my ankle descending from more bouldering (doh).
Finally, while I hobbled round the streets of downtown HK on friday night, weaving through the crowds of partygoers and soaring glass towers, I came across this scene, which I think illustrates the divide between bustling affluence and abject poverty that often sadly characterises economic hotspots like HK.

As usual, you can click on any picture to see a full-size version...