Saturday, 5 December 2009

Bhopal: 25 years of poison

Indra Sinha, who was Booker-nominated for his book on the Bhopal disaster, explains why the gas leak that killed 20,000 people 25 years ago – and continues to create health problems for countless more – is still a national scandal

Bhopal: Tasleen and Zubin

Tasleen, 26, who was poisoned by the Bhopal gas leak, cares for her disabled daughter. All photographs by Alex Masi, all rights reserved

Animal's People
  1. by Indra Sinha
  2. 384pp,
  3. Simon & Schuster Ltd,
  4. £11.99

In September 1982, Bhopali journalist Raj Keswani wrote a terrifying story, the first of a series of articles, for the city's Jansatta daily. Bhopal was about to be annihilated. "It will take just an hour, at most an hour-and-a-half, for every one of us to die."

Keswani's information came from worried staff at the Union Carbide factory, where a worker, Ashraf Khan, had just been killed in a phosgene spill. The first world war gas was used in the production of MIC (methyl-isocyanate), a substance 500 times deadlier than hydrogen cyanide, and so volatile that unless kept in spotless conditions, refrigerated to 0C, it can even react explosively with itself. Cooling it slows reactions, buys time, but MIC is so dangerous that chemical engineers recommend not storing it at all unless absolutely necessary and then only in the tiniest quantities. In Bhopal it was kept in a huge tank, the size of a steam locomotive.

Far from the shining cathedral of science depicted in Union Carbide adverts, the Bhopal factory more closely resembled a farmyard. Built in the 70s to make pesticides for India's "green revolution", a series of bad monsoons and crop failures had left it haemorrhaging money.

Union Carbide bosses hoped to dismantle and ship the plant to Indonesia or Brazil, but finding no buyers, went instead on a cost-cutting spree.

Between 1980 and 1984 the workforce was halved. The crew of the MIC unit was cut from 12 to six, its maintenance staff from six to two. In the control room a single operator had to monitor 70-odd panels, indicators and controls, all old and faulty. Safety training was reduced from six months to two weeks – reduced in effect to slogans – but as the slogans were in English, the workers couldn't understand them.

By the time Keswani began his articles, the huge, highly dangerous plant was being operated by men who had next to no training, who spoke no English, but were expected to use English manuals. Morale was low but safety fears were ignored by management. Minor accidents happened routinely but were covered up. There were so many small leaks that the alarm siren was turned off to avoid inconveniencing the neighbours. A Union Carbide memo boasted of having saved $1.25m, but said that "future savings would not be so easy". There was nothing left to cut. Then bosses remembered the huge tank of MIC. They turned off its refrigeration to save freon gas worth $37 a day.

A 1982 safety audit by US engineers had noted the filthy, neglected condition of the plant, identified 61 hazards, 30 critical, of which 11 were in the dangerous MIC/phosgene units. The audit warned of the danger of a major toxic release.

Safety was duly improved at Union Carbide's other MIC plant in West Virginia. In Bhopal, where six serious accidents had occurred – one fatal, and three involving gas leaks – nothing was done.

If safety was ignored inside the plant, Union Carbide had no plan at all for the surrounding densely packed neighbourhoods. As the situation worsened, factory staff, fearing for their own lives and those living nearby, put up posters warning of a terrible danger. Keswani wrote begging the chief minister of Madhya Pradesh to investigate the factory before Bhopal "turns into Hitler's gas chamber". His sensational style, perhaps, caused him to be ignored. His final article, "We are all about to be annihilated", appeared just weeks before the gas disaster.

As night fell on 2 December 1984, none of the factory's safety systems was working. The vent gas scrubber lay in pieces. The flare tower was undersized. The siren stayed silent. Years later – too late for the thousands who would now die in unimaginably hideous ways – a prosecuting attorney would say that Union Carbide had demonstrated a "depraved indifference to human life".

'That night'

Safety slogans at the Union Carbide factory Bhopal Safety slogans at the Union Carbide factory were in English - not a language all the workers spoke

3 December 1984, just after midnight. Death came out of a clear sky. From Union Carbide's factory, a thin plume of white vapour began streaming from a high structure. Caught by the wind, it became a haze and blew downwards to mingle with smoke coming from somewhere nearer the ground. A dense fog formed. Nudged by the wind, it rolled across the road and into the alleys on the other side. Here houses were packed close, shoddily built, with ill-fitting doors and windows. Those within woke coughing, their eyes and mouths on fire. Across the city countless women were saying, "Hush darling, it's only someone burning chillies. Go back to sleep."

Survivors' leader Champa Devi Shukla says, "We woke with eyes crying, noses watering. The pain was unbearable. We were writhing, coughing and slobbering froth. People just got up and ran in whatever clothes they were wearing. Some were in their underclothes, others wore nothing at all. It was complete panic. Among the crowd of people, dogs, and even cows were running and trying to save their lives and crushing people as they ran. All climbed and scrambled over each other to save their lives."

In the stampedes through narrow alleys many were trampled to death. Some went into convulsions and dropped dead. Most, struggling to breathe as the gas ripped their lungs apart, drowned in their own body fluids.

Aziza Sultan had two young children and was pregnant with her third. When the panic began, her entire family ran out of their house. They were in night clothes and it was bitterly cold, but nothing mattered except to run. Outside in the lane, it appeared that a large number of people had passed that way. Shoes, slippers and shawls were strewn about. A thick gas cloud enveloped everything, reducing the streetlights to brown pinpoints.

"In the panic," Aziza recalls, "lots and lots of people were running, screaming for help, vomiting, falling down unconscious. Children were wrenched from their parents' grasp. Their cries were heartbreaking. I was terrified of losing my children. I was carrying my baby son Mohsin. My daughter Ruby was holding on to my kurta, she did not once let go. We had gone about 500 metres when my father-in law spotted a truck and told us to climb aboard. We couldn't, but he was tall and strong so he got in. In the confusion, instead of lifting up his grandson, he grabbed another little boy who was running around on his own. My mother-in-law was vomiting. She was a heart patient and Hamidia hospital was still two kilometres away, much of it uphill. Soon Mohsin was being sick on me. Ruby was also vomiting. We all fell on the ground. I had a miscarriage right there in the middle of the street, my body was covered with blood."

At least 8,000 people died on "that night". Half a million were injured. In the years since, as more people died of their injuries and illnesses caused by inhaling the gas, the death toll has risen above 20,000.

The long-predicted gas leak at Union Carbide was, and remains, the worst industrial disaster in history.

The aftermath

Thirteen-year-old Salman who lives near the Union Carbide factory in Bhopal Thirteen-year-old Salman, who lives near the Union Carbide factory, is blind, and has other serious health problems

Light came to city streets full of corpses sprawled in the agonised poses in which death had found them. They lay in heaps, limbs twisted, faces contorted.

In some places the dead were so many that it was impossible to walk without stepping on them. These were scenes from an apocalypse. The sun came up on choking, blinded people making their way to the hospitals. Some, desperate to relieve the agony in their eyes, were washing them in sewage water from the open drains.

The hospitals were full of the dying and doctors did not know how to treat them because they did not know which gas or gases had leaked, and Union Carbide would not release the information, claiming it was a "trade secret".

A quarter of a century later, Union Carbide and its owner, the Dow Chemical Company, which acquired it in 2001, still refuse to publish the results of studies into the effects of MIC. With or without these studies, 25 years of suffering prove that mass exposure to MIC destroys bodies, minds, families and a whole society.

Abdul Mansuri speaks for thousands. "My breathing problems started after the gas and got worse and worse. I can truthfully say that I have never had a day's health, or a day without pain, since 'that night'." For some the pain, physical, mental, emotional, has been too much.

Kailash Pawar was a young man. "My body is the support of my life," he said. "When my breathing is normal I feel like living. But when it becomes heavy, thinking stops and absolute pain takes over. I have become worthless." He was still in his 20s when he doused himself in kerosene and struck a match.

Today in Bhopal, more than 100,000 people remain chronically ill.

The compensation paid by Union Carbide, meant to last the rest of their lives, averaged some £300 a head: taken over 25 years that works out at around 7p a day, enough perhaps for a cup of tea.

Over the years the survivors have received little medical help. Being mostly very poor, they were often treated rudely. Government doctors would refuse to touch them. They were theoretically entitled to free treatment but were prescribed expensive drugs they did not need and which in some cases actually harmed them. In 1994 the Indian government, eager to put the gas leak behind it, shut down all research studies into the effects of the gas, just as new epidemics of cancers, diabetes, eye defects and crippling menstrual disorders were beginning to appear.

Abandoned by all who had a duty of care, the survivors decided to open their own clinic. In 1994, an advertisement appeared in the Guardian, launching the Bhopal Medical Appeal. The generous response of this newspaper's readers and others enabled the survivors to buy a building, hire medical staff and begin training. In 1996 the Sambhavna Clinic opened its doors, offering survivors a combination of modern medicine, ayurvedic herbal treatments, yoga and massage. Consultations, treatments, therapies, medicines and post-treatment monitoring are all absolutely free.

The water poisoning

A young girl in the monsoon rains of Bhopal When the monsoon rain falls in Bhopal, it seeps through buried waste before filling up and polluting the underground resevoirs

After the night of horror, the factory was locked up. Thousands of tonnes of pesticides and waste remained inside. Union Carbide never bothered to clean it. The chemicals were abandoned in warehouses open to wind and rain.

Twenty-four monsoons have rusted and rotted the death factory. The rains wash the poisons deep into the soil. They enter the groundwater and seep into wells and bore pipes. They gush from taps and enter people's bodies. They burn stomachs, corrode skin, damage organs and flow into wombs where they go to work on the unborn. If babies make it into the world alive, the poisons are waiting in their mothers' milk.

Atal Ayub Nagar is a slim strip of housing sandwiched between Union Carbide's factory wall and the railway line. It used to have no handpumps and fetching water meant a trek to a well in Shakti Nagar, half a mile to the south. People clubbed together to install two handpumps. At first the water seemed OK, but then oily globules began appearing. The water acquired a chemical smell, which grew gradually worse.

A private Union Carbide memo, obtained via a US court case, reveals that as far back as 1989 the company had tested soil and water inside the factory. Fish introduced to the samples died instantly. The danger to drinking water supplies was obvious, but Carbide issued no warnings. Its bosses in India and the US watched silently as families already ruined by their gases drank, and bathed their kids in poisoned water.

In Atal Ayub Nagar, many damaged babies were being born. The situation did not improve after the state government took possession of the site in 1998. The following year, when Greenpeace was testing soil and water around the factory, it visited this place and found carbon tetrachloride in one of the handpumps at levels 682 times higher than US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) limits. People drank this water, washed their clothes and bathed in it.

In August 2009, a sample of water from the same handpump was analysed by a Greenpeace laboratory in the UK. Carbon tetrachloride was found at 4,880 times the EPA limit. In the last decade, the water has become seven times more poisonous.

Rehana is a nine-year-old from Atal Ayub Nagar. She was born without a left thumb, her growth is retarded, her mind is weak and she hasn't the strength to go to school. Rehana's vision is not good, she's plagued by rashes and is constantly breathless.

Her father sadly asks, "Why was fate so cruel to our poor child?"

Why was fate so cruel?

A boy sits on the wall of the former Union Carbide industrial complex The factory was abandoned by Union Carbide, who did not clean it out after the accident

Long before "that night" there had been troubling rumours, mysterious deaths of cattle grazing near the factory. Babulal Gaur, a Bhopal lawyer, mediated a settlement between Union Carbide and the aggrieved farmers.

In 2004, Gaur became a minister in the local BJP government and to him fell the duty of caring for the city's gas survivors. He told the Christian Science Monitor that the Union Carbide factory had contaminated the groundwater, and complained that the previous Congress government had tried to hush the matter up.

In May 2004, India's Supreme Court ordered the state to supply clean water to the poisoned communities. Gaur's government ignored this order.

A year passed and a group of women and children went to the government offices to ask why nothing had been done. They were savagely beaten, punched and kicked by police. Weeks later Gaur, by now promoted to chief minister of Madhya Pradesh, announced an ambitious £120m plan to beautify the city with ornamental fountains and badminton courts.

To mark the 25th anniversary of the gas leak, Gaur, demoted to Bhopal gas tragedy relief and rehabilitation minister, announced that he would open the derelict factory site to the public. There was no water contamination, he said, echoing Indian environment minister Jairam Ramesh, who, with curious naivety, told journalists that he had handled some waste and not become ill.

A cynic remarked that this was like touching a cigarette and saying, "Look, I haven't got lung cancer."

Denying that contamination exists clearly serves the company's interests. No doubt it is mere coincidence that the Dow Chemical Company, has made at least one donation to Gaur's party, the BJP.

This sordid little tale is itself an echo of the bigger machinations at the centre, where Dow has been trying to twist the arm of Manmohan Singh's Congress government into letting it off the Bhopal hook in return for a billion-dollar investment in India.

When people ask, "Why is the disaster continuing? Why has the factory not been cleaned? Why have Union Carbide and Dow not faced justice?", the answer is this: Union Carbide's victims are still dying in Bhopal because India itself is dying under the corrupt and self-serving rule of rotten leaders.

Indra Sinha is the author of Animal's People, a novel based on the Bhopal disaster.

For more on the Bhopal Medical Appeal: bhopal.org

Monday, 30 November 2009

Africa




The thing to do in South Africa is see the wild life. National Geographic and the Discovery Channel have scoured the whole of Africa for their progamming. Most of this originates in South Africa, the research, the education, the guides, the languages, the permits etc. It is an industry.

Having watched all these programs on cable, parents choose South Africa as the 'safe' country to bring their kids to get further educated and experience what the world without television and technology is. To show them what real wild animals in real untouched, unfarmed vegetation looks and feels like. In South Africa, one can find a malaria free game lodge to be guided round to see such animals.



If not a safari, there are many zoos - Pretoria which is 1/2 an hour away from Johannesburg has a better zoo than Joburg, apparently, drive through animal parks, places to pet and observe baby lions and giraffes, breeding centres that offer tours, animal sanctuaries, the largest cage in the world (that houses unwanted and rescued exotic bird and monkey species from around the world).



I said earlier that this is now an industry. South African universities leads the world in animal research like how wild animals behave and how to keep them like in the wild, how to breed them etc. I am sure they produce the world's best vets too. Everywhere we see advertisements for Game Lodges.

A South African can invest in opening a eco friendly game lodge. Turn your parents' farm into a game lodge, we'll help you learn how to run a B&B, find and choose the wild animals your grand parents hunted on game auctions, re plant vegetation from wheat to the original species and invite tourists to stay and enjoy a 'real safari experience'. These game lodges offer 2 safari tours a day, all meals included (I doubt its a la carte), a spa with healing therapies, library and full leather furnishings in the public area and english breakfast type bedrooms. You can get your plastic surgery done in Joburg by top surgeons And recover in a game-lodge-spa-healing centre all for the cost of doing the same thing in London.



Their expert breeding techniques allows a visitor to hunt down rare a white lion. The whiteness in a white lion is a product of a recessive gene, but hey, they take better photos dead. In Joburg, I was exposed to the existence of people who like to hunt, in this day. One can pay to hire a gun (I am not sure if you can export your own gun from the US/UK to the SA, though in the airports there are counters for you to surrender your gun before boarding a plane - can they be taken internationally or only regionally?? I do not know.) Anyway, you can hire a gun, a vehicle, a guide (pay extra for someone to recommend an exceptional guide) to hunt a wild animal. Just like they did in the old days when they did it for survival, just like they do in the movies.

Edit 9 Nov 2014 I found this website about canned lions which tells the story about the lion in a petting zoo or safari. They are bred for the hunt and all the money they can suck out of tourists till the day they are killed on the 'hunt'.

Now that's a reality experience holiday - why just head for a beach? The comment I read was, at least in South Africa they breed the lions/zebra for the hunt, not like in Zimbabwe where you get driven to a place in the savannah where the guide has tied the real wild animal to a tree for you to shoot and then taken a picture with.

And what do they do with the dead carcass? Just keep the photo? Replace their grandfathers taxidermied wall hangings in their dining rooms?



We visited a lion park, and depending on when the bred lions have mated and born a baby lion the tourist can get to pet them for 10 minutes. These poor babies, have a stream of American tourists who walk into the cage and touch them. One of these young ones was fast asleep (lions sleep for 18 hours a day, that allows a baby lion to sleep for - how long???) and most approachable. So everyone queued up to take a photo with their hands on his back. Would you like being touched the whole time you are sleeping? Well - Nathan would say yes - he likes a cuddle while he sleeps.. And how do these baby lions grow up? What are their attitudes to humans after this experience? Are these the ones who are bred for the hunt? I guess they will die anyway, so it doesnt matter?

A experienced tour operator mentioned to me. Her opinion of one of the game lodges I was looking at was that it was new and had a lot of local involvement in the management of its safari. But she didnt like the animals there. The wild animals had been brought over from Zambia and Zimbabwe. Their experience of humans was at the other end of a hunt and being killed. Therefore they were more aggressive towards humans if we came too close to them in safari - whether to watch them or accidentally stumble upon them.

Her take was that the wild animals in the Kruger National Park (which is not malaria free and being a National Park allows visitors to enter alone at their own risk and camp) has real wild animals who are more natural and kinder than the other safari park I mentioned. Now, is this kindness or less agression a result of their constant but unthreatened experience with people. How does the experience of people who point camera's at you all day differ from those who point a gun at you affect an animal? Does it make them less wild? I probably have to research the definition of wild and tame and if the meaning has changed over the years.



In starck contrast, we visited the Knysna Elephant sanctuary and took the photos of the elephants on the top. There were no Knysna Elephants in this sanctuary. The Knysna Elephant who is slightly different from the African Elephant was almost completely hunted out by the Europeans and Zulu's who shared the narrow coastline between mountains behind Cape Town - Knysna and the coast for their ivory and . There are 5 elephants who were sighted in 1980. There is better news about the survival of these elephants in this film. Elephants have really bad eyesight, but extremely good sense of smell. This probably helps in forests where one can smell but not see through trees.

These elephants therefore want to and are successful in keeping away from humans.

Monday, 23 November 2009

I *Heart* Johannesburg


Zoo Lake


Johannesburg is such a lovely city. It has a warm inclusive intelligent culture and a place I'd love a chance to live in. It would take a while to discover because of the crime rates, but hey what's good that's not worth some hardships?

  1. It has wonderfully temperate weather. It is on a plateau and therefore cooler in summer with lots of sunshine in winter than the surrounding areas.
  2. It has 10 million trees in it and I love trees.
  3. Its people are open, intelligent and considerate.
  4. The garbage collection services are called PIKI TUP.
  5. Even the cheesy bird park next to the Monte casino has the most fascinating birds and animals.
  6. It has Woolworths. It has a healthy very accessible organic market and eco friendly options. This company has soft connections with Marks and Spencer in the UK. Its products are similar in range, quality and style but a heck of a lot more affordable. Shopping!!
  7. It has beautiful settings for people to enjoy. Decent restaurants with children's entertainment. Shopping neighbourhoods with great playgrounds.
  8. Some people who do crazy things like walk along the highway, sell conveniences at traffic lights, slip alcohol to  buy on a Sunday. 
  9. Has a large and diverse population. A true multicultural city with people from all over Africa speaking in different languages (an average black African in Joburg speaks 3 languages and English to be able to communicate amongst themselves)

Saturday, 14 November 2009

Military Museum, Johannesburg


Original German fighter plane complete with crash damage.

This miniature wooden riding boot had a panel on the top to put things in. When the panel was slid open a snake with a pin as a fang would jump out. This snake was a symbol of guerilla warfare. I have seen/bought a container with a snake that jumps out. It gives quite a fright. I gave it to Ross Turner and I hope he still has it. I thought it was rather special. I was surprised to see the origins of this snake trick box in this museum.

Wonderful symbol on a German fighter plane. Its a young boy crapping on Uncle Sam's hat. Whoo hoo.!

Tuesday, 10 November 2009

Retail Industry

Now...

Why would an industry do this? Or why would a country allow the industry to do this? What sort of statistics Are they compiling?

I was entering my bills as I do, and came to the gift purchase I bought at Singapore airport. In the receipt printed out for me, the following information came after the name and contact details of the shop.

SalesMan Code 101 asilah
Nationality 22
Sex F

Before the list of purchases, total, payment method, date and "Please Keep your receipt for Exchange!!! Thank You. Have a Nice Day"

Why would any retail outlet want to classify the nationality and sex of its staff on duty? Is it to study behaviour characteristics of their staff and to project future staffing criteria? How can a country allow such blatant racism and sexism?

I will certainly keep this receipt and scan it to include in this post.

Friday, 6 November 2009

Amanita Design


This is my favourite games designer.
http://www.amanitadesign.com/


Its also my son's favourite games. The picture below is his a clip he likes.



Amanita has come out with a new game called Machinarium.

Amanita Design




Friday, 28 August 2009

What we should not forget



http://www.humanrights.de/doc_en/countries/sri-lanka/make_a_stand.html

http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2009/aug/26/sri-lanka-tamil-video-footage

http://www.tamilnet.com/art.html?catid=13&artid=30080

The shelling of the civilian hospital in the North, the so called no go zone.

Saturday, 4 July 2009

Bye bye Tokyo

Today we leave Tokyo.

First we packed our bags to leave with the concierge. Then we went out with the Turners to see Asimo and have lunch at Joel Rubichon. Unfortunately, he was full so we went upstairs to a soba restaurant.

After we left them to get on the shinkansen to Kyoto, we did our last shopping expedition to Cat Street Marmmut, Patagonia and those types.

Got the bus to the airport and left.

Saturday, 20 June 2009

Clothes I

I was driving along when a lady caught my attention. She looked like a dance or gym teacher; a slim Chinese lady. Then I realised I thought she was Chinese and not Japanese. I did not make this distinction from her facial features. It was her clothes: she was wearing a singlet top with gym pants that didnt leave much unnoticed. This seemed to mark her as a foreigner and not Japanese.

I looked around and realised, Japanese people are prudish in their dressing. To keep warm in winter and keep the sun from their skins in summer, we never see their skin. They wear 2 layers most times a inner shirt and a coat. The outer coat always makes them presentable. Never a T shirt and jeans kind of culture.

Thursday, 11 June 2009

Save Bastion Point: result

The minister has decided to go ahead with building a wall to upgrade the boat ramp.

The 178 page EES Inquiry report, and the Minister's 14 page justification for ignoring it, can be found at:

http://www.dse.vic.gov.au/DSE/nrenpl.nsf/LinkView/A684ED3F5775D64DCA256F2A000EDE6592FBC7C133A6F520CA2572DA007FAB8B

Our Media release is attached, and is also available from our website.

The Ministers media release is at http://www.premier.vic.gov.au/minister-for-planning/safety-first-for-new-bastion-point-boat-ramp.html

Tuesday, 2 June 2009

Tokyo Tower

Views from Tokyo Tower




Wednesday, 13 May 2009

Crayon rocks

Crayon rocks

These are the most adorable portable crayons I've ever seen. Cute huh? and beautiful. Perfect for traveling.

Added 11 Sep 2011: I bought some!!! for Jun - he can practise drawing with these soon. 

Saturday, 9 May 2009

Nagasaki Peace Memorial Hall for Atomic Bomb Victims



Everyone who was in the city died within 3 years of the bomb blast. A few who lived in the surrounding areas survived to tell the tales. Many who visited Nagasaki in the following 2 years were affected by the radioactivity of the surrounds.

The city was flattened except for the church and metal objects.

Thursday, 30 April 2009

Anpanman Museum, Kochi City



A wonderful museum! Although a small museum, it was just right for small children.

Designed by Nobuyaki Furuya and got a commondation from the 2000 Annual Architectural Design Commondation.

You enter into the large space which seems to be the size of the building. There are the inviting steps to the next floor. Tiny children with parents are milling around, looking on the exhibits on the floor and reading the books from the creatively located bookshelves. I recognise the stairs from the promotional photo. Up we go!

The top floor had originals from the creator of Anpanman, Takashi Yanase.

We follow the path that leads us via a corridor on the outer wall, outside on the 2nd floor, inside again through the narrowest staircase with special exhibits to the welcoming entrance hall.

Where next? We spot another door. It leads us to the basement. Aha - the children's floor. All the exhibits are children size. Small, cute, and full of anpanman, baikinman, a bakery, details of their vehicles and a large space with ALL the anpanman characters.

Miraculously we didnt have to visit the shop, as Nathan was happy with the shoplet at the restaurant.

There is a hotel within the grounds, and more buildings, a swimming pool and sculptures to explore. 1 hour and lunch there, was enough the satisfy Nathan while we got on our way.

Monday, 27 April 2009

Ise





On the way we stopped where we saw a small playground. While Nathan played on the wooden structure, extracting spinters into his fingers, we explored. It looked like a old abandoned home with this empty swimming pool at the top. The home was on a side of this hill overlooking mountains and forests. It occupied several levels below this swimming pool. One level had a concrete safe ramp so you could drive to it. It seems it is now used as a school excursion camp area.

In the middle of this wonderful forested area.

Saturday, 25 April 2009

Kurokawa



This capsule like apartments was designed by Kurokawa, who designed KLIA in Malaysia. It is in Ginza

Friday, 24 April 2009



Great entertainment! Fanstastic!

Wednesday, 15 April 2009

Save Bastion Point


Save Bastion Point Campaign



Why is Bastion Point special?

Town divided as development row ramps up

Here is an article about the boat ramp in Mallacoota. The decision to build the boat ramp should be out soon, we are all waiting patiently in anticipation to the ministers verdict.

ABC has more news about Mallacoota

Tuesday, 14 April 2009

Mori Art Museum



We went to the Mori Art Museum today to see the Kaleidoscope Eye exhibition. A Thyssen-Bornemisza exhibition. Nathan came along and he loved it. It was lovely to see him enjoy and appreciate the installations. They were amazing even to him.

Thursday, 9 April 2009

Disneyland


We went to Disneyland with Darshini and Suba. I do not understand the hype about Disneyland. Perhaps I would have liked it at 10 but I am not 10. The first time I was there, I was curious. This time it was like watching a bad movie twice. I think what puts me off Disneyland is the bad food they have.

Shoes in disneyland


The only way to really enjoy Disneyland is to be completely comfortable. The stress of 'what to do next' and carrying tons of baby equipment has to disappear.

Wear bedroom slippers, funny ears, costume up and wonder around eating pop corn, watching people and doing the tomorrowland mountain journey thingy over and over again.

Wednesday, 8 April 2009

Shibuya shopping

After spending the morning beautifying themselves, we had a Japanese lunch of tempura and soba followed by



the BEST shop in the world!

I bought


bikkura.jpg

some sushi playdough that you put in the microwave to become something else.



Tuesday, 7 April 2009

Cirque Du Soleil: Corteo


Went to watch this today. Beautiful. Wonderful. The production was breathtaking. A circus wonderfully presented with magical displays and colourful costumes. The choreography seamless. Balanced imagery.

Loved it.

Sakura blossoms


I am upset! I told Stephen he could delete all the photos on the camera before he went on Nathan's hanamatsuri trip and he did. He deleted all our sakura photos we took in the park next door.
I have this one we took on the way to see Corteo.

Monday, 6 April 2009

Departo



One day I shall explore this department store.

So far, I know,
  • Takeshimaya, Shinjuku (good supermarket, Tokyu Hands)
  • Keio, Shinjuku (great household floor)
  • Odakyu, Shinjuku (so so)
  • Isetan, Shinjuku (great food hall, mens department, I'm sure womens too)
  • Matsuya, Asakusa (liked the children's floor, crowded)
  • Mitsukoshi, Shinjuku, Ginza and Mitsukoshimae (boring in Ginza and Shinjuku but the main store in Mitsukoshimae has a great food hall).

Mikimoto





I dared not walk into this shop. Why be tempted?

I was told this black/brown building facade has to be seen at night when the lighting reflects on the facade.

Sakura blossom





We went to the Imperial Palace on Monday and the gardens was closed. No matter, we caught some excellent sakura blooms near the entrance to the main palace. We are not allowed to enter here, so we all watched from outside. Our visitors visited another beautiful garden, Hama Rikyu garden that afternoon for their tea ceremony.

Sunday, 5 April 2009

Hanamatsuri


Nathan attended the hanamatsuri parade in celebration of Buddha's birthday. The parade was organised by the local council and they walked around Azabu Juban shopping street. Kindergarten children were allowed to participate. For a fee they got dressed up (in rented costumes) made up and waited and waited. Finally they pulled a chariot of an Elephant to a dias where they bathed a statue of Buddha with tea.

The elephant looked very odd in this Japanese / Oriental setting. But Buddha is from India and the elephant represents where he came from. I heard a few mutterings about why is there an elephant in Japan? I really like how the Japanese always represent facts and knowledge in its most honest form. Facts are stated in its purest and truest form for everyone to understand. They also have this large sense of responsibility to everyone around them.

Thursday, 2 April 2009

redorangeflowers



I am trying to make this my background. Will I be successful?