Tom Visits Yunnan…and pays for it

So in my ongoing quest to try and visit every place in China I haven’t been to yet, I decided over Christmas break to travel to Yunnan Province. Yunnan certainly has more to see in it than most provinces in China, though is often overlooked by people travelling to China for a few weeks. For people visiting China for the first (And perhaps only) time tend to prioritize three or four big parts of China, those being Xi’an (Terracotta Army), Beijing, Shanghai and occasionally Sichuan province to see a giant panda. These attractions locations can easily fill out a two or even a three week trip! Luckily being stuck in China does afford you generally the amount of time to see much of it. That said there were consequences to my travel. Consequences most dire!

Yunnan is a southernly province of China west of Hong Kong and bordering a bunch of south east asian states

The red bit is Yunnan.

It’s got some of China’s only true tropical rain forests and is also home to many Chinese ethnic-minority groups, so many infact that its the only province in China wherein’ the ethnic minorities reach 30% of the total population! Because of it’s close adjacency to both Tibet and Thailand it’s also the only province wherein you find all three flavors of Buddhism. (Thai, Chinese and Tibetan)

The Ethnic minorities in China are numerous and at times seem to blend together due to their shared love for bright colors, beads and fancy head gear.

I could go indepth about the various groups and their customs but for the sake of making this blog not onerous to read through I’ll just summarize it. Basically the Minorities other than the real big ones like the Mongolians, Uyghurs, Hui, Manchus and Tibetans tend to be descended from tribal people who whilst nominally living within the Chinese Empire did not actively engage with the larger Han Chinese Culture. This was largely due to living outside of the larger walled Chinese cities and often times deep in the back country/forests/jungles/remote regions. Consequently they tend to be found in large numbers traditionally near the borders of Chinese territory and other countries. Today there are 55 such groups and they receive a controversial amount of extra support from the government. They rose to a somewhat privileged position after the communist party was established in 1949. This is in part because of the heavy support they had led Mao and the communists throughout the 1920s,30s and 40s. Having no love for the Qing Dynasty which had often persecuted them and little love for the Republic of China which largely ignored the minorities/excluded them, they chose to throw their lot in with Mao. It paid off in some ways, the overall minority population in China has risen dramatically and they can enter Chinese national universities with lower test scores. This has created some resentment amongst Han Chinese (Majority) people, but on the other hand Chinese minorities, especially those in Yunnan still overwhelmingly live in poverty. It’s startlingly quite similar to other minority vs majority situations you find in Canada and other diverse countries. The minority groups themselves are also quite often (Somewhat uncomfortably) paraded about and treated a bit like a human zoo by Chinese and foreign tourists a like.

Note the Blonde back packer and huge camera wielding domestic tourist.

Oh some of them also live in really cool round wooden houses.

The first stop on my journey was Kunming. Kunming is the capital of Yunnan and home to its largest airport. Many people visit Kunming as a starting off point for their Yunnan trip and its got a few cool things to see. First of all, unlike many Chinese cities it is very very hilly with the city straddling the side of a small mountain.

City view from Green Lake Park

Throughout China you can find rental bikes, they’re pretty much ubiquitous. Excitedly in Kunming they’ve stepped things up a bit by also having electric bicycles and full on scooters! They cost about 1GBP per hour to hire.

They aren’t terribly fast topping out at about 25 km/hr but it certainly made sight seeing around the city a lot easier on my feet and I was able to get a lot more done than I could have done otherwise, other than ratcheting up a high taxi bill.

Now I’ve had the same Lonely Planet china book since I first got to China, it hasn’t actually been updated since (Though the newest edition is coming out in a few weeks now) this book was published in 2018 and since the pandemic hit its has become incredibly out of date. Making matters worse I left my copy at home! I found a .PDF of the previous edition from 2015…so now I was really out of date. Still I figured some things like museums couldn’t have changed.

I was wrong

Behold the Provincial History Museum of Kunming….well it used to be. Location Changed and it’s now just a strange half finished art galley. Turned out the actual museum had relocated to faaaar south of the center of the city.

Its big

The museum was pretty comprehensive, with dinosaurs, early humans and generally speaking the history of Yunnan province up to the modern day. It also featured that ongoing strange theory that humans originate in China.

So you know there was that. Kunming also has some pretty colourful and impressive temples, but generally speaking most people do not spend much time here as it’s more of a hub to the rest of Yunnan. Though it’s biggest temple is quite unique for having a little Thai style Buddhist temple inside of it, which was given as a gift to Kunming by the previous King of Thailand himself!

That being said I did see some pretty cool things in Kunming. Such as this nuclear family skateboarding in Green Lake Park.

I also managed to track down a place selling Yunnan’s famous (In China atleast) Crossing the Bridge Noodle soup.

Basically its a form of hot pot wherein you get a big bowl of hot chicken soup and then a big selection of toppings to add in. This serving I got was meant for one person and about the mid-tier in toppings/ingredients which you then add in yourself. The name of the soup comes from a (Probable myth) about a Confucian scholar who was working out on an office in Green Lake. Every evening his wife would travel across the bridge to the island based office with a hot pot of soup which was sealed to keep in the heat in. To make his meals interesting she always brought him different ingredients to add into the soup then and there to ensure it was still quite fresh. Freshness of Chinese food is kind of a big thing within China. It’s why when people panic buy they stock up on an absurd amount of quick to spoil vegetables.

Kunming is also famous as a stepping off point for visiting these:

Karst stone formations which are often referred to as the stone forest. It’s a national park and one of the must see’s within central Yunnan or just southern China in general. They formed millions of years ago from erosion and glacier movements and all across this portion of Yunnan you can find these rather random and often quite tall pillars of stone jutting out of the grass. The Stone Forest is famous for just being so densely populated with them.

And densely filled with tourists wiggling through the gaps between the stones.

It really is quite a maze. Though the ride from Kunming is about 2 hours by taxi and there really simply wasn’t enough shuttle buses no doubt due to the ongoing concerns about the pandemic.

A more popular city for tourists (but not while I was there) is Dali. Dali is north of Kunming and has been a popular stop for backpackers in China since the early 1990s. Since then it’s really expanded and commercialised more for domestic Chinese tourists. That said it still has one whole kilometre long street simply called ‘Foreigners street’. Primarily because in the 90s dozens of western restaurants, hostels and bars popped up along it. The street is still home to many western style places to eat and drink though the hostels have largely moved outside of the increasingly expensive old city. Dali is famous throughout China for its quite well preserved triple Pagodas which were built about 1200 years ago.

Because Dali lies at the base of a mountain range and rolls relatively flatly down into lake Erhai (One of the largest lakes and the highest elevated lake in China) the Pagodas are visible from up to 20 km’s away. From afar they all look about the same height, but as you can see from the photo up close they are strikingly different in height. They are in the front of a massively reconstructed Buddhist temple which slowly rises up along the side of the plain and into the mountains.

Interestingly as you get near the top you are greeted by two halls of arhats. Sculpted by an artist I also encountered (Well not literally I saw his other sculptures) in a little buddhist temple hidden up in the mountains overlooking Kunming. The artist was known as Li Guangxiu. In the 1880s he sculpted literally hundreds of absurd, life sized and quite frankly hilarious/creepy looking Arhats.

The ones found in the Bamboo Temple overlooking Kunming were hand painted by him and they’re absurd designs got him a lot of flack/trouble back when he first made them due to their rather undignified and at times bizarre designs.

Some even had super stretchy limbs/body parts.

Apparently before he retired he made another 800 and covered them in Gold Leaf in Dali. I took a few pictures of them. To be honest it was rather creepy to be walking up and down those long dusty corridors, poorly lit and surrounded by manic looking Arhats.

That being said empty/abandoned was how a lot of Dali felt. I was travelling at Christmas time which isn’t a holiday for most Chinese people, so that was one factor. The other factor was the sheer non-existence of foreign visitors from outside of China. The final factor was likely hesitancy to travel very far or very much during the pandemic. This resulted in a new difficulty for me. Finding where to eat.

(Dali Old City when more crowded)

Normally my tactic is to just walk along the street and go into whichever restaurant seems to have the largest crowd of people in it. No luck this time as most restaurants were empty with just bored looking staff seated in them on their phones waiting for someone to come in. Furthermore my totally out of date Lonely Planet guide just brought me to non-existent restaurant after non-existent restaurant. Eventually I journeyed out of the Old City and into the new city where things were a bit more lively and managed to find a place that did some Dali famous dishes. Dali and all of Yunnan is well known within China for it’s Mushrooms and Lake Fish. This is when I came up against another problem whilst travelling in Yunnan, portion sizes. You see Chinese people normally eat together as a family or with friends and will order 3-9 different things which they then communally share. Consequently they don’t really make portions for just one person unless its a fast food place.

So yeah. That was a problem. Quite tasty though.

Interestingly Dali and Yunnan in general is also famous for its cheese. Cheese is not an overly popular food in China or atleast it hasn’t been traditionally. But many of the ethnic minorities in Southern China keep cows, goats, sheep etc. and milk them. Consequently a popular street snack in Dali is wrapped up and fried cheese which they then sprinkle sugar onto.

It looks a bit like this.

The weather was quite good here most days and I decided to spend one day just cycling along Lake Erhai. This quite long lake which is roughly shaped like a human ear (Hence the name which basically means…ear) I set off to visit Xizhou, a small ancient town about 30 kms north of Dali. The lake has a really nice and well pathed bicycle path along it littered with guest houses, hotels and people posing for wedding photographs.

It was a rather interesting ride as well as whenever I got bored of the lake view, I could turn off and into one of the dozens of villages which run along the front of the lakes. There are so many tiny little villages which have been there since the Ming Dynasty with many tiny temples and 600 yearold stone bridges spanning the little rivers which flow down from the mountains and into Lake Erhai.

Many of these villages have a big Bodhi tree in the centre of the village square.

After I got back into Dali I decided to drop off my bicycle and go up to the highest peak overlooking the city. This was probably the longest cable ride I’ve ever been on as the peak actually lies behind several other mountains which you need to scale and then zip across, so oddly a lot of the ride was actually quite flat. Altogether the cable car took 40 minutes to get to the top.

Once I got to the top I immediately noticed the lack of oxygen. I had previously laughed at the idea of buying canned air (Which many of the shops sell to would be hikers) but a combination of not having brought my winter jacket and the sheer elevation, at which level there was snow, did make me lose my breath a bit.

Also this sign at the men’s restroom made me laugh a bit.

All those steps to get to the top of the mountain also probably didn’t help much.

Near the top of the mountain is Ximatan glacial lake. It is said that Kublai Khan (Grandson of Genghis Khan) stopped here briefly with his horses to give them a bath in this big natural and very highly elevated pool

Sadly what I saw looked nothing like the pictures. Just a barred crater of slate.

Unfortunately the view from the top was obscured by fog and cloud, so didn’t get to see much from the very highest point.

That being said the view of Dali going up and down along the cable car line was fantastic!

After I got back down and more oxygen in my lungs I saw I had enough time to do something else, so I sought out Dali’s OTHER pagoda. The one no one visits. I had spied it from high up on the cable way and saw that it was easily walkable from the calbe-ways parking lot. Unfortunately this did take me through some wasteland and when I finally got close to the pagoda and I was blocked off by a 400 year old stonewall.

But ever foolhardy and undeterred I decided to follow the wall towards the nearby residential area and found my way up a path and through a half open construction gate to find this.

This temple complex was utterly gutted and destroyed during the Cultural Revolution, mostly be teenagers and young adults spurned on by Chairman Mao to destroy the old. There is something funny about the same young adults (Or possibly not them specifically) 50 years later being the ones primarily volunteering to rebuild them. Notably all of the workers looked to be in their early 60s or older. I’ve mentioned before on this blog how in China often the beautiful ancient temples you see are….largely reconstructed. It would seem all that survived here was the Pagoda and in a few years (Or months) they intend to reopen this temple complex and it will look something like this.

I was happy enough to sneak around, take some pictures and do a very tourist photo with the pagoda.

I made one final visit to the cities old Catholic Church (Built in the 1860s by French Missionaries). Oddly enough it is designed largely using Chinese architectural features though the murals are certainly old and new testament. The interior itself looks quite Catholic.

My next stop was going a bit further north to Lijiang. Lijiang sits at the very start of the Himalayan mountains and is another popular tourist stop for people travelling across Yunnan. Famous for it’s mountains, old city and the nearby Tiger Leaping Gorge.

Oh and this water wheel…for some reason. Oh and also really good Bai cuisine like this spicy pork!

They also have a very nice giant statue of Mao.

Also this really cool Imperial garden which the Emperor used to visit which has a great view of Jade Snow Dragon Mountain.

Though it was a bit annoying/sad to see the locals bullying some minnows swimming in an offshoot of the main mountain pool.

This time I prepared myself better for the high elevation as I knew it would be a 1000 meters higher than the mountain in Dali so I put on my winter clothes and took yet another cable car up the side of a mountain. Jade Snow Dragon Mountain actually has the highest elevated cable car in all of china and perhaps the world as it soars 4,600 meters up to the top of the mountain, well near the top. Once you get up there, you still have a few hundred meters of stairs to climb. The snow is so thick up there that a team of snow-blowers have to periodically clear snow from the stairs.

Up here I caught the attention of a young Chinese man named Wei who had enough of a grip on English to strike a conversation with me. As we were both travelling alone we decided to spend the rest of our time in Lijiang together, which proved quite advantageous as it gave me someone else to take photos of me with and a travelling companion for a few days.

After checking out the peak we headed back down to one of the big spill off rivers that flows from the mountain wherein the bottom of the river is composed of fine grey calcium. This means that when the sun is out and the sky is blue the water looks about as aqua blue as a toilet bowl full of cleaning fluid.

It also has some really pretty water falls as the river drops suddenly with rock formations repeatedly.

I met up with Wei again that afternoon and took him to the one popular Western restaurant in town which was having a Christmas party. Rather than order the turkey however I convinced him to try something utterly new, Burritos and nachos. Mexican food is growing more popular in China, especially in the big cities like Beijing and Shanghai. But it is still pretty uncommon.

He was happy to try it out but ultimately wasn’t very impressed. Sadly this was probably one of the better Burritos I’ve had in China, though it was a bit odd that they put cheese on the outside. I think it was just too heavy for him as they were exceptionally large and dense.

The next day we got the owner of the hotel I was staying at to give us a ride to Tiger Leaping Gorge. This is a very deep gorge which can take usually two days to hike through. Instead we cheated and drove to the middle point wherein the gorge gets its name sake. Supposedly a tiger was once seen jumping from one side of the gorge to the big rock in the middle and then jumping again to the other side of the river.

I guess a tiger coooould make that jump. Once more we were greeted by amusing signs poorly translated into English.

I felt compelled to try and break this rule. Apologies for the low resolution.

Next stop was the ‘First Curve’ of The Yangtze River. This is the first major point in which the Yangtze river makes a sharp turn and turns from heading south into Myanmar and instead veers sharply to the east and heads through the middle of China before eventually hitting Shanghai.

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This is actually really important as if the river didn’t turn here it would result in China having considerably less fresh water flowing through it and powering its huge hydro electric dams never mind the importance of this river for trade within China. Along the way back we also stopped by a small village which fascinatingly had intact one of the few remaining Tea-Horse Road bridges.

These bridges used to span hundreds of kilometres across deep southern China in what was called the Tea-Horse-Roads. These ‘roads’ which were really more so trade pathways through the thick southern Chinese mountains and into Vietnam, Cambodia and Thailand were used for centuries as another route for Chinese tea to make its way slowly out of China and into South East Asia. The bridges are really just planks of wood held up by heavy chains.

To make up for me making him eat heavy, greasy Mexican food the previous night we stopped by this small village to get some Chinese snacks, local small pot soup and then later that evening went to a local Lijiang cuisine place. The people there were ethnically Tibetan and we got to try some Tibetan/Chinese food!


Now if I had been a less stupid person, I probably should have stuck with Wei as he headed further north to Shangri-La. It was particularly stupid as cases of covid in Kunming had occured and we both feared we may need a negative test just to travel out of Lijiang. So we went to a local hospital, got our tests done and then like I said if I was smart I would have stuck with him. However, I was an idiot, instead electing to visit a far southern part of Yunnan which sits on the border of Myanmar and is clearly heavily influenced by Thailand. In the most tacky way possible.

Xishuangbanna lied to the most southern part of Yunnan and is relatively close to Thailand. Thailand itself has become incredibly popular with Chinese tourists since the 2000’s as an exotic getaway which is oddly generally cheaper than China and similar enough to China to not be uncomfortable. Seeking to capitalize on this Xishuangbanna has invested hard in trying to make itself as Thai as possible building night markets, buddhist temples and just generally trying to make the city look as South East Asian as possible to uh…mixed results.

I visited the night market which is probably one of the largest in China if not the world as it stretches out over a kilometre along the cities main river. It’s really more like 3 different night markets. One set across a grid on a city street, one that runs along a park and one that runs along the river. All three kind of flow into eachother and its utterly massive, even flowing out onto the river on barges in places. Little did I know how badly things were soon to become. I had heard rumours when I checked in that cases had been detected in Kunming again and that those travellers had passed through Xishuangbanna about a week ago. The next morning I woke up and was told to go do mandatory testing and that I couldn’t leave the compound the hotel was in until I had done so. Suddenly walls sprung up and ‘voluteers’ were patrolling what was increasingly a ghost city. After about 2 hours in line I got my ‘YOU DID A TEST’ card which allowed me to move around the city for groceries.

My first and only goal was to get out. I figured out through talking to other foreigners and through the hotel staff that I could get out if I did 2 covid tests 24 hours apart and then applied for a permission to leave letter from the city hall. This was a fairly arduous affair due to the sheer number of people leaving and how inefficient Chinese hospitals are. To get a test you need to stand in about 5 lines each about an hour long. First you stand in a line to tell the hospital what you want. Then you go to another line to sign into the hospital and get a document to bring to another window. At this window you pay for the test. Then you go to another line to line up for another document to give to the tester. You then take this document and get into another line to do the test. Altogether about 5-7 hours. I managed to burn through it fairly quickly as me and the other foreigners just stood in different lines and held the spot for eachother to make the process doable in about 3 hours. Then came the biggest line of all…

The line to get permission to leave. I actually filmed this thing and it took about 12 minutes to get from one end to the other. But after about 8 hours I got this document which allowed me to enter the train station to get to the airport in Kunming.

Oddly enough when I got to Kunming no one cared about seeing test results or papers, it was just to get out of Xishuangbanna. Because Xishuangbanna is so close to Myanmar’s border their city government takes things ludicrously seriously. Get this the city mass tested 9 times across 3 weeks and didn’t find a single other covid case…probably because the people who tested positive hadn’t been there for a week and so it was never in the city anyway. This is probably why the 7 foreigners I met managed to get back to Wuhan, Shanghai, Nanjing, and Beijing without any trouble at all…however Hangzhou decided to be weird.

I got home and the next morning got a text telling me I had 30 minutes to prepare for quarantine in a hotel. Making matters even more frustrating was that 3 of my colleagues had been in Xishuangbanna at the same time as me or slightly after and the longest any of them had to quarantine was for 2 days whilst some didn’t have to go into it at all.

Meanwhile I had to endure this for the next 14 days.

Also I was required to drink 2 sacks of this gross brown traditional Chinese medicine. Which of course is basically just magic.

On the plus side I didn’t have to pay for it. How long you need to quarantine and why seems to be pretty random in China these days. My next trips were all to Shanghai and within Zheijiang province under the hopes that this wouldn’t happen again…then it happened again.

Why Naoki Higashida is my hero

For Christmas, my Mum bought me The reason I jump by Naoki Higashida. There are some books which change us and this is undoubtedly the most life changing book I have ever read.

Higashida wrote this book when he was 13 years old. He is nonverbal and uses an alphabet system to communicate. That he wrote a book at all is inspirational enough but it is his reflections on autism that changed my views entirely.

The book is a series of questions and answers which explain the reasoning behind particular behaviours. I cannot explain what it means to have your suspicions confirmed and to have insight into seemingly random behaviour. To know that your child is in there somewhere even if they can’t yet communicate with you.

This book has taught me that being nonverbal is not the same as not being able to communicate. And being nonverbal does not mean that we should assume low levels of cognition either, though as a society we often do. As a result of Higoshida’s exhortations ‘not to give up on us’ and after a round of speech therapy which gave us a better understanding of why Hector wasn’t talking, we are finally making progress.

Until quite recently, Hector has been in his own world. Therefore, it was not possible for him to pick up language in the normal way. It wasn’t until we started intensive interaction that this started to change. This is a method where you use strategies such as mirroring, exaggeration and general over the top behaviour to encourage interaction. If our therapist in Shanghai had had Hector’s interests at heart, they would have told us we needed to do this before speech therapy could help but unfortunately they didn’t.

We are finally at the point where Hector actively seeks out interaction.  When he is in the mood he can make really intense eye contact. We’ve been able to start some alternative forms of communication like a choice board and makaton. His attempts to communicate are getting more insistent, more hand leading, jumping up and down and babbling. A lot more gesturing too. He’s even starting to point to or touch his choice board. Mostly randomly, though sometimes it seems to be the right symbol (including eat and more!).

Hector’s choice board

I guess the point is that we can get hung up on the question ‘Is he talking yet?’ when what is actually important is is he communicating yet. Of course I have dreams where he suddenly starts talking. But actually if he can get across what he wants in a different way this will make a huge difference in his life.

So if you want to understand the nonverbal people in your life please read The reason I jump. It really will change your perspective.

Everyone is a reader!

Bit of a different blog post as Hector is at school full time.

It was World Book Day last week so it seems the perfect time to reflect on Hector’s reading journey.

Reading has never been easy with Hector. He has never disliked books. On the other hand, he has always, even when he was a baby, found sitting still difficult. This is in sharp contrast to Max who stops crying as soon as you start to read even if he’s not being held.

Captain America for World Book day

When I was pregnant, I had visions of reading all the books I had loved to Hector but this was not to be. I could certainly read them and I do, but until very recently he would run round the room while I did so.  Even if this is how you read to ‘boys’ (apparently all girls sit nicely while they are read to) it just isn’t as satisfying.

Adjusting your own expectations is hard.  Nevertheless, I put away Castle Cole and started with the 10 Little series.  This could have been designed specifically for ND children. It has a sentence per page, lots going on and a number on each page. Perfect when training a Hector to listen to a story. 

I think one of the hardest things is that noone teaches you how to engage a ND child with books. All the advice assumes a passive child who will sit and enjoy a story with you. It wasn’t until I read ‘It takes two’ that I considered that reading wasn’t something that had to be done ‘to’ Hector but that I could enjoy the books with him in other ways, for example by just looking at the pictures. Unfortunately, even when I did ask for advice at his previous school they refused to even signpost me in the right direction. I was incredibly thankful that day to have a community Facebook group to rely on for actual practical advice.

I should say, Hector loves books. Sometimes if he doesn’t like my book he flicks through his own instead. The challenge for a while has been for him to allow me to read with him as he has been looking through books on his own for at least a year.

It has taken 4 years but there are now a small handful of books I can read with Hector.  By this I mean he is fully engaged and wants to turn the pages. His online journal also regularly mentions him engaging with books. I’m sure he will soon extend his repertoire which currently consists of:

  • 10 little monsters
  • 10 little dinosaurs
  • Where do diggers sleep at night?
  • You should never touch a polar bear
  • Lift the flap animal counting book
  • Gruffalo numbers

Further Hector friendly recommendations gratefully received!

February 28th to March 6th

February 28th

Hector

  • Played with his stacking cars completing it 2 to 3 times in a row
  • Matched shapes to the shape sorter

March 1st

Hector

  • Helped to build a tower, adding one or two boxes, and when it was built enjoyed looking at it before knocking it over
  • Consistently listened to 10 little monsters, waiting to turn the pages. When he did wander came back when sound effects were read

Max

  • Was very social, enjoying cuddles with Isobel

March 2nd

Hector

  • Added bricks to a 4 by 4 lego tower
  • Matched colours and when I started a row found and gave me the right blocks
  • Listened to all of 10 little dinosaurs and did not need any reminders to wait

March 3rd

Hector

  • Attempted to say drink and copied down
  • Tried to put a triangular block on a tower

March 4th

Hector

  • Stuck a toy card onto his now and next board (probably not with intention to communicate)

March 5th

Hector

  • Chose lots of books at library and sat and read each for a minute or so. Also spent 5 mins or so reading at home.
  • After being reluctant to go out, came quickly when saw shoes
  • Made a rectangle with his blocks
  • Showed interest in snail puzzle and let me help him add pieces
  • Played with fidget ‘snake’ for a few minutes while making counting sounds

March 6th

Hector

  • Watched Grandad cook dinner for about an hour
  • Needed less direction to point to help symbol
  • Did not wriggle out of seat belt

Max

  • Enjoyed a range of solids this week

February 21st to 27th

February 21st

Hector

  • Great first day

February 22nd

Hector

  • Excited vocalisations at having cereal
  • Copied when Granny and I said bar
  • Happily went into school with his teacher
  • Initiated brushing his teeth
  • Watched at least 10 minutes of Octonauts giggling and jumping up and down at the creature report

February 23rd

Hector

  • Copied when I said dinner and on
  • Stacked number blocks

Max

  • Enjoyed solids at nursery

February 24th

Hector

  • Sat on my knee after his bath and listened to all of Where do diggers sleep? (One verse a page)
  • Repeatedly said do do when wanted food

Max

  • Slept on his side and self settled quickly
  • Grabbed Hectors hand
  • Reached for lots of things
  • Rolled himself quickly but usually one way!

February 26th

Hector

  • Copied when I said down
  • Showed interest in organising coloured pencils and pens
  • Drew a line with chalk

February 27th

Hector

  • Enjoyed a bath without toys and allowed his hair to be washed
  • Went down the big slides at soft play
  • Avoided running into other children
  • Was very interested in a dog
  • Watched a TV show with people and cars for around 5 minutes
  • Looked at me, put his hands on mine and led them as if trying to tell me something
  • Listened and made eye contact when I stopped him from running

Getting an EHCP or why SEN children don’t get the same educational opportunities

So, I have tried to keep things focused on Hector’s achievements. But as he finally got his EHCP I wanted to reflect on this process.

I should probably say that I hope what we experienced is not best practice. I know of many other similar stories but I’m sure it is possible for things to go down a lot better than they did. Special teachers are not exclusive to special schools but unfortunately in mainstream you seem to be at the mercy of the class teacher caring enough to help. In our case this did not happen.

A little background. An Educational Health Care Plan (EHCP) is a document required for a school to access funding to support SEN children. It takes 20 weeks to get this document. If things are spotted in nursery this can already be in place by the time a child starts school. Schools should provide an education regardless of if they have this document.

When Hector started school we had no documentation from outside China. The reports we did have were not treated seriously because they came from China. As an example, the term ‘developmental delay’ was looked down on in spite of being nearly identical to the lazy Global Developmental Delay used here when there is no clear cause. This meant nothing was in place. It took Hector’s school two days to decide they couldn’t cope with him full time. The excuse given was he wasn’t safe, code for we don’t know what to do with him. So, in spite of having an equal right to education, this was casually denied. The fact that the impact on the other 29 children was mentioned revealing the real reason Hector couldn’t attend. We were lied to, not for the first time, and told it was a phased return for his own good. I spent the next term fighting to increase his hours when it became clear the reduction in hours was for their benefit not Hector’s.

At Hector’s new school they will communicate with us every day if we want them to. In spite of repeatedly asking for more communication at his old school we received no regular information on Hector’s progress until January when the school started to send pictures of what he had done that day. The excuse given was that they wanted to keep it positive. I cannot imagine ever saying this as a teacher. We quite frequently were only told he had been ‘full of beans’ and achievements like engaging in the classroom for the first time were never acknowledged. Hector has never once received a certificate from school, who only celebrate neurotypical achievements like reading or representing the school completely inaccessible to a neurodiverse child. They seemed bafflingly confused every time I pointed out that using a reward system like Class Dojo is disheartening at the least for parents of non verbal children. Not to mention that these systems are designed to allow parents to reinforce good behaviour which becomes impossible if the number of points are NEVER communicated!

The most common excuse used by the school for him making far less progress in school than at home was the environment. When I questioned them saying they could not provide an environment where he could learn their reaction was to shrug and say ‘What do you want us to do?’. There seems to be a perception that children with concentration difficulties need a white room! I have to wonder at what is going on if they cannot provide a quiet corner for him to learn in. I also find it sad that the solution for concentration problems is a white room. We have found simple tactics such as only allowing a limited number of toys at once have been pretty effective. I should say they also think Hector is hypersensitive based purely on him being scared of hand dryers, a common issue for neurotypical as well as diverse. You don’t have to spend long with Hector to know that he is sensory seeking.

I suppose I am writing this mainly to raise awareness of what SEN children and their parents go through. I would say our experience is not particularly unusual and it could have been even worse. We were often made to feel lucky that our child was allowed to attend even part time. Although there are examples of great practice unfortunately inclusion is a lottery that relies on the class teacher taking extra time for that one student. For now, we will make the most of a setting which has already made us feel more welcome in one day than six months.

February 7th to 13th

February 7th

Hector

  • Deliberately avoided puddles
  • Labeled A and S
  • Showed interest in ABC snail puzzle, including looking when I said Hector’s turn and trying to put pieces in
  • After Granny brought tin of cars through Hector added his
  • Copied d and s sounds

February 9th

Hector

  • Had a great settling in session at his new school
  • Undressed himself before his bath
  • Completed 3 vehicle puzzles with help to put the pieces together from the top

February 10th

Hector

  • Vocalised to his brother who vocalised back
  • Noticed another child who wanted to play with him including giggling
  • Stopped when there was a car with only verbal instruction and gesture
  • Only ran once on walk to school
  • Labeled X

Max

  • Kicked in his bouncer and laughed

February 11th

Hector

  • Allowed his hair to be cut only getting really upset when his hair was sprayed. Screamed but did not throw himself on the floor.

Max

  • Rolled from back to front

February 12th

Hector

  • Did all of the alphabet puzzle correctly placing most letters. Labeled O, S, U.
  • Lots of giggles and attempts to copy ‘in’
  • Stacked 10 to 6 boxes inside each other and built some towers
  • Showed interest in Mr Potatohead and wanted to pull out all his features!
  • Consistently stayed in bed after a final (long) story

Max

  • Outgrew his baby gym as no longer stays on his back when put down

February 13th

Hector

  • Took turns to tidy away all his alphabet/number cards
  • Alternated blue and white blocks creating a pattern
  • Immediately found ABC for alphabet puzzle and labeled A and O

January 31st to February 6th

January 31st

Max

  • Pulled his own socks off

Hector

  • Played at least 5 games of Hungry Hippos
  • Said duh when I said down
  • Fascinated by people’s hair
  • Took turns at school
  • Selected his favourite pair of shoes when he wanted to go out
  • Cooperated with his teeth being brushed
  • Focused for a whole story (sentence per page)

February 1st

Hector

  • Listened to 2 long Thomas stories, mostly sitting with me, sometimes wandering but always looking/listening until he read his own book halfway through second story

February 2nd

Max

  • Brought a painting home

Hector

  • Only ran about 3 times in library, spending the rest of the time choosing or reading
  • Showed me the PJs he wanted to wear and let me help
  • Happily sat next to another child
  • Noticed when Mrs Larkin said good morning and gestured close to hello
  • Went to the cupboard after tea and got out two cereal boxes just like we do in the mornings

February 3rd

Hector

  • Got happy and giggly when Grandad came downstairs responding to others laughing
  • When I said no to more toys accepted this and finished putting all the worms in
  • Found it funny when Lightning Mcqueen car made sounds

February 4th

Hector

  • Happily looked at ambulance book for at least 5 minutes
  • Put on wellies ready to go out
  • Looked when I pointed to preschool and changed direction
  • Happily helped tidy when not allowed to play with another toy
  • Used want gesture to ask for block
  • Showed interest in core board
  • Put 3D 1 to 4 in order
  • Put lego bricks in a box then took them upstairs

February 5th

Hector

  • Blew bubbles in the bath
  • Got out colouring book and then did some mark making with help

February 6th

Hector

  • Put numbers 1 to 8 in order on his caterpillar. I verbally reminded him of the order.

January 24th to 30th

January 24th

Hector

  • Played one game of pop up pirate
  • Interested in Hungry Hungry Hippos
  • Found it funny to run away from me or to come out of his room after a story
  • Showed me his what I did today pictures

January 25th

Hector

  • Aimed and threw lego a short distance into a target
  • Clicked on a phone app without hand over hand
  • Appeared to dance to LBB and then enjoyed watching Danny Go songs (person with animation)
  • Used want gesture without prompting

January 27th

Hector

  • Used food gesture while I was getting him food
  • Said letters o and z when looking at them
  • Followed instruction to take off shoes

January 28th

Max

  • Had his first taste of baby rice and loved it!
  • Took off his socks

Hector

  • Consistently used want gesture
  • Looked back for me when running and found it funny when I caught him
  • Showed interest in core vocab board
  • Had his usual stroke of Grandad’s facial hair

January 29th

Hector

  • Played with lorry in ‘appropriate’ way
  • Spontaneously ate his boiled egg with a spoon
  • Used want gesture without prompting and not just for food!
  • Did some of wooden transport puzzle
  • Did 100 piece shape sorter twice allowing hand over hand but preferring to do it by feel rather than sight
  • Showed awareness of a wheelchair and moved out the way

January 30th

Max

  • Squished some play dough

Hector

  • Appeared to copy when I said stop
  • Watched Grandad cook sausage and mash
  • Showed interest in colours, stamps and scissors
  • Played with play dough for at least 5 minutes enjoying both squishing and separating it

Tom Goes to Putuo Shan!

Putuoshan Map: Putuoshan China Map, Putuoshan Tourist Map…

For those who do not know, the Chinese word for mountain is Shan. Consequently, there are many, many, many places in China which have the word Shan in them. Some of which are not really mountains but rather very large hills. However, some of the most famous Shans are the ones which play an important role in Chinese religions such as Daoism, Buddhism and Confucianism. Somewhat unintentionally me and Katy have scaled quite a few of these ‘holy’ mountains. One of the most unique holy mountains, in this case a Buddhist one, is Putoushan. Putoushan is both a mountain and an island. As if someone had just dropped a Chinese mountain off the coast of China, Putoushan is a tiny place. About 5 kms long and 2-3 kms wide, it is one of the smaller inhabited islands of what is called the Zhoushan archipelago. Basically a few dozen islands off the coast of Ningbo (A large city near Hangzhou).

Shortly after getting back from Beijing rules were passed to restrict travel outside of Zhejiang. That is to say, to leave the province you needed to get a covid test done, and not an at home test like you can in the UK, but rather scheduling an appointment with a doctor and getting tested. The test needs to be done within 48 hours of travel so a bit annoying. Annoying enough for me to try and focus on just travelling somewhere interesting within my province which I had put off doing for a while.

Putuoshan Island (China) cruise port schedule | CruiseMapper

You cannot really take a train to Putoushan, largely because it is an island. There are a series of bridges spanning the archipelago almost like a freeway elevated above the ocean. I elected to take a long distance bus to the island from Hangzhou Eastern Rail station, the total journey took about three hours.  Long distance buses in China are variably about the same if not cheaper than taking a train and can be quite comfy. Each chair looks more like a recliner than a traditional bus seat. Biggest problem however is the invariably broken toilets onboard. Putoushan itself doesn’t allow any private vehicles on the island, so to make the final leap one has to take a passenger ferry across the bay.

Zhoushan Bridge is Opened [China] | Skyscraper City Forum
Changan Focuses on School Bus Development_Buses News_chinabuses.org

The biggest attraction Putoushan has to offer is also the largest, a massive bronze sculpture of Guan Yin. Guan Yin is the Boddhisatva (Like a saint/deity) of compassion in Mahayana Buddhism (Chinese Buddhism really). She’s often thus erected facing the ocean as she is said to provide protection for sailors.  The island is associated with her because it is supposedly her birth place. Though they can’t seem to decide which cave it was she was born in.

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The island has over a hundred temples/shrines dedicated to Guan Yin and you do not need to try very hard to find them as the island is littered with temples and electric busses linking them altogether. Accommodation on the island is a bit limited ranging from a few luxury resorts to home stays and guest houses. I elected to stay at such a guest house.

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It was nice however staying in a community block as there were plenty of small Chinese restaurants serving the locals.

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Far as I could tell there were no other foreigners on the island that weekend, which may have explained the amount of stares I received being a bit larger than usual.  I do wish I had gone during a warmer month however, the beach looked picturesque!

4 Days Hangzhou Putuoshan Brief Tour - China Discovery

I walked to the top of the island and to the highest peak, and cheated slightly by taking a cable car back down to one of the largest temple complexes on the Island. If there was any big detractor/disappointment it would have to be how relatively new everything felt. Many of these temples are technically centuries old, but most like many things in China have just sprung up or been heavily rebuilt since the 1990s. There is also something of a sense of sameness to some aspects of the island. Anywho, shortened post this time. Find attached a few more photos I took while spending the weekend in Putuoshan.

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