August12
For a brief hour just as the sun sets, the temperature drops to a mere 30-32 degrees, finally cool enough to venture out for some exploration. Simon actually goes out on his own in the afternoon sometimes, but it’s way too hot for me or the girls, so we stick around closer to home.
At the end of our long driveway is a main road or highway. It is under major construction so the traffic is only going about 40km/h. If we cross the highway we are instantly in rural China.

There are so many differences here. On one side of our building are some new townhouses being built, in exactly the same design as we might see in suburban Canada. On the other side of us, is completely traditional, rural landscape. Even within this small village, there are many old wooden dwellings and right beside them are large new houses made of brick and shiny tiles.


New or old, they are both drying their chili peppers out in the sun, and probably produce most of the food they eat.
August9
It’s been about a week since I’ve sat down to write anything. We (meaning everyone at the hospital) have been figuring out our new routines but now it all seems to have smoothed out. The staff have been moved to an apartment complex about a half hour walk from here, some have chosen to stay in Huaihua, about a half hour bus ride, so our morning routine starts a bit later, but I don’t mind that at all. One of the translators feels she needs to get a bike for her morning and evening commute to the apartment, Simon offered to help her choose one, because she has never ridden a bike before! This comes as a surprise but apparently she is not alone among adults here. This will seem like a huge cultural generalization, but I thought bikes were intrinsic to Chinese transportation! I guess I am wrong on that point. Speaking of which, I had promised the girls something special when we moved to the new hospital, and we’ve followed through…


Emily and Maddie are proud owners of a bike and a trike. They are ecstatic! Emily runs out the door as soon as she is finished breakfast to start riding, and rides until the sun sets (go girl!). We’ve decided to keep the training wheels on Em’s bike while she gets used to the hand brakes, and we don’t have a helmet for her yet. It’s on the list on the next shopping trip into Huaihua. Maddie likes zooming up and down the large hallways on her crazy-looking tricycle. Either that or they get pushed around on a wheelchair by their 14 year old friend, Nura. We are very happy to see them so excited to ride around, and to be able to get some much needed exercise; not so attainable in the middle of a busy downtown setting. Luckily the hospital has only 4 patients, including me, so the girls can ride around to their heart’s content and make lots of noise. The bonus for us…they cost, together, $40.
August8
The girls are experiencing a new and exciting aspect of rural living; more insects and wildlife! We can watch beautiful birds fly by from our large outdoor patio and there are many, many insects that interest the girls. Emily is desperate for a pet, of any kind, so I let her keep a cricket that she caught last night in a jar. She let it out this morning, for humanitarian reasons. The grasshoppers get very big around here, as you can see. Maddie doesn’t mind holding one, but this one was too big for Emily’s liking:

If you’re not paying attention, they’ll keep climbing up from your hand to your head!

Here is a photo of tonight’s visitor, a preying mantis:

August1
So we have finally been moved to the new hospital. It was a crazy day for the staff, getting us and all our stuff to the new city of Zhongfang. Some of us moved in a bus:

The new hospital is finished, for all intensive purposes. Well, actually the main floor up to the 3rd floor are pretty much functional, but the next 3 floors are still under construction. As of today we have a functioning kitchen, with gleaming new appliances and cupboards, about a 100 times better than the last kitchen! Ugh!
Our room is very bright and spacious, and we have been given a full suite for the price of a room. Dr. Ming, the VP, wants to impress us, his first patients, so that we have rave reviews of this new hospital. He treated us to a great dinner, cooked by his mom, on the first evening, he is on the far right side of the photo:

Here are a few views of our room and the girls’ room, I’m sure you can guess which is which:


There is even a proper massage-type table for my treatments:


And here is the view from our doorway and my own private (or I like to think so) tai chi area:

July24
We went for a group trip out to the site of the new hospital that is being built. It is the pride and joy of Dr. Ming and he is eager to get it finished and all of us in there. Unfortunately it looks to me that it is not that close to being finished, despite rumours of us moving anywhere from 3-10 days from now.

The hospital is in the newly built suburb of Huaihua called Zhongfang, and is set in a fairly idyllic setting in the countryside…

We have learned that, in China, everything has a yin and a yang. Yes, we will be near the beautiful mountains with a grove of orange trees right beside us; away from the constant honking and diesel fumes of the traffic in the city. However, this is the view from the other side of the hospital:

Hopefully the predominant wind direction stays away from us!