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| Shanghai Museum stairs |
This week, a group of 7 SHOU
employees traveled to downtown Shanghai for 5 nights to attend the Indian Ocean
Tuna Commission meeting for temperate tunas, albacore in this instance. I am
100% sure this meeting would be of interest to people of fisheries backgrounds
only. Many countries coming together to talk about the science of assessment
and then reviewing the technical document before submitting it to the science
committee who will then recommend it to the managers. I will just say, with
respect to the meeting, that I contributed some, mostly on language, and that
was enough to feel validated in attending. My roommate for the meeting was a
Ph.D student at SHOU from Cameroon, Richard. We had many interesting
conversations, about the scientists at the meeting and his country, mostly, but
also spent most of the week trying to decide who was generating the most stares
from Chinese locals on our walks around the town at night (the Chinese are
pretty famous for staring, I guess). Once the meeting was over, we were barred
from another technical meeting, which was confidential, leaving us to fill the
time on the
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| I like dinosaurs! |
town. The first night was just a walkaround for us. “Wanda Plaza”
(?) just walking around a mall, getting out of the hotel and stretching the
legs. But, as Richard left to attend personal business, I was given a grand
tour the next day from some SHOU students. I went to the Shanghai Natural
History Museum, Shanghai Museum and Shanghai Aquarium, all in one day, which
was something. I took >500 photos and killed the battery of two phones doing
so. So that was another thing. It was a pretty great day of touring.
Let’s
start with the Natural History Museum. I am pretty sure they had everything
included in the building. From pre-Cambrian Era to present and even exhibits on
the near future. Just an astounding array of exhibits. We spent 3.5 hours there
and we were moving fast, as to complete all three stops during the day. I could
have spent a month in that building, I am sure of it. Fossils, skeletons, tons
of taxidermy (most of it good), videos, pictures…it was really comprehensive.
The
next stop was the Shanghai Museum. This museum focused mostly on ancient artifacts
and relics of Chinese culture. Bronze, stone, jade, currency (China issued
first paper money), calligraphy, paintings, furniture, and official seals
through the dynasties, there were many exhibits to visit in this 4 story
building. I
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| Jade Carvings...pretty good! |
admit I am not necessarily so interested in seals, currency,
calligraphy and these types of items, so the hurried nature of this visit did
not necessarily dampen my mood much.
I mean, when you are looking
forward to the Shanghai Aquarium, it is easy to stay positive. Another massive
building with many exhibits, some of the standouts included the ray tank,
filled with many playful rays to delight the spectators; the seal tank, which
maybe was not big enough, but still saw seals swimming laps; the penguin
display, which lacked an underwater viewing arena, but still, penguins; and
then the crown jewel, the world’s longer underwater tunnel, complete with rays,
turtles, groupers and sharks. Really a tremendous exhibit to finish the
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| Rays in flight |
aquarium tour. Some things that struck me were the amount of pictures being
taken. Maybe this is because I haven’t been to an aquarium in the cameraphone-era,
but I still feel like it was excessive. There were even stages for pictures to
be taken: white shark, penguin and…giraffe? It’s true. Also, most everyone was
banging on the tank glass to get whatever critter was inside to present
themselves in an active way. You may not be surprised to learn that this was
ineffective and annoying. Also, I should mention that China has probably
perfected the gift shop. There is always a gift shop and patrons always browse.
The trick is, most only take pictures with the gifts. Good way to game the
system, I suppose. Anyway, it is a business idea, I think.
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| Inside 'Linnaeus' Labortory |
After pictures were taken, we,
being my two student-guides plus myself, met up with others at the famous (I
guess) Super Brand Mall on the river for dinner, before taking in the city
skyline, including a now close-up of the Pearl and Shanghai Towers and looking
back across the river to the place I had been previously (Nangjing Road and
People’s Square).
Note: During this trip I discovered
Banana Juice (delicious) and deep fried chicken feet sole (fine, but chewy).





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ReplyDeleteThe aquarium would be my favorite part too.
ReplyDelete