Author Archives: Lloyds_admin

Hong Kong’s Hidden Gem : Sai Kung

One of Hong Kong’s little unknown secrets is Sai Kung; which offers some of the most spectacular country landscape in the world. Its country park has some of the best walks and trails for all ages and experience. The preservation of the area has been done well and unlike the rest of the Hong Kong, it is still relatively unscathed by the bulldozers that are all-too-ready to erect another 50 storey residential building.

Sai Kung Country Park

Sai Kung Country Park

The most famous trail is of course the MacleHose one (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MacLehose_Trail) which is simply resplendent; the scenery that you will see on this walk is breath-taking. The above picture gives the viewer an idea of the splendour on offer in Sai Kung; the waters off its coast are also least polluted as the effluence of the pearl river delta comes out of an estuary far away Sai Kung.

Discover Hong Kong has compiled a concise guide to Sai Kung which covers all of the attractions in and around Sai Kung that any visitor of Hong Kong should experience.

https://www.discoverhongkong.com/content/dam/dhk/intl/plan/traveller-info/e-guidebooks/sai-kung-walking-guide-en.pdf

For expats who have not discovered Sai Kung, this is certainly a district to consider if you are looking for a peaceful area to bring up the family. It is about 40 minutes drive to Central and offers some lovely houses and properties that enjoy the benefits of suburbs such as a some great sea views, cleaner air and lots of greenery. There are some great eateries to choose from with a sea front promenade where some of the best seafood can be found and just around the corner to that there are some pubs where you can enjoy a pint of ale or two.

There is an estate agent with a good reputation in Sai Kung called Eastmount Property (https://www.eastmount.com.hk/) who can help you find a suitable house or apartment for those wishing to re-locate to Sai Kung. There is also some property portals such OneDay that offer a selection of properties (https://www.oneday.com.hk/en_US/residential/hong-kong-to-rent/sai-kung/sai-kung2/) for the Sai Kung area.

The seafood restaurant that is famous is called 香港西貢全記海鮮 and it might be easier to give that name to a taxi driver because everyone know this place. Here are some pictures that may whet your appetite. http://blog.sina.com.tw/julie168/article.php?entryid=609639

 

Special Travel into Vietnam during Covid-19

Prologue
This article is intended for travellers to Vietnam during Covid-19 when there is a scarcity of flights and entry into the country as a tourist is completely non-existent. This is based on a first hand experience of a traveller who managed to get into the country (via Hanoi) as an investor on the 12 January 2021, things may be different in the future and the procedures might differ from airport to airport.

In the last 6 months, Vietnam has not issued a single tourist visa; only in the last month or so have they started to allow foreign investors or foreigners with businesses in Vietnam or those with specialised skills into the country. I have a registered company in Da Nang and a work permit (but no Residence Card) so was able to obtain an official invitation letter through my agent (Lyn Visa) that made me eligible for travel into the country.

Flights
If you were able to overcome the first hurdle of getting an agent who could get you an invitation letter your next challenge would be getting on an aeroplane to your city. Each invitation letter will clearly state the port of entry and you cannot deviate from that; fortunately for me the agent also arranged the flights, quarantine hotel and the special vehicle that escorts you from the airport to the hotel. The service is by no means cheap.

The flight I was put on was a special chartered flight that transitted through Hong Kong from China and there was only 4-5 people boarding from Hong Kong. When we reached the Hong Kong Airlines check-in desk they were not even aware of our existence and that there were passengers boarding from Hong Kong. After much back and forth along with a few disgruntled travellers and I brandishing our e-Flight tickets to the counter staff were we able to proceed with the check-in process.

Since we were a chartered flight the airport tax was not included in the flight tickets so each person had to pay HK$ 120 in cash moreover although my e-ticket indicated that I could take 35Kg of luggage with me that allowance had to be one single piece of luggage rather than 2 suitcases so I ended up paying another HK$ 290 for the excess luggage.

You could be see the counter staff desperately communicating with somebody higher up about how to deal with our case and after much trepidation, I was finally issued a boarding pass and allowed to process to boarding.

Being the last-minute person that I am I only arrived at the airport around an hour or so before take off which in hindsight was slightly dangerous so I urge others to get to the airport in good time in case of unforeseen events springing on you.

Airport Security
Airport security had never been more of a breeze. I was the only person going through and was tended to by coterie of overly helpful staff and I must admit I had never been able to get through airport security so quickly in my life so things weren’t all bad.

Boarding
As I neared my boarding gate I saw an increasing number of people milling around in turquoise Hazmat suits; first I thought these were medical staff brought in from Vietnam to check that all travellers were fit and healthy to board the flight but later I discovered that they were just overly-zealous travellers from mainland China.

Upon Arrival
After disembarking you will walk towards the immigration department and at some point you will required to present the test report showing that you don’t have Covid-19; the health person just glanced at mine and waved me on. After that you will reach an area (this is the Hanoi airport) where there are immigration counters and a section where you can obtain Visas. I will write about what I did but a fellow traveller did something quite different and still got through. In terms of the process:- Queue up at the Visa issuance counter and when you get to it, hand them your passport, invitation letter, the Covid-19 test results and the Pre-filled Entry Form along with 2 recent photos. After they accept your documents they will tell you to sit down and wait for your name to be called up; if you are successful they will give you back your passport with a visa issued which takes up an entire page of your passport.

Hanoi airport during covid19 | travel restrictions

Hanoi airport covid19

People milling around not knowing what is going

After this, you can queue up at the immigration counter and they will stamp your passport but they will keep hold of it and motion you to the luggage reclaim area. After getting your luggage, you can just sit quietly somewhere even though nobody seems to know what is going on; because eventually they will process flight by flight but this will only happen once everyone has collected their luggage so at this point just wait patiently.

Before getting on the special vehicle that takes you to the hotel you will be given a Hazmut suit that you will have to don. The immigration department personnel will verify your identity and then give your passport to a specialised person who will escort you to the hotel.

After getting to the hotel, you will have an opportunity to take off the Hazmut suit and chuck it in a designated bin and the specialised person will give your passport to somebody at the hotel and you will will be escorted to your room.

Good luck and safe travels.

Things To Bring

  • Certificate to show that you don’t have Covid-19
  • Invitation Letter
  • Flight eTicket
  • 4 recent passport photos (I was not aware of this)
  • Bring US dollar cash (3-months visa costs US$ 25 in cash – credit cards are not accepted) have lots of US$ 1 bills that you can give to staff in the hotel who may be able to help you buy things from outside the hotel…..Forget about trying to money out using the ATM upon arrival which is what I used to do… I brought with me US$ 300 just in case
  • Bring HK dollar cash with you – since you don’t know what fees the airport might charge
  • Fill out the Entry Form before hand so you don’t have to faff around looking for the form, something to write with and a surface to write on

Things to Bring (For the hotel)

  • A mug/cup that you can drink your morning coffee or tea from – in my hotel room there are only these floppy paper cups which I hate
  • A supply of tea / coffee that you like – I have been given a sumptious supply of this 3-in-1 coffee powder which I will forego on
  • Basic toiletries (shampoo, tooth brush, etc)
  • Socket adaptor(s) – if you are coming from the UK, Hong Kong or anywhere else – our plugs don’t fit into the sockets in Vietnam
  • Bring lots of wine, whiskey or whatever you like to drink because when I arrived late at night customs wasn’t even open

Homeopathic / Natural Treatment for Ani Pruritus (Itchy Anus)

Ani Pruritus (Itchy anus) is usually caused by a fungus and can linger forever if not treated. Certain foods and drinks can exacerbate the itch and by reducing the intake of these foods one can alleviate the itch; however it will never go away unless you treat it properly. So in this article I will share with you how to permanently treat itchy anus naturally.

I’ve had this for over 15 years now and the itch always comes back and when travelling to hot places the itch returns with a vengeance. I first used some steroidal cream to treat the issue and it did work up to a point for a while but it would always come up; and because steroidal creams cannot be used on a long term basis I had to stop using it. Rubbing alcohol offered immediate relief when swabbed and applied for 15 minutes or so.

Having suffered bouts of pruritus in the most annoying place for years I finally found a natural cure that made it go away forever so I want to share with everyone what I did.

Natural Cure and Permanent Treatment for Itchy Anus

The ingredient that I discovered was Turmeric; this is the ingredient that is used in some curries and often used to marinate foods in Asia.

This is what you do:-

(1) Get Ground turmeric maybe around a tablespoon

Ground Tumeric

Ground Tumeric

(2) add just a few drops of distilled water to the Turmeric and mix until it turns into a paste; you may need to add a few more drops of water to get it into a paste

(3) Apple the paste to anus and leave it there until the next time you shower

I got relief after within 15 minutes of applying this turmeric paste normally and after repeating this procedure twice a day for a fortnight the itch just went away for good.

I hope this recipe will also work for you.

Gold Hits US$ 2,000/oz Silver targeted to reach US$ 50/oz before end of 2020

Gold Price

Due to the reckless expansionary monetary policies of Central Bank money’s value is diminishing at a staggering rate. The Federal Reserve announced at the start of the year the “release” of US$2 trillion into the markets to help with the economy to weather the storm. It is semantics but the US$2 trillion doesn’t actually exist and when the Feds say “release” they mean they will print US$2 trillion. Nowadays they don’t even need to bother with printing they just press a button. When the money is circulation is diluted to such an extent it is no wonder that people will flock to other asset classes that are better at storing value such as precious metals such as Gold and Silver.

The Federal Reserve has and continues to manipulate the gold and silver markets through the likes of JP Morgan, Goldman Sachs and the other big Wall Street banks; by depressing the prices of precious metals it gives them the ability to continue printing money. The Feds generally prefer to short the silver market because it is significantly smaller than the gold market therefore the amount of money they need to expend to short the silver is significantly less than the amount of money they need to short the gold market. Because the price of gold and the price of silver has always been in lock step if the Feds can depress the price of gold by depressing the price of silver. The romans locked the ratio of Gold to Silver at 1:12 and the French in the 18th century locked it to 1:15. However, in the last few months the Gold to Silver ratio went over 1:100 which is unprecedented; the only explanation is that the Feds was able to depress the price of silver but not Gold’s. The Gold market is much bigger so it is harder to manipulate so the price is more represented by the forces of supply and demand than manipulation. Using techniques such as smackdowns and sudden margin calls the Feds have been able to depress the price of silver but this is about to change and silver will eventually get back to a normal ratio with gold between 40-70.

Today the price of gold reached US$ 2,000/oz which means the price of silver should trade at between US$ 28/oz to US$ 40/oz. This will no doubt happen in the near future and silver will catch up with the price of gold.

The uncertainties with the coronavirus, the potential conflict in the South China sea and the negative growth of many economies means that Gold and Silver will continue to be winners at least for the next 6 months with silver out-performing gold because the Feds will find it untenable to continue depressing the price of silver.

At this time, Gold and Silver are the choice store of value and investors should seize this moment to hedge against inflation by investing in Gold and Silver.

Other resources recently that point to a continuation of the bull run:-
https://www.kitco.com/news/2020-08-04/Gold-price-powers-above-2-000-bulls-want-more.html

Censorship at Facebook of Police Abuse in Hong Kong’s Unrest

It is rumoured that Facebook and Instagram are actively deleting photos of police abuse potentially kowtowing to pressure from Beijing. Perhaps Beijing is promising to allow Facebook and Instagram to operate in China if they continue to help Beijing censor content that Beijing does not want the world to see.

The below is but one.

censored police abuse

censored police abuse

This last week (16-17 November 2019) saw some of the most violent and tense conflict between protesters and the police and the Poly Tech University in Hung Hom became a battleground between the police and the protesters.

With over 4,000 arrests made now; the Hong Kong government will now stress test the judicial system with the trials that will go ahead. With the High Court calling the Anti-Mask Law “inconsistent with the basic law” Beijing now wants to give directives to the court on how to make rulings and this will end the separation of powers.

Joshua Wong Disqualified by Communist Party from Running for Election

In the eleventh hour Joshua Wong the de facto pro-democracy figure head of Hong Kong is barred from running for this year’s District Council election.

A single unknown person called the “election officer” by the name of Laura ARON can decide who can and who cannot run. Why don’t we simplify the election process and get this person to select all the district councillors instead of just disqualifying candidates that she personally doesn’t like or has been instructed by Beijing to disqualify? The basis for disqualification is because she believes that his platform is to make Hong Kong independent even though none of his campaign manifesto included independence; so what her reasoning is purely by telepathy. This is Communist China’s adherence to one country two systems; this is how the Communist Party of China operates clandestine and underhanded; this is why the whole of China should unite and we should remove the Communist Party from power; this means Taiwan, Hong Kong, Macau, Tibet, Xinjiang, Mongolia and all of the good people of China. It is time for change; Revolution of our times. The Communist Party continues to repress its people, build concentration camps to toruture 1 million Uighur muslims without any reason other than the fact that they are muslims and control what people can and can’t see by the great firewall.

Hong Kong’s district council election is a farce; the Communist Party of China is nothing more than a Mafia organisation and Xi Jinping is turning the clock back 50 years.

 

 

Hong Kong Government IP addresses

hk government mail IP address

hk government mail IP address

We’ve noticed that when the Hong Kong government sends emails they use the following servers / IP addresses.

For example:-
mail52.imail.scig.gov.hk [202.128.250.132]

In fact, from looking up on db-ip.com – it would seem that the the government owns this block of IP addresses.
202.128.250.0 – 202.128.250.255

The various government offices all seem to have different IP addresses provided by different suppliers
218.253.212.153 <= is the department of health’s IP address.

Interestingly, virtually all Hong Kong government sites are hosted in the US on this particular IP address 34.92.192.127

Sites such as:-
boardwalk.gov.hk
cleanharbour.gov.hk
dh.gov.hk
ehealthrecord.gov.hk

Around 200 websites are hosted on this US IP address which belongs to Google (it would seem if you do a web search); so Google is hosting many of Hong Kong Government’s website.

Tsuen Wan / Kwai Chung Protests 25 August 2019

25 August 2019 – Another weekend of protests but this time it started off at Kwai Chung Sports Ground (葵涌運動場) to Tsuen Wan Park (荃灣公園); bowing to pressure from Beijing MTR Corp decided to close down a few underground stations to make it more difficult for protesters to get to the demonstration site. This also happened yesterday to the demonstrations at Kwun Tong.

Congestion at Texaco Road, Tsuen Wan Hong Kong – 7:45pm 25 August 2019

These protests have been started by Carrie Lam the chief executive of Hong Kong who tried to bulldoze through the extradition bill – she has had many opportunities to diffuse the situation but instead has dug herself into the Fuhrer bunker.

Rain was bucketing down and as I walked from Tsuen Wan West to the Texaco Road I saw a convoy of about 15 police vans rushing from Tsuen Wan West station to Yeung Uk Road at about 7:35pm tonight; from the pictures you can see that bricks had been dug up from the pavements.
Vi

Tsuen Wan West - 25 August 2019 7:34pm

Tsuen Wan West – 25 August 2019 7:34pm

Looking down Yeung Uk Road - Facing East

Looking down Yeung Uk Road – Facing East

people crossing Yeung Uk Road

people crossing Yeung Uk Road

Bricks Dup Up - Tsuen Wan Protests

Bricks Dup Up – Tsuen Wan Protests

Tsuen Wan West - 7:35pm

Tsuen Wan West – 7:35pm

As I try to get to Texaco Road, I go up a footbridge and the main action is in Yeung Uk Road where a number of police cars are stationed.

Police Vans on Yeung Uk Road

Police Vans on Yeung Uk Road

On Texaco Road I notice makeshift road blocks had been set up presumably by protesters. Some of the railings had also been taken down.

Railings on Texaco Road, Tsuen Wan - Taken Down

Railings on Texaco Road, Tsuen Wan – Taken Down

Many cars tried to get through Texaco Road but instead had to go around.

Texaco Road - Makeshift Barriers

Texaco Road – Makeshift Barriers

As I approach the roundabout connecting to Texaco Road, the flyover, Tsing Yi, etc. the traffice is completely blocked up and doesn’t seem to be moving.

Massive Congestion on Texaco Road

Massive Congestion on Texaco Road

For more information about the exact routing and information this news site seems to cover the events quite well.
https://www.hongkongfp.com/2019/08/25/hong-kong-police-lift-ban-sundays-tsuen-wan-protest-organisers-change-route/

Begging Carrie Lam to Step Up | Protests 18 August 2019

Carrie Lam and the government seem to have completely buried their heads in the sand. Why can’t she just withdraw the damn extradition bill? Why is she so stubborn and irresponsible? Hong Kong is crippled every weekend by these protests. Today it was estimated that 1.7 million people attended the demonstrations even though it was pouring almost all day.

Carrie Lam must go, she had so many opportunities when she could have diffused the situation and could easily have nipped it at the bud but instead her pigheadedness and genuine belief that she is superior to all Hong Kongers has lead us into this political disaster. At this current juncture I cannot offer a proposal on how we could diffuse the situation. The protesters are furious because of the police abuse and their collaboration with triads in the Yuen Long attacks; the fact that police have not charged a single one of the white-clad thugs who beat up people in black indiscriminately is testament to their collaboration. The government cannot back down now because they would lose face. Carrie Lam has prided herself on being Number 1 her whole life and at school when she came fourth one year she cried and then the next year she regained the position of Number 1. In a similar way when she first became the Chief Executive she was only fourth (after CY Leung, Donald Tsang and CH Tung) in terms of how many people she managed to get to the streets. Her determination did not falter and quickly she gained number 1 position and managed to get in one day more people than all the chief executives managed to get in each of their respective tenures. She will go down in history as the only Chief Executive of Hong Kong to have achieved (cumulatively) tens of millions to demonstrate; this number is still growing so we must wait before we start counting how much of a number 1 she is.

Today is the 18th August, 2019 (Sunday) and we see demonstrators leave from Victoria Park in droves and many continued until late into the evening. Here are some pictures from the various parts in Wanchai and Causeway.

Protests at Henessey Road

Protests at Henessey Road

Henessey Road Wanchai 18 August 2019 Protests

Henessey Road Wanchai 18 August 2019 Protests

Evening Henessey Road Protests

Evening Henessey Road Protests

Wanchai Evening Protests

Wanchai Evening Protests