Wine Auction in Hong Kong

I have heard of a furniture auction, an estate auction, and an art auction.  Hell, I have even hard of a bull auction.  I am from Texas after all.  But, until a few days ago, I had never heard of a wine auction.

I have never seen a more disgusting display of wealth, power and decadence in my life.  It was so much fun.

Wine Bible for this auction.

You enter this restaurant under tight security and are handed this book.  You can’t tell from the picture, but the book weights about 4 pounds and is hard cover.  It holds the key to every bottle, case and magnum of wine they are going sell over a period of three days; about 1,500 lots.

From this book, you can find out the name, age, region and description of each wine.  They also used a lot of strange acronyms such as owc – it means original wooden case.  All of this effects the price of the wine.

The book is also filled with all of these clever descriptions for the wines in each lot.  My absolute favorite description said that the wine, “had a tomato sex appeal”  I am not kidding.

Here is another actual description as seen in the bible (book).

Typically the cases of wine would range between 40,000 and 60,000 HKD.  That is about 5,000 to 7,800 USD.  Here is the board which tells you which lot is up, the list price and what the previous lots sold for.

We purchased Lot 150.

Now the best part of the wine auction is tasting the wines.  You have wine dealers and vineyard owners walking around to all the different tables to let you taste their prized possessions.  They are a crazy eccentric group of people.

I got to sample a 1971 Lynch Bages Cabernat.  That wine is older them me.  It was so good.

I also sampled a 1982 Chateau de la Tour Cru Clos-Vougeot – isn’t that a mouth full.  And a 1991 Chateau de la Tour.  Now I have no clue what all that means, but it was some really good wine.

Simple the best

But, my favorite was the Armand De Brignac Champagne – Vintage NV – Ace of Spades, Brut.  A 36 bottle lot sold for 10,000 USD.  A little over list price.  But, this was the best Champagne I have ever tasted.  It was just beautiful.  But, the funny part was that when it was brought to our table I guess in order for me to relate to the wine, the sommelier told me that the champagne was endorsed by none other then P Diddy himself.*

*Actually it is endorsed by Jay Z and I knew this already.  I didn’t correct him though.  No need to embarrass him.

All in all, I would have to say this was one of the best outing I have been too in my five years in China.  These people treat wine line a business transaction.  It wasn’t the type of auction that I am used to.  No fast talking auctioneer and no screaming and cheering when you won the bid.  It is frowned upon evident by the weird stares I got when I clapped after we one a particular active bidding war.

But, everyone was so nice and we got to drink wine. A lot of wine.  And, I can say that the rumor is true.  You don’t get a hangover when you drink good wine.

Anyone else been to a wine auction?  Was it the conservative atmosphere that I described or was you experience different?  What is the oldest bottle of anything that you have drank? 

My Weekly Update – Schedules, Snakes & Star Wars

One week off the A to Z Challenge and I found myself with no more structure and to many ideas in my head.  I thought I would give you my quick hits for the week and then start fresh next week with my new blogging  – – – –

Schedule

Monday – Main Blog post

Tuesday – Movie Quotes

Wednesday – Book Quotes

Friday – Main Blog Post

Sunday – Weekly Wrap up

* I will try this schedule for the rest of May.  With JuNoWriMo starting next month, it is bound to change.  Bear with me, I am still new to the blogging/writing life.

Snakes

At the Academy, we had a snake in the bathroom.  I am not messing with you.  We really had a snake in the bathroom.  A king cobra.  Really.  I’m not lying.  We had a kind cobra snake in the bathroom.  How’s that for a friendly work environment?

They are doing a lot of construction near our building.  All the little critters are looking for new homes and Mr. King Cobra thought the men’s bathroom at the Academy would be a perfect summer home.

But, I learned something this week.  How the Chinese get rid of snakes? According to my staff, there are several options:

  1. Drive the snake away by putting sulfur in the toilet and around the building.  Apparently, you can pick up sulfur at your local grocery store.
  2. Poison the snake by putting your normal household cleaning products in the toilet.  Again, apparently you can pick this up at your local grocery store.
  3. I am not sure what this does, but grab the snake by the tail and swing it around your head really fast.  This is from the military guy on our staff.   Apparently, this is how the Chinese military deal with their snake problems.

A couple days after the first and second snake sighting, one of our clients was leaving the Academy and saw the snake on the cart path behind the building.  Now, everyone has declared the snake gone. What? Apparently, they are assured that it is the same one.

Still not using the bathroom in this place. 

Star Wars

Yesterday was “Star Wars Day”.  I have been a huge fan for years and never knew there was a “Star Wars Day”.  “May the 4th be with you!” Get it. How did I celebrate?  I watch Episode IV. I typically share any and all Star Wars references I see.  So, every day could be “Star Wars Day” in my world.

Blog Love

Finally, I wanted start sharing blogs that I love and subscribe to.  I can’t wait for their posts to hit my in box every day.  I hope you enjoy them, too.

  1. Cowbell – Jenny Hansen is funny.
  2. The Masquerade Crew – each crew member contributes great stuff.
  3. My Gypsy Soul – Ana Riley has things to say.
  4. the. ego. tripper. – Good travel and photos with great sense of humor and a huge ego.
  5. Geektroverted – Andii is helping me accept my inner geek.

I have started a list on twitter as well, please subscribe.

T – Traveling Tips

Do you enjoy traveling? I do. I enjoy every aspect of it. From the moment I book the airline ticket to the moment I am unpacking upon my return home, traveling is my bliss. I believe it’s the aspect of living a different life whether it be for 2 days or 2 weeks that makes traveling such an attractive pursuit for me. And, it doesn’t matter if it is a business trip, a family trip or a vacation, any time I can be in a difference city, sleeping in a strange bed (not like that) or eating different food, I am happy.

About six years ago, I got a new job and was thrilled because I never spent more than three weeks at home. It was so much fun. In a year, I went to Lake Tahoe, New York City, London, Hawaii, Dallas, China, Los Angeles, Arizona and China again.

Then five years ago, I moved to China and for two years, I didn’t travel at all. It was killing me. Especially begin so close to so much that had yet to explore. It was frustrating, but I was trying to start a business in a foreign country and needed to stay put.

But, once that third year hit, I couldn’t take it any more. I had to travel. We started traveling for work. I went to Singapore, Vietnam and Tokyo and my nomadic nature was satisfied.

So, here are my tips on traveling that I have learned over the years. They have helped me travel with less stress and I hope they help you as well.

  1. Book everything as early as possible. I mean everything. Airfare, hotel, car, transportation, dinner reservations, attraction tickets, etc. On a recent trip to Hong Kong with my mom and brother, I booked the cable cars to the Big Budda on Lantau Island. When we arrived there had to be 500 people in line and we walked right past them all because I had purchased the tickets online.
  2. International flights, get to the airport early. You never know what might happen. You can pick good seats on the plan, you can upgrade if you roll like that. If you are like me, I can’t eat on the plane. Long flights and stomach issues don’t mix. I arrive early to enjoy the great choices of food at the international terminal. In Hong Kong, it is the Popeye’s Chicken. So random, but so good.
  3. When you exchange money, make sure you they are just exchanging your currency for the place you are going. I once exchanged RMB into USD and they converted it into HKD first. I lost money on that deal.
  4. Jetlag – I covered this in a previous post. In order to explore the world, you have to deal with it.
  5. Just be patient. When you travel, you are oh so on everyone else’s times schedule. And, if that schedule changes, don’t take it personally. Shit happens. Patience is the best advice I can give you.

So, that is what I have learned from a lifetime of traveling. For me, I can not and will not every stop exploring this amazing world we live in.

What are your best traveling hints and tips?

I – Itinerary

I have a pretty intense itinerary for my trip.  I always create an itinerary in order to make sure that I do everything I need to do.  I am a list maker at heart.  My day isn’t finished until I have marked everything off of my list.

Here is my itinerary:
Monday:
  • Arrive and check into hotel
  • Ferry ride to Watson’s bay – Lunch fish and chips
  • Dinner – Lord Dudley’s Pub
Tuesday:
  • Breakfast at Pancakes on the Rocks (This place looks so good.)
  • Lunch and Golf at The Australian
  • Dinner w/Friends
Wednesday:
  • Harbor Bridge Climb
  • Dinner at Rock Poll Bar & Grill
Thursday:
  • Breakfast and Golf At St. Michaels
  • Golf At Camden Lakes
  • Dinner at Sydney Cafe
Friday:
  • All day tour of Hunter Valley Vineyards
Saturday:
  • Shopping & Spa
Sunday:
  • Leave for home

See, not to packed, right? All reservation have been made and all tickets have been purchased.

But, what if I just threw the itinerary out the window? What would happen if I went with no plan and no arrangements made?   Well, I have an idea what would happen.

Last October, with my family in town, we went to Beijing for a couple of days and once there, everyone suggested that we have to go to Xian to see the Terra Cotta soldiers.  So, I am thinking, great, absolutely.  Just catch the train and spend the day in Xian and come right back to Beijing that night.  Right?  Wrong.

It was a holiday in China that weekend and if I wanted to purchase a train ticket, I would have had to purchase it about 2 months prior.  Or, wait in this line for 4 days.  So, instead of spending the day in Xian, we spend the day in a our hotel in Beijing.  That is what happens when you fail to plan.

Creating an itinerary and following it makes for a exciting, laid back, and relaxing vacation to me.

What about you?  Do you plan your vacations or just go and see what happens?

Crazy Stuff in China

I know this is an on going theme in my blog and if you have only visited China or only heard about it,  you probably still don’t quite understand why these incidents are so amusing to me and my friends who live here.  But, trust me when I say that I have never laughed my ass off over so many situations as I have in China.  The latest happened just 5 minutes ago.  My boss/friend and I were leaving dinner and stopped at this little boutique next door to the restaurant.  We were looking at some pendants and rings and boss/friend sat her computer down to take a closer look.  We didn’t buy anything.  So, we proceeded to exit the store and walk over to our hotel a good 5 minute walk up two flights of stairs.  

We are opening the door to go into the hotel and we hear this guy yelling at us in Chinese, “Miss, Miss, your computer, Miss.”   Oh, ok. boss/friend forgot her computer.  No problem, thanks for letting us know.  Thanks for bringing it . . . 

He didn’t bring it.  He ran 5 minutes, after us, up two flights of stairs,  to just tell us that she forgot her computer.  He didn’t bring the computer. I couldn’t believe it.  He didn’t bring us the computer, he just ran all the way over here to tell us we left it.  Is that not insane.  Why waste all that energy and yelling at us like a banshee and not even have the computer to give to us.  Am I going crazy here? Am I missing something?  Are they missing something?  

Unbelievably! We had to walk all the way back to the store, down two flights of stairs and then back to the store, with the guy.  He actually started asking us questions like, “So, how long you been in China?”  OMG!  Boss/friend was pissed but we were laughing our asses off the whole time.  

There is just some things about living here that just can’t be explained sometimes.