...so please indulge me for a moment, and then we'll be back to normal programming folks.
Firstly - I love DIY. I have fantasised about doing up and renovating a place of my own for as long as I care to remember. I got to partially live out that fantasty when we partly renovated our house in Melbourne. I was here in Hong Kong for most of it though, so I missed out on most of the fun stuff - painting etc. So, I was hoping that painting our new flat would make up for what I missed out on when doing our place. We got the keys last weekend and spent 2 days tearing down wallpaper. This weekend we are cleaning up and preparing the walls so we can paint next weekend. Tonight after work we went out to B&Q (the first and only store in HK devoted to DIY) to get stuff. There are times I wish I lived in a country where I was communicating with people who speak the same language - and tonight was one of those times. I am not the most patient person at the best of times, but seriously, I knew more about paint than the guy working there. Not only that, but we were dealing with people called "Geronimo", and another called "Wonka". I am not kidding. (I have no idea why Chinese people choose stupid, and ridiculous English words as names - but that is a seperate rant alltogether). Going to a store like this is supposed to be fun. In Australia, going to the local Bunnings (I guess the US equivalent is Home Depot) is a Sunday afternoon ritual. Going to a DIY store where there is no sausage sizzle out front, and a tradesman inside to ask " you 'right luv?" is lacking in the experience department.
Secondly - why is it that people in Hong Kong think that painting is so difficult? I came across so many real estate agents when we were apartment hunting that would say that we could paint the place ourselves, but the landlord wasn't prepared to do it - their reasoning? It was either a) too expensive, b) would take too long, or c) they didn't know how to do it. I'm talking about apartments that with a simple coat of paint and a few small DIY jobs, could command an extra US$1000 a month (that's how crazy the rental market is here). But they seem to think that painting is for experts. One agent said to me "Europeans, they know how to paint". Lucky for me, I married an Italian.
OK. I'm taking deep breaths. I think I'm done now.
Have a great weekend everyone. I will be washing down our walls with warm water, and whatever cleaning liquid I can find, because HK's great and wondorous DIY store doesn't carry sugarsoap.
Firstly - I love DIY. I have fantasised about doing up and renovating a place of my own for as long as I care to remember. I got to partially live out that fantasty when we partly renovated our house in Melbourne. I was here in Hong Kong for most of it though, so I missed out on most of the fun stuff - painting etc. So, I was hoping that painting our new flat would make up for what I missed out on when doing our place. We got the keys last weekend and spent 2 days tearing down wallpaper. This weekend we are cleaning up and preparing the walls so we can paint next weekend. Tonight after work we went out to B&Q (the first and only store in HK devoted to DIY) to get stuff. There are times I wish I lived in a country where I was communicating with people who speak the same language - and tonight was one of those times. I am not the most patient person at the best of times, but seriously, I knew more about paint than the guy working there. Not only that, but we were dealing with people called "Geronimo", and another called "Wonka". I am not kidding. (I have no idea why Chinese people choose stupid, and ridiculous English words as names - but that is a seperate rant alltogether). Going to a store like this is supposed to be fun. In Australia, going to the local Bunnings (I guess the US equivalent is Home Depot) is a Sunday afternoon ritual. Going to a DIY store where there is no sausage sizzle out front, and a tradesman inside to ask " you 'right luv?" is lacking in the experience department.
Secondly - why is it that people in Hong Kong think that painting is so difficult? I came across so many real estate agents when we were apartment hunting that would say that we could paint the place ourselves, but the landlord wasn't prepared to do it - their reasoning? It was either a) too expensive, b) would take too long, or c) they didn't know how to do it. I'm talking about apartments that with a simple coat of paint and a few small DIY jobs, could command an extra US$1000 a month (that's how crazy the rental market is here). But they seem to think that painting is for experts. One agent said to me "Europeans, they know how to paint". Lucky for me, I married an Italian.
OK. I'm taking deep breaths. I think I'm done now.
Have a great weekend everyone. I will be washing down our walls with warm water, and whatever cleaning liquid I can find, because HK's great and wondorous DIY store doesn't carry sugarsoap.
