@nnoble: So a US visa would be easier to get than a 'Europe' visa!
@nnoble: So a US visa would be easier to get than a 'Europe' visa!
tiger: That sounds about right. My involvement, other than get a small percentage on shipments for eight years ended, ended when they formed their venture. The pharma guy reported and paid me quarterly but it was slow at the beginning.
As a rule, I avoided food and medical stuff due to high regulation risk. I had a SOE company in Zhuhai that develop a product that contained aloe, 100% duty on content, and alcohol, both a hazard material (fire) and with FDA medical exposure. US customs required a detailed chemical analysis as formality. The Chinese side felt the product formulation was secret and refused. Nearly a year, four trips to China, packaging design, landing a USD 600K first order with about USD $25K out of my pocket, I gave up. Lesson learned: Stick to being an agent no matter how good the margins looked.
I've never had any problem getting a US visa.
lemon lover is right about the 100 mg vitamin C tablets. I bought those once but never found them again in Beijing.
Vitamin C is water soluble so your excess intake is pissed away.
I take 1000 mg Vitamin C as suggested by my cardiologist in 1996 after a series of ischemic heart attacks, one a month, where no cause was evident. In 2014, The VA determined Agent Orange caused my heart attacks.
From wikipedia:
"A meta-analysis of 44 clinical trials (2014) has shown a significant positive effect of vitamin C on endothelial function when taken at doses greater than 500 mg per day. The researchers noted that the effect of vitamin C supplementation appeared to be dependent on health status, with stronger effects in those at higher cardiovascular disease risk."
So, lemon lover 大夫, I will continue to consume unnecessary vitamin C at 7 cents a day because I haven't another heart attack since I started doing so in 1996.
BTW pharmacy prices in Kunming seem to be fixed as I found no difference from one pharmacy to the next.
In Feb 2014, I did an analysis of Vitamin C costs. These calculations were at 6.21¥ per USD.
I had my son send me a bottle Costco brand vitamin C, 500 tablets, 1,000mg tablets. My cost, including shipping was $34 U$D.
I compared the cost of two domestic vitamin C products and two imported vitamin C products I found on Nan Ping Jie:
Costco 214¥ per bottle, cost per mg was 0.00007 U$D
Domestic A 108¥ per bottle, cost per mg was 0.01496 U$D
Domestic B 198¥ per bottle, cost per mg was 0.00674 U$D
Import A 239¥ per bottle, cost per mg was 0.00087 U$D
Import A 98¥ per bottle, cost per mg was 0.00350 U$D
Chinese labelling is not always clear. The size of the tablet will be clearly given but to find the amount of Vitamin C per tablet requires careful reading. Both domestic brands were 100 mg tablets but one contained only 11.8 mg 'C' per 100 mg tablet and the other 32 mg 'C' per 100 mg tablet.
Nearly all the vitamin C sold in the US originates in China.
Aspirin can be found in 50 and 100 mg tablets and the cost per mg is much cheaper than the US 325mg tablets.
In China Tylenol is hard to find and quite expensive. It also doesn't look right.
Full disclosure: One of the imported vitamin C product is well known to me. I brought a Taiwanese business guy, a Chinese scientist living in the US and a Vietnamese born pharma company owner, together to design, manufacture and distribute standardized TCM pills. Their products were to be exported to China. I found only their line of Western vitamins for sale.
No results found.
Good for quality, but pricey, hand tools.
Be aware they will push whatever they are selling. Some of the staff have no idea about the technical side of appliances.
I went there to buy a stove. I repeatedly told them I would be using bottled gas. They sold me a stove. When I went to my local gas guy, I learned there are at least three kinds of gas sold. Luckily, B&Q did not deliver as promised. I went back to the store and discovered they had sold me a stove they needed to be hooked up to the gas main. I got my money back.
The sales lady was almost in tears, 没有问题!I don't know if it a safety or design issue, but I would think B&Q would know and care.
Last week had an 8:45am flight.
Subway starts at 9am. I have no idea where to catch an airport express bus. Eight taxis refused to go to the airport. After almost an hour standing on Beijing Lu took a black taxi, this dude drives slower than my mother, 120 yuan.
Flight back was delayed so I learned the subway stops running at 6:10pm.
Getting a taxi back was easy, more taxis than customers. Taxi was 87 yuan including 1o yuan toll, airport to Beichen area. Yes, he took a longer route than necessary.
Kunming imagines being a gateway for international travelers. New airport but hard to get to and from it.
World Class Airport, NOT!
Tonight "Peacock", a performance by Yang Liping (杨丽萍), to begin her world tour, 8pm, 100-1680 yuan at Yunna Haigeng Auditorium.
Saw this lady perform at the Pasadena Civic Auditorium, in California, in 1995. Quite a good and interesting show.
I'm going to try to make it.
Not so good. Kimchi had a very sour taste. Other food was nothing to brag about. I don't think I would go back.
This bus station is not located as indicated. It is further North!
20 years in Yunnan with Jim Goodman
Posted byYes, yes. All shut up so the troll can continue with his dumb ass comments.
Inside a pu'er tea factory
Posted byMy second wife, self described tea expert, says pu'er tea was developed by the Brits. The tea was formed into cakes for the long trip to England. The fermenting occurred by accident but the tea was washed and sold anyway. It turned out to be improved by the process.
I've asked and tried to confirm this with no success. There is a lot of tea lore around but almost nothing about the origins of pu'er cha. Sometimes pu'er cha is called 'red tea' but there is, locally, a red tea which is not exactly p'er tea, and quite expensive. Locals seem to refer to fermented pu'er as 'black' tea. For a time, I thought the difference was between Yunnanese people and folks from the north and east, then I bought some 'red' tea in Banna. It is different and quite nice. Also different is the tea sold by Dai and Ahaka people.
This article is excellent. Follow-up articles on local tea products/indutry would be great.
Yuxi-Mengzi: China's newest railway
Posted byAlPage, damn I'm getin old. Thanks!
Yuxi-Mengzi: China's newest railway
Posted byWhich Kunming train station does this train depart from?
Inside a pu'er tea factory
Posted byGreat photo essay! Thanks.