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Southside Magazine October 2013

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Page 1: Southside Magazine October 2013
Page 2: Southside Magazine October 2013

www.hkticketing.comTICKETS ON SALE NOW!31 288 288October 16th - 27th 2013Drama Theatre, Hong Kong Academy for Performing Arts

Written by Adam Long, Daniel Singer and Jess WinfieldAdditional Material by Reed Martin

THE COMPLETE WORKS OFWilliam ShakespeareWilliam Shakespeare

ABRIDGED

“Absl hlrs!”The Independent, London

“Irresistible!”New York Times

ABA Productions & The Reduced Shakespeare Company proudly present

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The really useful magazineOCTOBER 2013

“SEIZE THE MOMENT. REMEMBER ALL THOSE WOMEN ON THE TITANIC WHO WAVED OFF THE DESSERT CART” – ERMA BOMBECK

PEOPLE

4 Snapped!Southside’s social life.

THE PLANNER

6 Happening in October

NEWS

10 What’s going on?Party time on Southside.

FIVE MINUTES WITH...

14 Shek O Chinese & Thai Chilling with chilli.

LOCAL

16 Turtle tail On the trail of a free green turtle.

CHARITY FOCUS

18 Breast is best Support for the Hong Kong Breast Cancer Foundation.

INTERVIEW

20 Louise Hill A graphic artist with designs on your walls.

FEATURE

22 Secret dining Hideaway restaurants in Aberdeen and beyond.

EATING

28 Fergus on Food Seafood on Southside.

EDUCATION

30 Safe harbour Wave hello to The Harbour School.

FAMILY

36 Fright night How to Halloween.

OUTDOORS

40 Happy camping Hong Kong under canvas.

HEALTH & BEAUTY

44 Defying gravity Testing Flex’s aerial arts.

PETS

46 Kitty corner Where to adopt a cat. Plus Sally Andersen on local “breeds”.

CREATURE FEATURE

49 East Asian porcupineThe facts.

DISTRIBUTION

50 Where to find Southside MagazinePick up your copy here!

MARKETPLACE

52 Your guide to shops and servicesCool stuff to buy and do.

CLASSIFIEDS

58 Loads of random useful local stuff.

ULTIMATE GUIDE

60 All you need to knowNumbers that make life easier.

MY SOUTHSIDE

63 Pascale SeilerThe road to happiness.

Find us on Facebookf Southside Magazine

www.hkticketing.comTICKETS ON SALE NOW!31 288 288October 16th - 27th 2013Drama Theatre, Hong Kong Academy for Performing Arts

Written by Adam Long, Daniel Singer and Jess WinfieldAdditional Material by Reed Martin

THE COMPLETE WORKS OFWilliam ShakespeareWilliam Shakespeare

ABRIDGED

“Absl hlrs!”The Independent, London

“Irresistible!”New York Times

ABA Productions & The Reduced Shakespeare Company proudly present

Cover by Michael Ma, facebook.com/MichaelMaPhotography

Page 4: Southside Magazine October 2013

4 | WWW.SOUTHSIDE.HK

peopleSnaps from Southside

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people say cheese

Share your event photos with us at [email protected]. Get snapping!

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UNTIL OCT 20Ocean Art WalkHong Kong Shark Foundation and Ocean Recovery Alliance host a visual exhibition about ocean conservation. L3, Core C, Cyberport, www.travelsouth.hk.

OCT 19-20Southern Beach GamesTwo days of sandy fun and games at Repulse Bay Beach, including a 5km open-water swim from Stanley. Details at www.openwaterasia.com.

UNTIL NOV 1Hong Kong CleanupTake a broom to Hong Kong’s coastline, parks and urban areas in this annual series of eco-events. Register at www.hkcleanup.org.

UNTIL OCT 17Huang Zhiyang exhibition Chinese contemporary art. Pékin Fine Arts Hong Kong, 16/F Union Industrial Building, 48 Wong Chuk Hang Road, 2177 6190.

OCT 1-31Halloween FestOcean Park’s annual spook fest (see p.36). Discounted tickets for HK ID card holders from www.oceanpark.com.hk, 2552 0291.

OCT 1National DayNo fireworks out of respect for the victims of last year’s ferry accident.

OCT 3-6Asia Contemporary Art ShowWorks by young, emerging and recognised artists. J.W. Marriott, Pacific Place, Central. Tickets $150-$240 from www.asiacontemporaryart.com.

OCT 4-31Disney’s Haunted HalloweenDress up for Mickey’s spooky party. Thu-Sun, Hong Kong Disneyland, Lantau, www.hongkongdisneyland.com.

OCT 1, 6, 13 & 20Stanley International Beer CarnivalFour weekends of beer and fun. Stanley Promenade. Details at www.travelsouth.hk.

planner happening in october

UNTIL OCT 6Hong Kong International Comedy FestivalBack for its seventh year and funnier than ever. Join the audience or stand up and take the mic. Details at www.hkcomedyfestival.com.

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planner

OCT 12Clean Half SwimThe annual 15km swimming race from Stanley Main Beach to Deep Water Bay for solo swimmers or relay teams of five. Dry off at the barbecue after-party. Register at www.openwaterasia.com.

OCT 14 Chung Yeung FestivalPublic holiday and ancestor-worship festival.

OCT 17-18Charity Christmas Card & Handicraft FairChristmas cards, wrapping paper, decorations, Christmas puddings and more at this annual event run by the Community Advice Bureau. 10am-5pm, Li Hall, St John’s Cathedral, Garden Road, Central, [email protected].

OCT 20Pink Walk

Put one foot in front of the other in aid of the Hong Kong Breast Cancer Foundation. Dress code: pink.

8.25am-1pm. The Peak. Enroll by Oct 11 at www.hkbcf.org.

OCT 12Justin Bieber Live in MacauBecome a Belieber (we won’t tell). CotaiArena, The

Venetian Macau. Tickets $380-$1,768 from www.hkticketing.com, 3128 8288.

OCT 13, 14Cyberport Kite-flying DayKites, grass and a fun day out for the whole family. Cyberport Promenade, www.travelsouth.hk.

OCT 8-13Ennio MarchettoHilarious one-man show featuring paper costumes, wigs and props. Drama Theatre, HKAPA, Wan Chai. Tickets $395-$695 from www.hkticketing.com.

OCT 6Parkview Charity BazaarMore than 70 stalls, games, food and performances. 10am-5pm. The Podium, Hong Kong Parkview, 88 Tai Tam Reservoir Road, www.hongkongparkview.com.

OCT 6, 13, 20, 27Island East MarketsHong Kong’s very own farmers’ market sells everything from organic veggies to vintage goodies. 11am-6pm, Tong Chong Street, Island East, Quarry Bay, www.hkmarkets.org.

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Got an event? We can publish the details for free. Email [email protected].

BOOK NOWNOV 2Spanish Women’s Association Annual PartyBarbecue, buffet, cocktails, music and more. From 8pm, Royal Hong Kong Yacht Club, Kellett Island, Causeway Bay. Tickets and details from [email protected].

NOV 4Matchbox Twenty Live in Hong KongTouring Asia for the first time. Star Hall, KITEC, Kowloon Bay. Tickets $788 from www.hkticketing.com, 3128 8288.

NOV 17Stanley CarnivalOld-fashioned games, live entertainment, food, shopping and prizes in aid of Christina Noble Children’s Foundation. 11am-6pm, Hong Kong Sea School, 13-15 Tung Tau Wan Road, Stanley. Tickets $100-$250 from [email protected].

DEC 7Winter Garage SaleBook your tables now for the biannual bonanza of pre-loved goodies by calling Jean on 9045 5942. 9.30am-3pm, LG3 Car Park at Hong Kong University of Science & Technology, Clearwater Bay.

NOV 29-DEC 1Clockenflap FestivalIt’s back! Franz Ferdinand and Chic headline Hong Kong’s answer to the Glastonbury Festival, with seven music stages plus art, film and cabaret. West Kowloon Cultural District. Early-bird tickets $440-$980 until Oct 13 at www.clockenflap.com.

planner

OCT 25Quiz nightBird brains unite at the Pickled Pelican, 8pm-10pm. 90 Stanley Main Street, Stanley, 2813 4313.

OCT 25-NOV 16Marco Polo OktoberfestLederhosen, beer steins and oompah bands. L6, Marco Polo Hongkong Hotel, Harbour City, Tsim Sha Tsui. Tickets from www.hkticketing.com.

OCT 27Spooky Halloween PartyDress up and play in the maze, mystery cave, dress-ups and more. Prizes for the spookiest family. Wise-Kids Playroom, Cyberport, Pok Fu Lam. Tickets $300 from www.cyberport.hk, 2989 6298.

OCT 31HalloweenBeware trick or treaters, and things that go bump in the night. Event details on p.36.

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newsLocals fight car park Local residents are challenging plans to build a multi-storey car park in Stanley. The Southern District Council proposes to build the car park next to the bus terminus, between the market and Stanley Main Beach, and is considering rerouting the traffic system to allow more buses and cars into the area.

But residents say the car park will only be full on holidays and weekends, and will remain largely empty during the week, citing the many unused parking spaces in the low-rise green area. They are fighting the plans on the basis that the multi-storey building will change the character of the area, but they are reported not to be hopeful about the outcome.

After years of standing empty, the prime beachfront Seaview Building in Repulse Bay is to finally get a new Chinese restaurant.

Spotlight Enterprises will open a retro restaurant, reminiscent of a 1950s’ diner, catering to wedding banquets in a hall overlooking the beach. There will also be a bar and mini food court serving dishes such as suckling pig, Thai barbecue and local-style snacks to visitors to Repulse Bay.

The contract, awarded by The Leisure and Cultural Services Department (LCSD), states renovations must be complete by September 2014 and must maintain the facade of the building without any demolition or major alterations.

Last year LCSD invited proposals from businesses to revitalise the 60-year-old Seaview Building, which was intended to be redeveloped into a hotel following the closure of the popular original Seaview Restaurant.

Restaurant for Repulse Bay

It’s party time on Southside. Hannah Grogan checks out the District Council’s plans.

Go Fly a Kite at Cyberport and canoe polo, part of the Southern Beach Games.

Call of the south

With the sun shining and the thermometer dipping, October is always a favourite month to get out and about in Hong Kong. But this month there’s more happening than ever with the Southern District Council (SDC) splashing the cash on three events that will turn the Southside into party central: the Southern Beach Games at Repulse Bay, Stanley International Beer Carnival and Go Fly a Kite, a kite-flying festival at Cyberport.

Organised in conjunction with the Southern District Office and members of the public, the events are part of the year-long Southern District Tourism and Culture Festival, a $3 million initiative to promote the area.

“We try to be as creative as possible when figuring out what is to be presented in the festival,” says the SDC chairman Chu Ching-hong. “We are trying out a variety of events throughout the year, including both cultural and sports programmes. The SDC will review the feedback from the community after the festival to see whether some can be sustained in future.”

The festival includes annual events such as the Dragon Boat

Festival in June and the Mid-Autumn Festival’s Pok Fu Lam fire dragon as well as new events that aim to highlight the best of what the Southside has to offer.

October kicks off with the Stanley International Beer Carnival will take place over four weekends. Each weekend focuses on beer from a different country or region, starting appropriately enough with Chinese beer on October 1, Chinese National Day. As well as the beer stalls, there will also be games, activities and art on Stanley’s waterfront promenade.

Go Fly a Kite (October 13-14) promises to be a colourful weekend for the whole family, featuring kite masters from Japan, India and China who will be holding kite-making workshops on October 13 and flying their stunning kites on October 14 – with opportunities for you to try your hand as well as watch the masters at work.

And October 19-20 sees the Hong Kong Southern Beach Games, a fun-filled, action-packed weekend on Repulse Bay Beach. As well as a 5km swimming race, expect Hong Kong’s first

Oct 1, 6, 13, 20International Beer CarnivalStanley Promenade.

Oct 13-14Go Fly a KiteKite-flying festival, Cyberport Promenade, Pok Fu Lam

Oct 19-20Hong Kong Southern Beach GamesRepulse Bay Beach.

October events

beach water-polo competition, canoe polo, dodgeball, handball, competitive sandcastle construction and more.

“These events have been chosen because we believe that they cater to different aspects of people’s lives,” Chu says. “Simply speaking, we are hoping to bring people together on the Southside and show them everything that is on offer here.”

For details of the Southern District Tourism and Culture Festival, visit www.travelsouth.hk.

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Top Deck closes for refit

news in your backyard

Popular Southside brunch spot Top Deck has closed for up to a year for maintenance. The 9,000-square-foot restaurant on the roof of the Jumbo Kingdom floating restaurant will reopen in 2014 with a new look.

“We are closing for at least nine months, maybe even a year,” said spokesperson Catherine Yuen. “The whole floor needs massive maintenance.”

Staff threw a final party on September 29 and sealed a time capsule of “2013 artefacts” to be opened when – and if – Top Deck reopens. Jumbo Kingdom’s lower floors will remain open.

The restaurant has been an expat favourite since its opening in 2005 and its champagne-fuelled Sunday brunches will be missed.

Sad news: Daniel Marinov, founder of Shek O’s legendary restaurant The Black Sheep, passed away on September 11.

Famous for great stories, great cooking and great parties, Daniel will be fondly remembered by Black Sheep regulars. The backstreet restaurant, with touches such as neon lights and zebra skins, reflected the surreal zigzags of his own life. He spoke eight languages, invented the neon telephone in the late

1980s and made – and lost – a fortune on electronic innovations. He also contributed plans to West Kowloon. “He was an amazing guy,” said fellow restauranteur Jean Paul Gauci. “Always buzzing with ideas.”

Mr Marinov died, aged 57, after a battle with cancer. Details of his funeral were being finalised as we went to press. (For details, please call The Black Sheep at 2809 2021.)

“We plan on hiring a boat and sprinkling his ashes into the sea around Shek O,” said his mother, Silvano Marinov. “Daniel loved Shek O.”

The Black Sheep will continue, but Daniel will be missed.

Farewell to Black Sheep’s Daniel Marinov

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British one-stop baby shop Mothercare has opened a new store, its ninth in Hong Kong, in Horizon Plaza, Ap Lei Chau. And that’s got to be good news for Southside mums who previously had to trek into Prince’s Building in Central for their Mothercare fix. The brand, which plans to open another new store soon in iSQUARE, Tsim Sha Tsui, sells good-quality products for babies and children, including toiletries, clothing, pushchairs, toys, nursery furniture and other essentials. For details, visit www.mothercare.com.hk.

news

Hailing Shek O bus terminus The art deco bus terminus in Shek O is to be granted a higher historical status, according to government heritage advisers.

Much loved by local residents, the 58-year-old bus terminus, with its distinctive cantilevered balcony and art-deco lettering, appeared in Steven Soderbergh’s 2011 film Contagion, making it popular with camera-toting visitors.

It was built in 1955 as a watchman's quarters and garage for the now-defunct company, China Motor Bus (CMB), which

operated routes on Hong Kong Island. There was an office on the ground floor while the second floor was a changing room where CMB drivers could put their feet up. The two-storey, privately owned building is one of the few non-residential art deco buildings still standing in the Southern District.

The Antiquities Advisory Board had proposed giving the building grade-three status, but many on the board, as well as local residents, believed it merited a higher rating.

Mothercare opens in Ap Lei Chau

Page 13: Southside Magazine October 2013

Tai Tam Montessori Tel: 2525 1655Repulse Bay Montessori Tel: 2803 1885Mid Levels Montessori Tel: 2549 1211The Peak Pre-School Tel: 2849 6192Repulse Bay Beachside Tel: 2812 0274Happy Valley Pre-School Tel: 2575 0042

Pokfulam Pre-School Tel: 2551 7177Woodland Waterfall Tel: 2872 6138(Pokfulam)Woodland Harbourside Tel: 2559 1377(Aberdeen)Sai Kung Pre-School Tel: 2813 0290

www.woodlandschools.com

Seven of our pre-schools use ‘Traditional’ teaching methods in line with the UK National Curriculum’s Early Years Foundation Stage (EYFS). These schools are fully accredited by the Pre-School Learning Alliance, London. Three of our pre-schools offer ‘Montessori’ teaching methods that are fully approved and accredited by the Montessori Centre International (London). At Woodlands we recognise the benefits to children of learning Mandarin, and offer the option of bilingual classes.

For 35 years Woodland has set the standard in Hong Kong for quality early years education. With ten schools,

Woodland offers the only accredited early years education in Hong Kong.

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Governor Chris Patten was an honourable guest back in the 1990s. I trust my workers as if we are family. We depend on one another. Most of us have been working together for 10 years now.

We like to have fun with customers. One time, we invited 20 customers to join our annual songkran festival at the restaurant – our neighbours joined in and we had about 40 people throwing water at each other. It was chaos, but everyone had a blast.

We enjoy a simple and relaxed life in Shek O. We don’t go to the city often and we find it easier to keep the traditional taste in all of our dishes. We do not change our menu to follow the latest trend and we take pride in our extensive menu.

We have witnessed generations of families coming to our restaurant – these customers have become lifelong friends.

Shek O Chinese & Thai Restaurant, 303 Shek O Village Shek O, 2809 4426.

Shek O’s top tablePomechareon Sutichai tells Vivian Lui about life at Shek O Chinese and Thai.

My mother loves to cook. From a young age, she dreamed of opening her own restaurant in Thailand. Twenty-two years later, she came to Hong Kong and had the opportunity to take over this restaurant in Shek O. We’ve never left. We focus on healthy eating and originality. We stand out from other eateries because we provide only high-quality seafood served on tableware from Thailand, with a laidback seaside atmosphere. We want our customers to feel the authenticity of local Thai culture. Hong Kong is hectic enough. We respect our customers’ need to get away from the city and quietly enjoy the food at our restaurant. We want them to feel like home, anything but commercial.

five minutes with... my thai

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local shell to shore

EditorialJane Steer

[email protected]

Hannah Grogan [email protected]

Art DirectorCarly Tonna

[email protected]

Graphic DesignerEvy Cheung

[email protected]

Sales ManagerJonathan Csanyi-Fritz

[email protected]

Sales ExecutiveJackie Wilson

[email protected]

Digital Content EditorSharon Wong

[email protected]

Accounts ManagerConnie Lam

[email protected]

PublisherTom Hilditch

[email protected]

Contributors Carolynne DearJess HannahMarie Teather

Sally AndersenFergus FungKaren ChowSteffi Yuen

Agatha Yuen

PrinterGear Printing

Room 3B, 49 Wong Chuk Hang Road, (Derrick Industrial Building),

Wong Chuk Hang, Hong Kong

Published by Fast Media

Floor LG1, 222 Queens Road Central Hong Kong

Southside Magazine is published by Fast Media Ltd. This magazine is published on the understanding that

the publishers, advertisers, contributors and their employees are not responsible for the results of any actions, errors and omissions taken on the basis of

information contained in this publication. The publisher, advertisers, contributors and their employees expressly

disclaim all and any liability to any person, whether a reader of this publication or not, in respect of any action

or omission by this publication. Southside Magazine cannot be held responsible for any errors or inaccuracies provided by advertisers or contributors. The views herein are not necessarily shared by the staff or pubishers. No

part of this magazine may be reproduced without written permission from the publisher.

www.fastmedia.com.hk

GIVE US A CALL! Editorial: 2776 2773

Advertising: 2776 2772

On the trail of a free green turtle. By Steffi Yuen.

Tailing a turtle

The Agriculture, Fisheries and Conservation Department (AFCD) has been monitoring the movements of a released green turtle and building up a more detailed picture of turtle habitat in the waters off Tai Tam.

The mature female turtle had a lucky escape after being caught in a fishing net off Tai Po on December 14. Fortunately, she was still alive when the fisherman hauled in his nets and called in the AFCD.

“We gave the massive turtle a quick body check and were happy to find no cuts or wounds,” recalls the AFCD’s Connie Ng Ka-yan, the wetland and fauna conservation officer in charge of the rescue. “The turtle was sent to Ocean Park because there are more suitable facilities, equipment and professional vets to give the turtle the best care and a detailed health check.”

It was good timing for the AFCD, which has been researching the five turtle species found in Hong Kong waters, building a genetic database and using satellite transmitters to track the turtles’ migratory routes and feeding grounds since 2002. With a shell measuring 83cm long, the turtle is thought to be aged 30 to 50 years, and after a couple of months’ recuperation weighed in at a healthy 60kg. Researchers

took blood samples, attached tracking devices and tags to her shell and flippers, and released her back into eastern waters on January 28.

“The satellite transmitter on the turtle’s shell is less than five per cent of its weight and the tags are small, lightweight and streamlined, thus will not hinder the turtle’s growth, movements, or behaviour,” Ng says. “With the microchip, inconel tag and satellite transmitter attached to the turtle, we successfully recorded the turtle’s fantastic journey for around a month.”

The data shows the turtle spent most of her time near Tai Tam, Sai Kung and Daya Bay.

“We are so excited by the results,” Ng says. “It matches our record of green turtles’ feeding ground. Green turtles are commonly found to be wandering around southern China, and southern to eastern Hong Kong.”

After a month, the tracking devices were damaged, probably during feeding near a rocky shore, but Ng says the data they provided is already proving valuable. It has been shared with other

conservation centres, contributing to the understanding of this endangered species, and the blood sample has been carefully preserved as part of a growing genetic database.

The AFCD’s turtle conservation project is being run in collaboration with both Ocean Park and the Guangdong government. Members of the public can play a vital role by reporting sightings of wild green turtles, Ng says, helping to build a more detailed picture of the species’ feeding grounds. And she says there are plans afoot to give the public more details of this and other wildlife conservation projects through a new Hong Kong Biodiversity Newsletter, which should be published in the next couple of years.

Help protect green turtles by reporting sightings and strandings to the AFCD by calling 1823.

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BLADE seriesKerlite finish

ITALIAN Kitchen, Bathroom, Living funitures

U47 21/F, Blk F Wah Lok Industrial Ctr31-35 Shan Mei St, Fo Tan, ShatinHong Kong

T 3741 2095 F 2791 [email protected]

Available on theiPad

Modulnova CatalogueAvailable on theiPhone

Modulnova App 2012

modulnova.hk

charity focus think pink

Breast is bestIn Breast Cancer Awareness Month, Jess Hannah looks at the work of the local charity.

Hong Kong thinks pink this month as the city dons the pink ribbon in support of international Breast Cancer Awareness Month. The Hong Kong Breast Cancer Foundation (HKBCF) was established in 2005 by doctors and breast cancer survivors to provide educational, paramedical, emotional and financial support to women affected by breast cancer.

The disease strikes more women in Hong Kong than any other cancer, with an average eight cases diagnosed every day. Early detection is key: when breast cancer is discovered at an early stage, the survival rate is high. So HKBCF encourages regular breast screening, including self examination, clinical examination and mammography, which can reduce mortality rates by 25 per cent- 30 per cent.

HKBCF Founder Dr Polly Cheung, a breast surgeon who has been serving on the council of Breast Surgery International since 1999, envisions a future in which women lead “full, healthy lives without the fear of

losing their breasts or even their lives to breast cancer”.

“[HKBCF] strives towards improving the social environment and awareness of the issue and aims to steer public health policies in favour of

our mission,” she says. October is Breast Cancer

Awareness Month worldwide, and among the many fundraisers in Hong Kong is the ninth Pink Walk for Breast Health, one of the most hotly

anticipated events in city’s charity calendar.

The cost of careBreast cancer treatment is vital but expensive, and the HKBCF relies on public donations for its work in education, patient support and research. Please donate generously. • $5 delivers an educational booklet to

members of the public.• $100 buys a Comfort Kit for breast

cancer patients.• $750 pays for one mammographic screening.

For details and donations, please visit www.hkbcf.org.

Among the many fundraisers in Hong Kong is the ninth Pink Walk for

Breast Health

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interview

Hannah Grogan talks to the Hong Kong graphic artist with designs for a wall near you.

Louise Hill

My love of design and creativity comes from growing up in a family of designers. I am blessed to have been surrounded by beautiful textiles and creative conceptual artwork all my life.

I was 17 when I started art college – really young. And because my parents were artists, that’s kinda all I knew, what I grew up with. I couldn’t envisage anything else I’d be good at.

After graduating in London, I specialised in high-end packaging design for more than 15 years working for clients such as Crabtree & Evelyn, Fortnum & Mason and Marks & Spencer. I developed a love for colour, typography, illustration and detailed artwork, which I now put to use with my new canvas design venture.

After freelancing and guest lecturing at RMIT (Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology), we moved with our young twins to Shanghai for five years and three years ago to Hong Kong where I continue to be inspired by the wonderful energy and colour that Asia has to offer.

I create fun modern images on canvas using your own photos. They can be a fun alternative to a family portrait, a gift for a friend leaving Hong Kong or a contemporary and unique personalised piece of art for your home. For commissions, a client will send me 20 or 30

Louise Hill with her new range of canvases.

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interview all things bright and beautiful

Maxi Cosi Rodi Air (15-36kg)(Special edition Vintage Football or Magic available mid October)

Ergobaby Urban Chic Carrier

Yu Fruit Bars & Snacks(available mid October)

Mamas & Papas Chamberlain Oak Cot/Toddler/Sofa Bed

Sono Vaso Viola Cardigan

$750Mustela Bebe

$690

$6,999

Usborne Books

from $118

Boo! Centerpiece & Cupcakes stand

Lascal Buggyboard Maxi

from $4.90

from $45

Grobag

from $325 $2,190

from $45 $1,290

October’s hot picks

Pedder Building Store 5/F Pedder Building,12 Pedder Street, Central T: 2522 7112Horizon Plaza Store 21/F Horizon Plaza, 2 Lee Wing Street, Ap Lei Chau T: 2552 5000www.bumpstobabes.com

B2B 13_10 SaiKung.indd 1 19/09/2013 10:01

photographs to my dropbox and I’ll edit and rework all of them: cut them out, maybe add a border and put them together as a gift. It’s such a rewarding feeling to create personal memories for clients.

But it’s my new series that I want to expand. I created detailed, colourful images printed on canvas. There’s three in the series so far. The

latest is a really chaotic and crazy transport one. I think the style is me mixed with a bit of G.O.D and Shanghai Tang – I really admire those companies.

I like to put mood boards together for people and myself. I use Pinterest everyday. I’ve got loads of boards up there. It’s a graphic designer’s dream – a visual Facebook.

I don’t tolerate plagiarism, it’s not creative. At RMIT, I found a lot of students were very good at making things look pretty on a Mac but they’d lost the ability to think conceptually, like students used to pre-computers.

You have to get ideas onto paper first before touching the technology. Think about it. They just think, “Right, I’m really good at Photoshop and Illustrator so I can make it look good.” But anyone can do that. You need something behind it – you need substance, an idea, some depth to the design – in order to be successful.

I miss packaging design. I absolutely loved it. But this stuff has a freedom about it, because I’m doing it for myself. You spend your 20s and 30s working in design studios and then, if you have kids, you get to that stage in your life where you can’t be working until 2am.

It’s nice to work for yourself, create your own deadlines and have freedom to express yourself.

For details, call Louise Hill Design on 6073 2270 or visit her Facebook page.

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feature

Cuore Cuore is a private kitchen in its truest sense. It’s inside the Wong Chuk Hang home of Italian chef Andrea Oschetti, who throws open his front door for guests looking for something outside the restaurant norm.

“I live where I cook,” Oschetti says. “The concept is me in my home – and when people come here, I have nothing to hide. People encounter me and my food and my home.”

He lives and cooks in a 2,500-square-foot, open-plan space with a chef’s table that can seat up to 30 people. It’s warm and cosy, decorated with photographs and mementoes from his travels. Eating here is all about intimacy and engaging with the chef as he cooks. Like all the best Italian food, the emphasis is on excellent

ingredients cooked simply, and Oschetti spends time sourcing the finest seasonal ingredients in Hong Kong and overseas.

“Food should be exciting, healthy and sexy,” he insists.

For details and reservations, visit www.cuoreprivatechef.com.

Artichoke CanteenSouthside’s newest restaurant and art space is Artichoke Canteen, which opened last month on Ap Lei Chau. It’s located down the hall from The 8th Estate Winery in the Harbour Industrial Center’s original canteen, which means the space already has a food and liquor licence.

The food is international cuisine with a focus on vegetarian dishes, plus a few fish and chicken dishes for the carnivorous. Open and spacious, with an industrial-chic vibe, alfresco terrace and a domed wood-fired pizza oven, what’s not to love?

Hannah Grogan explores the new crop of hideaway restaurants around Aberdeen.

Page 23: Southside Magazine October 2013

It shares a partitioned space with new art gallery, Toof Contemporary. The entire art-conscious development aims to become a community space for the area and will be open to rent for private functions. It also plans to run monthly events such as Pilates classes and coffee workshops. With a supervised kid-friendly corner where you can stash the little ones, and a location close to the Horizon Plaza shopping centre, this is a canteen with appeal.

3/F Harbour Industrial Center, 10 Lee Hing Street, Ap Lei Chau, 2580 0293.

The 8th Estate WineryNow in its sixth year, The 8th Estate remains Hong Kong’s only winery. It imports grapes from all over the world and produces wines on site. “Wine doesn’t necessarily travel well,” explains founder Lysanne Tusar. “It’s always best to drink wine closest to where it was produced – that’s the concept of bringing in the grapes directly.”

The 8,000 sq ft space has plenty of wiggle room, with large barrel rooms and an alfresco

terrace used as entertainment areas for up to 200 people, plus a production room where the wine is made and bottled. The winery is open for public tastings at weekends, with private tastings available by arrangement for parties of six or more, including a server, cheese and crackers.

3/F Harbour Industrial Center, 10 Lee Hing Street, Ap Lei Chau, 2518 0922.

CulinartOpened in March, this purpose-built kitchen focuses on the fine art of cooking. Owner and chef Stanley Wong specialises in Western cuisine with Asian influences and California-style presentation. He runs a catering business and private kitchen in a comfortable, chameleon-like

space. Equipped with a hi-tech kitchen and a cosy fireplace, it’s airy and bright during the day yet intimate at night.

The chef’s table can seat eight to 24 private kitchen guests, who watch as Wong cooks up a fine-dining menu of six or seven courses ($1,080 a head). The menu changes monthly with what’s in season, but whatever Wong has cooking you can be sure your tastebuds will thank you for it.

22B Kwai Bo Industrial Building, 40 Wong Chuk Hang Road, Aberdeen, 2580 0919, www.culinart.com.hk.

Chef Studio by EddyLocated below Culinart, Chef Studio by Eddy is owned, operated and designed by chef Eddy Leung, who has been running private kitchens since 2000, when he opened Poison Ivy in Wan Chai. He focuses on European cuisine, particularly French, with menus dictated by the season and innovative use of local and imported ingredients.

WWW.SOUTHSIDE.HK | 23

feature sssh!

Eating here is all about intimacy and

engaging with the chef as he cooks

Clockwise from left: Culinart’s kitchen and a dessert; black truffle consomme by Chef Studio by Eddy; inside The 8th Estate; (below left) cosy at Cuore.

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feature

Call the WiFi Guy!

Mobile : +852 9385 8379 Email : [email protected]

The space is large and industrial, offering catering, private dining, cooking classes and team building. “It’s not a business, it’s a passion,” Eddy says.

If industrial Wong Chuk Hang doesn’t tickle your fancy, go for a backdrop of Lamma, Po Toi O or Middle Island aboard a private boat catered by Eddy that can be rented for day trips ($600 a head for 15-16 guests, including

food). Alternatively, Eddy will cook for you in the privacy of your home.

5B Kwai Bo Industrial Building, 40 Wong Chuk Hang Road, Aberdeen, 3104 4664.

Pomegranate Kitchen New kid on the Wong Chuk Hang block, Pomegranate Kitchen has moved out of owner Maria Bizri’s home kitchen and into its own

premises. Already established as a successful catering company, Pomegranate is now open for private dining on the premises for up to 26 guests and as an event space for larger parties. Bizri is also planning cookery classes.

It’s a pristine white space with a Mediterranean vibe and a large alfresco terrace. Appropriately, the food is all about the flavours of the eastern Mediterranean – Greece, Turkey

Pomegranate Kitchen has an eastern Mediterranean vibe, while The Butchers Club (opposite) is all about the beef.

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featureand Lebanon – with a menu strewn with koftas, kebabs, kibbeh and dips, and main courses garnished with sumac, zataar and harissa.

For details, call 2580 0663 or visit www.pomegranate.com.hk.

Kea’s KitchenIn the heart of Aberdeen Typhoon Shelter, a houseboat is cooking up a storm. Run by chef Kea Liden, Kea’s Kitchen is a floating private kitchen and cookery school focusing on traditional Thai food. Open Wednesday to Sunday, the 63-foot Mandarin Manor boat has indoor seating for up to 20 people and another 20 can be accommodated on the top deck. Booking is essential. For details, call 6077 5964, email [email protected] or visit www.keaskitchen.com.

The Butchers ClubNot surprisingly, this new business is all about meat. Learn about the art of butchery and dry-ageing meat, or chow down on some of the finest prime beef in town at the chef’s table, which can cater for up to 10 (minimum spend, $10,000). Diners are encouraged to interact with the chef and butchers and can try shucking oysters and turning a steak on the grill. Bring your own wine.

13C Sun Ying Industrial Centre, 9 Tin Wan Close, Tin Wan, Aberdeen, 2552 8281, www.butchersclub.com.hk.

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food by fergus fin dining

Seafood, eat foodFergus Fung finds the Southside’s best fish dishes.

When the craving for seafood strikes, the first places that spring to mind are Lamma Island, Sai Kung, Lei Yue Mun, Po Toi O or Sam Shing Hui. But Southside has the best selection of seafood in all Hong Kong. Aberdeen has been a fishing port for more than a century and the Aberdeen Wholesale Fish Market is the oldest and largest in Hong Kong.

Its tanks are filled with live seafood caught not only locally but all over the world, including Alaskan king crabs and Australian abalone. Aberdeen’s fishmongers will also seek out unusual shellfish, ocean and river fish on request. However, this is very much a wholesale market and unless you run a restaurant or retail seafood business, most stalls will not sell to you directly. So how do you get your seafood fix?

Until recently, there was a canteen in the market catering to fishmongers and their clients, which served probably the best selection of seafood in town as well as legendary French toast. However, the operator lost the tender when the lease came up in the

summer and the new operator has yet to take over – hopefully, its seafood culinary skills will be just as good, if not better, than its predecessor.

The Southern District Council is also keen to promote seafood in its bid to boost tourism, and has been looking into spending some of the $100 million recently allocated to each district to build a new seafood dining complex next to the fish market.

That’s still a few years down the road, and until then Southsiders can indulge in local seafood in the Ap Lei Chau wet market. On the first floor of the Ap Lei Chau Municipal Services Building (8 Hung Shing Street) are a few congee and noodle stalls. What the menus do not advertise is that you can buy fresh seafood in the market below and they will cook it for you – just like in Sai Kung, Lamma and elsewhere.

While you indulge in the smorgasbord of

seafood in Hong Kong, keep in mind what is sustainable in our world. The World Wildlife Fund (WWF) publishes a guide recommending seafood that is sustainable, what to think twice about ordering and what to avoid. This information is also in the latest edition of WOM guide, available at all major bookstores.

Fergus Fung co-founded the WOM Hong Kong restaurant guide, available in online and print versions. He is also a wine consultant for Bonhams 1793 and a Southern District Councillor.

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education small is beautiful

Breaking the mould Hannah Grogan discovers what sets The Harbour School apart.

Each class of about 15 students has a qualified teacher and a co-teacher with a degree in a specialist subject such as art, history or philosophy. About half the faculty are male.

“Because we have very small classes and an extremely high teacher-to-student ratio, it is common to see children working in small groups or individually with a teacher. This may be because they are advanced, because they

need additional help or because they have a particular interest,” Blurton says.

The school also places importance on after-school classes or “SEA courses” (it is The Harbour School after all), which give the children

Nestled away in a corner of Kennedy Town is a small school doing things a little differently. Opening in 2007 with just seven students, The Harbour School (THS) now has an enrolment of 180 children aged four (pre-kindergarten) to 14 (grade eight).

Principal Jadis Blurton, who has 30 years’ experience in education, child psychology and educational psychology, agreed to take on the role only if she could make the school what Hong Kong really needs. From the moment you step through the door, it’s clear she has helped create something special. This is a happy place, where children are engaged, passionate and taken seriously.

“We take happiness very seriously,” Blurton says. “Kids who are happy and self-confident are more productive and creative. It is very difficult to learn or produce while feeling anxious, sad or frightened.”

THS has an international curriculum based on the US system. It takes a structured approach to the core competencies of reading, writing and maths and has a “units of inquiry” approach to science and social studies.

This is a happy place, where children are

engaged, passionate and taken seriously

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education

distance of the main campus. The search is on for a permanent home that can accommodate its targeted maximum size of 300 students (from ages four to 18) in one campus to maintain the small size and nurturing nature of the school community.

While it was forged from the need for

Factbox

Year founded: 2007Number of pupils: 180Teacher-pupil ratio: whole school about 1:3; in-class at least 1:7Campus address: 2/F, 23 Belcher’s Street, Kennedy Town Phone: 2816 5222 Website: www.thsdock.net

a chance to extend their learning outside the classroom but as an extension of school. There are more than 20 clubs to accommodate such diverse interests as photography, poetry, wrestling and Irish dancing.

Currently, the school is split between three locations, with two annexes within walking

additional school places for international children, The Harbour School is about more than just providing extra places. It is about providing places for those who need them.

“I am passionate about the need for good programming for children who are outside the mould because they are gifted and/or may have specific learning disabilities, attentional problems, behavioural problems, and so on,” Blurton says. “This is a problem in international schools as well as in local schools. There are also many kids in Hong Kong who cannot afford or get into international schools but who do not speak Chinese, and these kids are in need of appropriate placements. Kids are our most important natural resources – we are foolish if we waste them.”

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Children born in 2009 may apply for Year 1; children born in 2003 may apply for Year 7. September 1-30Central application period for parents to submit their applications. Download a form at www.esf.edu.hk/application-form.

September 3Applications open for Nomination Rights (www.esf.edu.hk/esf-nomination-rights).

October 4 (Year 7), October 7 (Year 1)Deadlines for the receipt of supporting documents at ESF Centre.

October 7 (Year 7), October 11 (Year 1)Acknowledgment emails will be sent to parents advising on the admission process.

October 8 (Year 7), November 22 (Year 1)ESF sends invitations to assessments or interviews – including invitations to interview with guaranteed place if successful; interview with entry wait list place if

successful; and confirmations of wait listing for possible future interviews.

October 15 (Year 7)Deadline to confirm attendance at assessment by payment of external assessment fee.

October 18 (Year 7)Parents sent email confirming assessment venue and timing.

October 26 (Year 7)Assessments conducted at Bradbury School and Beacon Hill School.

November 15 (Year 7)Applicants receive interview timings (if required).

November 25-December 4 (Year 7)Year 7 interviews conducted.

December 9 (Year 7)Applicants receive letters confirming their assessment results

December 20 (Year 7)Deadline to confirm places offered by payment of deposit and refundable capital levy.

January 6-30 (Year 1)First-round interviews at primary schools February 10 (Year 1)Applicants receive confirmation of interview results.

February 24 (Year 1)Deadline to confirm places offered by payment of deposit and refundable capital levy

February-August (Year 1)Further interviews at primary schools.

Countdown to joining ESFKey dates for applying to Years 1 and 7 at ESF schools for the 2014-15 academic year.

ITS School Placements provides an education consulting service that works with families and employers

to find the right schools for individual children in Hong Kong, from nursery to secondary schools. ITS also offers research, policy and advisory services for corporations. For more details, contact [email protected], 3188 3940 or www.itseducationasisa.com.

Page 35: Southside Magazine October 2013

The Clearwater Bay Golf & Country Club – Pro-shop: 139 Tai Au Mun Road, Clearwater Bay, N. T. Tel: 2335 3875Wicka Designs: G/F., No. 1 Tai Mong Tsai Road, Sai Kung. Tel: 2422 0885

You may purchase our Insect Protect Device at the following retail points:

Just Green Soho:52 Graham, Sohoz, Central, HK. Tel: 2801 5611

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Haunted house parties

Where to get spooky props and scary costumes.

Party supplies Eezy Peezy Parties, www.eezypeezyparties.comMatteo Party, 3/F, 530-532 Jaffe Road, Causeway Bay.Simply Love, 7A, 38-44 D’Aguilar Street, Lan Kwai Fong.The Ivyleague Company (professional face paints), 7/F Far East Consortium Building, 204-206 Nathan Road, Jordan.Toys R Us 2/F, Site 2 of Aberdeen Centre, Aberdeen; 201-210, Nexxus Building, 41 Connaught Road Central.Toys Club 1913 Horizon Plaza, 2 Lee Wing Street, Ap Lei Chau; 5/F, 1 On Hing Terrace, Central.

CostumesChoi Chi, 13 Tung Choi St, Mong Kok.Markets Pottinger Street, Central; Stanley Market.Remy Fashion, Li Yuen Street West, Central.

family woo-oo-oo-ooo

How to HalloweenCarolynne Dear checks out Hong Kong’s fright nights.

Law Lan’s Possessed Possessions, Ocean Park.

Ocean Park’s Halloween FestIt’s back and scarier than ever. Now open all day and all evening for the price of a regular ticket, Halloween Fest features haunted houses, spine-tingling rides, skeletons in the fish tanks and pumpkins in the panda enclosure. American sculptor Ray Villafane will be working his magic at the Pumpkin Creation Lab, where he will transform 100lb squashes into monsters and ghouls. Other highlights include the Crash the Monsters Party, Law Lan’s Possessed Possessions and Murder Factory.

Throughout October, holders of Hong Kong ID cards receive a 15 per cent discount on regular admission tickets on Halloween Fest Days. Premium Tickets include priority access to 16 attractions, a $100 park voucher pack and a Halloween souvenir. There’s even an app, the Halloween Fest Schedule Pass, offering priority access to five attractions to users tapping in information about their visit.

October 1-31, with extended park openings. For details, visit www.oceanpark.com.hk.

Disney’s Haunted Halloween Mickey Mouse dares you not to scream at his annual Halloween party at Hong Kong Disneyland. Shake your bones at the Monsters U Dance Party in Tomorrowland (beware the Monster Scareoff) or follow one of Mickey’s Hide and Go Treat Trails.

There’s also a Halloween Screams fireworks spectacular, with exclusive viewing area for Mickey’s party guests. And don’t forget Mickey’s Costume Party Cavalcade, as well as the many spookily themed attractions throughout the park including Space Mountain Ghost Galaxy (for those who dare), and the ever-popular Haunted Mansion House.

The party is held on Thursday-Sunday evenings from October 4-31; ticket holders can enter the park three hours before the party starts. Advance tickets are available from www.hongkongdisneyland.com. And don’t forget to dress up.

Scream at Madame TussaudsTiptoe through a dark and abandoned asylum, infested with live performers and wax monsters

– or risk becoming a permanent resident of these dark and spooky corridors. Visit from 2pm-4pm or 6pm-9pm for a free Halloween makeup session. October 12-31, 10am-10pm. See madametussauds.com/hongkong for more info.

Lan Kwai Fong Halloween PartyDress up and join the adults-only fun at one of Hong Kong’s biggest and longest-standing Halloween bashes. The bars go all out with spookfest decorations and this year the whole area will be transformed into a secret garden, with wicked witches, monsters, elves and goblins mingling with Lan Kwai’s creatures of the night. October 31, 8pm-late. Details at www.lankwaifong.com.

Halloween BarbecueThis annual Kennedy School fundraiser is fast becoming a Pok Fu Lam institution. Go along and join the fun on Friday, November 1. The event is organized by the Parent Teacher Association and all proceeds go to the school. Tickets sell out fast. For details, visit www.kennedy.edu.hk.

Saving Candy World RockABaby partySave Candy World at this Halloween disco bash. RockABaby invites candy hunters and their families to help retrieve the stolen Halloween candy at a musical performance for children aged two to five years. There will be a funky family costume contest, a disco-dancing King and Queen challenge, the Mummy Wrap, group games and more. October 27,

10.30am-12.30pm, 3.30pm-5.30pm. 6/F Tung Hip Commercial Building, 244-248 Des Voeux Road, Sheung Wan, 3586 3071, www.rockababy.com.hk.

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promotion

Pok Fu LamNew preschool for

Safari Kid, the new international preschool brings customized learning to your child through a unique system. First Hong Kong school opening in January in Pok Fu Lam.

“Take the best aspects of many of the major teaching methods, Montessori, Steiner, Waldrof, and then add a completely customized education system which challenges your student to achieve his or her best and the result is a method of our own, the Safari Kid method.” Explains Jared Dubbs, Director of Safari Kid Hong Kong. To say this is something new may be an understatement. “Customization is a problem that has always plagued educators,” Mr Dubbs continues, “at Safari kid, we have developed a tried and tested method of customizing the learning experience for every child. In terms of early childhood education, this is very new.”

Safari Kid was founded eight years ago in Silicon Valley, California, and now has 17 schools worldwide (and another 12 opening in the next six months), with the Pok Fu Lam campus being the first in Hong Kong. It provides preschoolers with a comprehensive, structured learning model in a safe, fun and nurturing environment. Its emergent curriculum takes the best practices of top international approaches to early education, such as Montessori and Steiner, and fuses them with its own proprietary programme. A Safari Kid education focuses on all the core development areas critical in the first five years - cognitive abilities, language and communication, imagination and creativity, motor skills and social and emotional growth.Jane Mackenzie of Safari Kid.

Pok Fu Lam Road

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Victoria Road

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promotion

SAFARI KID101 Chi Fu Landmark, Chi Fu Fa Yuen, Pok Fu Lam. For applications and details, please visit www.safarikid.com.hk, or email [email protected] Open days take place on Saturday, November 9 and Sunday, November 24.

“At Safari Kid we create a community between student, teacher, and parent in which we customize the child’s learning. Children will benefit from our experience and achieve results parents can see ” Dubbs says.

The star in the Safari Kid arsenal is its accelerated learning programme, which is structured in modules designed to help a child progress. This programme is customized for each individual’s learning pace.

“It’s important to understand that our school is not age based, every child is unique, and we base our classes on the position of each child on the learning curve. Every students needs to meet certain criteria for advancement. As soon as a child has completed a particular level, they move to the next one,” says Jane Mackenzie, Principal of Safari Kid, Hong Kong. “Each child develops at a different pace. It isn’t good to hold back a quick learner but similarly we don’t want to put any pressure

on a child who needs more time to develop. Safari Kid also uses techniques and tools that enable all children to develop core language and maths skills at an early age and the results in California have been amazing. Every child who successfully completes our programme can read, write, and do mental maths. It sounds unbelievable, but the results speak for themselves. Our level four students are typically ahead of their P.1 counterparts.”

Recognizing that small children have a short attention span, classroom time is broken down into structured but engaging sessions of around 20-25 minutes, with each session focusing on one or more of the core developmental areas. Math, language (reading and writing) and basic sciences are covered through theme-based activities and a proprietary curriculum with the aid of several teaching techniques.

The Pok Fu Lam school is located in a 7,500-square-foot site, with a huge

3,000-square-foot play area and five large classrooms decorated in bright, primary colours with a distinctive “safari” theme. Safari Kid takes children from the age of 18 months, moving into their unique level 1 programme, when students meet their developmental goals, they move on to level 2, then three, then four. The teachers are all trained in the Safari Kid method and the ratio of adults to children is 1:6 for toddlers and 1:8 for older pupils. The school offers morning and afternoon sessions and an extended-day programme from 9am-5pm.

“Working couples might not want their children to spend most of the day with their helpers and this isn’t a crèche – they are actively learning,” Mackenzie says.

Another plus for parents is that Safari Kid offers an extensive menu of activities for children up to 11 years old. After-school classes from 3pm-6pm include arts and craft, drama, yoga, ballet in a purpose-built dance studio, mixed martial arts, fencing, IT, languages (Mandarin, Cantonese, French, Spanish, Hindi), robotics with Lego-tronics and several others.

“Kids are normally ferried around from one activity to another, which can be hard for parents and children. Our vision is to create a one-stop school for activities, where parents can structure the after school activity schedule they think best suits their children, all in one place,” Dubbs says.

Get ready Hong Kong, this is a new type of learning. The results speak for themselves with over eight years of experience and more than 5,000 preschoolers world-wide who have progressed through this system.

promotion

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Rent a basic four- or six-person tent in the private beachfront campsite or sleep in style in one of the three-metre-high safari tents, boasting deluxe camping mattresses, furniture and even air conditioning. If you’d rather have a proper roof over your head, there are four guest rooms to choose from with private showers, air conditioning and wireless broadband access.

It’s not all about camping. Long Coast has stacks of watersports to choose from, with professional support if you need it, as well as beach volleyball ($250 to rent a net for a day) and other beach equipment such as deckchairs ($50 each), parasols ($50 each) and ice boxes to chill those beers ($50 each, with one ice pack). Activity/camping vouchers are available for $540 to $720 for two people (depending on day and season), which includes use of kayaks, bodyboards, skimboards, and overnight facilties.

If you’d rather just camp, it costs $170 to $200 to rent a tent on the beach and $200-$250 for a Safari tent. 29 Lower Cheung Sha Beach, Lantau, 8104 6222, www.longcoast.hk.

Safari Bush CampersThese semi-permanent canvas tents look as though they come straight from an Out Of Africa movie set and are about as stylish as camping in Hong Kong gets. The 10 Safari Bush Campers each sleep six people and come

Where to campThere are 41 campsites in Hong Kong, mostly in Lantau and the New Territories. The closest to Southside is on Tung Lung Chau at the eastern end of the harbour. Within the country parks camping is permitted only at designated sites; pitching a tent elsewhere is not allowed. For a full list, maps and how to get there, visit the Agriculture, Fisheries and Conservation Department website, www.afcd.gov.hk.

Glamping“Glamping”, or glamorous camping, means staying in permanent tents with wood floors, en-suites and comfortable beds. Lightweight, portable tents are cheap, flexible and they can be made more luxurious with these simple additions:•Rattanbeachmat,laidoutsidetent

and swept regularly.•Bucketofwaterforwashingfeetbefore

entering tent.•Dustpanandbrushforsweepinguperrant

grass or sand.•Battery-operatedfanforcooling.•Smalldog–securitysystem.

Glamp sitesIsland Club Yes, we know this is accessible only by ferry from Cheung Chau but once you get your head

round the boats, trains and automobiles you’ll need to get there, you won’t fail to have a fun-filled weekend at Island Club on Lantau.

The private inn and campsite offers activities galore including kayaking, windsurfing, banana boating, snorkelling, rock climbing, surfing and wakeboarding. While a bit of a rough diamond compared with other glamping options, it is reasonably priced.

A day trip including lockers, loungers, umbrellas and a barbecue buffet costs $350 to $450 a person plus an extra $30 to $60 for unlimited drinks, and $200 if you choose to stay overnight for a true adventure.

G/F, 23 Tai Long Village, Lantau Island, 2989 2315, www.islandclub.hk.

Long Coast SeasportsWhether you’ve got a princess who doesn’t want to rough it or an adventure hound who does, camping options abound at Long Coast Seasports on Lantau, whose “front yard” is one of Hong Kong’s longest stretches of sand, Cheung Sha Beach.

Happy campingEmbrace your wild side by sleeping under canvas in Hong Kong’s great beyond.

outdoors tents moments

Sleep in style in one of the three-metre-

high safari tents

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outdoorswith double airbeds, proper bedding, tables and chairs, air coolers and mozzie screens on doors and windows ($1,200 a night at weekends). They are set in a 40,000-square-foot herb garden with showers and washroom facilities.

For dinner, the Palm Beach Cafe offers light refreshments and the nearby beachside Stoep restaurant (2980 2699) serves hearty South African dishes and barbecued meats to satisfy even the hungriest campers. Palm Beach, Cheung Sha, Lantau, 2980 4822, [email protected], www.palmbeach.com.hk.

Teepee VillageGrab your headdresses, pack your warpaint and get ready for action, native American-style. Owned and operated by the people who run the Safari Bush Campers, Teepee Village on Palm Beach has eight handpainted teepees of various sizes on an 18,000-square-foot lawn. Weekend rentals start from $850 a night for a four-person teepee with sleeping bags and mats; a 26-foot-diameter teepee, which can sleep up to 20 people, is $3,200 a night. Add-ons include camping lamps ($20 each),

mosquito nets ($50 each) and air coolers ($100). The adjacent Palm Beach Watersports

Centre offers all sorts of watersports including kiteboarding, surfing and windsurfing. Palm Beach, Cheung Sha, Lantau, 2980 4822, [email protected], www.palmbeach.com.hk.

Treasure IslandThe private campsite behind Ooh La La restaurant (2984 8710) not only has ready-pitched tents for hire but also changing rooms and showers. A four-person tent is $700 a night including sleeping bags, mat, coolers, charcoal, dishes and cooking equipment. Cycling and kayaking can also be arranged. Booking essential. Pui O Beach, Lantau, 2546 3543, [email protected], www.treasureislandhk.com

Tsim Bet Tsui Organic FarmNot everyone was born to be a beach babe. If you dread the thought of sand in your sleeping bag, you can still experience the great outdoors at Tsim Bet Tsui Organic Farm in Yuen Long. During autumn and winter, the farm offers camping in authentic Mongolian gers, costing from $800 for two to five people and $1,500 for eight to 10. With spectacular views of the Mai Po Marshes, the farm also has a petting zoo, a miniature train and barbecue pits. Lau Fau Shan, Yuen Long, 2472 6962.

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NEW CAMPUS

ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS NOW!2014-15

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Stanley CampusAdjacent to Stanley Plaza, Stanley

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South Horizons Campus G/F, Blocks 23-23A, South Horizons, Phase III Ap Lei Chau

Mid-levels CampusM/F, 17 Po Yan Street, Sheung Wan

To sign up for an info session:email: [email protected]: +852.2861.0339www.montessori.edu.hk

INFOSESSIONS

on10 Oct & 7 Nov

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Defying gravity Jess Hannah is swept off her feet by aerial arts.

A glimpse of Flex’s new aerial arts studio fills first-timers with trepidation. Bright and modern with a spectacular green view, the space is completely empty except for a dozen shiny cloth hammocks hanging from the ceiling and a ream of knotted white silk dangling in the middle of the room. Suddenly you wonder what you’ve signed up for…

Aerial arts is a new workout focusing on flexibility, balance, stamina and core strength that involves being suspended in mid-air by nothing more than a length of cloth attached to a carabiner.

Instructor Emily begins by explaining the differences between aerial yoga, aerial Pilates and aerial arts. The first two are variations on traditional forms of Pilates and yoga, while aerial arts is focused on performance, flexibility and crowd-pleasing dramatic poses. Thankfully, our audience consisted only of Emily and her brother, Adam, who took photographs of our attempts.

health & beauty

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WWW.SOUTHSIDE.HK | 45

Getting started was difficult. We began with basic movements using the hammock – stepping onto it, flipping upside down and hanging so our hands trailed the floor – improving quickly as we learned to trust it.

Time to move on to the silk, a long piece of cloth that struck us with new fear. Emily demonstrated, moving effortlessly between poses and knotting the silk with twists of her ankles. We found it far more difficult, requiring flexibility and a strong core to twist in the coils of silk and strike poses without falling, wobbling or letting our smiles falter. But we steadily improved in balance, confidence and positioning so that by the end we could strike the elusive Amazon pose convincingly.

With Emily’s guidance, we were soon hanging upside down and striking poses, using our core to hold ourselves upright rather than the white-knuckle death grip on the cloth that we resorted to instinctively.

It was a fantastic experience – tiring and

ForeverBeauty_93x120_Oct13SS_OL.indd 2 19/09/2013 10:24 AM

MEETING LOCATIONSCentral YWCA Mondays 12pm, 6pm, 7.30pm

Kowloon USRC Mondays 6.30pm

Pokfulam Kennedy School Tuesdays 3.45pm

Sai Kung/Clearwater Bay – Hebe Haven Yacht Club Wednesdays 6pm

Southside – Hong Kong Cricket Club Thursdays 10am

Please check www.weightwatchers.com.hk for meeting details before visiting a meeting

**Show your Australian Association or AWA membership cards for registration discounts!**

Bring this advertisement in and receive a Weight Watchers cookbook (while supplies last)

We teach people to lose weight for good and become Everyday Strong!

join Weight Watchers® today!

BE INSPIRED

WW2469_LAM120_120x93_Hong Kong Clearwater Magazine.indd 1 13/09/13 11:28 AM

health & beauty up in the air

sometimes scary, with the continual threat of rope-burn or face-planting, but also fun and addictive. As soon as the session ended, we were keen to master another pose, learn to spin upside down more gracefully, or knot a rope with our ankles.

Heck, we’re betting you won’t want to stop until you can do the splits several feet in the air.

Flex Studio, Shops 308-310, One Island South, 2 Heung Yip Road, Wong Chuk Hang, 2813 2212, www.flexhk.com.

Page 46: Southside Magazine October 2013

46 | WWW.SOUTHSIDE.HK

pets glamourpuss

Hong Kong Alley Cat WatchHong Kong Alley Cat Watch was set up by Marian Banaghan and Michelle Temple in 2003 to care for injured street cats and newborn kittens. The society welcomes calls about orphaned kittens and runs a foster and adoption programme, as well as a successful trap, neuter, release scheme. Its website is a good source of information about how to care for cats. Contact: Michelle Temple 9310 0744, [email protected], www.hkalleycatwatch.com.

SPCA It’s not just dogs seeking a new home at Hong Kong’s premier animal-rescue charity. The SPCA’s Barking Lot Cafe in Stanley has kittens and cats that need rehoming, including exotic breeds. See the website for pictures, and try to resist adopting all the moggies looking for love. Contact: 14 Stanley Main Street, Stanley, 2164 8382, www.spca.org.hk.

Hong Kong Cat RefugeThis welfare group promotes animal birth control and other cat welfare initiatives. It rescues, cares for and rehomes stray cats and

The cat’s whiskersWho can resist a kitten? Adopt one from these rescue centres, writes Steffi Yuen.

dogs. In 2010, it rescued about 40 homeless cats and dogs during the relocation of Tuen Mun Village. The refuge is always seeking donations as well as foster or permanent homes for its cats.Contact: 8200 4668, [email protected] or [email protected], hkcr.org.hk.

The Hong Kong Cat Salvation ArmyUnder the slogan “Cat lovers don’t buy, adoption is vogue”, the HKCSA encourages the city’s cat fanciers to adopt rescue animals instead of buying pedigrees from pet shops. Set up in 1997, the charity cares for and rehomes stray, abandoned and abused cats and works to educate the public about cat welfare. Its schemes include the No Fur Project, Desex Manifesto, and Elderly Cats Scheme.Contact: 9431 9461, [email protected], www.hkcsa.org.hk.

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Stanley_outline_SSMar13.indd 1 2/8/13 12:14 PM

petsBreeds apart From monkey dogs to Shek O sharpeis, Sally Andersen identifies Hong Kong’s unique breeds.

A few people recently shared an article on Facebook about trying to increase adoptions from US dog shelters by giving the dogs breed names because people are more likely to adopt a “breed” than a mongrel. I was included in these “shares” along with comments about how brilliant it was and asking why no one had done this before.

Well, excuse me, but I am the creator of many Hong Kong “breeds”. The first, the Wan Chai terrier, was even taken up by other organisations to describe a certain type of dog. Wan Chai may have been torn down and transformed, but there are plenty of Wan Chai terriers still around.

Other “breeds” I have identified and named include the Chung Hom Kok collies – large and beautiful and all originating from one pair that have been allowed to breed and interbreed. From time to time groups of them P

ictu

re: K

athl

een

Kuo

k

are surrendered to the AFCD Kennels in Pok Fu Lam following complaints from residents, and I take them out from there.

Then there are the monkey dogs, so-called because as puppies they have a very monkey-like face. I don’t know how this “breed” has survived in such a pure way, but they are unmistakable. The most recent “monkey” arrived last month and was immediately offered a home by the owners of two other monkey dogs.

Perhaps the best known of all my breeds is the

whippety dog

A Chung Hom Kok collie, just one unique Hong Kong “breed”.

Page 49: Southside Magazine October 2013

www.robstep.hktel +852 9122 2126 email [email protected]

Contact us for a free try-out at your home.

Online purchase is available at www.robstep.hk

WWW.SOUTHSIDE.HK | 49

Sally Andersen is the founder of Hong Kong Dog Rescue, a charity that rescues, rehabilitates and re-homes unwanted or abandoned dogs.

East Asian porcupine

The East Asian porcupine is a member of the rodent family and can be found in Nepal, central and southern China, Thailand and Singapore. It is common and widespread in Hong Kong except on Lantau Island.

It has a short cream crest on its neck and upper back and is covered in spines for defence and camouflage. The quills are about 50mm long and dark brown on the front of its body; those on the hindquarters are 230mm and banded black and white. When the animal feels threatened it shakes special hollow quills on its tail to produce a hiss-like rattle and may charge backwards into its attacker with quills raised.

Porcupines are mostly nocturnal, but may be seen during the day foraging for leaves, herbs, twigs, green plants and even bark. They are sometimes seen scavenging in groups of three or four on the edges of villages. Porcupines live in groups of up to 10 in large burrows, which they dig with powerful front legs

aka Hystrix brachyura

and which may be used for generations. In the breeding season, males spray the females with high-velocity jets of urine prior to mating.

In Southeast Asia and some parts of Europe, porcupine is eaten as a delicacy and its quills may be dyed and used for traditional decorative clothing. Steffi Yuen

in your backyardpets what’s in a name?

Black fluffies don’t include all long-haired black dogs, but only those with the breed’s distinctive temperament.

The Shek O sharpei has very distinctive looks and temperament. It’s similar to the Cheung Chau sharpei, although the two have their differences.

Perhaps the best known of all my breeds is the whippety dog. Not only are they distinctive but generation after generation of these puppies have appeared at AFCD kennels. Like all the Hong Kong “breeds” I have identified, temperament is as important as looks, and I am sure there are many other “breeds” in Hong Kong we have yet to discover.

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Cyberport

Chi Fu

Pok Fu Lam

AberdeenShouson Hill

Deep Water Bay

Repulse Bay

Chung Hom Kok

Red Hill

The Manhattan

Tai TamParkview

Bel-AirBig Wave Bay

Shek O

Ap Lei Chau

Stanley

The Peak

Wong Chuk Hang

Southside magazine continues to extend its reach in our community, here is the latest in distribution news.

Larvotto Due to popular demand, we’ve increased distribution to Larvotto by 30%. This marine-themed luxury residential complex offers unmatched waterfront views and is only 5 minutes from upscale shopping at Horizon Plaza. Southside Magazine can be found at the Larvotto clubhouse on the coffee tables of many of its residents.

Ap Lei Chau- Bumps to Babes- Chapin House- Everything Under The Sun- Indigo- Indigo Kids- Indigo Outlet- Larvotto- Little Picasso Studio- Mothercare- Okooko- Pacific Gourmet- Tequila Kola- Rimba Rhyme- Shambala Cafe- Tree

Sheung Wan & Central- ITS Educational Services- Seasons Fitness- Starlit Art Space

Pok Fu Lam- Kellett School- Kennedy School- Mount Davis- Sunshine House Chi Fu- Sunshine House Pokfulam- The Limestone Arms- Woodland Pokfulam Pre-School

Deep Water Bay- Beach Club- Coco Thai- Hong Kong Country Club- Park N Shop

Aberdeen- Aberdeen Marina Club- Elite PT Studio- Flex Studio- GCX- Golden Goose Gourmet- GP Deva- Hong Kong Country Club- MUM- One Island South- Park N Shop- Wicka Designs- Woodland Harbourside Pre-School Stanley

- Boathouse- Cafe Groucho’s- Chez Patrick- Cheers Real Estate Limited- The Chocolate Room- Classified- Haagen Dazs- Lucy’s on the Front- Mijas- Pacific Pets- Pickled Pelican- Paisono’s Pizzeria- Pizza Club

- Pizza Express- Ricacorp Properties

- Saigon in Stanley- Smuggler’s Inn- Spiaggia

- Stan Cafe- Stanley Main Street Bar & Cafe

- Stanley Veterinary Centre- Starbucks- Taste Supermarket

- Vern’s Beach Bar- Wildfire

The Peak- Cafe Deco The Peak- Delifrance- Haagen-Dazs- International (Park N Shop)- Pho Yummee- Starbucks- Sunshine House The Peak- The Peak Lookout Café- Woodland Pre-School The Peak

Repulse Bay- Anastassia’s Art House- Bayley & Jackson Dental Surgeons - HS Modern Art- Indigo- Manhattan Tower- Sense of Touch- Spices- The Club- The Lily- The Somerset- The Verandah- Woodland Beachside Pre-School- The Woodland Montessori Pre-School Repulse Bay

Manhattan TowerThis exclusive residential building, tucked away in a lush country park setting, houses some of the most stunning apartments on the Southside. All 40 units are 2,400 square feet with fully fitted kitchens and bathrooms, teak floors and best of all, large balconies to soak up the breathtaking views of Deep Water Bay and the South China Sea. Southside Magazine is now conveniently placed at the Manhattan Tower reception.

Tai Tam / Shek O- American Club- Ben’s Bar- Craigengower Cricket Club- Fusion (Park'N Shop)- Happy Garden Restaurant- Hong Kong Cricket Club- Hong Kong International School- Hong Kong Parkview Resort & Spa- Hong Kong Parkview Suites- Lulu Shop- The Manhattan- Ming’s Cafe- Pacific View Residential Clubhouse- PIPS Kindergarten- Redhill Clubhouse- Shining Stone Restaurant- Soma Spa- Sunshine House Tai Tam- Wellcome, Red Hill Plaza- Woodland Tai Tam Montessori Pre-School

One Island SouthLocated in the elegant surrounding of Wong Chuk Hang, this highly prestigious office building with spacious design offers a fresh new world of unlimited potential for work, life and innovation. One Island South is ideally located with inspiring sea views of Deep Water Bay and lush greenery of Shouson Hill. Employees at One Island South can now find Southside Magazine located at the lobby.

Cyberport- Baguio Villas- Bel-Air Clubhouse- Cyberport Arcade- Delaney’s- Indigo Kids- Indigo Living- International (Park N Shop)- Le Meridien Hotel Cyberport- Scenic Villas- Starbucks- Thaima-V

distribution

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WWW.SOUTHSIDE.HK | 51

Bel-Air

Hong Kong Parkview

Le Meridien Cyberport

The Manhattan

distribution where to find us

Redhill Peninsula

Pacific View

The Repulse Bay

Cyberport Arcade

Join our communityWant Southside Magazine in your residential building’s reception or clubhouse? Want to distribute Southside Magazine in your restaurant or store?

It’s easy as pie and best of all, completely free of charge. Send all enquiries to [email protected] or call (852) 2776 2772.

Hey Mr. PostmanJoin our free mailing service to have your copy of Southside Magazine delivered straight to your mailbox. It’s Free and exclusive

for residents living in Southside or the Peak.

Sign up herewww.southside.hk/subscribe

Page 52: Southside Magazine October 2013

52 | WWW.SOUTHSIDE.HK

To advertise, email: [email protected] or call 2776 2772.

marketplace

To advertise, email: [email protected] or call 2776 2772

Supporting Children and their

families with school readiness, classroom skills, social skills and

special needs.

Meaningful, holistic,child-centred,

evidence based care

t: (852) 2807 [email protected]

www.spot.com.hkCentral & Wong Chuk Hang

Interdisciplinary Children's Therapy Centre

Page 53: Southside Magazine October 2013

To advertise, email: [email protected] or call 2776 2772 WWW.SOUTHSIDE.HK | 53

marketplace

Alex GregSpecialist in custom and handmade jewellery

www.alexgreg.co By Appointment Only Tel: 3543 1791

Page 54: Southside Magazine October 2013

54 | WWW.SOUTHSIDE.HK To advertise, email: [email protected] or call 2776 2772

marketplace

THE FIRST

Holiday Bazaar of the Season 2013

Wednesday October 30thVista Ballroom

The American Club Tai Tam28 Tai Tam Road

10am-6pm

open to members & their guests only

Designed & Printed by: www.PrintPlus.com.hk

For information, please contact [email protected]

Organized by

Sponsors:Hong Kong’s Community

Page 55: Southside Magazine October 2013

To advertise, email: [email protected] or call 2776 2772 WWW.SOUTHSIDE.HK | 55

marketplace

www.thesouthafr icanshop.com

Biltong, Boerewors and much more!

148 Electric Road T: 2164 4888www.go ldenpatheducat ion.com

Our Communication Arts, Creative Arts, Performing Arts and Home Tutoring Service Helping your child on the path to success!

Page 56: Southside Magazine October 2013

56 | WWW.SOUTHSIDE.HK To advertise, email: [email protected] or call 2776 2772

marketplace

Monthly Car Park Space

for lease6688 8232

Redhill Plaza3 Red Hill Road, Tai Tam, HK

www.hshd.com.hk

Our Practitioners

Open HOursMon/Wed/Fri 09:00am – 06:00pm

Tue/Thur 09:00am – 07:00pm

Sat 09:00am – 04:00pm

Closed Sunday/Public Holidays

Find us atG/F, 120 Stanley Main Street, Stanley, Hong KongT: +852 2372 9700 E: [email protected]

www.stanleywellnesscentre.com

Your path to optimal health

OsteopathDr. Damien MouellicB.sc. (Clin. Sc.), M.H.Sc. (Osteo), M.A.O.A., H.K.O.A.

HomeopathMina V WeightLSCH, RS HomRegistered Member of the Society of Homeopaths, UK

Naturopath/HerbalistJeanette Lilly BlanksBHSc(Hons), MNIMH, MNHAA, MATMSUK & AUS registered Herbalist

Doctor of OsteopathyJennifer Kier

AcupuncturistBrendt ReynoldsBhsc., AACMAMember of the Australian & Chinese Medicine Association

PsychologistDr. Robin Li-Liang, Ph.D., M.A., Ed.M., A.P.A., H.K.P.S.US (New York Licensed Counseling Psychologist)

OsteopathAlessio SavonaB.sc., BOst., M.I.C.O., H.K.O.A.

Massage TherapistRachel DaviesDip. Sports Massage, CIBTAC

PhysiotherapistMona HussainB.A.(Psych.) M.S., D.P.T., Doctorate in Physiotherapy (USA), Certified in Spec. Ed. (USA)

Professional spray tanning from the comfort of your own home.After hours appointments available.

Find us on Facebook

T. 6234 8594

[email protected]

Page 57: Southside Magazine October 2013

To advertise, email: [email protected] or call 2776 2772 WWW.SOUTHSIDE.HK | 57

©Joan B

oivin Photography

marketplace

Mobile Veterinary Service

Tel: 9860 5522

Email: [email protected]

www.homevet.com.hk

7 days a week, 24 hrs

Servicing all areas

Home-oriented

Ultrasound

THE VET COMES TO YOU

NEW: In-Home

Dr. Matthew

PET BEHAVIOUR PROBLEMS?BY YOUR PET?!!!STRESSED

Hong Kong’s first and onlyBehavioural Veterinary Practice

Tel: 9618 [email protected]

can help resolve aggression, fear, anxiety, separation related problems, compulsive disorders, inappropriate toileting, noise phobias etc.

Not all behavioural problems are simply training issues.

Dr. Cynthia SmillieBVM&S PG Dip CABC MRCVS

www.petbehaviourhk.com

Page 58: Southside Magazine October 2013

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classifieds

Phuket - Modern Thai villa in secure compound with private pool (not overlooked). 3 ensuite double bedrooms. Fully equipped kitchen, tastefully furnished, wi-fi, TV, DVD. Short walk to unspoilt Bangtao beach and bars, restaurants. Daily maid service and airport transfers included. Contact British owners: [email protected] +852 6184 8910.

LUxURY VILLA FOR RENT IN BALI. Breathtaking view, fully staffed, 5 mins from the best beaches. Perfect for a family holiday, or 2 families holidaying together. www.villabayubali.com. “Don’t even consider a hotel in Bali. Top shelf!”

OVERSEAS PROPERTY

Hua Hin ThailandSuperb 4b/r House, Rent and Sale1-min to the beachShared Pool, GardenOnsite Thai Cafe, www.watura.comOwner: Sue 9754 5967

LUxURY FULL SEA-VIEW VILLA ON KOH SAMUI FOR RENTVilla Cumberland is owned by a family and is designed to be enjoyed by families on the beautiful tropical island of Samui.Located just 400m from the beach, the villa is comprised of 3 en-suite bedrooms, large study, wi-fi, cable TV, 250 sqft playroom, totally private swimming pool, and large flat garden.Very reasonable rates, contact the owner: 6273 2668 or view on:www.come2samui.com/html/cumberland1.html

NEED A HOLIDAY? PHUKET VILLA FOR RENT! Luxury 5 beds villa with swimming pool located in Surin area. Walking distance to beaches. Reasonable rates! Website: www.phuketvilla4rent.com. Email the owner: [email protected].

Bangtao Beach Villa, Phuket for Rent. Stunning six bedroom luxury villa by Bangtao beach next to Banyan Tree Hotel) with large private swimming pool, chef, maid, executive minibus with driver, all transfers and full breakfasts. Cook will also prepare lunch and dinner, you pay food cost only. We have three large king size suites with full sea views and three big twin suites (one with disabled access). Beautifully furnished with large European style kitchen. www.salafa.net or call +852 6999 1500.

LOCAL PROPERTY

Silverstrand Villa $78K Ref ~CWB499Conveniently Located, 3 Bedrooms,Landing/ Study Area. High Ceilings, Spacious Living/Dining Room,Large Terrace,Helpers Q, Garage, Sea Views. Popular Location.Stroll to the Beach www.thepropertyshop.com.hk 27193977 C-027656

Private Pool & 4 Beds $ 65 K Ref ~SK344Attractively renovated, 4 Bedroom Village House. Private Pool & Terrace. Spacious Open-Plan Kitchen, Separate Family Room, Nice Bathrooms. Sea & Mountain Views, Convenient for Transport. Quiet Location. www.thepropertyshop.com.hk 27193977 C-027656

(HK$93,000)“STANLEY” HIDDEN TREASURE1523(S) 2054(G)Exclusive 3 Beds Lowrsie Double Height Ceiling Renovated Deluxe Bath & Fitted Western KitchenUNIQUE HOME LIMITED (C-049605)(852)28800709 WWW.UNIQUEHOME.COM.HK

(HK$110,000)BARGAIN 4 BEDS HOUSE1872(S) 2680(G) + Terrace & Big BalconyRecommended 3 Storey 4 Beds House + Terrace onG/F Large Balcony on 1/F 2 Maid’s Room 2 Car Park UNIQUE HOME LIMITED (C-049605)(852)28800709 WWW.UNIQUEHOME.COM.HK

Page 59: Southside Magazine October 2013

WWW.SOUTHSIDE.HK | 59

classifieds

TUITION

Mandarin / Cantonese speaking nanny -- can play with your kids, read them stories and guide them to discover the daily life. Mandarin tutors -- for kindergarten, primary and secondary students, (teach them pinyin, vocab, oral, writing skills....) also experience in helping students to prepare IGCSE, IB, AL...Please visit www.call-a-tutor.com or call 2572 8989

Tennis Performance Asia LimitedLessons/Training: Private, Groups – Adult, children, Ladies Coaching.Kowloon, NT, HK Island, HK, Australian, USPTA Qualified Coaches. Contact Senior Coach Todd Hooper – 97335197: [email protected]. www.tennisperformanceasia.com[TPA] Director – Ray Kelly

Judo & Martial Art Class6302 0999

Richiewise Sophia LearningSAT/ AP/ GCSE/ IGCSE/ DSE/GED/ IB/ GRE/ Gifted Education/ Olympiad/ UniversityLevel/ Mathematics/ Finance/ Science/TOEFL/ IELTS etcPlease call Auntie Lilian for details: 64374148 (Sai Kung)

SERVICES

EVENTS

COMPUTER SERVICES HK – ONSITE TROUBLESHOOT & SETUP, WINDOWS & APPLE DEVICES, IPAD. IPHONE, APPLE TV, DATA RECOVERY, DATA TRANSFER,INSTALLATION OF NETWORK, WIRELESS, WIFI EXTENDERS.INTERNET, EMAIL, HARDWARE, SOFTWARE PROBLEMS.EMAIL [email protected] OR CALL CHRISTOPHER KRISHNAN 91470230

NATIONAL HARBOUR RENOVATIONSHome and office reno upgrades.Plumbing, electrical and handyman services.Call Charles [email protected]

‘SHOPPING BAZAARS’For the love of shopping! Register early for Shoppinghongkong’s bazaars at The American Club! Oct 30th & Dec 16th [email protected].

local news & exclusive offers

Southside Magazine

Find us on to receive up-to-date

Page 60: Southside Magazine October 2013

60 | WWW.SOUTHSIDE.HK

V2boats9122 2126 | [email protected]

Boating Crown Relocations2636 8388 | [email protected]/hongkong

Expert-Transport & Relocations Warehouse2566 4799 | www.expertmover.hk

Transport & Travel Services

Bumps to Babes2552 5000 (Ap Lei Chau Main Store)2522 7112 (Pedder Building Branch)www.bumpstobabes.com

Petit Bazaar2544 2255 / 2528 0229 / 2407 [email protected] www.petit-bazaar.com

Robstep9122 [email protected] | www.robstep.hk

Rumple and Friendswww.rumpleandfriends.com

Toys, Accessories & Kids’ Parties

Annerley – Maternity and Early Childhood Professionalswww.annerley.com.hk

Watermark Community Church2857 6160 | [email protected]

Spa de Farida2649 6833 | [email protected]

Stanley Wellness Centre2372 9700 | [email protected]

SPOT Centre 2807 2992 | [email protected] www.spot.com.hk

Community & Health

Weight Watchers2813 0814 [email protected]

Elite PT2522 9925 | www.eliteptstudio.com

Everfine Membership Services Limited2174 7880 | [email protected]

The Clean 9 Detox9211 3322 | [email protected] www.foreverlivinghk.weebly.com

The Jazzy Gym 2947 8088 | [email protected]

Social, Sports & Equipment

South Stream SeafoodsUnits 202-204, Lai Sun Yuen Long Centre, 27 Wang Yip St East, Yuen Long, N.T. Hong Kong 2555 6200

Food & Beverage

[email protected] www.south-stream-seafoods.com

Golden Goose Gourmet2732 0981 [email protected]

Olive Tree HKwww.olivetreehk.com

The South African Shopwww.thesouthafricanshop.com

Wine n Thingswww.winenthingshk.com

Habitat Property2869 9069 | www.habitat-property.co

Kam House6486 0425 | [email protected]

Le Meridien Cyberport Club Horizon2155 0489 | www.clubhorizon.com.hk

Le Meridien Cyberport Hotel2980 7788

One Island South2118 2900 | [email protected]

Ovolo Hotels2165 1000 | www.ovolohotels.com

Red Hill Plaza6688 8232 | www.hshd.com.hk

The Arcade, Cyberport3166 3111 | [email protected] www.arcade.cyberport.hk

Jones Lang LaSalle2846 5000www.joneslanglasalle.com.hk

Real-Estate & Hotels

Hong Kong Parkview2812 3888

www.hongkongparkview.com

the ultimate guide to southside

Animal Behaviour Vet Practice 9618 2475 | [email protected] www.petbehaviourhk.com

Animal Emergency Centre2915 7979 www.animalemergency.com.hk

Homevet9860 5522 | [email protected]

Pacific Pets @ Stanley Veterinary Centre / Pet shop2813 7979 | [email protected]@stanleyvetcentre.com

Pets & Vets

Ennio Marchetto | Oct 8 - 13Drama Theatre,The Hong Kong Academy of Performing Arts31 288 288 | www.hkticketing.com

Holiday Bazaar 2013 by Shopping Hong Kong | Oct 30American Club Tai Tam [email protected]

Alessio Bax & Lucille Chung | Nov 5Concert Hall, Hong Kong City Hallwww.pphk.org | www.urbtix.hk

Kidsfest Hong Kong 2014 | From Jan 15, 2014Drama Theatre, The Hong Kong Academy of Performing Arts31 288 288 | www.hkticketing.com

Southern District Tourism & Cultural Festival 2013www.travelsouth.hk

The Complete Works of William Shakespeare Oct 16 - 17Drama Theatre, Hong Kong Academy of Performing Arts31 288 288 | www.hkticketing.com

Events

Gresham’s Auction House2552 1887 | [email protected]

Multimedia

ABA Productions 2547 7150 | www.aba-productions.com

My Little Paper, Daily 7/Daily 10www.daily7-daily10.com

Premiere Performances of Hong KongTicketing Enquiries: 2734 9009Telephone Booking: 2111 5999Programme Enquiries: 9545 6851 www.pphk.org

Dadi Precious Photography6920 6689 [email protected]://www.dadiprecious.com/

Page 61: Southside Magazine October 2013

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GET LISTEDcall 2776 2772email [email protected]

Alex Greg - Specialist Handmade Jewellery3543 1791 | www.alexgreg.co

Bronze Mobile Spray Tanning6234 8594 [email protected]

Palavi - Specialist Jewellerywww.palavi.net

Sabai Day Spa — Stanley2104 0566 | www.sabaidayspa.com

Sense of Touch2592 9668 | [email protected]

Fashion & Beauty

Box Design2573 3323 [email protected]

Everything Under the Sun2544 9088 | www.everythingunderthesun.com.hk

Indigo Living Ltd.2552 3500 | [email protected] www.indigo-living.com

Indo Handyman2578 1865 | [email protected]

JCAW Consultants2524 9988 | [email protected]

Life Solutions2778 3282 | [email protected]

Makaron Home [email protected] | makaron-home.com

Mothercare2627 0035 | www.mothercare.com.hk

Natural Balance United [email protected]

National Harbour Renovations90851886 | [email protected] www.nationalharbour.hk

Philips Sonicare2619 9663 | www.philips.com.hk

Rimba Rhyme2544 4011 | www.rimbarhyme.com

Wofu Deco2768 [email protected] | www.wofudeco.com.hk

HomeEducation

[email protected]

Union of Languages34262303 | [email protected]

Woodland Pre-Schools2803 1885 | 2551 7177www.woodlandschools.com

Asian Enterprise - Graphic Design classes93872661

Bebegarten3487 2255 | www.bebegarten.com

ESF Sports Programme2711 1280 | www.esf.org.hk

ESF International Kindergartenswww.esfkindergartens.org.hk

Golden Path Education2164 4888 | www.goldenpatheducation.com

HK Kidz2877 6160 | www.hkkidz.com

Les Petits Lascar2526 8892 | www.petitslascars.com

Safari Kidwww.safarikid.com.hk

Sunshine House International Pre school

2813 0713 | www.sunshinehouse.com.hk

Sylvan Learning Center2873 0662 | [email protected] www.educate.com

The International Montessori School2861 0339

Education

Colour My World2580 [email protected]

Morningstar Preschool

Learning through imagination, inquiry, integration and reflection

Morningstar Preschool and Kindergarten9736 5241 | [email protected]

Mentorhood Learning Center5160 1828 | [email protected]

Kidevaction3480 3004 | [email protected]

Starlit Art Space2108 2180 www.starlitartspace.com

ITS Education Asia2116 [email protected]

Starlit Voice2108 2182 | [email protected]

the ultimate guide to southside directory

HFS Asset Management Limited2511 8337 | [email protected]

Hampton, Winter and Glynn2847 2300 | www.hwg-law.com

Pete Kelly - Musician9477 0669 | www.petekelly.com.au

Professional Wills2561 9031 | www.profwills.com

Sum Hing Carton Box [email protected] | www.boxx.hk

Sunkoshi Gurkha Security Ltd2199 7774 | www.sunkoshigurkha.com

Wifi Guy Hong Kong9385 8379 | [email protected]

Other Services

Modulnova Hong Kong Ltd3741 2095 | [email protected]

Modulnova Hong Kong Ltd3741 2095 | [email protected]

Page 62: Southside Magazine October 2013

62 | WWW.SOUTHSIDE.HK

Tell us about yourselfI am an agent of transformational change. I work as a trainer, coach and author. It is a joy and a fulfilment I am truly blessed.

Tell us about your work.I want to see people and organizations create powerful changes in their talent management and the way they harness their potential. The Southside is where I wrote my first co-authored best-selling book, titled Ready, Aim, Captivate,

my southside the road to happiness

Pascale SeilerThe lifelong Southsider and Intuitive Coach on how to be happy.

Submit your shot

Here at the Southside Magazine office, we love receiving beautiful pictures of Southside from our readers. Each month we publish our favourite. To enter, simply email your best shots of Southside, along with a brief description, to [email protected].

This month’s winner: Scott Seybold. “Early in the morning at Ma Hang Park in Stanley.”

photo competiton shoot for it

which is all about having people harness their passion with their purpose.

What draws you to the Southside?I was born and grew up in Hong Kong. I have seen Southside through all its changes and, boy, has it changed a lot. Southside is home – it’s where I feel nurtured and at the peak of my creativity and passion. I can look out of my window and connect with the ocean yet it’s just a cab ride away from the city.

Favourite Southside places? I have an eclectic mixture of favourite places. In my formative years, Sandy Bay was a great place where I went with my parents and took lots of walks and played lots of sport. As I grew older, I loved taking the boat to Top Deck. I love being on the water. And when I am in a reflective or exploratory mood, I walk to Horizon Plaza to the Italian Deli or Poissionnerie or just chill with a good magazine at TREE Cafe.

Favourite secret spot?Sham Wan Towers on Ap Lei Chau has an amazing swimming pool and barbecue garden overlooking the sea. This cozy nook has provided a creative space to escape and to pursue my writing. It’s where my writing really took shape so it’s special to me.

What do you do in your spare time?I love to do what Julia Roberts did in Eat Pray Love – il dolce far niente, the sweetness of doing nothing. Simply put it can mean allowing things to just show up. I may take a walk on the beach, read a book... anything that calls to me in the moment. It is a beautiful way to experience life and it deepens over time.

Best way to enjoy the outdoors?I love communing with nature, whether it’s just taking a walk under majestic trees in Aberdeen Country Park or standing on the bridge looking down at the reservoir. To take it up a notch I have dinner outside – nothing beats great company and great weather, it’s one of my all-time top moments.

Best advice you have been given?Regarding working, a mentor of mine once told me: Remember to have fun doing what you love and the moment it isn’t fun anymore, move on.

Top tips for finding happiness? Look at little ways you can progress in the direction of what makes you feel happy and alive.

Incremental steps lead to momentum over time. Take three actions towards your goal everyday, and you’ll achieve that goal much quicker than you can possibly imagine.

Page 63: Southside Magazine October 2013
Page 64: Southside Magazine October 2013