KizukiTamura [2016-05-28 14:56:26 +0000 UTC]
un petit verre d'eau cela me suffira
👍: 0 ⏩: 1
Sei-Zako In reply to KizukiTamura [2016-06-18 10:13:19 +0000 UTC]
Et encore ... Pfff il y a resto et resto
👍: 0 ⏩: 0
cameraflou [2016-05-27 08:02:15 +0000 UTC]
Je ne viendrai pas manger chez toi !
Sei-Zako In reply to cameraflou [2016-06-18 10:13:03 +0000 UTC]
Les resto chinois ont une réputation à tenir
cameraflou In reply to Sei-Zako [2016-07-22 13:27:58 +0000 UTC]
C'est vrai j'ai encore bouffé du chaton avarié l'autre jour j'ai eu la chiasse pendant 2 jours
undefinedreference [2016-05-20 19:33:39 +0000 UTC]
Reminds me of a little Chinese store I visited in Liege in 1989. I'm not even sure why I was in Liege, I probably got bored sitting at home and decided that Liege would be a nice place to visit on an average weekday. The store looked extremely intriguing so I went inside just out of curiosity. It was near that big square with the ugly concrete buildings spoiling the atmosphere created by the ancient palace or something (Place Saint-Lambert I think, from what I can find on the internetwork). Inside was a wonderland of racks packed with kitchen utensils, food and herbs. I had been in Indonesian stores before, but never in a Chinese one. Everything inside was utterly "traditional", the food and other stuff, the clothes the owner and his wife wore, his grey beard and mustache. And they were very friendly, that's my strongest memory of the place. I couldn't just walk out so I bought a tin of green tea. Later that evening when I got home news was pouring in about the massacre taking place on and around Tiananmen square in Bejing. Which of course had nothing to do with my visit to that store, but it did cause the news to hit me harder than it probably would have otherwise. So there's a story about your hometown for you
Sei-Zako In reply to undefinedreference [2016-05-24 13:41:59 +0000 UTC]
En voici une bien étrange histoire. Les coïncidences de l'existence ... Merci de l'avoir partagée avec moi. Il est vrai que la place Saint-Lambert est très vilaine. Cela dit, Liège change beaucoup en ce moment.De grands travaux de rénovation jalonnent la ville.Les buildings en béton du bord de Meuse sont tellement affreux qu'ils sont devenus splendides à mes yeux.Les chinois sympathiques semblent également avoir quittés la ville. Il y a toujours des épiceries asiatiques, mais les commerçants sont extrêmement désagréables.Je ne suis pas originaire de Liège. Je suis née au Luxembourg, de nationalité française, mais j'ai toujours habitée en Belgique. La pointe sud du pays et avec les années, je monte de plus en plus vers le Nord J'aime Liège et ses alentours.J'aime aussi beaucoup la Hollande
undefinedreference In reply to Sei-Zako [2016-06-16 19:50:03 +0000 UTC]
It's the "affreux" factor that was always so fascinating about Liege. Complete wrecks of homes and entire blocks boarded up, as seen from a safe distance through a train window. Especially the boarded up areas looked like they weren't safe places to go sightseeing. I guess stuff has changed since the late 80s. I hope for the liegans it has improved at least Plus not to forget those stairs up the hillside, a bit more mainstream touristy but still really ice. I once kind of hijacked someone from the krishna cloister in the Ardennes, in Liege we walked for kilometers along the banks of the Meuse right next to the busy highway trying to hitchhike back to NL, that wasn't the greatest "Liege experience" ever. They should really do something about those Meuse banks, they're to pretty to waste on passing traffic!
EintoeRn [2016-05-20 15:57:04 +0000 UTC]
shopping again ?
Sei-Zako In reply to EintoeRn [2016-05-24 13:42:47 +0000 UTC]
Pineapple, water and paint, what more ...
EintoeRn In reply to Sei-Zako [2016-05-24 16:47:30 +0000 UTC]
Pineapple ! I see
Sei-Zako In reply to EintoeRn [2016-05-26 19:25:09 +0000 UTC]