
Okay, was on the train back from Hong Kong. Had to use the restroom. This is it, and yes that is the ground that you can see in the hole. It is just a hole in the floor and everything just falls onto the tracks. There is a flush to make sure it goes out!!!! WOW.

Paul and I stayed in Hong Kong over night. we ended up riding up this escalator. Seemed like it took forever. I think i read that it takes over 20 minutes to ride to the top. Even though it was downhill, the trip down was pretty rough. Here is a description and details:
Hong Kong Island is dominated by steep, hilly terrain, which makes it the home of some rather unusual methods of transport up and down the slopes.
Since it was officially opened to the public on 15 October 1994, it has played a very important role in transport in Hong Kong since it links Des Voeux Road in Central with Conduit Road in the Mid-levels, passing through narrow streets. Daily traffic exceeds 55,000 people, although originally forecast to transport 27,000, and using it is free of charge.
The whole system is 800 meters long with a vertical climb of 135 meters. The total travel time is twenty minutes, but most people walk while the system moves to shorten their trip. Due to its vertical climb, the same distance is equivalent to several miles of zigzagging roads if travelled by car. It consists of twenty escalators and three moving sidewalks. According to Guinness World Records, these escalators together form the longest outdoor covered escalator system.
The escalator daily runs downhill from 6:00am to 10:00am and uphill from 10:30am to midnight. Apart from serving as a method of transport it is also a tourist attraction and has restaurants, bars, and shops lining its route. There is an entrance and exit on each road it passes, often on both sides of the road.

We were on the cheap in Hong Kong. This is the stairwell leading up to the 3rd floor of what we thought was a condemed building. This is the building where the hostel we stayed at was in. The room was probably a 10X10 room with two bunk beds in it with a 3 inch thick mattress. It costs us about 25 US dollars total for both of us to stay there.

Picture of the Ladie's Market in Hong Kong. It was crazy. People everywhere. Bags, purses, jewlry, watches, clothes, stuffed animals and more for the haggling. The good thing was that it was easy to pick our co-workers out of the crowd.

One of many pics i took of the nightly laser show that uses the buildings of Hong Kong. We are across the sea in Kowloon on an observation deck. There is music to which the laser show is synchrozed to. It only lasted for 15 minutes but was awesome. The tall building had a huge spotlight shooting skyward and that is what is lighting up the cloud above. It's amazing how the whole buildings light on and off to the music as well as the laser lights on top of them. It was pretty cool.