beijingkids Blog - Latest posts
For One Day Only, Hit the Ice for Half Price
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This Saturday, take advantage of your beijingkids Club membership to get 50 percent off the ticket price at Sanlitun SOHO’s outdoor ice skating rink. For one day only, families can get in for RMB 15 per person (regular admission: RMB 30) by showing their beijingkids Club card at the door. Skate rentals are included in the price of admission.
Please note that this is a promotion, not an event managed by beijingkids.
Photo by jayhay2336 via Flickr
- Happy_Eggplant's blog
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A Ball For Daisy Wins the 2012 Caldecott Medal
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- pandaroo's blog
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Slow Saturday? Check Out beijingkids Top Picks
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As kids start filing back to class and families decompress from the holidays, there's nothing better than having a lazy Saturday. If you're looking for ideas on what to do during the rest of the weekend, the beijingkids Top Picks newsletter (February 2-5) can help. Published every Wednesday, the newsletter rounds up the best events from every week.
- Happy_Eggplant's blog
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The Grass Is Greener (and Duller) on the Other Side
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In a thought-provoking piece for The New York Times, columnist KJ Dell’Antonia wonders what effect her and her partner’s choice to move to the countryside may have had on their children’s independence. She quotes Dr. Richard Jackson, a professor of environmental health sciences at the University of California: “Children who grow up in suburbia can’t meet their life needs without getting a ride somewhere.” For many expat families living in Beijing, this sentiment is likely to hit home.
- Happy_Eggplant's blog
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Be There

I have a pre-tween daughter, Leah, who is exercising her independence these days. She tests me with her words, and she certainly challenges authority. She's still a little girl, yet she knows that bigger things are just around the corner. To provide her with some much-requested liberation, I don't meet her at the bus stop anymore, and she doesn't have a great desire to hang out with me if there are other -- better -- options around.
When Illness Strikes, Plans Change
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- pandaroo's blog
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Don't Vacillate – Vaccinate
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Protecting and maintaining children’s health and well-being is the number one priority on every parent’s list. Childhood immunization is one weapon that helps prevent our children from getting devastating diseases like meningitis, pneumonia and polio. However, navigating the immunization process while living in another country or moving between countries can seem like a daunting process.
- Happy_Eggplant's blog
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Shunyi Happenings: New Eateries
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Coming back from CNY holiday, my girls and I took a walk around Pinnacle Plaza to see what was new. Things we noticed were mostly in area restaurants…we must have been hungry! Here’s what we saw:
*Coming soon is a new Mexican grill called Avocado Tree! It is located right next to Johnson’s Computers, but doesn’t appear to be open yet (and there was no closed-for-CNY sign on the door like at many other establishments). It’s not a large place, but I’m personally hoping that it’s good, as Mexican options are much needed around here. It is pretty close to Mexican Kitchen, but then again, everything is close to one another in this area.
- charcey's blog
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Scrub That Surface! 8 Common Food-Borne Illnesses
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In Beijing, we discuss food safety with the zeal of hardened sports fans. Every week seems to bring some fresh scandal about the things we eat and the products we use. But what about the dangers that lurk in our homes? One of the biggest culprits is the kitchen. For example, did you know that kitchen sinks are dirtier than public bathrooms? With that in mind, here’s how to thwart eight common food-borne illnesses.
- Happy_Eggplant's blog
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Purified Water: Fake or Real?

Numerous times in the last four years that we’ve lived here, questions about the authenticity of jug bottled water has been a topic of debate. Those of us expats with water coolers in our homes – most of us -- generally use the reliable Nestle or Watson’s brands of water. Occasionally, a person might question the taste of the water, or simply the look of the bottle that has been delivered. Is it real? Is it fake? What are we really drinking?
Because we’ve had no problems or concerns in our household, I haven’t really been too concerned with proving that what we have is real. That is, until I saw the water bottles pictured above behind our neighborhood Jenny Wang’s. My head wanted to justify what these were all doing there, but I couldn’t come up with anything. So I started to go back to those information posts I had previously ignored. I wanted to know.



