This is from CNN.. pretty good list..but is more for foreigner than local people.
Select 18 vintage makeover to kick start 2010.
January
1. Today: Watch Maria Sharapova and Venus Williams rally tennis like ping pong at the Hong Kong Tennis Classic.
2. Seasoned fighters knock each other's teeth out at the Legend Fighting Championships, Hong Kong's first-ever mixed martial arts tournament, January 11.
3. Out with the old, in with the even older: get a vintage-style makeover at Select 18.
4. The Jockey Club Creative Arts Center in Shek Kip Mei holds it's open house event, January 16-17...
5. ... while artists throw open the doors to their normally private studios for the Fotanian Open Studios 2010 running for two consecutive weekends, January 16-17, 23-24.
6. Go head to head with rich mainlanders at the Sotheby's Wine Auction on January 23, which will offer the most valuable wine collection ever provided by Sotheby’s: 840 lots worth HK$28.5 to $40.8 million.
7. Lose at the bidding and head to Shenzhen instead for cheap beer and an all night pig-out session at Mark Obama Ndesandjo's Cabin BBQ.
8. During Hong Kong tourism's low-season, head to Ladies' Market and kill with newfound haggling skills.
9. Watch Avatar again, this time in the first row of an i-Square screening.
10. Subscribe to Butterboom and Hong Kong Fashion Geek's RSS feed for notices of sample sales all year round.
February
11. Dance salsa passionately in the streets during the Hong Kong Salsa Festival Street Party on February 4.
12. Practice hard enough and you might graduate from the streets to the ranks of competitor in the Asia-Pacific Salsa Open Championships on February 6.
13. Watch a concert at the AsiaWorld-Expo, such as the one featuring British rockers Muse on February 6.
14. Celebrate Chinese New Year, February 8-21. We're dreaming of lai see and fresh turnip cake already.
Cantonese Opera Treasures Feb 25-27.
15. Visit the
flower market for the mad Chinese New Year rush to buy auspicious flowers such as narcissus and red gladiolus.
16. Unfortunately, the lunar new year day falls on February 14 this year, so you'll have to choose between dinner with the clan and your Valentine date.
17. If you choose the former, you'll have to make a visit to Roger Chan's chocolate atelier for a sweet make-up gift for your Valentine.
18. Get your Year of the Tiger fortune read at Temple Street market.
19. Catch Hong Kong's newly-minted soccer stars in the Chinese New Year Cup.
20. Attend at least one creative happening around town during the 38th Hong Kong Arts Festival, held from February 25 to March 28.
21. Learn to appreciate Cantonese Opera with the Cantonese Opera Treasures show from February 25-27. It's a crash course in operatic screeching, Chinese-style, with a repertoire that charts the evolution of the genre.
22. Keep that new year's resolution and finish the Hong Kong Marathon 2010 on February 28.
March
23. Actually read a book, or hear someone talking about a book, at the 10th anniversary of the Man Hong Kong International Literary Festival, March 11-19.
Let loose at Hong Kong Rugby Sevens, March 26.
24. Shoot a video of your hair growing and send it in to March 12's
Hong Kong Independent Short Film Awards.
25. Shake your head in disbelief at gravity-defying stunts at the 8th Hong Kong Wushu International Championship from March 12-14.
26. Watch the birth of Hong Kong's new fashion star at the Fashion World Talents Awards Finals on March 19.
27. The Hong Kong Flower Show 2010 is a big draw for flora-thirsty Hong Kongers. To be held March 19-28.
28. Watch Tom Ford's beautiful cinematic debut "A Single Man" starting March 11.
29. Actually watch a movie from the selection at the 34th Hong Kong International Film Festival, March 21–April 6.
30. Catch Kings of Convenience on March 25.
31. Streak in the stadium and make the front page of the SCMP at the
Hong Kong Rugby Sevens 2010, March 26.
32. Really turn off the lights this time round for Earth Hour, March 27, 8:30pm.
April
33. Join Leslie Cheung's legions of fans gathered outside the Mandarin Oriental on the anniversary of his death, April 1.
Graham Street Market.
34. Bet on which piece of art will fetch the highest, most ridiculous bid at the Sotheby's Art Auction, April 5-6.
35. Cheer for your favorite Hong Kong film star at the Hong Kong Film Awards in mid April.
36. Walk around Graham Street market and take photos before the neighborhood is torn down for redevelopment.
37. Then stroll through Mongkok's various street markets before that neighborhood also gets redeveloped.
38. While in Mongkok, buy a DSLR and reserve it for taking photos of your food, exclusively. Upload every last photo on to Openrice.com.
39. Mongkok crowds got to you? Head all the way to North Point for Oil Street's secluded post-industrial-romantic harborfront.
May
40. Pretend to be in Paris for a month with Le French May (date TBC).
Cheung Chau Bun Festival May 21.
41. Plan for your post-mortem needs at the
Asia Funeral Expo, May 13-15. Morbid? Yes. Too soon? Never.
42. At least try to make it to the Cheung Chau Bun Festival on May 21.
43. Attend one of the most important art fairs for Asian art, and oggle eye-candy gallery owners, at the ART HK 10.
44. Bring pen and paper to note down fashion must-buys at Sex and the City 2, releasing in Hong Kong on May 27.
45. Prepare for summer with a Brazilian wax at Nude.
46. Hit the beach at the first sign of warm weather. Head to quiet and secluded Tai Long Wan first, then when your tan is on, head to South Beach to show it off.
June
47. Compete in the 2010 Hong Kong International Dragon Boat Regatta (date TBC), or just join the rowdy drunken spectator crowds.
June 4 candlelight vigil.
48. Sober up for the Tiananman Square incident candlelight vigil at Victoria Park on June 4th.
49. Go on as many junk trips as financially possible this year. Plan one now.
50. Pretend you hate karaoke, then hog the mic all night long singing in several different languages.
51. Go to Shanghai to see the World Expo and criticize the Hong Kong pavilion.
52. Or just toast to the World Expo at Shanghainese restaurant Lo Ching Hing.
53. Attend the last horse race of the season and feel justified losing the month's salary for the "special" occasion.
54. Go to Macau to see the exhibition of Michael Jackson's things.
July
55. March for democracy on July 1.
56. Watch the World Cup final on July 11 in a sports bar in Wanchai. Or in 3D at home.
57. Forget marathons -- tackling the queues and immense crowds at the Hong Kong Book Fair is the real test of stamina and patience on July 21-27.
Hong Kong National Geopark.
58. Shortly afterwards, be the first in line for a leng mo photo album signing at the Ani-com and Games Fair.
58. Give in to the trend and buy an OSIM massage gadget to ease those aching calves from standing in queues.
59. Finally make a visit to Ngong Ping 360 and test out the crystal cabins by jumping up and down in one hard.
60. Walk around in a typhoon, signal 8 or higher, film things flying in the wind, and post the video on Youtube. Don't forget to turn the camera on yourself too and look war-correspondent-serious.
61. Take a National Geographic-worthy photo at the Hong Kong National GeoPark.
62. Revel in Hong Kong's open air public spaces attached to swank, snooty bars such as Dragon-i, Red Bar, and The Pawn.
63. Then pick up a Eastern European teen model at D-i.
August
Get spooked by Hong Kong's haunted houses during the Chinese ghost festival.
64. Bring a rolley luggage case and nerves of steel with you to fight for bargains at the overcrowded Food Expo, August 12-16.
65. Escape Hong Kong's climate triumvirate of high temperatures, high humidity, and high concentration of pollutants in the air, by ducking into a cinema for the Summer International Film Festival (date TBC).
66. There are plenty of reasons to go to Macau at anytime of any year, but there isn't one better than the Adult Asia Expo 2010, August 20-22.
67. Get spooked at haunted houses in Hong Kong during the Chinese ghost festival (Yue Laan Festival).
September
68. Summer is done. Get over it ... by drinking with people you just met at one of Hong Kong's best dive bars and challenging them to dice.
69. Take advantage of Hong Kong's mild September weather and enjoy the Open Air Market held the third Sunday of each month, September through December.
70. Get lost on the East Rail line and end up accidentally at Tai Mei Tuk for barbecues and bike rides.
71. Load up on mooncakes until you're groggy with sugar and fats then light lanterns on the beach for the Mid Autumn Festival, September 22.
Halloween in Hong Kong.
October
72. Cover the walls of your apartment with Chinese flags for National Day on October 1.
73. Learn Mandarin to communicate with the flood of mainland Chinese tourists taking over Hong Kong during the Golden Week holiday.
74. Join the rowdy expats for the Hong Kong Cricket Sixes on October 30–31.
75. Dress up as the most mocked politician of the year for Halloween and get stuck in the crowds in Lan Kwai Fong. Then get disappointed when no one gets who you are.
76. Watch Macau prove it's music credentials at the Macau International Music Festival (date TBC).
November
Hong Kong Beach Festival in November.
77. November seems to be the month of gluttony. Kick off by taking two sick leaves for the
Hong Kong International Wine & Spirits Fair on November 4-6 -- one to attend, one to recover from hangover.
78. Then head to Macau for the 10th Macau Food Festival between November 12-28.
79. Eat at all the
Michelin starred restaurants, poo-poo them on Openrice, then come up with your own list before the next edition publishes. Don't forget to bring your only-for-food DSLR.
80. Have a last hurrah on the beach for the season in early November at the Hong Kong Beach Festival.
81. Get to the Macau Grand Prix on November 18-21.
82. If you don't make it, then follow the UBS Hong Kong Open fervently during the same weekend.
December
83. Hold a memorial for the Central Star Ferry Pier on December 12.
Hong Kong Christmas lights.
84. Gawk at
Christmas lights decorations with a stroll along the harborfront.
85. Gear up for the year-end sale season. You'll need comfy shoes, credit cards, and clothes that are easy to get in and out of.
86. Rid your buyer's remorse by volunteering at struggling Hong Kong non-profit organisations.
87. Eat yourself silly with a winter solstice banquet on December 22.
88. Avoid taxi queues on the way home from Central post-countdown by, well, not going home, and drinking at Lan Kwai Fong till sunrise.
Read more:
88 things to do in Hong Kong in 2010 | CNNGo.com http://www.cnngo.com/hong-kong/none/great-big-list-hong-kong-2010-027668#ixzz0bqMPGfIE