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Michael's Round-the-World honeymoon

a travel blog by The Happy Couple


Michael's view on the trip. This blog is really mostly for me, so that I'll have a clearer memory of the trip when it's done, like a journal, so please forgive me my obsessions like sampling and photographing all the local food and the booze. It's just my thing!

Also please forgive all typos, spelling mistakes and grammar mistakes. I'm usually doing this in a rush, and most of the time it's on such a slow PC that it would take even longer to check for mistakes and correct them.

The blog is usually 2 to 3 weeks behind, but I try to keep next few locations on the map up-to-date. You can see the schedule dates associated with the map if you go to http://blogabond.com/TripView.aspx?TripID=4517 and click "Show Newest First" or, if the maps are causing problems try http://blogabond.com/TripView.aspx?tripID=4517&slow=1
view all 2953 photos for this trip


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Forbidden City and the Great Pall of China

Beijing, China


We didn't want to overstretch ourselves on our first full day in Beijing, but we thought we had better get started since there was so much to see there, and since the Forbidden City and Tian'anmen Square were very close to the hostel, we decided to start there.

Outside it seemed the weather had taken a turn for the worse. When we arrived it had been nice and sunny, but now a thick fog seemed to have descended on the city and it was even more humid. After a bit of debate we agreed that it must be pollution, although it was different from the black pollution of Delhi which turns nose-blowings black; this was just like fog and our snot was still clear! A shame really, because the city didn't look as nice with the thick haze between the camera and the subject.

The Forbidden City was very impressive: absolutely huge and every massive building exquisitely decorated. It was crawling with other tourists though, which made it hard to take the photos we wanted. Chinese tourists are really funny: apart from the most common “twin peace signs” pose that they strike for most photos, they have a whole catalogue of other highly posed positions for having photos taken in; they often climb on things and they seem compelled to touch whatever they are having their photo taken standing next to. They don't seem to have much respect for objects, even ancient ones, which Joanne was appalled at. Perhaps it's a remnant from the Cultural Revolution when they attempted to erase the past and the arts were considered dangerous.
Apart from the climbing on valuable artefacts I have some sympathy for the exaggerated posing because otherwise it is easy to end up with lots of stiff-looking photos where you look like you've just been copy-and-pasted onto lots of images of famous places. Of course we are far too reserved and Calvinistically Scottish to do embarrassing things like strike silly poses, after all we are not American or Chinese, so we'll just have to continue looking dour in front of famous places – most of the time. A little disappointment was that you are not allowed into most of the buildings, but they didn't look all that interesting anyway. There were a few nice gardens inside, but again the Chinese tourists were showing them no respect and climbing over fences to have their photo taken among the flowers and so on. Large parts of the Forbidden city we off limits, but the area available to us was still huge.





Next stop was across the road to Tian'anmen Square. I think it's quite a typical authoritarian square: huge and imposing. It's flanked on one side by the Great Hall of the People with the National Museum opposite, on the third enclosed side the Chairman Mao Memorial Hall, where Mao's preserve body is on display in a glass case, and in the middle of the square is the rather phallic Monument to the People's Heroes. All the buildings around the square are very impressive, but very stern. The police presence in Beijing generally had been rather prominent, but in the Square the security was very tight. We had to put our bags through X-ray machines and walk through metal detectors just to get into the square. The square was also very busy with Chinese tourists, having their photos taken in front of the big Mao portrait outside the Forbidden City. All day people had been giving us long curious stares; a few people had asked to have their photo taken with us, we were obviously so alien. We hung around the square for a bit just watching people and getting stared at. Chinese people all seem to smoke and there are almost no restrictions on where you can smoke. With nearly 1.5 billion people they are going to have massive smoking-related health problems unless they do something about it soon.

On the way home, we were almost hit by several electric bicycles. While I approve of them for environmental reasons, they just don't make enough noise for you to know they are coming. The pedestrian flow around most of the Beijing, as well, seems to be very controlled: there are barriers preventing people from crossing roads almost everywhere, underpasses being the only way of getting to the other side. We stopped off at Snack Street to see if we could buy our dinner there. Some of the food looked quite nice, but they had some very unusual things as well, for example live scorpion kebabs, various insect and grubs, sea-horses, and star fish. We decided to give it all a miss, but I was very tempted by the cups of soft drink bubbling smoke, presumably with lumps of dry ice dropped in. Carrying on home we noticed that there are loads of KFC and Macdonalds everywhere. In a Communist country? How odd!



permalink written by  The Happy Couple on July 19, 2009 from Beijing, China
from the travel blog: Michael's Round-the-World honeymoon
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It Really is Great!

Beijing, China


In a bid to save money we eschewed the hostel's Great Wall tour and their advice on how to get there, and decided to follow the directions we had found online. A metro ride across town and we'd be able to get the last tourist bus leaving to Mùtiányú, which we had read was less touristy than Bādálĭng where everyone goes and is reportedly crawling with vendors and touts. When we arrived at the bus stop a man there told us there was no bus except on Saturdays and Sundays; if we had bothered to read what the Lonely Planet said about Mùtiányú we would have known this, but determined to make the plan work we fell back on the advice the hostel had given us, by jumping back on the very cheap, modern, and efficient metro and catching a different bus on the other side of the city. This approach meant changing to a minibus at the end of the bus route, which we were slightly apprehensive about. Some way from the last stop, a man got on the bus and pointed to us and said that we were at our destination and we should get off now to get to Mùtiányú. He managed to fluster us a bit, but we were sure enough to stay on the bus. After we pulled off from the stop I checked with the driver that we were still going to our destination. It was just a minibus driver trying his luck.

When we got to the end of the bus route it all went very smoothly. Minibuses were waiting to whisk us off to the Wall and they were only asking for about half of what we expected to pay, and we didn't even have to barter to get that price. The driver must have been desperate for work because he offered to wait for us and do the return trip too; he wouldn't even take half the money before we set off up the Wall.

It was a bit of a hike up the wall, but with the heat and the humidity we were sweating profusely; the fact we hadn't done any proper exercise for ages probably contributed to the difficulty we felt. At the top the view was superb. Even though the Wall had been restored it was still very impressive, and we had chosen well because we were not hassled too much and it wasn't jam-packed with other tourists as Bādálĭng would have been. We walked from one end of the restored section to the other, up and down some very steep stairs, until we got to a sign indicating that we should go no further. Beyond it was quite overgrown but other than that the wall actually looked in pretty good condition. There was an offshoot at right-angles to either side at this point and these bits of the wall were in a similar over-grown condition. It didn't seem like they would actually have had to do all that much restoration to get it in the tourist-friendly state it this section now was. I stood there thinking to myself “Wow! I'm on the Great Wall of China. I'm really here!”

We had refused the cable car on the way up because we really needed to save money after Japan, and our hostel wasn't really as cheap as we should have been aiming for in China, but there was a toboggan option for the descent and I couldn't resist. It was quite expensive, but it was definitely money well spent. Unfortunately there was a slow guy with a child going pillion in front of me, which ruined my high-speed descent, so I just stopped completely until Joanne caught up with me then set off again at full speed. There were officials posted at all the sharp corners telling me to slow down, but I ignored them and, since the rules at the top had said no photographs, I took a video of part of the descent. At the bottom I capped it all off by haggling a great deal on an army-style bag with the Mao motto Serve the People in Chinese on it, under the red star.


Back at the hostel we asked if they knew somewhere for Peking Duck, since we thought we should try it while we were there, and were directed along the Night Market. There were more food stalls here, looking a bit better than the ones on Snack Street, although they still had the collection of alternative foods. We found our place and went in for duck. It was a bit above our budget, but we felt we had to. The menu had all sorts of horrible sounding things on it; I'm sure they're all really nice, but we were quite happy to stick with our side of vegetables and Beijing duck, which is of course what they call it. It wasn't really Joanne's or my sort of thing. It all seems to be about the fat; the meat is cut into three types: breast fat, lean breast, and mixed fat and lean, which I think is leg meat. There are little rice pancakes to wrap it in, and sugar, a choice of three sauces, cucumber, and spring onions to vary the contents of the parcel with. The fatty stuff is just really really fatty and I thought it was disgusting when I tried a few pieces without any accompaniments. By the end of the duck we were both totally full, although it hadn't looked all that much when it arrived, but it was a rich, sickly full, rather than a stuffed full. I could see the point of it, and I understood what they were doing, and why some people would like it, but it just wasn't my kind of food – but at least I'd have real Peking Duck.




Back at the hostel an American guy we were chatting to, told us he was leaving for Shanghai the next day, to see the total solar eclipse there. The what?. We knew nothing about it, but it sounded like an excellent plan. Shanghai was our next planned destination, but it would mean leaving Beijing a day earlier than we had planned, which we weren't too bothered about as we felt we had already had an excellent two days of tourism. So that was the new plan: Shanghai for the eclipse the day before Joanne's birthday!

permalink written by  The Happy Couple on July 20, 2009 from Beijing, China
from the travel blog: Michael's Round-the-World honeymoon
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Descent from the Great Wall

Beijing, China


I've finally managed to get enough time online to upload this.



permalink written by  The Happy Couple on July 20, 2009 from Beijing, China
from the travel blog: Michael's Round-the-World honeymoon
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Hotel Beijing

Beijing, China


Since we had decided to go to Shanghai a day early, we had to book our train ticket as soon as possible. Train ticket booking was one of the services the hostel offered, so it wasn't going to be much hassle. We thought.

In order to be as organised as possible we spent much of the morning deciding on our exact itinerary for the rest of China so that we could book all of our train tickets at once. When I finally went up to book them we ran into several problems. First of all, the trains were fully booked on the day we wanted to go to Shanghai. Secondly I was told that they could not book any of the other tickets; only tickets originating in Beijing. Back to the drawing board.

We looked at flying but it would have cost far too much. We asked about the bus but that was fully booked as well. We considered going part of the way a day earlier and then travelling to Shanghai the intended day, but those routes were fully booked as well. We gave up on the eclipse and tried to book trains to Shanghai a day later, in time for Joanne's birthday which was our original plan, but those were fully booked as well. We considered switching the route around and going to Xi'an in time for Joanne's birthday, then Shanghai afterwards, but the trains to Xi'an were all booked up as well. In the end we just asked how long we would have to wait in Beijing to get a train to Shanghai, but they couldn't tell us that. Apparently we should have booked ten days previously... but we were in Japan at the time and we wouldn't have been able to book! We were trapped in Beijing!

Finally we tried asking about the bus to Shanghai after Joanne's birthday but we were told that they couldn't book bus tickets. Earlier in the day a different staff member had looked up buses online for us, but he seemed to have disappeared. There was no bus information online; we couldn't even find out which bus station (there are about 15) to go to, to ask about tickets. All the information we could find simply said that Beijing transport was simple: flying is cheap and the trains are excellent. Approaching desperation Joanne phoned a tourist information line, only to receive a recorded message in Chinese, a trick clearly taken out of the Japanese book of tourism! Joanne asked the girl on duty at the hostel if she would phone the number and decipher the message; it was a message saying that the number had changed. She called the new number, but discovered that “tourist information” meant “booking hotels”, so we were stumped again. Maybe seeing our desperation, or wanting to get us out of the common area, the girl asked what we were trying to achieve now and offered to phone a bus station for us. I wasn't the express bus we had been hoping to get, but she was able to reserve us overnight tickets to Shanghai the day after Joanne's birthday, over the phone; and they were going to deliver the tickets to the hostel.

At last some progress! Our arrival in Shanghai assured, we sent off several batches of Couchsurfing requests to Shanghai, Hangzhou, and Suzhou; although we couldn't book tickets for the latter two, we had been assured that there are plenty of trains, so no need to book in advance. This had taken almost the entire day and during that time we had got talking to Sue, an Australian woman in her fifties who periodically went travelling without her husband, as he didn't enjoy it much. She sympathised with our difficulties as she had run into the same ones. In Suzhou, though, she told us, the ticket office there had been very helpful and allowed her to book all the rest of her rail tickets from anywhere in the country. We looked forward to being able to remove the anxiety of no onward transport.

Sue had just arrived in Beijing and asked if she could tag along to the Night Market with us to get some food from the stalls. We passed on the sheep penis, centipede, water beetles, longhorn beetles, bee cocoon, testicles, and other organs, settling for some disappointing and over-priced spring rolls and dumplings. Maybe Snack Street was the place to go after all; the food there had been cheaper at least.



permalink written by  The Happy Couple on July 21, 2009 from Beijing, China
from the travel blog: Michael's Round-the-World honeymoon
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Spectacle: Total Eclipse of the City

Beijing, China


We hadn't managed to get to Shanghai in time for the total solar eclipse, but there would still be a fairly full eclipse visible from Beijing, so we had decided to view it from Tian'anmen Square; it was nearby, it would be interesting because of all the people there, and there was enough space that tall buildings would not block our view of the sun.

In the morning we had a look outside and the pollution was the worst we had seen it. We discussed trying to get out of the city where the air should be clearer, but we hadn't really got up early enough to realise any alternative plans, and we just accepted that we were stuck with the plan we had. We had to get within about fifty metres of Tian'anmen Square before we could even see it, but hopefully the sun would still be visible through the fug. There were plenty of people in the Square but most of them seemed to be waiting for tours of the Forbidden City to begin.

Our arrival was a short time before the start of the eclipse and there was no sign at all of the sun. Even the other side of the Square was partially obscured. Given the conditions I didn't expect to see anything until near the maximum of the eclipse, when I hoped we would at least notice it becoming darker. We waited and people-watched. As time passed, it seemed like it might be getting darker, but it was so gradual that our eyes were adjusting to it and it was hard to be sure there really was anything to notice.

Just after the time for the maximum of the eclipse had passed and we were starting to give up altogether, a troupe of yellow-clad youths seemed to be moving in formation to music. I couldn't see clearly what was going on, so I got up to take a closer look, planning to take a video clip of whatever was going on, and left Joanne sitting and paging through the Lonely Planet. I had just whipped out my camera, as I was close enough to video the dancers, when I noticed people all around me going oooh and aaah and pointing to the heavens. I looked up and there it was: a not quite full solar eclipse, which I immediately snapped a couple of photos of. I thought of whistling or shouting back at Joanne, but then remembered all the security forces around and thought better of acting in such a prominent and individualistic way in Tian'anmen Square, however when I looked over I could see everyone around her was looking up and pointing at the sky too, so she would obviously have seen it too. The whole time we were in China people stared at us, even in Beijing where they see lots of tourists. Often they asked to have their photo taken with us, and that day was no exception.

I took a couple more shots and walked back over to Joanne; nobody runs or jogs in the Square. Did she see it, I immediately asked, but my confidence had already subsided as she still seemed engrossed in the Lonely Planet. Inevitably the response was “see what?”. The eclipse had long since sunk back behind the Beijing soup and Joanne had seen nothing. She was devastated: “All this time waiting around and I miss it!”. We waited a bit more in case it broke through again but, when enough time had passed that there would no longer be much to see, we gave up and headed off in the direction of the opticians where Joanne planned to get some cheap glasses and contact lenses; we had heard the prices are a fraction of what you pay in Scotland. Just as we were about to leave the square, I spotted the sun peeking through again and alerted Joanne. It was still fairly eclipsed, but it was well on its way to the end. Joanne cheered up that she had at least seen something of the eclipse, if not the relative spectacle I had witnessed.

At the opticians, with some difficulty, we were able to establish that the very reasonable prices on display were for everything, not just the frames. It really was a bargain, however I admonished Joanne for simply agreeing to the ticket price as the girl from the hostel who had given us the directions said we should definitely get a discount off the advertised price. But at 240 Yuan it was still a great price, I'm told. After a bit of coaching from me, she also chose a pair of polarising sunglasses and this time asked for a discount, claiming grounds that we had already bought something. They were very obliging and dropped to price from 120 to 70 with no argument. We were asked to come back in 45 minutes when the glasses would be ready.

Joanne's birthday was the next day and she had chosen to attend one of the famous Beijing acrobatics shows as a birthday treat, however she suspected the one they were selling tickets for at the hostel might be a bit touristy, so we were now hunting a theatre the Lonely Planet had recommended for a more authentic experience, partly in the hope it would be cheaper too. A muggy half-hour walk brought us to the theatre, where we discovered that the cheapest tickets were a bit more than those the hostel was offering and, what's more, the hostel were offering transport there and back, which seemed like a large bonus now that we were both sticky with humid sweat. Just outside the theatre were women kneeling on the pavement selling pretty Chinese fans. I considered buying a couple then, so we had something to keep cool with, but the fact I had not yet bought anything for Joanne's birthday made me see sense and I decided to return alone later.

On the way back to the opticians we decided we should really take more advantage of the cheap prices, and get another pair of glasses for Joanne to post home, as well as a replacement for the dodgy spare pair of Joanne's sunglasses I had been wearing since I lost mine. Maybe to save us all embarrassment after our clumsy haggling earlier, this time we only had to ask what the price was and they dropped it considerably, and I walked away with a new pair of polarising sunglasses for 70 Yuan, and Joanne secured a second pair of glasses for 200. This meant another wait, so I took the opportunity to offer to pick them up after some shopping I had to do. It turned out Joanne had expected me to do any remaining birthday shopping at a market we had planned to go to earlier, but I was sure I would be fine locally.

As soon as Joanne was out of sight I began the march back down the road to the theatre. The opticians was off a main street, just south of one of Beijing's few remaining city gates, which seemed to be a brand new shopping district that wasn't even finished. It seemed so new and artificial that it had more the feel of a film set rather than a real place for real people. Most of the shops weren't open yet, but those that were are clearly pitched at the high-end and tourist market. There were tram tracks and stops on the street, but no sign of any overhead power supply; if the street had not been so obviously new I would have assumed that they were vestiges of a defunct transportation system, so had they constructed this artifice of a street with built-in romantic nostalgia? It seemed possible considering how fake everything else about the street was. At the bottom of the street a sign confirmed that it was not to be a fun place: a four-by-five grid of signs prohibiting various behaviours would probably have been smaller if they had listed instead what was allowed; spending money and supporting the Chinese economy exclusively, I would think.

After a rather misjudged “shortcut” I ended up back at the theatre. Of course the fan-selling women had gone. I really could have done with one myself by that point too, but I needed to press on, so I made my way all the way back to the vicinity of the opticians, picking up a cute Buddha's Eyes key ring, allegedly made from yak bone, from a Tibetan shop on the way. Then almost across the road from the opticians I noticed some fans in a shop Joanne had described as “a junk shop” earlier. She had really wanted a fan, so I went in anyway. Although I was conscious of Joanne's description, the shop seemed to have some really nice stock and I found myself piling several items on top of pretty fan I had chosen. None of it was very expensive but since the dive trip in Thailand was meant to have been her present, she was only expecting token gifts anyway. Very pleased with myself, I collected the glasses and headed home. As I passed the top of the fake street, I tram pulled along side me, drawing large crowds of onlookers. Another one was sitting ornamentally behind gates at the other side of the street. They must be powered by an onboard battery but, judging by the trouble they had moving the thing even at a crawl, they are only going to be used for “fun rides”, in keeping with the rest of the street, rather than for anything real like transport. On the way home a downpour started, leaving it mercifully cooler afterwards.

Back at the hostel we realised that the cheaper acrobatics tickets the hostel were selling was actually to the very same place we had visited earlier.

permalink written by  The Happy Couple on July 22, 2009 from Beijing, China
from the travel blog: Michael's Round-the-World honeymoon
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Joanne's birthday

Beijing, China


The morning of Joanne's birthday, we had just ordered our breakfast when I thought I heard a couple at the next table asking for “two free breakfasts”. The previous day I had noticed a sign up saying “Free breakfast not on the menu”, but we had decided that it meant that there is no free breakfast, although we had considered the other possible interpretation; after all there was no free breakfast on the menu. I went up to the desk to ask what it was all about. I as told it was only for class A rooms, whereas we were staying in a class C room but, I complained, we only moved into the cheaper, shared-bathroom, room for the extra two days we'd had to extend our stay by when we discovered we were stuck in Beijing. He flipped back through his ledger and said that since we had booked over the internet, only class B rooms are available, and that's what we had been in before. He pointed to the price advertised behind the desk and said “Class A”. This was actually the price we had paid for days three and four of our stay; we had originally booked in for only two days in case we didn't like the hostel or we could find a cheaper option, and when we discovered how nice the hostel was we asked to extend our stay by two days but had been surprised to discover that we had to pay more when booking direct, when it is usually cheaper to book direct. Suddenly I saw: it was dearer at the desk because it then counted as a class A room, entitling you to free breakfast. I explained all this to him and he demanded to see the receipts for days 3 and 4. I objected that I didn't know where they were, but he seemed unable to find any trace of the middle section of our stay. Luckily Joanne was able to find the receipts. In China you always need to keep your receipts: without your deposit receipt, you can't get your deposit back, and without receipts in general there never seems to be any proof that you have paid; in this case, apparently, because their ledger system was a shambles! They made some excuse about a new girl having taken the money from us; apparently they each have their own ledger book and system of notation: either they couldn't find hers or couldn't understand it. Nonetheless we came away partly victorious with four free breakfast vouchers. We had already eaten breakfast, but I didn't care: I was having my free breakfast!

After second breakfast we were joined by Sue, who had just come from her free breakfast, won after a battle of her own: she was in a class B double room, but only because they were not able to provide her the single room she had booked, and since she was paying the full class B tariff, she argued that she should at least get a breakfast for the extra money she was spending. As we talked we heard a murmer of “free breakfast” spreading round the room. Soon there was a queue of people at the desk and everyone on both side of the desks was looking rather agitated. “See what we've started”, Joanne said. When we returned later in the day the “Free breakfast not on the menu” sign had been taken down.

We were going to the Summer Palace that morning and Sue asked if she could join us, so we all took the hostel's advice and took the 20 minute walk to the bus stop next to where I'd seen the tram the previous day. The bus would drop us off right at the palace, avoiding the “very long walk” from the nearest metro stop. What a nightmare the bus journey was: it took about two hours for a seven kilometre journey, for all of which we were standing and being wrenched around by the drivers terrible driving and very heavy brake foot. By the time we reached the palace I was in agony. My back had been giving my low-level gyp almost since the start of out trip; not surprising since my bag started out over thirty kilos, and there is a lot of taking it off, lowering it down, lifting it back up, putting it back on, lifting it up to go on top of buses, and that sort of thing; but it had so far held out and not deteriorated into a full-scale back problem. It seemed the bus journey had finally done it. I hobbled around the Summer Palace with the other two for a while but I wasn't enjoying it much. It was clearly a very pretty place, but the Beijng pollution was taking the sheen off the beauty again and, as with the Forbidden City, there were loads and loads of other tourists, many of whom were children with those annoying sliding bird whistles that annoying vendors everywhere inside were constantly demonstrating to sell them. It was an enormous site, full of places called things like 'The Garden of Eternal Peace and Tranquillity'. “This tranquillity is a lovely idea. Shame it's ruined by all the noise” quipped Joanne. When we saw boats on the lake it was clear what we should do, so I bought a couple of cans of beer, purely for back-pain-relieving purposes of course, and we went out on a pedal boat. Much more peaceful, and the exercise and sitting seemed to help my back a bit, or maybe it was just the beer.

The bus journey there had taken up so much of the day that by the time our hour was up it was time for us to be heading back. The walk to the subway was a bit longer and we were harassed by rickshaw drivers the whole way, an experience reminiscent of SE Asia and India we had so far been spared in China. In fact apart from the “student” con artists, there isn't much hassle as a tourist in China.

We got back just in time to change before the minibus took us to the acrobatics show. I should say at this point that I wasn't that excited about the acrobatics show; for our last night it was a choice between that or a Kung Fu show, which I would rather have seen, but it was Joanne's birthday so it was her decision. The Kung Fu wasn't going to be a real competition anyway, just a demonstration, otherwise I would have ensured we made it to that on a previous day.

The opening act featured some difficult balancing by one girl and lots of other auxiliary girls who didn't do much more than roll around the stage. Oh – and they were all spinning innumerable plates; it was obviously fake though and I felt quite embarrassed watching it. I was just thinking that the act would actually have been quite good if they hadn't bothered with the silly plates when one of the girls dropped a plate. Immediately I assumed it was to prove that the plate spinning was actually real, then noticed that the other three plates on poles held by the same hand were now all hanging limply, not spinning, but somehow still clinging on the the poles. Quickly the girl saw what they were doing and chucked the four sticks away off stage. The group of four sticks were obviously a unit as well; I wouldn't be at all surprised if the spinning was motorised.

After that I was feeling quite cynical when the second act started. This time it was a contortionist, who was balancing piles of wine glasses, but the glasses were obviously all stuck together and it was clearly fake again. Her act was very impressive, but totally ruined by the stupid balancing. Her finale was to take each glass in turn from her forehead pile and pour out the liquid to gasps all around, supposedly proving not only were the glasses separate, but she had been keeping all the liquid in all along. During this finale, though, one of he helpers who was collecting the glasses as she removed them, kicked over one of the piles of glasses that had been removed intact. Of course the tower fell over as a unit and no liquid spilled out. I suppose the head pile must be the easiest for the contortionist to keep a good check on.

I did manage to shake off some of the cynicism and enjoy the remaining acts, some of which were quite entertaining, but every time they brought an element of balancing objects they were obviously cheating and I found it embarrassing. There was no need for them to do it: the acts were perfectly good without going that extra distance. Joanne enjoyed it more than I had, and neither she nor Sue had noticed all of the cheating, so obviously I'm just too much of a cynic to be looking out for that sort of thing.

To top off Joanne's birthday we had decided to go out for a hot pot, which we'd been told was a local speciality. The Lonely Planet recommended a couple of cheap places, but instead we asked at our hostel if they knew of somewhere locally. Unfortunately they must not have realised we were staying at a hostel because we were cheap and we were directed to a very expensive hot pot restaurant. Ah well, we decided, it's a birthday so we can splash out and ordered the beef option. We were a bit disappointed that they didn't give us any instructions, leaving us a bit confused about what goes where when, in fact the only service we got after ordering was five minutes after our food arrived when the waitress appeared out of uniform and told us we had to pay as they were closing. We were permitted to stay and do what we could, but being novices, we really made a meal out of it. A bit of a disappointing end to a nice day. At least she had loved all the presents I bought.

The next day, after sharing the remaining three free breakfasts, we had only one thing to do before getting an afternoon bus: get to the post office and post home Joanne's extra glasses and a few little things we had bought. We asked the staff in the hostel for directions and they showed us on the hand-drawn map behind them. It wasn't too far, so we would have loads of time to spare. When we arrived at the spot, however there was no post office. We tried asking some passersby, but could never be completely certain we were being directed to a post office, which we couldn't find, and not just a post box, which we did find. Eventually we gave up and went back to the hostel. This time they went online and called up Google Maps: look there's another one here, they said pointing at a map with only Chinese characters on it. When I complained that I could tell where it was, they went back to the wall map and showed me. This one was even closer, so we couldn't understand why they hadn't sent us there in the first place. Ten minutes later we were standing, holding our bags of things to be sent, outside a Post Office Savings Bank. Back again to the hostel. This time one of the staff kindly offered to take us to the one marked on the map. It was not where the map had said it was, but once we were there, what a contrast to the useless, slow, Indian postal service. We stood and watched as our fragile items were expertly and thoroughly wrapped until the girl was satisfied she could bounce each one on the counter without any danger of it breaking. This took a while though, and we were nail-bitingly fearing what Indian-style delays might be involved in the actual sending, but it was fast and easy.

Excellent service, but what a carry on it had been to get there. We had to get a taxi to make it to our bus in time.

permalink written by  The Happy Couple on July 23, 2009 from Beijing, China
from the travel blog: Michael's Round-the-World honeymoon
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Shanghai, China




permalink written by  The Happy Couple on July 25, 2009 from Shanghai, China
from the travel blog: Michael's Round-the-World honeymoon
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Arrival in Shanghai

Shanghai, China


We had not been looking forward to the bus from Beijing, for one thing because it was a 25 hour journey, but also because we had noticed that our seat numbers were not consecutive, so we would either have to battle our way through some difficult communication and persuade someone to swap with one of us, or spend the whole journey apart. When we got on the bus we had a lovely surprise: it was a sleeper bus, with proper beds, and the reason our seat number weren't consecutive is that the numbering goes left bottom bunk, left top bunk, middle bottom bunk, middle top bunk; we had two neighbouring top bunks, so it all seemed like it would be much better.

However for me it was just another Asian travel nightmare: the aircon blew directly onto my forehead, which kept me awake, but also gave me an ice-cream headache; even though it was a non-smoking bus, people seemed to think they could get away with smoking in the toilet – and then they did, the reason only becoming clear when I saw the driver smoking at the wheel; the provided blanket was too short for it to cover my arms and feet at the same time; the bed was too narrow for my small bag to fit comfortably with me and there was nowhere secure to put it instead; when the driver wasn't smoking he was talking on his mobile, in fact usually it was both at once; and possibly worst of all, the passengers were constantly farting so that the bus was filled with noxious gas. It was a long journey though and, since we were lying down the whole way, I did probably get a reasonable amount of sleep once I thought of wrapping my krama around my head to protect it from the cold. The krama was a birthday present to me from Joanne in Cambodia. The Cambodians mostly use them to keep dust out of their faces when on the back of mopeds, but they use them for plenty of other things, and I had found several more uses since leaving Cambodia, but this was another one.

To compound the discomfort of the journey they played that other common Asian trick on us and did not drop us at the bus station, but at the side of the street, in some unknown part of the city. At first sight Shanghai was nowhere near as modern and pretty as Beijing, with lots of rubbly building sites and crumbly tower blocks which looked like they must be social housing, which I assume almost all housing in China is. It turned out we were near a metro stop, and we found our way to the hostel with no trouble at all.

At the hostel we returned to trying to organise the next stage of our trip. After the trouble we had escaping Beijing, we wanted to get the next journey booked as soon as we arrived. We were told that we couldn't book trains from Shanghai to Suzhou or Hangzhou because the train were so frequent there was no point in booking. After some debate they told us it might be possible to book a train ticket from Suzhou to Xi'an, which was great as it was the journey we were most worried about not being able to get. But we would have to wait until the next day to find out.

Taking advice from the hostel, we went to a fairly cheap nearby restaurant. The food was really good. Joanne especially had been finding Chinese food a bit difficult to take: the meat is awful. And offal, usually. I don't know why we were bothering ordering meat, actually, we really should have been ordering vegetarian food, because vegetables don't have bone, sinew, or fatty skin, which is all the meat in China seems to consist of usually. Anyway, this wasn't like that: it was proper bits of animal muscle and it was very very spicy. After the shock and disappointment of Thai and Indian food not really being hot at all, China provided us with by far the fiercest food so far. A bit of a surprise and it seems to be only certain regions that do spicy food: the restaurant we were in was a Yunnan restaurant and previously we had eaten very hot Sichuan food.

We had a bit of difficulty ordering in that restaurant as it wasn't a tourist restaurant, and it seemed that English was not as widespread in Shanghai as it had been in Beijing. I was really struggling with the language, and the phrase book I had bought wasn't up to the standard of the Lonely Planet ones we had usually bought, and I had thought those were useless. It's just the tones that make the language so hard. Even with the phrase book's system of Romanisation and accents I find it very hard to work out what the word is supposed to sound like. The result of that was that nobody ever seemed to understand even single words that I said, so managing a whole sentence was out of the question. In retrospect, we really should have bought or downloaded audio guides for countries with tonal languages; the few times that Chinese people said words for me to copy it was much easier rendering them comprehensible next time I used them, but words hardly ever sounded like I had expected from reading them. In common with most Asian languages, the grammar, as far as I could tell from the phrase book, seemed to be very easy. It had all the same components, unusual from a European language perspective, that every other language we had encountered had: quantifiers for counting objects and a far more complicated system of pronouns and conferring respect when addressing or referring to people.

I think Chinese would be great to learn, because learning it would teach the ability to grasp a tonal system as well as the grammatical structures that seem to be common to at least most Asian languages, but also it would teach at least a rudimentary collection of the Chinese characters used in several other languages, for example Japanese. These characters are another major obstacle to learning the language. I had always believed that they were purely pictograms, meaning that they each represent a concept and you just have to know the character to have any idea what it means or how it's pronounced. Several people had confirmed this to me, and it would mean the writing system was incredibly difficulty to learn, each character needing to be learned separately. However after arriving in China I looked at an online introduction to writing Chinese, which claimed that most characters contain elements which carry information about the meaning and the pronunciation of that character; they quoted a study which came up with a figure of 90% of characters not being pure pictograms. Thinking about it, the people I asked were probably all Japanese, so maybe there are no pronunciation clues for them since, although the meaning of a character is usually the same across languages, the pronunciation is usually very different. Nonetheless, we were having far less difficulty in China than we had in Japan, because they seem to be far more geared to tourism and their Romanisation system, pinyin is far more widespread than Japan's romanji.


permalink written by  The Happy Couple on July 25, 2009 from Shanghai, China
from the travel blog: Michael's Round-the-World honeymoon
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Drinking on the Bund

Shanghai, China


We spent the morning struggling with more train booking pain. The girl from the hostel returned to let us know that it was possible to book the train we wanted from Suzhou, another place, to Xi'an. Unfortunately she hadn't booked anything, so we told her we would like the ticket that she enquired about, but that meant waiting another day to find out if there were still seats. However, cheered by the fact it was possible to book trains originating somewhere other than your current location, we asked if she could also find out about (and this time also book) the train from Xi'an on to Lanzhou. She wasn't sure, but we couldn't understand why one booking would be possible and not another, but this is China so you never know!

We decided to see a bit of Shanghai and took the metro into the centre. Shanghai, it turned out, was every bit as modern as Beijing, it's just that our hostel was far out in the uncharted backwaters of the unfashionable end of the western side of town. The centre was full of tall modern buildings, but punctuated by older European-looking buildings which had not been a feature of Beijing. We were heading for the Bund, a street built by European traders when the city was an autonomous settlement immune from Chinese law. The buildings there do look quite oldish European, but across the river is Pudong, which is China's answer to Hong Kong. Apparently the Chinese government plan this to become the most economically active region of the country, so that it's no longer a former colony, but a newly built 100% Chinese venture across the river from an old European concession. Pudong is certainly modern and similar to Hong Kong, but it's not quite the techno-skyline Hong Kong offers, yet. However our view was slightly spoiled by the fact they are reconstructing the walkway on the Bund side of the river, and the works are hidden behind huge adverts all the way along.

It was our intention to walk all the way down the Bund and into the Old Town district, but I was distracted by a sign sticking out up a side street claiming to be Shanghai's oldest microbrewery. The beer was really quite expensive, but they had a two-for-one offer during the day. But there was a snag: this free drink could not be claimed on the same day; they just gave out vouchers valid from the following day. Sneaky! We had about three each of the nice German style beers. The brewery was only established in the 90s, but I suppose it was probably all state-owned breweries until then.

After we realised how much money we had spent we dragged ourselves back out onto the Bund, where we were almost immediately befriended by Chinese students wanting to practice their English etc., who wanted us to come with them to an acrobatics performance later. They didn't quite seem like the con men we were used to in Beijing, yet I felt instantly very uncomfortable about the whole thing. Near the end of the conversation I discovered that they were Christians. And I thought they had just been harmless con men!

We made it down to the Old Town, but our hearts weren't really in it. One of the beers must have been stronger than it tasted. The Old Town looked a bit too reconstructed, but the lots of the buildings were quite pretty; maybe we didn't even make it to the real stuff, I don't know!

Back at the hostel, Joanne's increasing antipathy towards Chinese food led us to ask at the hostel for a Western food restaurant. Burgers the girl stated. Fair enough, I suppose. On the way we worked out we'd been directed to a McDonald's and took evasive action; we had eaten once at McDonald's so far, a breakfast muffin, hung over at the airport waiting to leave Japan, and we had no intentions of aid the evil empire any further. We ended up walking into what I can only describe as a greasy chopstick, and failed almost totally to communicate with the staff. We ended up with dumplings and soup. Chinese soup is usually disgusting, consisting of nothing more than MSG-filled stock and bits of bone and gristle. The dumplings looked OK, though. In this case the soup was actually quite nice, just due to the inclusion of large quantities of fresh coriander. The dumplings were, however, just what you'd expect from a greasy chopstick: stuffed with fatty low-quality meat; not very nice.

Back in the hostel we made a decision to cut China short, because Joanne was keen to spend some extra time in New Zealand, which we'd only scheduled eighteen days for. Joanne phoned BA and rescheduled our flight, transferring four days from China to New Zealand.



permalink written by  The Happy Couple on July 26, 2009 from Shanghai, China
from the travel blog: Michael's Round-the-World honeymoon
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Museum and Free Beer

Shanghai, China


Sorry about the formatting of photos in this (and several preceding blogs) but the formatting seems to have been broken and I can't be bothered investing the hours it normally takes to make it look OK.

We had yet another morning of trying to organise transport, but we did have one small victory: the girl working at the hostel had managed to get us train tickets from Suzhou to Xi'an although she had been unable to book our transport onwards from there. Another dead end! Since hostels always seem able to book transport, we booked our accommodation in Suzhou and tried phoning ahead to them to ask them to book the train for us, but for the first time the hostel did not offer that service. Organising transport is very tricky in China; clearly you are meant to travel with a group

After Xi'an we intended to get the train to Lanzhou and onto Xiàhé by bus from there. We reckoned that it wouldn't be a very busy route so we'd be able to book that without any trouble when we arrived in Xi'an. That only left our return journey from Lanzhou to Hong Kong to consider. This leg of the journey was vital because we would miss our flight to New Zealand if anything went wrong. In the end we decided not to gamble on being able to get train tickets and decided to fly. We found quite a few cheap flights sites in English and filled in all our details on the cheapest one, only discovering that there was no actual online booking: we just filled a web form and someone would get back to us. Not quite the peace of mind we were looking for, but we felt we were edging towards being organised.

That done we leapt into tourist mode again and took the metro to Renmin [People's] Park for the museum. Outside the museum we were approached by two Chinese girls who planned to attend some ethnic minority fair nearby and they were keen for us to join them so they could practice their English. These girls seemed totally genuine, but we were both now very suspicious of these approaches as it always seems to be con-artists, so we politely refused, saying we needed to get to the museum before it was too late. Outside the exit of the museum we were approached by another group, who again seemed like perfectly innocent young people, but this time I was sure it was a con, because they invited us to a tea ceremony and told us it was a very special one we could only see that day, just like the gallery people who insisted it was the last day of the exhibition. The tea ceremony is a well known con, where you are left for a massively inflated bill for just a couple of cups of tea. This time it was easy to get out of it, because they had thought we were leaving the museum since we had mistakenly gone to the exit instead of the entrance; that was another give-away: they were hanging around, poaching, outside the exit of a well-known tourist site.

The museum itself was great. We don't normally like museums much, but this one really appealed to us both. I think it was partly the way it was very atmospherically lit, and cameras were allowed which made it a bit more fun as well. It was mostly just objects, but somehow it didn't seem as dry and dull as that would suggest; perhaps it was the way they were arranged in chronological order, so seemed to take us through Chinese history as we walked around.

After the museum, determined to cram in as much as possible, we took the metro across the river to Pudong. We had been going to walk across via the Bund Sightseeing Tunnel, but it was much cheaper just to get the metro. We took in the view of the Bund from Pudong, but it was raining quite heavily, so not much fun.

Pushing on with the tourist agenda, we got back on the metro and took it out to the start of the maglev line to the airport. We had no reason to be in the airport, but the Shanghai maglev is the fastest operational train service in the world and I just wanted to ride it for fun. Inexplicably Joanne wasn't very excited about it, but maybe it's a boys toys kind of thing. When we arrived there I had a huge let-down. Apparently the full-speed service doesn't run all the time, and we had missed the last 430km/h train, leaving us only with the option of a pathetic 300km/h. The Nozomi in Japan goes at that speed, and our Shinkansen was almost that fast, so it would have been a waste of time. We would have to return the following day.

To console me we returned to the bar at the microbrewery we had been in the day before and redeemed a few of our vouchers for free drinks. I'm sure the free ones tasted even better than the ones we paid for the previous day. We used the bar's wifi to check email and discovered that I'd filled in the flight form incorrectly and had reserved a flight on the wrong day, and it was more also more expensive than the web site had said. I replied explaining the date was wrong and we set off to look for a club we were planning to go to the next night. When we were out with Sia and Willemijn in Thailand they had told us about places in Shanghai where you can pay an entry fee then get free drinks all night. It sounded like the fee was set with Asian livers in mind, not Celtic ones, so it was our intention to go to one of these places the next night.

After wandering around the Bund for ages, we came to the conclusion that the club we were looking for was at an address which had been demolished as part of the extensive building work all around the area. We ended up in an old building, an island among the building works, where they were trying to regain some of the massive losses to their business, caused by the great difficulty in getting there past the building sites and road works, by offering two-for-one Schofferhoffer. An additional bonus was that the building used to be a clock tower (or was it a lighthouse?), so there were levels well above the adverts hiding the building work, and we were finally able to get a proper view of the light of Pudong. It isn't as impressive as the Hong Kong lights, but there are more tour boats sailing up and down the river, also lit up. After a couple of rounds of two-for-one Schofferhoffer we were drunk enough to and cope with the awful food offered by our hostel when we got home.



permalink written by  The Happy Couple on July 27, 2009 from Shanghai, China
from the travel blog: Michael's Round-the-World honeymoon
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