PANDAS!!!!

We woke up to a warm humid morning, headed down to breakfast then out to meet our guide. Today was Panda day. We were worried the inclement weather may cause the pandas to seek shelter, and we wouldn’t see them.

We arrived at the research station, and followed the pathways user an arch of bamboo trees. It didn’t take too long to find our first panda perched up in a tree.

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A few minutes later another panda arrived, and then a few more. We had timed it perfectly, the pandas had just eaten and it was rest time. Pandas eat upwards of 40kg of bamboo per day, it takes about 16 hours to find and eat this. To allow it to digest they need to rest, evidently pandas are not lazy, they are energy efficient!!

We saw an number of pandas of different ages from 1 month through to many years. It is worth reading about what happens at the research station, through their efforts they have turned the decline of the panda population in the wild into a small increase. Currently there are only around 1500 in the wild, 300 in captivity including 140 or so at this research facility. Once finished with the pandas we had lunch and headed out to the railway station four our trip to Chongqing to join our cruise. Once on board we had 3 questions to answer, were we vegetarian, what’s our next destination and would we like to upgrade to a suite (very good price sir!!). We succumbed very quickly to the offer after he showed us the cabin we had booked. The new one was twice the size with a work area, sofa and bath tub!!

 

pandas-19Food…..
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Food, Glorious Food

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Time to Digest
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Where’s my Back Legs?

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Mother and Cub

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Same Mother and Two Cubspandas-3

Panda Kindergarten Four of the Pandas are 3 month old, the one in the pink box is 1 month old.

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Red Panda

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Random Couple with Panda

We traveled on the high speed “Bullet Train” cruising at 295Km/h
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High Speedwe

We were picked up at the station by our guide and driver, and driven off to the port. Unfortunately both entrances to the port are closed for construction, meaning a 200m walk to the boat. As this provides such an inconvenience for us poor tourists the tour company hired a porter to carry our cases!! I was a little too embarrassed to take a photo, but instead of using a trolley the porter had a 5ft bamboo pole and hooked the cases to either end and carried it across his shoulders!

Although the boat did not sail until 21:00 we were allowed to board around 17:00 which gave us plenty of time to freshen up.

The downtown area of Chongqing was beautifully illuminated as the pictures below show.

sailing-fro-chongqing-14 sailing-fro-chongqing-1 The Blue Lines are Cranes at Construction Sites

sailing-fro-chongqing-3 The Green Building is in the shape of a boat (at least it is in the imagination of its German Architect. The building changes colour, and as we moved away the shape of a boat could be seen from certain anglessailing-fro-chongqing-5

Following in a Nautical Theme… Sails on Apartment Buildingssailing-fro-chongqing-9 sailing-fro-chongqing-10 sailing-fro-chongqing-12

Being an American based cruise company there is a lot of English speaking people on board, much easier on the ears!! The boat is the largest on the Yangtze river at 10,000 tons and 400 passengers.

Posted in 2016, China, Trips, Week 2 | Leave a comment

Back to the land of Oxygen

We finally departed Tibet, true to previous experience we were 3 hours late in departing. Our original flight was 1315, this was changed to 1615 and then cancelled last night. The next flight we were put on was at 1310, progress a 5-minute gain! This flight too was cancelled and we were put on a 1610 flight after two of our flights were cancelled. I am beginning to develop a healthy disrespect for internal Chinese flights. When we arrived at the airport the flight departure was showing 1610, which is what we were expecting. Shortly after a further delay was announced, the flight had been delayed until 1610 (that was not a typo!!), go figure. Anyway due to other commitments by our driver and guide we finished up spending 5 hours at the airport, it wasn’t too bad as there was plenty of time for people watching. Lunch was a bit of a disaster, it came s a package including a soft drink, coke for Lyn, Sprite for me. No Coke no Sprite! Water for both….. no water! OJ for both, no OJ! Finished up with Hot OJ…. Not good.

Yesterday was our last tour day in Tibet, which was probably good as we were both feeling the effect of altitude. In the morning we went to the Drak Yerpa monastery. The nice thing about this place was its location, about 1 hour north of the city and well into the countryside. We went through a small pass on the way there, and like all good Tibet high spots it was festooned with prayer flags.

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All good monasteries are inevitability located on a hill; this one was no exception, further up the hill are a number of caves where early kings and Dalai Lama(s) would go to meditate. The longest meditation was believed to be 3 years 3 months 3 days and 3 hours! However, to get to these caves required walking a distance of 1.5 miles with a vertical component of 1650ft (500m) this walk started out at around the 15000 ft. mark. Despite having just developed a cold it wasn’t too bad but I doubt if I’d volunteer to do it again.

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The Last Two Pictures are of the Caves

One disappointing thing was that all the palaces, temples and monasteries contained virtually the same items, statues (all in the same style), wooden blocks from which the scriptures are printed, butter wax candles and fistfuls of money being left as offerings, although it must be said that the most common denomination of these notes was 1/10th of a yen which translates to around 2 cents. However, it was still worth the trip to each one.

On the way back to the city we stopped off at a fairly isolated farmhouse to see how the country folk live, the answer is fairly basically except for the 32” flat screen satellite TV! Other than that they raised their own animal, grain and vegetables, not my preferred lifestyle as the nearest computer store would be over 100km away!


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Pantrycountry-family-home-10

Living Roomcountry-family-home-6

Kitchencountry-family-home-4

Eating Area in Kitchen
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Stovecountry-family-home-2

Housecountry-family-home-1Crops Drying in Courtyard

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Ceiling Decorationcountry-family-home-7

In the picture above we were offered a traditional snack made from barley, butter and cheese. The three ingredients are served in the bowl and you mix them by hand! Our guide told us it was pretty strong stuff and may give us “loose movements”. He had some, we declined. He spent the afternoon looking for washrooms, we didn’t!!

After lunch we had some free time so we looked around the shops and then headed off to our favourite coffee shop.

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In the afternoon we headed off to the Sera Monastery to watch the monks debating. For some reason, known only to the monks, cameras were not allowed but you could take pictures on cell phones, my camera may have accidentally self activated a few times. Although we understood not a word of what was being said, the physical actions presented plenty of entertainment!

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Back at the hotel I collapsed like a sack of potatoes rice for a couple of hours, then we took a walk around the corner to one of the local restaurants that had an English sign outside. We had a good meal and our last fill of Yak.

We arrived at a rainy Chengdu around 1830 and as we got off the aircraft we experienced the good old Chines tradition of fitting 200 passengers on a bus designed for 100. Not pleasant. We arrived at our hotel about an hour later. Our plan was to lounge around for a bit then go to bed and sleep off Tibet. Because I have a hotel frequent stayer card for this chain they forced me to accept some tickets for free, alcoholic, drinks from the bar! How could I refuse? We got to the room and it was all decked out in a Panda theme.


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Sorry there are no photos but I can either spend an hour sorting them out and uploading them or I can try to sleep off the cold and Tibet. You lose, temporarily.

Tomorrow we have a couple of hours on the bullet train(there wasn’t) there maybe WiFi there, then we have 3 or 4 days on the boat, again I am not sure of the WiFi situation(sometimes there is, sometimes there isn’t), so it may be a few days before I get anything posted. I can still write the blogs in Word, but I can’t embed the pictures unless I am online.

 

Posted in 2016, China, Trips, Week 2 | Leave a comment

Nothing Nada Zilch

No Blog today due t matters not entirely beyond my control. I started developing a cold last night, then this morning we visited a monastery which involved walking 1,5 miles starting at 15928′ and finishing above 16500′. Of course what goes up must come down, so a fairly strenuous day. All we have tomorrow is a 2.5 hour flight which will land approximately 12500  below the height it took off from!

Posted in 2016, China, Trips, Week 2 | Leave a comment

O.M.G.

WARNING!

This entry may well be even more incomprehensible than usual!We have done one h**l of  lot of walking today, mostly vertical and have had a lot of information to absorb so both body and brain hurt!!! The title refers both to the physical effort (which would have been moderate even at sea level) as well s the mentall effort to take in all the details and man made objects we saw including 1 mausoleum which was made from over 3700kg of gold and  10,000+  gems!

Thanks to the three who took the time yo answer te Lion Quiz, all get a point for getting the right answer but Jeff gets a bonus point for his eloquent wording!

In answer to a question, the Dalai Lama was not at home, he got kicked out of the country by the people who sell sweet and sour pork with fried rice, after the Tibet uprising in 1959 and is now persona non gratta residing in India.

Even less writing to day…. sorry

This morning we headed off to the Drepung Monastery, the largest Monastery in Tibet.

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View of Templedrepung-monastery-16Every Year a 500ft Acroll is unrolled in this area
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Holy Dogs? (the place is full of them)drepung-monastery-14

STAIRS!!!!!drepung-monastery-11

More stairs and Painted Rocksdrepung-monastery-10

Close Up of Rocksdrepung-monastery-7

Rocks stairs and Scroll Areadrepung-monastery-4

Hand Powered Prayer Wheels (to be rotated clockwise)

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Water Powered Prayer Wheel
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Incense Burning

For lunch we headed back to the Tibet Family Kitchen that was closed yesterday. It turned out to be just as the name suggested a small restaurant in a Tibetan family home. The food was excellent, yak meat dumplings and yak meat with fried lettuce.


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Sitting room (where we ate)
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Lyn Studying Menutibet-family-kitchen-1

Dining Room

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Food

After lunch we had a little spare time so we explored the local area.

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Quilt in Back Streetback-streets-lhasa-4

Back Street Souvenir Stallback-streets-lhasa-3 back-streets-lhasa-1

Back Street Views

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Main Street Lhasa Views

The biggie of the day was the Potala Palace. You will see from some of the pictures sloped walkways climbing up the outside of the Palace, this is the only way in. The yellow and red portions were built in the 7th century. The white section was added in the 17th  century.  The Paace served as the Dalai Lamas winter home.

Again we were very restricted in what we could photograph, unfortunately

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Random Couple Below Palacepotala-palace-10Drums to call to prayer in the morning and signal a ban on noise in the evening

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View of Lhasa from the Palace

Posted in 2016, China, Trips, Week 2 | 1 Comment

Lots of Walking…. Little Oxygen

Yet again due altitude related knackerdness (Tibetan word for sickness) this will be mostly pictures with references in blue.

We met up with our guide at the civilised hour of 09:00 and headed out to Norbulingka, meaning Treasure Parkthe traditional summer home of the Dalai Lama.

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That Random Couple Again Sitting at the Gateway

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Main Entrance

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OK, no one was brave enough to provide an answer to a similar question a few days ago, these two lions are more colour than the previous ones, which is male, which is female and why. Surely someone can at least hazard a guess?

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View from Street

In most of today’s picture the scenes will be outside ones only, as cameras are not allowed inside.

Next we headed off to lunch, originally it was meant to be at a small family home type place, but for some reason it was closed (today was a minor religious holiday here so that may have been why). It was a little unfortunate as the place looked “interesting”.

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We finished up at a more commercial place that served authentic Tibetan fare where we had our first taste of Yak meat, and pretty good it was too.

After this we walked to the Jokhang Temple the holiest place for Buddhism in Tibet.

Below are some vies of the general area approaching the Temple.


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Offerings to the Godsjokhang-temple-area-4

Incense (burning juniper branches) to clear the air of evil.

Tibetans will attempt to make a pilgrimage to the temple at least once. Some will come bu car or public transport, some will walk for up  to a year and others will travel on hands and knees according to their devoutness.

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Next some pictures from within the temple grounds

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Pilgrims at Prayer at the Temple Entrance

jokhang-temple-14 jokhang-temple-12Views of the Temple.

Inside photos not allowed.

As part of the pilgrimage people complete three different circuits, the first is a circuit within the temple, the second or Bark Hor is a 1km circuit of the temple and the third is a circuit of Lhasa. we did the first two, views below.

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There Just Happened to be a Fabric Store on the Circuit!

bark-hor-middle-circle-23Two Monks

bark-hor-middle-circle-2View of Potala Palace (More tomorrow)

bark-hor-middle-circle-11Colourful Dress

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Pilgrim – Device in her hand is a Prayer Wheel which is swung to rotate the cylinder clockwise

Next stop was the Tibet Museum, again no inside photos.

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Cutting Leather for Boot Heelsjatson-chumig-welfare-special-school-11

Mini Boot Trinketsjatson-chumig-welfare-special-school-10

Sewing Soles to Boot Basesjatson-chumig-welfare-special-school-6

Embroidery fro Boot Decoratingjatson-chumig-welfare-special-school-5

 Making Books from their own Paper.

Lastly was a trip we had requested outside of the tour itinerary. A friend of ours had been a volunteer in Tibet many moons ago, and one of the things the group did was to build a soccer pitch at an orphanage. He still keeps in contact with the director, so we decided to visit her. The orphanage provides a home for 114 orphans from all over Tibet and puts them through school and college and will continue to house them until the find a job. If they can’t find a job, they can sty at the orphanage and be taught handicrafts to make items that can be sold to raise funds. Primarily they make paper and books as well as Tibetan boots.

Our visit had an added benefit, our tour guide was impressed with the work being done at the orphanage and is going to try and get his tour group to add it as a destination. He is also going to fund raise from his friends and associates!!

For some reason a couple of the photos would not load properly.

Posted in 2016, China, Trips, Week 2 | 3 Comments

Tibet Bound!

This covers the two days traveling to Tibet.

Woke up this morning to a misty start. The city of Xining is different the others we have stayed at, it is much quieter both traffic and pedestrian wise. Te sidewalks are probably 6 to 8 times wider than Beijing. We left out marbled palace room and headed down to breakfast. The breakfasts are buffet style, and I went hunting for the omelette station; there wasn’t one. I asked one of the chefs who spoke English, and the next thing I knew a junior cook had been sent off to find and chop the ingredients an make me an omelette. Seems there is usually no call for them; it was the best omelette so far this trip.

Next we headed out to the local supermarket to get some snacks for the train, as well as some bottled water. The supermarket was enormous, think a large Walmart on steroids. Shopping done, it was back to the hotel for 30 minutes before meeting up with our driver for the trip to the railway station. Travelling to Tibet is not straight forward, you need a Chinese Visa, a Tibet travel permit, a train ticket and in our case two passports! Our passports were set to expire n April 2017 which would have been fine for this journey, but our travel agent advised us to get a new 10-year passport as this would allow us to obtain a multi entry Chinese visa good for 10 years. If we had kept with the old passport or got a 5 year one, then the visa would only be a single entry one for the same price.

We final obtained the boarding pass, and it was off to security, just like an airport. My can of deodorant was confiscated as it was deemed inflammable! All we had to do now was say good by to our guide and wait for the train.

 

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The New Xining Railway Station

We had pulled a bit of a trick in getting the train accommodation we did. We booked a sleeper, but the best sleeper they had was 4 berths. Being the quiet, shy retiring couple we are we didn’t relish a 22-hour trip with a couple of stranger who, in all probability we wouldn’t be able to communicate with. We finished up paying for the 4 berths in the cabin which really wasn’t that expensive and so got it ail to ourselves. Once we got on board we were really glad we went that route, the cabins were minuscule with 2 upper and 2 lower bunks which doubled as seating.

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Good for 2 Cramped for 4

We met up with a group of Chines people in the same car who came from Toronto, so that helped us greatly when it came to ordering dinner. Again good prices, a filling meal for the 2 of us for $20. Currently we are travelling on a plateau about 9000ft above sea level. By about 5AM tomorrow we will be at the highest point of 16,655ft before descending into Lhasa at a mere 13,500ft. The train is equipped with oxygen ports and breathing tubes are available if required! Below are general views along the way. dsc01169 dsc01170 dsc01172

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A little hard to tell from the above photos, but that truck is carrying 26 vehicles, loaded 2 abreast!dsc01175

Hand Cut  Sheaves of Wheat

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Many of the workers we saw were hand cutting the crops, a few had combine harvesters and one enterprising girl was using a whipper-snipper!!dsc01177

Scare Crows Chinese Style

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Our Traindsc01184

Sunset
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Yaksdsc01196

Village in the Foothillsdsc01197

Closer View of Villagedsc01200

More Yaksdsc01204

Almost all the country houses we saw had large walled in areas.dsc01206

Small Town – Big Police Stationdsc01213

Yak Close updsc01217 dsc01218

Army Campdsc01224

Military Helicopterdsc01227

Not Sure – But it was colourful

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Not Yaks – Sheepdsc01231

5*  Sleeper China Styledsc01210

Up Marke House
dsc01199In many places tents were set up in the fields.

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The above is for our friend Charlie who was having problems installing a steel roof, it’s easy just weigh it down with cinder blocks!

We arrived in Lhasa on time to the minute. Once we had cleared “immigration” we met up with our guide and headed to the hotel. Compared with the recent “palaces” we have been staying in this one is a little less extravagant, but none the less perfectly adequate for us.

After arriving it had been suggested  that we relaxed and acclimatised for the rest of the day as we are at 12,000ft  or 3656 metres above sea level. After being cooped up on a train we decided to risk a slow walk for some exercise. What better to do than go and find the only geocache in Lhasa. We succeeded with no ill effects.

For homework you can read about Lhasa

Posted in 2016, China, Trips, Week 1 | Leave a comment

Warriors

An interesting eating experience last night. Our guide had recommended a restaurant opposite the hotel, with a caution not to eat at the smaller establishments. We headed over to the restaurant only to find we were in the land of no English speakers! Through a series of pictures on the menu we managed to order a main dish and rice each. The staff seemed to believe this was not enough and kept pushing for us to order soup and other appetizers. Luckily we were able to resist, when the dishes came we were convinced that they had brought us 2 main dishes each! Unfortunately, it didn’t’ all get eaten. After dinner we walked along the street where the smaller restaurants were. I now understand the caution from our guide. In many cases the food was stored outside and was still moving (as in living / breathing) There were bullfrogs that could be killed and cooked to order, lobsters suffered the same fate as did some unidentifiable thing that would have been at home on a Klingon dish.

This morning we headed out to the Terra Cotta Warriors site. Again you can read about them HERE.

Before we arrived at the site we stopped at a small factory that makes full size and miniature warriors using the same techniques as the original artisans used. The warriors are hollow and their heads are detachable. The reason for this is to allow the heat and moisture to escape during the firing and cooling process.

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Full Size Torso

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Detailing Models

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The Kiln

The factory also made Chinese Lacquered Furniture

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Having bought our souvenir warrior we headed off to the real thing

Both of us thought that the warriors were in the open, but they are all under the cover of buildings. Makes sense really, as they need to preserve them from the elements. The warriors were first discovered in 1974 by a couple of farmers digging a well. When the archaeologists started work they discovered most of the warriors and other artifacts had been destroyed, this destruction was not a recent thing, it dated back to shortly after the warriors were created when the peasants revolted and set fire to the wooden structure covering the site.

In the photos below, the complete warriors are the result of painstaking reconstruction from the damaged parts. Other pictures show the state that the site was found in, and also some area where digging has not yet commenced. Some areas have been left untouched while research into preservation was carried out. When the warriors were first discovered they were all brightly painted. Within days of uncovering them the colours all faded.

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Only the first few rows have been restored

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Below are the remains as found

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terra-cotta-warriors-21The Warriors Hospital – renovation in progress

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Pictures of the warriors before the colour faded



After touring the 3 pits that are known to contain warriors, we headed off for a visit to the museum and some lunch.

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After lunch our luck changed (for the worse) as it started to rain. We headed back to the car for our trip to the airport. We were a little early and would have a couple of hours to kill, unfortunately after waiting an hour, a 90 minute delay was announced for the flight. Seems delays are common over here! Our delay was “undelayed” by 15 minutes so we got airborne about an hour late.

Driving into the city of Xining we were amazed at how man of the high-rises were lit up with both stationary and moving lights, a little like Las Vegas. On arriving at the hotel we had our first real issue of the trip, there was no reservation for us. After about 10 minutes of checking and hunting through the reservation system it transpired that we were a day early! Luckily there was room available so here we are. Travel agent has been asked to confirm the remaining hotel reservations!!!

The wait was worth it, we have a fantastic suite, enough marble to sink a battleship, two 40″ TV’s a full bathroom and an additional washroom, bedroom, sitting room and even a washing machine!!

Almost certainly there will be no blog tomorrow as we board a train in the afternoon and spend 22 hours going through the mountains to Tibet. Hopefully there will be reasonable WiFi in Tibet.


Posted in 2016, China, Trips, Week 1 | 1 Comment

The Best Laid Plans …………

Well, we survived Beijing, even after finding our own evening meals for the last three nights. Luckily the restaurants have menus with pictures! Prices are pretty good with an evening meal for 2 costing $20-25 Cdn.

There was much debate as to how long the drive to the airport would take this morning, one hour was allowed, it took 25 minutes! The waiting time will be spent between the relative quiet of the lounge and the people watching in the terminal. The waiting time has just increased due to a one hour delay!! This was the good news We got on the flight, and the captain announced a further 15 minute delay due to those pesky air traffic controllers. About 30 minutes into this 15 minute delay we were informed that due to bad weather south of the airport we were now into an indefinite delay and that lunch would be served on the ground! Not good.

Finally three and a half ours late we got airborne. Luckily this flight was an extension of our Toronto – Beijing flight and we were in Business, so the delay from that point of view was tolerable. What was more concerning was that we were to tour the Terra Cotta warriors on arrival at Xi’an (read about Xi’an here). 

Our bags were second off the belt, and we headed out to meet Julia, our guide. She had been waiting 4 hours at the airport! There was a quick change of plan, there was no time to everything we had planned for Xi’an so we settled for a visit to the old city wall this afternoon (forgoing the Muslim Quarter and the Big Wild Goose Pagoda. Neither were high on our priority list anyway. We would visit the Warriors tomorrow before flying out.

The traffic out of the airport was bad due to a broken down car, we then picked up speed until we hit the outskirts of the city. Again a well populated city with 8.75 million people. It is also unique in that it is the only Chinese city still surrounded by the original city wall.

Below are some general views taken from atop the wall.

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Inside the wall new buildings retain some of the old architecture

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That’s what happens when you try to switch lanes when you shouldn’t

Luckily Julia stayed with us until we checked in at the hotel as there was an issue with our free breakfast. The Hilton wanted to charge us $20 each for it! I have a Hilton Loyalty card, whether that made any difference or not I don’t know, but shortly after we settled into our room the front desk phoned to say that although the breakfast / room rate was not booked, we were offered a complimentary breakfast each!

Time for more Chinese food!

Posted in 2016, China, Trips, Week 1 | Leave a comment

A Quieter Day

A later start to the day as we had a shorter itinerary, we also had a new guide who just happened to be the husband of our previous guide! Today we headed out to the Temple of Heaven, then for a rickshaw ride around one of the old Beijing hutons.

A new idea…… instead of me providing too much of the background history, of which there is too much to recall correctly and write I’ll post a link so you can read the details yourself if you want! Temple of Heaven

Apart from being a religious place, the area is also a large public park which is very popular with the locals on the weekends for exercising and socialising. Most Beijing residents live in apartments with no access to land, so they flock to the city parks instead.

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Above they are playing cards and dominoes, also popular are Chinese checkers and Mahjong.

The main building is the The Hall of Prayer for Good Harvests, an all wooden structure built with no nails!

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The building is supported by 28 massive columns, 4 in an inner circle representing the 4 seasons, further out a ring of 12 representing the months and finally another ring of 12 representing the time periods of the day (evidently in Asia they had 12 time periods each day).

Next was the Circular Mound Altar.

heavenly-temple-circular-mound-altar-2The altar is built atop a 3 tiered structure


heavenly-temple-circular-mound-altar-4The altar is the floor area of the mound, Local people believe it brings good luck to stand on the central stone. Nine is a very lucky number in the Chinese culture, the first circle of stone around the central stone contains nine stones, the next circle 18 up to the 9th circle which has 81. Each set of steps between the three layers consisted of nine steps.

Below the view is looking towards the Beijing sky line. Although the picture doesn’t show it too well, the row of objects in the centre of the picture were used to burn tree bark to scent the air, and on the far right of them is the oven where sacrifices were burnt.

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Next we went to one of the Huton districts, huton meaning alleyway. These alleyways lead through a series of houses built around large quadrangles and were usually for the richer people. In more recent times more houses have been built within the quadrangles leading to dense population in some areas. The houses are in great demand though, due to their central location. Continuing our luxury tour, we were driven around on a cycle powered rickshaw!

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Even rickshaws can run into traffic jams!

Below is the entrance to a renovated house. In older times this would have been owned by a military officer, shown by the round drum like ornaments on the front step

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We had lunch at one of the houses, it was all locally cooked dishes and was very tasty. My only complaint about the food to date is they leave all the bones in. Trying to extract the meat from pieces of chopped up chicken wings (while using chopsticks) is cruel and inhumane punishment for a hungry traveler!

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A typical sitting room

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Maybe this guy made vases?
zhangwang-huton-7View along the hutong

Once back at the hotel we had a rest then headed out to a pedestrian precinct a few blocks away. We also managed to find our first Chinese cache there!

Posted in 2016, China, Trips, Week 1 | Leave a comment

No Tanks Today

Today’s trip was modified slightly due to a number of roads being closed tomorrow for a large triathlon in the area of the Summer Palace. We finished doing two major trips today and then two smaller ones tomorrow. Today’s trip was Tiananmen  square and the Summer Palace. A lot of walking and sitting in traffic jams was called for making for a tiring day, so this will be a mostly picture blog again.

We headed out from the hotel and got a few pictures of the “locals”

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Bikes and Scooters are Everywhereen-route-tiananmen-square-2-copy

Beats an 18 Wheeler Anyday
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Hard Working police get Their own Shade

We arrived a t Tiananmen Square and met up with half the population of Beijing! The area was enormous, around 48 hectares (whatever one of them is). Here is the answer:

The hectare (/ˈhɛktɛər/ orhɛktɑr/; symbol ha) is an SI accepted metric system unit ofarea equal to 100 ares (10,000 m²) and primarily used in the measurement of land. Anacre is about 0.4047 hectare and one hectare contains about 2.47 acres.

It was BIG, unfortunately due to the crowds you didn’t get a good feel for the enormity of the place.

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Above is the mausoleum of Chairman Mao. Evidently it is the dream of most Chinese to visit this site once in their lifetime, if you look in front of the building you can see the line of people waiting to enter, multiply that by 3 for the people you can’t see round the corners of the building and that was today’s lineup. The crowds are kept moving and if you were at the end of this line your wait time would be around 30 minutes. In mid summer the wait time would be 4 hours or more, hence the portable barriers in the foreground.tiananmen-3

On one side of the square is the National Museum of China

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And on the other the  Great Hall of the People with Monument to the Peoples Heroes in front.

Below are some of the gardens surrounding the squaretiananmen-6-copy tiananmen-5-copyHere are some general shots

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Incense Burnertiananmen-23-copy

I get really bored guarding this fire extinguisher!

tiananmen-13-copyRandom couple in the “must have” shot with Chairman Mao at the North Gate aka the Gate of Heavenly Peace

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Another Incense Burnerforbidden-city-16-copy

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Fire Extinguisher (13th Century Style

The large bronze or iron pot above was filled with water for use in fire fighting, in the winter a fire was lit under the pots to keep the water from freezing.

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The official grain measure standard.

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A world famous artist /calligrapher at work in the museum.

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Moat surrounding the Forbidden City

From here we headed off for lunch and saw a few more of the “local” vehicles.

local-transportation-4 local-transportation-3 local-transportation-2After lunch we headed off to to Summer Palace where the Empress would spend about six months of the year.

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Giant Lily Padssummer-palace-14

Just showing off with the new camera, in the first picture you may be able to see a flower almost dead centre in the pond. Above is a close in on that flower

Below are some general views of the Palace and Lake
summer-palace-41 summer-palace-40 summer-palace-37 summer-palace-19Lyn and Lisa (our Guide)

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Above are two lions guarding a gate, one is male  the other female. Which is the male and how could you tell?

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The 17 Arch bridge joining an island to the mainland.

Enough for now…….. need food

PS There will be spelling and grammar errors in the above!

Posted in 2016, China, Trips, Week 1 | Leave a comment