Blanca & Ian's Travels

China

Trip Report - February 2007

Do Not Drive Tiredly
(Highway Sign on Chinese Highways)

Beijing


Wangfujing Pedestrian Mall
Old style
Pop-top

New & old.  Filthy & clean.  Chaos & serenity.

Beijing is a massive collection of opposites.  This ancient city is also a new & vibrant city.  Our first glance - on the way from the airport - revealed a city like any other.  Traffic, freeways & toll roads.  Busy urban streets.  Horns blaring.  A chaos of traffic.  But mixed into that traffic you'll find motorcycle taxis & pedi-cabs & bicycles, bicycles & more bicycles to remind you that you're not at home anymore.

Chinese script mixes with a smattering of English on streets signs, storefronts & billboards.  An explosion of red.  And people are everywhere.  On the roads & sidewalks & packed in the buses, in the malls & in the restaurants.  And construction is everywhere.  The whole country is a big construction zone with cranes hovering in every direction you look as traditional neighborhoods fall under the bulldozer blades.  Everything, everywhere is in high gear.

Welcome to modern China.

That can of Coke at left is very representative.  It looks awfully familiar but it sports the kind of pop-top that has disappeared from North America & Europe decades ago.  A blend of new & old.  But they're catching up at a phenomenal pace.

It is an amazing place to go.  In this report, I'll attempt to give you a feel & taste for the China that we visited.

Note:  Numerous pictures were taken from a moving car & suffer slightly, 
but I like driving shots . . . and . . . Beijing was really hazy for the first few days.


Accommodations

Wangfujing Pedestrian Mall
Condo Living - Dawang Rd

Condo - Xi Da Wang Rd  Free

Our new daughter-in-law-to-be had just moved into a condo in a newer building.  2 bedrooms, 2 baths with showers.  Although the shower was really the whole room as there was no enclosure with just tiled sloping floors & a drain.  To be fair, there are plans to pour some cash into renos.  She also was really light on furniture however . . .

Accommodations:  Very basic condo with no frills yet.  Nice & secure & with family.

But . . . to give the lovebirds privacy (and ourselves too) we also stayed a block away in this 5 Star hotel:

Wangfujing Pedestrian Mall
Plaza Royale - Dawang Rd

Wangfujing Pedestrian Mall
Plaza Royale - View - Dawang Rd


Plaza Royale (Regal Court Hotel - HoJo managed) - 23 Xi Da Wang Rd  
838 RMB per night - duplex suite

booked thru www.asiatravel.com (Nothing but excellent service btw)

Accommodations:  We opted for a deluxe 2 story duplex room with king bed.  Very nice.  Plush couch & chairs.  Bathrobes & slippers.  42" Plasma TV, electronic lighting control, in-house restaurant.  Very nice.  The staff fell over each other with good mornings.  The doormen would gladly signal a taxi & tell him where you're going.

The Negatives:   15 minutes west of the heart of Beijing by taxi.  Not much else around.

 

 

 


Day by Day

Day 1 Tuesday Feb 6

Arrived in Beijing around 10 PM about 2 hours late.  Customs & baggage went like clockwork & we were met by our son & his fiancée.  He has been in Beijing for 3 weeks & she was on holidays from her new job at a big US accounting firm in Beijing.  They were technically married less than a week before our arrival but that was government office deal in Shijiazhuang.  I dare you to try to say that btw.  Of course, the public marriage was the reason for our trip.  We poured into 2 taxis - they are very small in Beijing - for the late-night 20 minute ride to their condo on Xi Dawang Rd in Southern Chaoyang, 2 big blocks south of Chang'an & its handy subway stop as well as its Soho office tower & mini-mall.  Less than 100 RMB with toll charge.  And NO TIP!  We drop the bags & doubled back to the Soho to a cheap noodle place for a late dinner.  I don't even remember what I ate or the name etc due to the 24 hour travel day.  During the walk back to the condo, we really notice a strange vaguely familiar smell.  We first smelled it at the airport, but it's everywhere.  Hmmm.  Smells like something industrial.  Oh.  That's pollution.  From coal heating.

Klunk.  (The sound of my head hitting the pillow).

Day 2 Wednesday Feb 7

We leap up full of energy . . . well, B & I do anyway.  But horror of horrors, they don't have coffee.  Or a coffee maker.  Argggh.  We slink around the corner to an upscale coffee shop to feed our habit.  Festooned with couches & stuffed chairs this place is seriously up market.  And seriously expensive, as we dole out 80 RMB per coffee.  It was good, but not that good.  And it was beside a barbershop which more often than not will offer men other 'services' besides a haircut from what we're told.  Ècaffé European Italian Royal Coffee.  Search out a Starbucks instead . . .

We finally roust the younguns & head toward the Forbidden City on a cool (high 7C) misty day.  We stop at the McDonald's on Wangfujing for lunch on the way.  McDonald's?  I know, I know, but they insisted that it was better than at home.  It wasn't.  Then after grabbing the obligatory candied strawberries on a stick, we made our way to the Forbidden City.  We skipped the 1st ticket booth inside which only gets you up the Tian'anmen Gate.  We got the right tickets at the next set of booths but skipped the audio tour things.  We decided we didn't need to know every building & its history & preferred to meander at will.  My pre-trip reading + guidebook always seems to fill in the historical blanks sufficiently. We spent the next 3 hours just wandering around this massive sight.  Through its miscellaneous gates & buildings & gardens it is a great place to just explore.  Along the way, we ran across an exhibit of Imperial jewelry which was very nice to see.  Unfortunately, several of the main palaces were shrouded & closed for renovations.  I guess they want them beautified for the 2008 coming out extravaganza.  That just gives us a good excuse to come back sometime.

It is a truly astounding place.

We wandered out back - north gate - near closing & found that taxis can't stop on the road behind the palace.  We finally get one on a side street with a good day of touristing under our belts.  Dinner was at Xiaba Xiaba (another suggestion from the besotted couple) a hotpot restaurant franchise geared to twenty somethings.  The staff yell greetings & farewells to every diner coming & going, so it's not a quiet place.  Hotpot is popular in China.  You order multiple plates of thin, frozen rolled meats & various veggies & boil them in broth in your own bubbling pot on a hotplate.  Your plate is a bowl of peanut sauce.  Not expensive, but I don't remember the price.

Day 2 Notes:

No tipping
Pedestrians beware
Just say boo & wave the hawkers away
You better know how to use chopsticks
Don't drink the water - even hotel tap water is not potable
Taxis are cheap & always seem to be available
Always have the destination address written in Chinese for taxis
Scratch the bar on the top of your restaurant bill & you can win money (the other bar is a tax code)

Day 3 Thursday Feb 8

7:30 AM finds the 4 of us piling into a van on our way to see the Great Wall at Badaling.  A bit brighter day but just as cool.  Another day for the long underwear & this time I brought my gloves - a good thing as it turned out.  While I had been leaning towards Muianyu from my research, my daughter-in-law had arranged this one through her mother, who has a good travel agent in China.  160 RMB pp.  Only one other couple came along, a pleasant English Sri Lankan couple just fresh from touring Australia.  Driving north, we pass the Yonghe Gong Tibetan Lama Temple as well as a colorful collection of stores & homes.  In the northern suburbs we pass the site of the 2008 Olympic games.  For a square mile around, everything is under construction.  Event venues, condos & more condos are being slapped up to host the event.  The guide promises us that we will come back later in the day.

A pleasant drive into the country brings us to our 1st stop, the Ming tomb of Chang Ling.  You approach along a narrow road with a line of poplars (poplars are the ubiquitous tree of China it would seem, since they also plant them along every highway).  The tomb area is quite lovely, surrounded by big hills/small mountains.  Since it was cold & off-season, the massive bus parking lots were empty, but I can imagine in peak times this is not the case.  The Chang Ling tomb is unexcavated - or at least inaccessible to us mortals, but the grounds are nice with several buildings to scramble around.  Our guide kept rambling on about the dos & don'ts of the era & virtually everything ended with having your head cut off.  Fun times.  I kept looking over my shoulder for sword-wielding executioner-type dudes.

Then, of course, it was down the road to a jade factory.  Then another 20 minute drive to a government run eatery & cloisonné factory.  This is where the tour companies & your friendly & helpful guide make money.  You get a brief walk-through of whatever they're making & then you move on to the showroom.  Well-dressed, English-speaking salespeople latch on to every loose person & attempt to insert a vacuum in your wallet.  RESIST!  While the factory tours are mildly interesting, the hard close techniques in the showroom get irritating.  The goods seem to be high quality & the prices are just stupid.  I watched a particularly unfriendly couple from Texas buying big in the cloisonné factory.  The manager was hauled over to do the close.  And of course they are giving you their 'best price' which will be double or triple what you will pay in the Beijing hutongs or markets for the same goods.  We compared.  You have been warned.

After this rigmarole, we finally wound our way to the Great Wall.  You first see it from the highway around Juyuon Guan as you drive into the mountains.  The appropriate ohs & ahs resounded in our van.  Fifteen minutes later we pulled into the Badaling Great Wall parking area.  Again, we were thankful for our winter visit with only a smattering of buses & vans.  It was cold.  We broke out gloves & hats - especially after one of the hawkers snuck up behind me & plunked a fake bearskin style hat on my irritated head as I was fumbling in my bag for my good ole Canadian toque. The hawkers here were particularly hungry & they would come running out of their huddles to hit on us as we 'ran the gauntlet' to get to the ride up.  There was even a wooden bear den for the usually dorky photo shots.  We paid an extra 60 RMB for the tram ride up & down & even though it was pretty hokey, it was so damn cold we were glad we did.  Up on the wall, a fierce Mongolian wind was blowing.  This certainly didn't encourage a nice leisurely stroll despite the sunshine.  Small patches of snow were visible in hidden corners too.  The Great Wall is, of course, great.  After only 20 or 30 minutes & one watchtower, we had all had enough of the bitter weather & opted to head to the warm van.  Thankfully the British couple readily agreed.  On the way down, the hawkers were even more aggressive as they watched our tourist dollars walking away.  No "I've Been the Great Wall' T-shirts were sold to us that day.  My son came up with a plan for the hawkers.  When they won't take no for an answer, just keep offering 1 Yuan.  For anything.  T-shirt - 1 Yuan.  Snow leopard skin - 1 Yuan.  Jade carving that's really just a cheap fake anyway - 1 Yuan.  Just keep walking & offering 1 Yuan.  They'll get the hint.

But the Great Wall was certainly a highlight.

Back in the van, we wound our way over a twisty road & back to the highway for the trek back to Beijing.  True to his word, our guide took us back thru the Olympic area but our destination was a silk factory.  Time for another wallet-suckage attempt.  We got the story - 1 worm or 2 for you, madam?  Then the sales floor.  We did some dickering with them but ended up passing on a 5000 RMB offer for king with cover & pillowcases.  More on this in my Xi'an segment.

All in all, it was another great day of touristing.  If I were to do it again, I think I'd just arrange a cab.  There were taxis waiting at Badaling so it is doable if you can overcome the language bit.  I would agree with many posters that Badaling would be a circus in prime season - it had all of the hoopla albeit frozen hoopla - so Mutianyu might be a better choice.  I don't know.  We went when we went where we went.

We quickly checked into our hotel & then trudged over to a local Carrefour supermarket/everything store for some supplies.  Yikes.  Now this place was a serious zoo.  It was packed.  If you're Canadian, think Boxing Day X3.  Ditto for Americans & Black Friday.  Wall to wall, cart to cart shopping in high gear.  All ages, all talking at once.  I couldn't escape fast enough.  The same place also had a Bread Talk - Chinese boutique bakery chain - and a Pizza Hut which we sampled in Beijing Redux.  More on that later.  Btw one great thing Beijing has, in some areas, is footpaths over busy roads.  These allow you to cross mid-block & they're also much safer than crossing at some intersections - especially at night.  Ditto the tunnels around Tian'anmem Square.

For dinner, we decided Beijing duck was our goal.  At the insistence of our daughter-in-law, we skipped all the Guide Book versions & went to a local chain restaurant called Jin Shan Cheng near the China World Trade Centre.  It was a great choice.  The appetizers were good - fried pumpkin & some eggplant dish - and the duck was superb.  Sliced with style table-side too.  Well worth the piddly 137 RMB we paid for dinner for 4.  For those astute readers, you will note that this is less than we paid for 2 coffees on our 1st morning . . .

Day 3 Friday Feb 9

Now it was down to the reason for the trip.  It was arranged that the mysterious, well-placed, bride's father would pick us up at 11 AM for the 5 hour drive to Handan for the wedding on Sunday.  He arrived an hour early with a big minivan & a pool driver.  So, we packed our bags in the van & inserted 6 people & set off.  We spent the 1st hour driving around Beijing to find a suitable welcome lunch spot for us.  After an attempt or 2, he settled for one.  All of this time he was barking instructions to the driver or into his cell phone during frequent calls.  Oh, have I mentioned that the Chinese are cell phone obsessed?  Not so different than anywhere else in the world, I guess.  I was very happy to leave my Blackberry at home in Canada, thank-you.  And we never got around to getting the proper card for my wife's GSM phone.  Somebody always had one we could borrow.  And speaking of phones, I dove into the Yellow Pages at the hotel to look something up.  Silly me . . . they're in Chinese . . .

So, we had a 'size em up' lunch at some nice restaurant near Beijing University.  Everyone was on their best behavior, of course.  Even our son, the groom, had only met him briefly once before.  We knew the bride's mother was very nice & approachable, but he was the enigma.  He was very gracious.  After lunch, we skirted Beijing on an outer ring road & headed south for the long haul to Handan.  If you are wondering where the subtitle of this ode is from, this is it.  Do Not Drive Tiredly - is a sign on Chinese highways to discourage accidents.  They also have Do Not Drink & Drive signs.  The highways are very good, but trucks lane hog the left lane which is posted at 120 km/hr.  Many cars opt to pass on the paved right-hand shoulder.  We even passed a police car doing this so it appears to be accepted.

To continue see Handan.



Beijing Street Images
Part One

Wangfujing Pedestrian Mall
Wangfujing Pedestrian Mall


The omni-present black Audi A6s & Taxis


Motorcycle Taxi

 


Chang'an Rd


Porsche Dealer - Chang'an Rd


A barbershop or a brothel?

 


2008 Olympic Site - the Bird's Nest


More Olympic Site - Bird's Nest & 
Aquatic Center


Street at night

 

Wangfujing Pedestrian Mall
Plaza Royale Elevator Sign


West bound on Chang'an
approaching Wangfujing


Walmart has invaded
but locals say they're too expensive

 

Wangfujing Pedestrian Mall
A street scene north of downtown

Wangfujing Pedestrian Mall
Fine dining on Wangfujing

Wangfujing Pedestrian Mall
Tian'anmem from across Chang'an

 


Forbidden City Images


Tian'anmen Gate


Chairman Mao


Fractured English sign

 


Atop the Wumen Gate


Painted buildings


Mythical roof detail

 


A shrouded building - under construction


An Imperial lion


Gilded pot handle

 


Door detail


Red Army guards walking the beat


Roof detail

 


Carved wall detail


The dragon screen


A quiet courtyard

 


Red coral lion - Forbidden City


The hill at the North Gate.


The moat at the NE corner

 


Ming Tomb Images


Tomb Building


Another tomb building


Chang Ling with a pile of money

 


Great Wall Images - Badaling


The 1st view near Juyuon Guan


An unrestored section roadside


View from a tollbooth

 


Brave Souls on the Wall
It was freezing!


The Great Wall


The Great Wall

 


Horsing around at the Wall


The Great Wall


The Great Wall at
Juyuon Guan

 

China Home