Posts from — April 2010
The A-Bomb Museum
Hiroshima was a pleasant surprise after our whirlwind through other parts of Japan. It’s quite touristy here and very well designed for foreigners and also very pretty. We caught a tram to the Museum and Peace Park, which was something a little bit different, after flying around on the bullet trains.
I have to share with you Georgie’s comment about the Shinkansen trains – she is such a world traveller!! She said – “They aren’t that fast! I don’t think it’s any different to the Eurostar!” Pretty good comment for a 9 year old – she still has no idea how lucky she is!
Anyway, as you would imagine the A-bomb Dome was very thought provoking. The bomb was detonated about 600 metres above Hiroshima and almost directly above the Dome – they believe that is why it was not completely flattened like most other buildings close to the hypercentre. [Read more →]
April 30, 2010 No Comments
A whirlwind tour of Japan
We’ve been and gone to Japan and it seems like the 10 days we spent there were over in an instant. We started with Tokyo and firstly we were struck by the difference to Beijing.
Beijing is on the move.. It is bright and shiny and there are building works going on everywhere. Tokyo looks like it moved about 1980. We supposed this was when their economy was booming and probably Beijing will be like that in 20 years.
Japan was a bit of a culture shock – a lot of which we can contribute to the fact we weren’t in any place long enough to get comfortable and some to the fact we’ve been travelling in the East for a while now and Japan is very western by comparison. So whilst it was nice to be in cities that weren’t all that different to Australia – I’m sorry to say Westerners are probabaly far more concerned with getting to wherever they’re going – usually to work! and this can make them appear to be less friendly? I think Japan suffers from this as well.
In Beijing, we only had to hold up a map and we’d have someone come up and ask us were we ok, could they help? In Japan, we spent an awful lot of time just trying to find our way around – the maps were terrible and when you asked directions, it usually consisted of something akin to “just around that corner” with a vague wave of an arm. We both had a bit of a meltdown with some staff at the Tokyo station when we were told to validate our train passes at the office “just around the corner”. After wandering aimlessly for about 20 minutes, we finally discovered the office – around the corner, walk about 500 metres, up the stairs to another level, through a labrynth of tunnels, around several more corners etc etc!!! Not happy Jan – I can tell you!!
You can imagine what we said, when after having validated our passes and got our tickets for the train, we asked the lady where we should go to get to the platform. Guess what she said? “Oh not far - just around corner” and vaguely waved her arm!!! Paul made her come out of her ticket office and show us – she ended up walking us all the way there!
April 30, 2010 1 Comment
6 in China
6 Things we found out about China:-
- The Chinese people are incredibly friendly and will go out of their way to help you;
- The Beijing subway is the cleanest, most organised subway I’ve ever been in;
- You have to put your bags thru an xray machine at every subway and attraction in Beijing;
- Facebook does not work;
- You can have ox’s penis in a hotpot(!);
- There are 77 McDonald’s stores in Beijing city.
Favourite thing we did:-
Paul – The Wall
Amanda – The Wall
Caitlin – Terracotta Warriors, Xi’an
Georgie – The Great Wall
Ashlea – Bamboo rafting on the Yulong River, Yangshuo
Michael – The Great Wall
Favourite food:-
Paul – Double cooked pork at Sims & Stuffed green peppers at Yangshuo
Amanda – Best Chinese food was everything at Sim’s Cozy Garden Hostel, Chengdu - consistently brilliant (Pizza Hut was also refreshingly nice)
Caitlin – The Saddle Mexican Cantina, Beijing & Pizza Hut
Georgie – Sim’s Cozy Garden Hostel & Pizza Hut
Ashlea – The Saddle & Pizza Hut
Michael – The Saddle & Pizza Hut
Favourite Place:-
Paul – Beijing
Amanda – Beijing
Caitlin – Beijing
Georgie – Yangshuo
Ashlea – Beijing
Michael – Beijing
Thing disliked the most:-
Paul - Multiple admission fees to almost every sight in Beijing
Amanda – smokers on the train and in restaurants
Caitlin – public spitting
Georgie – spitting
Ashlea – public toilets at Xingping
Michael – cruise on the Li River
April 20, 2010 2 Comments
The Wall & Birthday Cake
Due to the way our round the world ticket works, we had to work out the dates for all our flights in advance before we left Australia. We can change them but with a penalty of $80 per person – which obviously when you times that by 6 becomes kinda costly. So the best we could do was estimate the amount of time we wanted to spend between flights and go with it.
We ended up with way more time in Beijing than we needed and so we were left cooling our heels, waiting for our flight day. Not such a bad thing though, gave us plenty of time to investigate the sights we wanted to see at a leisurely pace (or not) and also spend a couple of days doing nothing but reading a book or for the kids – the dreaded fractions and grammar!!
We also worked on our French, which we’re learning as a family and generally sat around waiting for our clothes to dry (one of the disadvantages of having one set of warm clothes!!)
April 19, 2010 2 Comments
Indian in Beijing
We have continued working our way around the sites of the capital, including Wangfujing pedestrian mall (including the snacks in the night market – think starfish, seahorse or scorpion kebabs… ) and still attempting to order dinner at the largely non-English speaking Chinese restaurants.
Tonight we found a menu that consisted of lamb spines, whole pigs head in a pot and deep fried cow’s intestines. If nothing else it could be developed into a good weight loss program…? [Read more →]
April 9, 2010 1 Comment
Heading for the capital
It would be an understatement to say that I wasn’t looking forward to taking the sleeper train from Xi’an to Beijing! On the bright side, this time it was only 11-12 hours rather than 15, so if we were to suffer, at least it would be a shorter sentence.
It turned out to be no problem. This is such a well worn route that there are numerous trains to Beijing every hour and most of the soft sleepers are taken up by foreigners who obey the non-smoking signs. What a relief.. [Read more →]
April 7, 2010 2 Comments
Terracotta Warriors
Xi’an is the ancient capital of China and it’s sort of what you expect from the tourist brochures, with lots of beautiful old buildings with the ornamental Chinese roof decorations etc. It also has plenty of multistorey apartment buildings, office blocks and mega shopping malls to service the teeney weeney population of 8 million!
Unfortunately we had to cut short our intended stay due to the lack of train tickets to Beijing if we didn’t go earlier. We saw most of the highlights though, which are mostly clustered around the centre of town – the Bell Tower, Drum Tower, the ancient city wall and of course the premier event – the Museum of the Terra-cotta Warriors & Horses.
April 5, 2010 1 Comment
The Smokey Express
We had our first Chinese train trip from Chengdu to Xi’an (pron. She Ahn) and we had to do our best just to survive with sanity intact. Firstly, we had to brave the ticket office the day before just to get tickets on the sleeper. We lined up at the counter marked “foreigners” but funnily enough the clerk there did not speak anything but Chinese!
The ticket office is a full on expedition in itself (it’s in a separate building and the queues are massive but really it’s nothing compared to the actual station itself). [Read more →]
April 5, 2010 No Comments
Panda Land
We had the choice of taking the train from Guilin to Chengdu, which would have meant a 23 hour journey – or we could pay $10 extra and fly, which would take an hour and a half. Wasn’t much of a decision, we were off to the airport!
Chinese airports are no different to Australian ones. They’re all run by a corporation who owns all the restaurants which are rediculously expensive – one difference here though, the food was very good.
Anyway, we boarded our tiny little plane emblazoned with China South-Western Airlines and prayed that they had a better safety record than Garuda! No problems there though – we touched down in Chengdu 5 minutes before schedule and were off to find our way into the city.
April 1, 2010 1 Comment