Monday, 24 June 2013

Shanghai living & Dim Sum chilling

What a whirlwind fortnight it has been, firstly apologies for the lack of updates but a combination of non-stop travelling and sightseeing, combined with the inconvenience of China's internet service left me offline during the trip. Enjoy reading and welcome back for this summer's adventures!

In two weeks myself and my dearest mother, Pat managed to race through Shanghai, Xian, Beijing and of course Hong Kong. We had booked onto a Wendy Wu tour, so everything was inclusive and arranged, all we had to do was sit back relax and take photos. We had a national tour guide and local tour guides at each city and I would highly recommend Wendy Wu tours for anyone who wants to visit China but is unsure on how they'd cope alone. This group tour was immense, a great mix of people young and old from all over the world and for our group we were like a family within days.

Shanghai Living
Shanghai was the first stop as we waited for the full group to arrive. It consisted of couples and families from Australia to America and also closer to home from Kent to Cambridge, the Aussies were quick to throw in the shouts and the coach was soon a source of some quality laughter for everyone. Each day consisted of an early rise and lateish finish, we were on the road at 8am on the first day off to the water canal town of Wuzhen to explore the ancient ways of life there and of course to experience the local dishes. Shanghai itself offered a glimpse into the past life of the great city, trekking through the old French and British quarters showed how different cultures stamped there presence all over Shanghai. A boat tour/dinner gave us a special sight of the iconic skyline at night and showed just how vast the city is.


Yu Gardens of Shanghai

Xian's 600 year old city wall
Xian was our next stop in the heart of China, there was no pollution here and temperatures soared to well over 30c. It was great to finally see some sunshine and fresh air, Xian is certainly a great city home to the Terracotta Warriors and start of the Silk Road. It was quite nostalgic for Pat visiting somewhere I was nearly 19 years ago and seeing the transformation of the city. There is a clash of old and new everywhere, on one side you have a 600 year old city wall and next to it a state of the art shopping centre with a 40ft television screen for a ceiling that displays waterfalls and meadows. The downside is only spending two days here and I think this city has a lot more to offer, we managed to cram in a few markets in the Muslim quarter and the Little Wild Goose Pagoda next to one of the National museums that provided an insight into my motherland's history.





The clash of old and new in Xian

I fit just right in...


Great Wall CONQUERED
A quick flight over to Beijing provided the final destination of this fleeting tour and it did not disappoint. We climbed the Great Wall, visited Tiananmen Square plus the Forbidden City and strolled through the Summer Palace. I had visited all of these sights as a small toddler and now revisiting them as a small adult, I learnt to appreciate it and marvel in the magnificence of my countrymen's achievement of the past. But of course, the stop over would not be complete without a trip to the Bird's Nest and Water Cube home to the 2008 Olympics and although it is basically derelict like most Olympic venues, it still stands tall and testament to a fantastic games. The last two nights proved unbelievable, a Kung Fu and Acrobatics show left me stunned at some of the shit they can do, the final piece of the Acrobatics show was ridiculous and simply unreal, have a watch here



Pat, smashing the Great Wall
Forbidden City
















Although the tour ended in Beijing, it was not the end of our holiday... HONG KONG was our final destination and despite going every year, it's a place I consider my second home where I can speak cantonese and feel at least average height. There wasn't much to do in terms of attractions, it was more about seeing family, paying respects and eating our body weight in food. Sweating is always an issue in HK and this year proved no different, but the safety of any commercial building soon cooled us down.

This holiday has been a different type of adventure, although there has been no serious boozing and shaping throwing, spending time with Pat on holiday has actually been great. Now that I've finished university and off into the working world, there won't be many opportunities to spend such time with her and I've appreciated it a lot for this holiday and exploring China with her. This adventure was all about family and even though the next adventures are going to be without a doubt immense, this is one adventure that I'll always remember since, after all it's family that really matters :)

Some of the wonderful HK fambo

Keep watching.x

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