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My first China trip, in 2013. After a rendezvous in the capitol with my then-girlfriend/now-spouse Kelly we went on to Xi'an to see the terra-cotta warriors; afterwards, she returned to her home town in southern Guangdong, and I went on to Shanghai. Note that all images here are thumbnails; click to zoom.

Beijing

June 25
Slanted Tobacco Pipe Street

Picked up at the airport by Kelly and friend, we drove into town. I could see huge buildings through the smoggy air and expressed my assessment: "Beijing is a mighty city." Our hotel, very traditional, in Yien Dai Shie Jie, "Cigarette Bag Leaning Street" or Yan Dai Xie Jie, "Slanted Tobacco Pipe Street", the wutang alley area near the Drum Tower (seen in the background here, with Kelly wearing backpacks fore and aft). We go out this first evening to several places.
               
  two soldiers in full dress
June 26

After a Dou Fu Nao breakfast (very soft tofu in a watery soup) accompanied Kelly shopping for cell-phone chips. Began noticing these fellows; you see 'em marching around the central city in squads of four, six or eight; two abreast. Probably hit the ceiling if they noticed my photographing them.

June 27

Beihai Park morning, where we watched people dancing, then transition to another hotel south of the Forbidden City. Tianenmen Square in the afternoon, and finally, Lamb Hot Pot dinner.

man writing Chinese characters on the sidewalk with a long wand, in Beihai Park
Hanzi writer in the park, using a brush kept wet from a small water tank on his back.
dancers in Beihai Park
Dancing in Beihai Park, with video!
Lamb Hot Pot restaurant
Lamb Hot Pot restaurant
 
R in Tiananmen Square
In Tiananmen Square, where I received smiles from the locals by whistling "The East Is Red" as I strolled about.
in Tiananmen Square
Note the bright red fire extinguisher. A few others were off in the distance, just sitting there ready in case someone tries a self-immolation, or so I was told. And at the right edge, that soldier is standing vigil, at attention for hours, under the umbrella.
June 28
Strangely stunted trees in the Forbidden City Room too small and noisy, that hutong courtyard hotel, so we moved on to this very nice King's Joy. Then, the long march past Tienenman into the crowds of tourists awaiting entry into the Forbidden City. Finally inside, Emperor This, Emperor That; yeah, yeah; Old China becomes tiresome, and this City spans much too large an area for walking. I wanted my bicycle for getting around, like Peter O'Toole. Somewhere in there was a Hall of Mental Cultivation, "delightfully dilapidated", according to Lonely Planet. Pictured are some strangely stunted trees for the Emperor's amusement and a fearsome attack turtle. I ran out of steam early, so back to the hotel for naps and internet. Later the first subway rides of the trip, to/from Olympic Park (the Birds Nest and Water Cube!) Amazed to see the subway tunnels lined with screens animated such that commercials seen through the windows keep up with the train.
Forbidden City tourists waiting to get in
Tourists waiting to get in to the Forbidden City
Forbidden City turtle statue
June 29

Buffet breakfast, downstairs at the hotel, then shopping, first along Wang Fujing (where I bought my Mao hat) then the even bigger Xidan. After purchasing our Xi'an plane tickets and an internet break, back out to Tiananmen to see the flag lowering ceremony and the new domed Centre for Performing Arts, followed by a beef with bok choy dinner and food purchase for tomorrow, along the way walking back to the hotel.

June 30

Bus ride out to the Great Wall today. So foggy, couldn't see much - visibility near zero, but this meant few tourists, glad we went. Access via chair-lift; unfortunately the Alpine slide to get back down was closed. Bought a little red book (in English) at one of the many souvenir stalls down below.

Great Wall selfie

Xi'an

July 1

In Xi'an after high-speed express train ride through deserted countryside with stops at new high-rise cities. Now in a 27th-floor apartment, an internet friend of Kelly's with two other women relatives including an ancient, silent grandmother who stares at me, wondering no doubt what this oafish lauwei is doing in her apartment. Across the street that evening, I have my first taste of that specialty of Shaanxi Province: Rou Jia Mo "hamburgers".

July 2

Xi'an is surrounded by a massive, rectangular city wall, still in great shape; we even enjoyed a bit of tandem bike-riding up there today. Later, walking in the Muslim Quarter, and then a kind of dancing waters show, the Musical Fountains in North Square.


high rise apartments in Xian
steps leading down from the Xian wall view on top of the Xian wall
July 3

April 1978 National Geographic coverDay-trip today,by bus, in the rain, out to see the Terra Cotta Warriors. I remember reading about their discovery in this 1978 National Geographic. The site has grown into a complex of several buildings, the main 'dig' roofed over like an airplane hangar.

Tonight we're in the 3e Hotel.

view of the terra cotta warriors view looking down into excavated pit of terra cotta warriors, many of them headless
July 4

Like Beijing, Xi'an also has a Drum Tower/Bell Tower pair. Posing here with the Bell; Drum to the right.

R in front of Xian Bell tower Xian Drum tower
July 5th

Afternoon and evening spent at Tang Paradise Gardens. Lots of statues of the poets amid rugged terrain, cast from concrete to look like natural stone, with hanzi carved into, and painted. At dusk, the illuminated Lake Show, with such cavalier spraying of coherent light! I doubt that lasers pointed at the audience would be allowed stateside, even if feeble, even with curtains of water in-between.

Kelly inside the Tang Paradise garden of Xian view inside the Tang Paradise Garden of Xian

July 6th

My flight out of Xi'an delayed, Kelly's was on-time and now I'm a solo traveler again. Eventually, Shanghai. Subway ride from the airport where a friendly passenger getting off at my stop pointed me towards my destination in a side-street, this very nice loft room at the Bee Home Hostel, which seems to be closed now, alas.

Shanghai

July 7th

Walking around in the French and International Concessions, at last. Tree-lined streets, and buildings with art deco details. Also, the pagodas of Old Town, mostly a market for tourists where I noticed storefronts decorated with these little reed geodesics, each containing a cricket.

July 8

Bund in the morning, walkng along the river, watching the dancers; then to the Shanghai Museum, and a return to Old Town (for the animal and insect market, with the live crickets seen here).


Out past Century, later, to the Carrie-Four mega-super-market and an Aji-Sen ramen supper nearby. Earlier today, at the train station, booking tickets for tomorrow's day-trip to Nanjing, at the English-language Ticket Counter. Also stumbled upon a museum devoted to obscure, local uprisings of armed workers there in the 1920s.

July 9

Nanjing

High-Speed Express train to Nanjing, by way of Suzhou. Walking around this former capital, clueless, feeling out of it in China without Kelly. Saw the wall and central gate in Nanjing, but didn't pay to go in and up. Lunch was a sandwich at a weird bakery where the girls all wore these curious breath deflectors I thought of as iMuzzles.

July 10

Back in Shanghai, exploring the Jing-An district, where I had a curry lunch. Later, more fun at dusk hanging out on cosmopolitan Nanjing Road and the Bund. Here's a 360° pan of the Bund waterfront, beginning and ending at the green-pyramid-topped Cathay Peace Hotel, with the skyscrapers across the river in Pudong at mid-point as the Custom House chimes play "The East Is Red."

                Changchang, mascot of the Shanghai Metro.
Changchang, mascot of the Shanghai Metro
This concludes my first mainland travel report. In 2016, we went back, to her hometown; then Hanoi, Vietnam for a couple nights; and on to Yangshou, Chongqing, Chengdu and Hong Kong.
               

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