Category Archives: China

Hangzhou- Day Three (Deshou Palace, etc)

An important reason for my visit to Hangzhou was to visit a recently restored historical site dating to the Southern Song Dynasty: Deshou Palace.

But that attraction did not open until 9:30, so first we casually ambled around a lovely nearby neighborhood.

Drum Tower

Deshou Palace was an absolutely wonderful site. The building was a reconstruction carfully designed to match the original appearance. It was paced full of artifacts as well as artwork related to the history and culture if the era. Various panels provided text that gave historical background .

An interesting modern twist was a huge interactive video display with a seemingly random collection if Chinese written characters that floated downwards. If you touched a character, it triggered the screen to display a relevant poem!

Deshou Palace

Historically this palace had been a sort if retirement quarters for the emperor. It had included extensive gardens of which only a small section has yet been restored .

A beautiful place! I could easily have spent a whole day there. It was a shame that our train tickets forced us onward to Tongling, where Jim wanted to show me his hometown!

Hangzhou- Day Two-

Decent weather today! No sign of rain!!

First I spent some time exploring the area around the Grand Canal. I viewed the canal from walkways along its bank. I also rode a “water- bus” to the picturesque Gongchen bridge.

Later I went to the far side of beautiful West Lake, and visited Leifeng Pagoda.

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Still later I met up with my good friend Jim ( the ” young scholar”), and we returned to Hangzhou by one of the wooden tourist boats that cross West Lake.

Evening view across West Lake

Refreshing plum juice, and a dumpling snack.

Nanjing

Nanjing: the “Southern Capital”. This was my fourth visit to this former imperial capital city (also capital for a while during the Republic).

During this visit my focus was seeing my friend Violet, and a pair of historical sites related to Zheng He, the renowned admiral during the early Ming Dynasty whose immense “treasure fleet” explored southeast Asia, India, and even areas of Africa’s eastern shores! Unlike typical “western” expeditions, the goals were trade, goodwill, and world investigation.

Unlike the later Christopher Columbus, Zheng He actually *did* arrive in India, and was not so stupid as to confuse new, unknown regions with India.

Nor did Zheng He spread disease and enslave the people he met.

Shanghai

In Shanghai I visited Bamboo and her husgand

In Shanghai I visited my good friend Bamboo, and her husband Sun Yiyueh (Cyrus).
This made me very happy! I met Bamboo many years ago on my second trip to Nanjing.
Some of you are familiar with the various videos I produce to help “westerners” learn a bit about China. Bamboo has played a crucial role in the success of the videos. As originally produced, these used the “voice” from “Google translate” so demonstrate the Chinese pronunciation of various place-names. That Google audio was pretty terrible, and I wanted to improve it to better server the viewers. I remembered that Bamboo had done extensive work on Chinese television, so I asked her if there was any chance she’d help with the needed audio improvements. She graciously agreed to give me assistance and over the years has continued to provide audio clips for that series. This makes a huge difference for the viewers!

I suppose I “don’t get out much”. I had never seen such a thing, but starting with the hotel in Shanghai, I encountered robots at each Chinese hotel I stayed in! There are robots that vacuum the floor, and others who either pick up or deliver items to guests’ rooms! How cool is that!!!!???

Arrived in Shanghai!

Well, it was a “long haul”, but I made it to Shanghai.
Getting there involved a 2.5 hour drive to Denver from our (new) hometown in Pueblo, Colorado. An overnight stay in a hotel in the general vicinity of Denver International Airport. then up before the roosters to catch a 6:00 AM flight to Dallas/Ft. Worth.
There I boarded a flight to Shanghai. Ironically, about 75 minutes into the flight, the airplane flew directly over Pueblo… my starting point the day before! (I saw this on the “real time” in-flight monitor screen on the airplane!

My Spring 2024 trip to China

March 20 – May 6
I was REALLY happy to go to China again!
I was able to see a lot of friends and colleagues while I was there!

East to West, North to South. I visited one of the world’s most modern and developed cities (Shanghai). I also visited Lanping County, a place that had been the poorest area in China. But government efforts to help the people there move out of poverty were wildly successful. It is a lovely place!

Map of Peter's trip
Click on the photo to open it. Then you will be able to enlarge as desired.

Here was my schedule:
March 20: Fly from Denver to Dallas/FortWorth
transfer to flight headed to Shanghai Pudong Airport
March 21: Arrive in Shanghai
March 21-22: Shanghai-
March 23-24: Nanjing
March 25-26: Hangzhou
March 27-28: Tongling, Anhui
March 29-31: Zhengzhou
April 1: Datong, Shanxi
April 2: Taiyuan, Shanxi
April 3-7: Nanyang, Henan
April 8-11: Xi’an, Shaanxi
April 12-16: Yinchuan, Ningxia
April 17: Lanzhou, Gansu
April 18-20: Chengdu, Sichuan
April 21-23: Guiyang, Guizhou
April 24-25: Dali, Yunnan
April 26-28: Lanping, Yunnan
April 29: Kunming, Yunnan
April 30: Nanning, Guangxi
May 1: Shenzhen
May 2-3: Xiamen, Fujian
May 4-5: Shanghai
May 6 Fly back to the United States!
Shanghai to Dallas/FortWorth
Dallas/FortWorth to Denver then home to Pueblo!

Shanghai

Pudong-

Peter with the iconic “Oriental Pearl” building in the background

Shanghai Tower

At 632 meters of height (2,073 ft), the Shanghai tower is the tallest building in China and the second tallest in the world (as of 2019). The public observation deck is on the 118th floor and it was exciting to be on the world’s second fastest elevator, with my ears popping while we ascended!

Shanghai Tower (on right), with the (perhaps!) more visually interesting Jin Mao Tower to the left

Maglev Airport Rail Link

China chose the German company Siemens to build a 30 kilometer “demonstration” maglev railway line that terminates at the Pudong airport in Shanghai. The technology is impressive, and the train is rated to go as fast as 430 km/hr. As a demonstration implementation, it only runs at this high speed for a while each morning. I took the conventional metro line to the airport and then rode the maglev line back as far as it went, completing my journey on the metro again. I rode in the afternoon, at “only” 300 km/hr. It was still and exciting and different sort of experience!

Model of the maglev train and “track”
The actual train

The ride was smooth and it was a bit exciting the way the line “banked” into curves!

Out and about

Based on various travel guidebooks i consulted, the shopping area adjacent to Yu Gardens seemed like a must-go attraction. The gardens themselves were closed due to some remodeling activity underway, so I went straight to the shopping sector. I was fairly disappointed. Brand-new “Qing Dynasty” buildings with glitzy silk, pearl, and souvenir stores, packed with people. More than anything, the crush of tourists in the area seemed ripe for pickpocket activity. I looked around a bit and left.

Yu Gardens shopping neighborhood

Nearby was a zone more to my taste: Tiny earthy shops with aggressive haggling and an eclectic variety of goods. I was really disappointed that the kite store did not have one small enough for me to pack in my suitcase! 🙁

Night Cruise on the Huangpu River

Just for fun I took a night cruise on one of the many boats plying the Huangpu River, passing between garishly lit skyscrapers on the Pudong side and brightly lit colonial period remnants of foreign dominance on the Puxi side. As the tourist boats sailed up and down the river, darkened cargo barges slipped silently by.

Guilin

I first visited Guilin in 2015. On that trip I cruised down the Li River, enjoying the world famous scenery of tree covered karst peaks. Everyone who visits China should include that in their itinerary!

I have been to Guilin two additional times. Last year I had a wonderful visit to a small Dong-minority town, as well as the famous Longji rice terraces near Guilin.

This year I continued to investigate Guilin’s less famous attractions.

Night Cruise

All three times I went to Guilin I stayed at a hotel in rooms overlooking a branch of the river. At night I would watch small passenger cruise boats go by. This year I finally got around to trying a night cruise. It was fun. Do it!

Ling Canal

North of Guilin, in Xing’an county, is a marvel of ancient engineering known as the Ling Canal. Completed in 214 BCE under Qin Shi Huangdi, first emperor of China, this canal is still functional. It provides a link between the Xiang and the Li rivers. These two are tributaries of larger rivers, so functionally the canal provides a transportation channel connecting the Changjiang (Yangtze) with the Pearl River system.

To accomplish this task, there were several design challenges:
1) The elevation of the Xiang River was lower than that of the Li River and
2) river heights were subject to seasonal variations, which created a risk that the canal could overflow its channel.

A wedge shaped weir raises the level of the Xiang River
This canal connects to the Li River
One of numerous bridges that cross the canal
Osmanthus tree in bloom. The name of the tree in Chinese is “Gui” which, combined with “Lin” the word for forest, provides the name of “Guilin”: Osmanthus Forest.

Reed Flute Cave

This cave is a popular destination at the northwestern edge of Guilin.
I was able to catch the #3 bus on Zhongshan Lu (near my hotel).
For a mere 2 yuan (about 40 cents), it took me all the way to the cave.

The cave is quite accessible and the path inside is relatively short and easy.

View of a lake next to the cave

Solitary Beauty Peak / Jingjiang Princes Palace

This is a great historical site. The downside is that it seems the only tours were in Chinese.

Pagodas of the Moon and Sun

Really

Pagodas of the sun (left) and moon (right)
Pagoda of the Moon