Wednesday, July 25, 2007

Fom Tokyo to Nagasaki

We've had a busy few days on the trains in the past week here in Japan, and it's been fantastic. We organised a Japanese Rail Pass for ourselves before we arrived here and it's been so easy to use it's almost unbelievable. You just show up at a station, reserve your seats if you want to and go where-ever takes your fancy!

So far we've visited Kyoto...
Such a beautiful and Japanesee city. If you catch my drift. We wandered around the Gion district looking at temples and shrines and we even caught site of some Geisha as they moved through the streets. Unfortunately I got so excited that I forgot to take a picture... You can't win them all I guess!

Kyoto
Here are some girls in Kimono as the next best thing.

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Shrine in Kyoto

We also spent two nights in Hiroshima. The city was completely destroyed by the atomic bomb in 1945 and the people there chose to leave a partially destroyed building insitu as a reminder of what happened there. It's very striking.

A-Bomb Dome

But it's not just all about death and destruction when you visit either Hiroshima or Nagasaki. It'S an important thing to note about both of these cities. Life has gone on here, buildings have been rebuilt and there is a huge amount of pride on view.

Castle
Castle in Hiroshima

In fact in Hiroshima we saw our first baseball game! Once we figured out what was going on it was really good fun and the cheer leaders made it very exciting!

In Nagasaki there is a concerted effort to showcase the cities fascinating history. It was the only port in Japan to have any contact with the west for close on two centuries. Also not all of the city was completely destroyed when the bomb was dropped here so there are plenty of shrines to visit. It's a very beautiful place and both here and Hiroshima are a high light of coming to Japan.

Spectacle bridge
The spectacle bridge

Thursday, July 19, 2007

Oooo Exciting!

I`ve just learned that two of my photos on Flickr of Dublin have been shortlisted for the Schmaps on line guide!

The photos are this one of Merrion Square

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and this one of the Grand Canal

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I`ll let you know if I`m successful!

Tuesday, July 17, 2007

Earthquake

I didn`t realise the seriousness of yesterday`s earthquake here in Japan when I was writing last night. Here`s the latest BBC update . Hopefully that`s the end of it for the moment and the earth will remain nice and stable for the next two weeks...

Monday, July 16, 2007

Turning Japanese I really think so...

Yeah I know a predictable post title but I could`t resist it!

So we`re now officially out of China. We landed in Tokyo this afternoon after a very pleasant flight with Cathay Pacific and are lucky enough to have missed the Typhoon that was threatening to strike Tokyo over the weekend, I think we`re out of danger here now! However I did notice on the train into the city from the airport that there were delays to some trains due to an earthquake! We don`t get interesting stuff like this happening to us in Ireland so it`s a whole new world of experience for this Travelling Trixi! Bring it on I say so long as nobody gets hurt.

We`re here in Japan for the next two weeks it`s expensive so we`re on budget rations but that`s ok we`re not complaining. I haven`t seen anything of Tokyo to report yet apart from the fact that every person we met has been very friendly and helpful and everyone seems to have a word of English which is helpful!

Once agin we encountered difficulties with uploading photos in Hong Kong so I`ll just have to keep trying!

We had a ball there though. Once we got over the tiredness that comes with travelling for a protracted period of time we really got into the swing of the city. The museums are amazing and I especially would recommend the Science Museum which had this big kid running around pressing buttons and getting all interactive with the scientific stuff. It was very cool.

I also loved the Star Ferry tour of Victoria Harbour. We took the 6.00p.m. boat and it was perfect. The sun was setting and the sky, the water in the harbour and the waterfront buildings were all bathed in a beautiful red glow. The weather was balmy to hot and the breeze was a blessing as it came over the water. It was incredibly relaxing and beautiful and definately another thing to recommend. Also the walk around the Peak is something to savour. The views are incredible and even in the heat it was a very pleasant way to spend an hour.

The other side of Hong Kong is of course the shopping. And boy can you shop if you want to drop. I loved the night markets on Temple road, the bargaining was hard but there were good souvenirs and gifts to be got there if you were up for the challenge. There was also a constant queue outside Louis Vuitton in Tim Shui Tsai which puzzled and amused us in equal measure! Why do people bother? That`s a rhetorical question I really don`t care why people waste their time in such ways! But the sheer pointlessness amused me!

So now we`re in Tokyo. I`m going to miss China a lot I know but I am looking forward to travelling in Japan over the next two weeks. I hope I fall in love with this country as completely as I fell in love with China...

Saturday, July 07, 2007

Farewell to China

Well we've arrived in Hong Kong and said our sad goodbyes to China.



I've written an account of how we got here and hope that this post will appear first and the rest in order of where we went. It may not work out that way so bear with me!

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Tianamen Square

I also hope to get some photos up and sent to friends and family over the next week so there should be more colour coming soon.



I had the most amazing experiences in China over the last few weeks and I'm really not ready to leave yet, but time is moving on and there's a whole wide world to be seen yet.



I'm going to ease myself into Hong Kong by going to see the light show this evening and saying goodbye to our new friends.



I'll check in again later on in the week.

Yangshou

They refer to Yangshou as a a back packers paradise and that it certainly is.



The scenery in this part of China is breathtaking and we went on a fantastic bike ride to Fuli village on one of the mornings we were there. I really enjoyed the little excursion and have made up my mind to purchase myself a bike when I get home. It's a cool way to get around.



We also attended a chinese cookery school which was great fun. We learned how to stuff pumpkin flowers, cook egg plant, make beer fish (fish cooked in beer a local delicacy) and chicken with cashew nuts. I have a recipe book and plan to practice more of this type of cooking when I get back.



We also witnessed the ritual beheading and preparing of snake meat for dinner. Now I know not everyone would be into this and I didn't think I would be either, but one thing I've learned on this trip is that food is food whatever way it comes and it all has it's merits. I drew the line at drinking snake blood though. That was a step too far for me.



We also tried our hand at Chinese painting which was very relaxing. That combined with some accupuncture put me in a very relaxed frame of mind for our last overnight train to Hong Kong.

Longsheng

oooohhhh Beautiful beautiful Longsheng. This place on our itinerary was far and away my highlight.



We stayed amongst the terraced rice paddies of the dragons spine for two nights. We walked for a total of 10 hours up and down the rice paddies, calling nie hao to everyone we met, laughing everytime someone slipped and nearly killed themselves in the mud, rescued puppies, got drenched in sweat and rain.... It was amazing.

Rice terraces
Rice Terraces

The houses in the villages are made of wood and as they are built on terraces each house over looks it's neighbour. There was an incredibly strong feeling of community and peace there and everyone we met had a kind word and smile for us. There are two minorities living in the area we stayed with the zhuan minority and met women of the miao minority who unwound their long hair for us so they could demonstrate how they dressed it.



I really liked this part of our trip as it really felt like the fact that we were there was of benefit to these people. We were supporting their economy and their way of life and I loved every minute of it. I hated leaving the peace and beauty of that place.

Shanghai

Of all the places I've been to in China I think Shanghai was my least favourite. It has a lot to offer and is a very busy commercial place but it just didn't do it for me.



Saying that though we had fun there all the same. The tourist tunnel was surreal and funny experience and if you're into 19th century porn by an add on for the sex exhibition, it's flippin priceless. Although once I realised that all the porcelein chinese women were depicted with bound feet it was slightly less funny... and a lot more surreal.



The boat ride to see the lights of Shanghai is pretty cool but I wouldn't go up the Pearl tower again. The queues were Chinese style - chaotic and I just wasn't in the humour for it on that night. I think after the peace of Hangshou, Shanghai just grated on me a little. Lots of other people loved it though.

Hangshou

Hangshou is known in China to be it's most beautiful city. The main attraction there is the West Lake. It lives up to it's tag line I have to say.



We spent a very pleasant afternoon strolling around the lake on the first day we arrived and on the second day we spent an even more pleasant morning cycling around it! We also visited a tea museum and plantation which was really interesting.



I liked Hanshou so much better than Nanjing. We relaxed there and got some beautiful photos.

Laughing buddha

This is the famous Laughing Buddha, he's one of many rock carvings at Failin Temple complex and he just makes you happy to look at him!

Nanjing

It was only a short hop relatively speaking from Tai'an to Nanjing where city living was once again the order of the day.



Nanjing is a big place and there's loads to do there. As we only had a short time we visited the Presidential palace, the Taiping gardens and the Confucious temple as well as a trip out to Sun Yat Sen's monument.



There's a cool street with lots of night life called Fuziama street but beware of biting insects as Michelle and I got seriously huge disgusting bites there....

Buyong Village and Taishan Mountain

We didn't actually stay for an night in Tai'an city but were bussed instead to a village outside the city called Buyong village. We were billeted with various families in the village for the night so that we could get a glimpse of how real people live here in China. It was brilliant.



For a start the food we were given was just out of this world. It was simple enough fair but there were was loads of it. We were also introduced to new varieties of vegtables each more delicious than the last. In fact I would have happily survived on veg and rice if I had to after eating the food cooked by our hosts.



We were also given the opportunity to visit the village kindergarten as well as other community run projects. The Kindergarten was one of my highlights though.



The kids were beautiful. They had a little show prepared for us and then demanded that we do a show for them.... It was pricelessly funny watching grown men attempting the macarena! Everyone was sick and sore from laughing afterwards.



We stayed in a very simple room that night complete with cockroaches, straw mattresses and a thundering rain shower! It was all good though and I'd go back in a heart beat!



The following day we were dared to climb the local holy mountain called Tai'shan. It's a buddhist and taoist holy place and there were no other tourists there attempthing the 6666 steps! It was tough going. About half the group went half way and then took the cable car whilst those with more energy ran up the remaining steep incline! All I'll say is that theview from the cable car was very picturesque!

Xi'an

We took an overnight train to Xi'an with the sole purpose of visiting the Terracotta warriors, it was something I was really looking forward to. As we landed so early in the morning we went straight to the historical site which was a real bonus as we got to see all the warehouses before the large buses of crowds of tourists arrived.



The warriors are amazing and I was almost drooling at the thought of all that lovely archaeology waiting to be discovered there. The sheer scale of the project is amazing and the Chinese have done an excellent job of presenting the story and the archaeology.

Terracotta warriors
This was taken on camera phone I should have a better example later on.

For the rest of the time in Xi'an we visited the Muslim market which is definately one of the best markets we've been to on this trip. I got a silk brocade jacket made for me and the Boy picked up lots of gear that he had been looking for. Later that night we met up with the gang and had the most incredible meal. Hanif took us to a local restaurant, the type you'd walk past without even noticing that food was served there where we were introduced to Hot Pot. The principle is that there is a vat in front of you with stock of the chilli variety and the broth variety and the fun part is that you get to put whatever you want into the soup to cook! It's like fondu without the cheese. It was all very delicious and the communal eating part was just as much part of the experience as anything else! We then drank far too much beer and nursed our sore heads until we got our next overnight train to Tai'an.

The Great Wall

Rather than taking the east route and heading for the closest section of the Great Wall to Beijing, we were driven at 5.45 in the morning to Simatai which is about 2 hours from Beijing. I had been warned that the Wall was a bit of an endurance challenge as there were hawkers to be avoided and as well as crowds of people vying to put their feet where yours were supposed to go. However at Simatai it was nothing like I was warned about.



The first thing we discovered was that we each were allocated our own personal salesman or woman. Each person has a companion who walks and talks to you as you scale the wall huffing and puffing fit to blow the house down! I was given a tiny little man who stank of drink abandoned me to take the short cut (cheaters walk I call it) and then guilted me into buying a t-shirt because he was an old man you see! It was all very strange and kind of funny.



The actual walk itself is about 10km and took around 3 hours. It was tough tough going. I think the pollution in Beijing was really beginning to affect my breathing and whilst I enjoyed the experience I would have preferred if I hadn't been so wrecked after it! The views from the wall are amazing and the actual experience of being there made up for any discomfort. We were also there practically by ourselves. Apart from our little companions the place was deserted. It was very peaceful, clean and there was a very real sense of history there. It was definately worth the hype.