China
Shanghai

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    • Day 12

      Guilin and Shanghai

      April 29 in China ⋅ ☀️ 22 °C

      Bit of a dull day- off to breakfast and then drive 1.5 hours to Guilin airport. Lots of fog around so plane 1.5 hours late.

      Arrived into Shanghai and was picked up and dropped at hotel. Watched some netball then 45min walk to the Cheesecake factory for dinner. Managed to use the metro and back at hotel now.

      Tomorrow is a day sightseeing in Shanghai. Miss Finn and Tilly.
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    • Day 3

      Ambrosian Breakfast

      October 6, 2019 in China ⋅ ⛅ 68 °F

      The Fairmont Peace Hotel on the Bund in Shanghai is the most sumptuous and artistically beautiful hotel I have ever stayed in. This morning’s breakfast offered every type of cuisine, Eastern and Western. I have never had better food anywhere. We started off with traditional omelettes, but then I added some Chinese dumplings, pork inside a steamed bread roll. Everything was at least as good as the best food I ever tasted. Some of it was better. We have enjoyed egg custard tarts everywhere from North Carolina to Europe. Until today the best I had ever tasted were in Portugal, but today’s tarts here in Shanghai topped them. Today we will enjoy another trip to a garden in Suzhou, a seventeenth-century wonder, and will learn about the production of silk.Read more

    • Day 3

      A Loud Pop, A Woman Down

      October 6, 2019 in China ⋅ ⛅ 70 °F

      I heard a loud pop as the woman behind me hit the concrete. Everyone in the line to enter the Shanghai Museum fled from the noise, and I stood with Shane Lawrence next to Mary Larsen, sprawled out on the walkway. I had met her only the day before. She had tripped over a plastic hump covering electrical cords, and lay motionless on the concrete. Her right wrist showed an ugly bulge, and her hip hurt so that she could hardly walk. A guard rushed over to open that barrier that held us in the queue. Shane and I slowly pulled Mary to her feet as the guard shouted Chinese orders and motioned for Mary and me to go into the building—not Shane, just me. I don’t know why. Security officials ushered us into a cloakroom, where they asked Mary if she wanted a glass of water. In broken Chinese I suggested that they bring ice for her wrist, swelling and turning purple. Bringing a cold pack, they asked if she wanted an ambulance to take her to the hospital. After some discussion, they allowed Mary to go to the nearest hospital in a cab. The guards allowed Shane’s wife Mandy, a nurse, to join us. The taxi took us to a hospital, maybe ten minutes away, where we sought the entrance to the emergency room.

      Mary struggled to walk in the parking lot as I saw a woman whom I asked in Chinese, “Do you work here?” She said she did. I asked, “Can you help us take this woman to the emergency room?”

      Immediately she was a blur of action as she produced a wheelchair and rolled Mary up a nearby ramp and through a door draped with a heavy brown canvas curtain. She pushed Mary’s wheelchair through the split in the middle of the curtain into a semi-lit room. A baby with a bandage on its head cried with pain. An old lady covered in bloody bandages lay unconscious, surrounded by family members in the middle of the room. A wall of patients with a wide range of injuries and illnesses looked down at the floor as they sat in silence on gray metal folding chairs extending in a line down a hallway. In the corner of the room our helper began a Chinese shouting match at the nurses’ station, adding to the cacophony of wailing infants. A well dressed Chinese woman came to me and asked in broken English what was happening. I told her that Mrs. Larsen had fallen and broken her wrist. She joined the shouting match and after a few minutes told me that this hospital was only for ordinary citizens of Shanghai. Party officials, VIP’s and foreign tourists were treated in another, better hospital nearby. This hospital could not admit Mary. After more shouting with the hospital staff, she told me that a nurse was calling the other hospital to arrange for Mary to be transferred there. She spoke in broken English, I in broken Chinese, as I learned that she now lives in Ohio, but that she was in Shanghai tending to her mother, who was currently admitted as a patient. Finishing her phone call, the head nurse informed us that because the National Day celebration was underway, many of the the VIP hospital’s staff were on vacation, and no doctors were working at the VIP hospital that day. Then she said that if Mary thought her wrist was broken, she could stay, and they would treat it when her turn came. Because Mary was a foreign tourist, though, they would try to advance her in their schedule. Mandy and I held a quick discussion with Mary, and she decided that she would prefer to receive treatment elsewhere. We decided to take a cab back to our hotel to assess our options.

      Back at the hotel about lunchtime, I explained our situation to the concierge. She snapped into action as we took Mary to use the restroom in the hotel’s restaurant. The concierge said she was working things out and suggested that we return to our rooms for a few minutes. She would call us soon with more information. Mary’s arm and hip made her grimace as she asked to be allowed to wait in place, there in the restaurant. I returned to my room and ate a quick bag of peanuts washed down with a bottle of water.

      Our concierge advised us that she had made an appointment for Mary at a better hospital at 2 pm. She also introduced us to Jenny, our translator. At 1:20 pm we took a taxi to an emergency medical clinic near the old Russian embassy. The staff took Mary back for x-rays, with nurse Mandy accompanying her. I learned that Jenny was a Russian from Yekaterinburg studying hotel management in Shanghai. Her Chinese was superb. Her English was reasonably good. X-rays showed that Mary’s wrist was shattered, her hip was badly bruised but not broken. We would need to go to a hospital with an orthopedic surgeon for the wrist.

      Another cab ride took us to United Family Healthcare, a hospital with an orthopedic surgeon named Dr. Xu. After more X-rays and CT scans, the doctor advised Mary that surgery was necessary, the sooner the better. Mandy expressed both to the doctor and to us her serious reservations about Mary’s decision to allow a foreign surgeon in a Chinese hospital repair her wrist. Calmly Dr. Xu explained the risks involved in waiting to have the procedure done after returning Mary to the United States. Mandy asked me to step outside of the room and told me that she was having a panic attack.

      I said, “Panic attacks are not authorized tonight. You can have one, but not now. You’ll have to wait and have it later once we have Mary safe.”

      Finally, Mary had her mind made up: she would have the surgery in China. Again Mandy attempted to persuade Mary to delay surgery until she returned home to Arizona. Dr. Xu told Mary that he would prefer for her to stay overnight so that he could take her to surgery early the next morning, but because she had some things to pack, Mary asked to return to the hotel that night. She would return to the hospital for surgery the next morning.

      By that time Ray, our Viking tour guide, had arrived in Shanghai. Because my cell phone was not completing phone calls since arriving in China, I asked a nursing station attendant to call him for me. I reported the situation to him. He suggested that I tell the taxi driver to drop us at our hotel’s rear entrance on Dian Shi Road to avoid the National Day Parade. When we approached the area of the hotel, however, the police would not allow the driver to turn onto Dian Shi Road. I asked the driver to let us out at the intersection of Bei Jing and Si Chuan Roads. With the battery supply in my cell phone nearing zero I shot one final text message to Glenda asking her to have Ray meet us there with a wheelchair. He did so within ten minutes, and we returned to the Fairmont Peace Hotel at around 10:30 pm.
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    • Day 21

      Uferpromenade am Bund

      March 19 in China ⋅ ☀️ 19 °C

      Die chinesischen Behörden sind seit gestern an Bord und haben unsere Pässe genau unter die Lupe genommen. Nun dürfen wir mit einer Passkopie, die jedesmal neu kontrolliert wird, das Schiff verlassen und chinesischen Boden betreten. Machen wir und spazieren als erstes über die Promenade am Bund entlang. Wunderschön, auch wenn wir hier nicht alleine sind 🙄😉.Read more

    • Day 55

      Shanghai

      October 14, 2016 in China ⋅ 🌙 21 °C

      Mit dem Nachtzug ging es von Peking nach Shanghai!
      Wir hatten das Pech, unsere 4er Kabine mit einem schnarchenden Chinesen teilen zu müssen. Im Hostel in Shanghai mussten wir zuerst nachschlafen, bevor wir den Bund besichtigen konnten. Dieser bietet eine wunderbare Aussicht auf die Skyline von Shanghai. 🌃
      In der Urban Planning Exhibition Hall, wurde aufgezeigt wie aus dem kleinen Fischerdorf diese Riesenmetropole entstand. Absolut wahnsinnig, welche Dimensionen diese Stadt innert kürzester Zeit erreicht hat. Shanghai ist die grösste Stadt in China mit rund 22,7 Millionen Einwohnern.
      Unsere Impressionen von Shanghai und Peking sind sehr unterschiedlich. Shanghai ist eine total moderne Stadt und Peking beeindruckt eher durch seine geschichtlichen Schönheiten.
      Shanghai ist im Vergleich etwas teuer, die Touristenattraktionen sind teilweise überteuert.

      Heute besichtigten wir Suzhou. Dazu organisierten wir am Bahnschalter Tickets, was zu unserer Verwunderung relativ unkompliziert und günstig war.
      In Suzhou besuchten wir den Tigerhügel, mit dem "schiefen Turm von China". 🇨🇳 🏛

      Morgen geht unsere Reise weiter mit dem Zug nach Huangshan!
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    • Day 5

      Another day in Shanghai

      May 7 in China ⋅ 🌙 22 °C

      We took a stroll to the former residence of Soong Ching Ling who was the wife of Sun Yet Sen, the father of Chinese independence (1911). He formed the Nationalist party which subsequently took issue with the communists. But SCL was so attached to her country that after SYS's death she went over to the communist cause where she became revered. Her residence was probably grand by Chinese standards but not flashy.
      The group went into the city centre where we split up to do our own thing. Sue and I went to an old art Deco bank, then the Shanghai Urban Planning Exhibition Hall, which over 4 floors was a bit bewildering for a boy from a small provincial city. After some canny shopping we went back to the site of the formation of the Chinese Communist Party. It was a bit disappointing to be truthful as it didn't attempt to convey an atmosphere or give English speakers access to the historical materials.
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    • Day 22

      Pudong

      March 20 in China ⋅ 🌙 7 °C

      Wir beide sind noch funktionsfähig, der Abend ist noch jung - weiter geht’s. Wir gehen zum Bund Sightseeing Tunnel und lassen uns von einer Magnetschwebebahn inklusive Multimediashow unter dem Huangpu Fluss rüber nach Pudong bringen. Hier tauchen wir ein ins flirrende Lichtermeer, lassen uns auf dem Fake Markt übers Ohr hauen 😳😬 und genießen in der Bar des Jin Mao Towers einen Cocktail mit 1 A Panoramablick.Read more

    • Day 3

      What's the time?

      September 29, 2019 in China ⋅ ⛅ 21 °C

      Today started at 1.30am. That's when my brain decided it was time to wake up. Time Zones are such fun. It did mean I got to watch the impressive light show displayed on the skyscrapers along the banks of the Huangpo River. Eventually getting back to sleep I finally had to get up about 5am and start planning the day. A visit to the Bund was a no-brainer. It's a tourist must see, and since I'm a tourist, well, I think you can see where this is going. Initially I thought that if we could just get to the river front we'd find a bridge and simply cross over to strut the bund like international bon vivants. What I really should have realised is that the amount of large traffic motoring up and down the Huangpo, including cruise ships, indicated that bridges would be few and far between and any bridge would need to be high and probably vehicle only. Once this information was processed I realised that I'd need a vehicle to get me across this muddy brown slow moving liquid road. Then I had the revelation, what we need is a hop-on, hop-off bus. Fortunately I happened to know where one stops. After a few false starts and about two kilometres of moderately aimless wandering we finally lucked upon a parked Citysightseeing bus. We paid our 160 Yuan and boarded to enjoy the great sights of this mega-city. Sitting on the top deck, cruising the boulevards and timeless lanes of Shanghai was well worth the time and money invested, apart from the occasional frustration of a few random long stops. I think this was probably because the driver was gasping for a smoke. After about three hours of motoring around Shanghai we backtracked the loop and got off across from the Bund, but on the opposite side to our hotel. What the? China you devious devil! Not to be denied I rememberd reading about a tunnel that runs under the river transporting tourists from one side of the river to the other, in a psychedelic trippy mixture of lasers, spotlights and mood music. I, and probably you, have probably never seen anything like it. It was a one of a kind and got us to the right side of the river. Now we could casually saunter back towards our hotel, with a stop at the Disney store and the flagship Shanghai Apple store on the way. Tomorrow we get a Didi ride to the Shanghai Disneyland Hotel before hitting the park for our first day. Can't wait!Read more

    • Day 34

      Verschiedene Tempel

      January 13, 2020 in China ⋅ ⛅ 9 °C

      Ein paar typische chinesische Tempel haben wir uns angesehen. Diese sind in der Stadt etwas verteilt und inzwischen sind viele Hochhäuser drum herum gebaut. Mit den U-Bahnen erreicht man sie aber sehr gut.
      Hier gibt es anscheinend aber nicht ansaatzweise so viele Tempelanlagen wie in Thailand.
      Teilweise werden Eintrittsgelder von 5 Yuan bis 50 Yuan verlangt. Der mit 50 war leider der, der nicht der sehenswerte war.
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    • Day 265

      Tianzifang

      December 21, 2023 in China ⋅ 🌙 -2 °C

      Ein gemütliches, kleines Hipster Viertel mit vielen kleinen Läden und Restaurants. Wir haben ein hervorragendes tibetisches Restaurant gefunden und zum Schluss sogar noche einen Glühweinstand!! :D Da wurde sich dann erstmal aufgewärmt. Für mich natürlich mit einem Flying Hirsch ;)Read more

    You might also know this place by the following names:

    Shanghai, Schanghai, شانغهاي, Şanxay, Шанхай, Xangai, Šanghaj, Σανγκάη, Ŝanhajo, Shangai, شانگهای, Shang-hai, Shanghai - 上海, שאנגחאי, Šangaj, Sanghaj, SHA, Sjanghæ, 上海, შანჰაი, 상하이, Šanchajus, Šanhaja, Sjanghai, Szanghaj, Шангај, சாங்காய், เซี่ยงไฮ้, Şangay, شاڭخەي, Thượng Hải

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