Day 1: Saturday, July 12
We spent our first day simply travelling from Singapore to Beijing. It's only a 6-hour flight but by the time you add in waiting time at airports it becomes quite a long day. Fortunately the time zones are the same so we didn't have to cope with adjusting our body clocks. Lachlan & Caleb are great travellers - as long as they have some books and their Nintendos they are completely happy!
Day 2: Sunday, July 13
Xiaowei wanted to get going early each day to try and avoid some of the Beijing traffic congestion, so we ate breakfast in our hotel room each morning - cereal and toast was our daily morning staple. But even the most basic thing can be surprising - after we cooked our first piece of toast we discovered that the hotel toaster cooked an image of a panda on every slice! I loved that feature and wanted to pack the toaster in my suitcase to bring home (I didn't however - probably would have set off all sorts of security alarms at the airport!).
At 8am Xiaowei met us with his car and we headed to Tiananmen Square and the Forbidden City where we spent the next 6 hours. Both places are enormous and very difficult to capture in a couple of photos - the sounds and throngs of people, coupled with the intense summer heat and lots of walking made it a very exhausting day for us all. It was fascinating, however - to be at such historical & political sites was quite sombering. Tiananmen square is an enormous open space but central to it is Chairman Mao's tomb which we duly queued up for and walked past. The boys found the queueing quite tedious but came out a little in awe that they'd seen a 'dead guy', as Caleb described Mao's body. It is perfectly preserved and on display in a glass case within the enormous structure seen below. Lachlan and Caleb both learnt a LOT about Chinese history and culture and absorbed more information than I expected.
The Forbidden City is right behind Tiananmen Square and was swarming with people but the immense size of it allowed us to not have to push and shove to get around. The buildings were magnificent and the detail in each and every structure was incredible.
As we were leaving The Forbidden City and Tiananmen Square I snapped this photo (below) of an enormous electronic Olympic countdown clock - proof that we were in Beijing exactly 26 days, 6 hours, 44 minutes and 37 seconds before the opening of the 2008 Olympic Games!
By this stage we were ready for a break so we went and rested at the hotel for a couple of hours, ate dinner there, and then headed out again in the evening to a Kung Fu show. We all loved it - the show was very humourous and entertaining. The boys thought a very apt name had been chosen for the venue at which the King Fu show was held: 'Red Theatre'. No explanation needed :-)
Day 3: Monday, July 14
This was the day I had been most excited about - The Great Wall of China was our main destination of the day! We headed off at 7.30am and drove for about 2 hours through beautiful countryside before our first glimpse of the Great Wall came into view. After the intense heat and sunshine of the day before, the weather could not have been more different: grey and overcast with a light drizzle of rain. Initially I was a little disappointed with the rain as we were not able to get the typical views you see in travel books of endless mountains and winding Wall, and we look a bit wet and bedraggled in many of our photos. We were also unable to use the luge ride to get down from the mountain as the slippery conditions made it too dangerous - but the chair lift ride up and down proved to be wonderful (albeit a little scary for some of us!) and the boys loved it.
This was the day I had been most excited about - The Great Wall of China was our main destination of the day! We headed off at 7.30am and drove for about 2 hours through beautiful countryside before our first glimpse of the Great Wall came into view. After the intense heat and sunshine of the day before, the weather could not have been more different: grey and overcast with a light drizzle of rain. Initially I was a little disappointed with the rain as we were not able to get the typical views you see in travel books of endless mountains and winding Wall, and we look a bit wet and bedraggled in many of our photos. We were also unable to use the luge ride to get down from the mountain as the slippery conditions made it too dangerous - but the chair lift ride up and down proved to be wonderful (albeit a little scary for some of us!) and the boys loved it.
I have always loved using chopsticks, and Lachlan picked up the skill very quickly (that donkey meat works miracles!) but Caleb and Darrell needed a few chopstick lessons from Xiaowei before they could eat a decent amount of food without using their fingers!
Not to be outdone by Lachlan's bravery with the donkey meat, Caleb agreed to hold the beetle on his arm - something he would have been reluctant to do in the past.
We finished our day at the hotel restaurant - which became a favorite of the boys' since it had snooker and fuseball tables. It also had knives and forks :-)
Day 4: Tuesday, July 15
The Great Wall was going to be a hard act to follow but Xiaowei had another incredible day planned for us on Tuesday - we ended up being out for 12 hours straight and slept very well at the end of it. I managed to click off a photo of our hotel as we left it at 7.30am...our apartment was on the 16th floor at the back.
The Great Wall was going to be a hard act to follow but Xiaowei had another incredible day planned for us on Tuesday - we ended up being out for 12 hours straight and slept very well at the end of it. I managed to click off a photo of our hotel as we left it at 7.30am...our apartment was on the 16th floor at the back.
Our first stop was at the Beijing Zoo to meet our new favorite animal: the giant panda! They really are as adorable as they look in all the photos and we got there right at feeding time so they were active and happy. Caleb and I could have stayed and stared at the pandas all day!
What impressed us in particular was that a special enclosure had been recently completed to house the pandas who were rendered homeless during the recent devastating earthquake in China. Even the bamboo that they were eating had been brought especially from their particular province. All the pandas were healthy and playful and are certainly well-loved by the Chinese...and now us too! We did eventually move around and look at other exhibits - the Beijing Zoo is beautiful! - but the pandas stole our hearts.
Lunch was another venture to a local restaurant - this one in the heart of the hutongs, the old-style housing which is rapidly - and unfortunately - disappearing in Beijing.
Darrell had hoped to buy an erhu (a Chinese stringed instrument) while in Beijing and Xiaowei made it happen! The boys and I happily waited in the car while Darrell made his purchase...we were tired but we were still only half-way through the day!
The ancient buddhist Lama's Temple was next on our agenda. It is a magnificent cluster of beautiful structures of which I took a zillion photos. Here's one!
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The menus actually had English AND pictures so Darrell was able to help Xiaowei order our meal :-).JPG)
But it is not just a tourist attraction - it is also an everyday place where people - retirees, mainly, from what we could see - come to spend their days playing card games, meditating, doing Taichi, dancing, singing and playing instruments, as well as many other leisure pursuits too numerous to mention. .JPG)
The place was swarming with humanity but everyone was smiling and seemingly oblivious to us watching them and taking photos.
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Someone has asked me, since we returned, whether all of this was staged for tourists but we don't believe so. If it was, it was VERY well disguised! We didn't see many western tourists there anyway - we were vastly outnumbered by locals. We absolutely LOVED the Temple of Heaven - another 'favorite' for the view it gave us of local people and their ability to congregate and socialise in a such a happy, relaxed manner.
At 5.30pm we were booked to watch a Chinese Acrobatic Show which is a popular form of entertainment in China. I wasn't allowed to take photos once the show started so this pre-show shot was the best I could manage...
It was heaps of fun and we all thoroughly enjoyed the amazing agility of the performers. Our final venture of the day was dinner. According to Xiaowei, 'peking duck' is a must-try experience for the traveller to Beijing so we dutifully followed him to a local restaurant at which he used to work and one which is apparently famed for its duck.
I have to admit that Caleb and I ate our token mouthful of duck and left the rest for Xiaowei and Darrell - and Lachlan who, amazingly again, loved it! The rest of the meal was delicious so no-one went hungry :-)
Day 5: Wednesday, July 16
Our only planned outing for this day was to the Temple of Heaven. It is another site full of wonderful buildings and amazing historical significance.
We spent quite a few hours at the Temple of Heaven and after a fun rickshaw ride along the banks of a river and around the hutongs...
Beijing train station (below) has probably the most impressive facade for a station I have ever seen!
Day 6: Thursday, July 17
The Terracotta Warriors were our sole reason for travelling to Xian and we were not disappointed. We spent nearly 5 hours there then headed back to Beijing by plane. We'd decided in advance to play it safe and only travel one-way by train, just in case it was not the fun experience we were hoping for!
All of us were fascinated by the Terracotta Warrior army but Lachlan's enduring interest in archeology over the years became very real as he saw a functioning 'dig' site...
...and all of us were enthralled by the detail in every warrior's armour and face. A truly amazing place... Again, I took a zillion photos :-)
Day 7: Friday, July 18
By this time Xiaowei had picked up on my excitement about all things Olympic (!) so he drove us as close as he could get to the two most prominent Olympic stadiums: Beijing National Stadium (the 'Bird's Nest)...
Both buildings are impressive and I was excited to get so close to them! The remainder of our day was spent at the Summer Palace, a beautiful, spacious area which was the summer playground for the Emperor's of the past. Xiaowei's goal for this day was to finally launch the boy's kites (which he had bought as gifts for them) and he didn't let us down. They used this wonderful bridge as their launch pad...
...which provided an amazing view over the gardens and back to the bridge from where the boys flew their kites.
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Day 8: Saturday, July 19
Unfortunately our adventure had to come to an end eventually, and after a leisurely morning of packing we had to climb into Xiaowei's car one last time for our trip to the airport. What a fantastic guide Xiaowei proved to be - I cannot praise him highly enough!!
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I'm not sure who was more excited about the kite-flying: Xiaowei or the boys!
With Xiaowei's expert guidance both boys managed to get their kites soaring - it was a joyful way to finish our week.
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The Summer Palace houses yet another magnificent array of buildings...
Day 8: Saturday, July 19
Unfortunately our adventure had to come to an end eventually, and after a leisurely morning of packing we had to climb into Xiaowei's car one last time for our trip to the airport. What a fantastic guide Xiaowei proved to be - I cannot praise him highly enough!!
Visiting China was a real eye-opener for all of us and we returned to Singapore feeling much more appreciative of the Chinese culture we see here in Singapore on a daily basis. Beijing is a wonderful city and is well and truly ready to host the 2008 Olympics!
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