This blog is to share pictures and stories with my family and friends back home while I am studying abroad in Florence, Italy. I'll be gone September 2007 to April 2008. If you want to be get an e-mail when I update this please let me know! jessgiveup@yahoo.com
Sorry if there are spelling mistakes. Sometimes I dont have time to thoroughly edit before posting.
I really love hearing from you guys while I am away from home, please leave me comments and such! :)
Thursday, January 3, 2008
Taste of China
This is a long one guys, a day by day look at my trip to China, with pictures!
Dec 22: I called Mom and Dad in the morning and then my brother. I haven’t talked to Nick the whole time I’ve been gone, so it was really nice to be able to talk to him on my birthday. I’ve never been away from my family on my birthday before and I never in my wildest dreams thought my 21st birthday would be on an overnight plane to China. It was a very uneventful birthday, as far as 21 runs go. The only drink I had was the glass of wine on the plane with dinner. But I can’t complain about it. I feel so lucky to be able to live in Italy this year and travel to places like China, so sometimes if I get the short end of the stick (like missing my birthday) I just have to roll with it.
Dec 23: Landed in Beijing in the morning and even though we all were completely exhausted the tour guides took us to lunch before going to the hotel. Our first meal in Cina was good. We never ate anything too weird on the trip. Most of the meals were provided on the trip and so someone else chose what was served to us. (I discovered that I like peppers now.) At the hotel we had about an hour to rest and then went to the Temple of Heaven. The Temple of Heaven was our first time seeing tradition Chinese architecture, so it was very enjoyable. There was a big park area where retired people go to exercise. There’s also the temple part, travelers aren’t allowed in it, but we could look through the windows. A lot of the places we went in Beijing were like that (blocked to the tourists) and after a while all the architecture started to look the same: red buildings with dragons on the roofs, red for good luck and fortune! Most were one store, except the temples, those were three. After the Temple of Heaven we had a little more time to rest and then had dinner at the hotel. One of the memorable dishes from that dinner was duck fat in a pumpkin. No one really ate that one. I had a piece of cake later on and called it my birthday cake. No candles or singing though.
Temple of Heaven:
Dec 24: Went first to the Forbidden City. It was where the emperor lived with his entourage (including 1000s of concubines), so the normal people were forbidden from going in. There was a really sweet moat around it too, and really high walls. We walked all the way through it, which took us through several corridors, squares, temples, bedrooms, old trees, and more. In one of the squares it had bricks layered 8 feet deep because the emperor was afraid of people tunneling under and coming after him. He was a bit paranoid I think. It was also very, very cold that day. Well, it was pretty cold most everyday we were in Beijing. On the other side of the Forbidden City is Tian An Men Square. It’s a very large square, but there wasn’t a lot to see there, except the GIANT picture of Mao. All the tour guides in China referred to 1949 as “liberation.” I guess when you start with imperialiam, communism could be liberation. We walked across the square and then went to lunch. On this trip it seemed like it was always time to eat. We would go somewhere and then eat and repeat that pattern for days on end. After lunch we went to the SummerPalace. It was most impressive and was situated right on a lake. We were there on a foggy winter day so it wasn’t as great as it could have been. Before dinner we had planned to go to mass, but the church was already completely full half an hour before it was set to start. So we left and went to our dinner of Peking Duck. After dinner Fr. Paul have mass at the hotel for us. In our hotel rooms everyone found a panda bear from Linda, the trip organizer as a Christmas present. It was very sweet.
Mr. Mao from Tian An Men Square
Forbidden City. There were tons of sqaures and literally hundreds of buildings that looked like this one.
Imaging my life at the Summer Palace. (Side note: Angie thats the scarf you gave me for my birthday, I love you!)
Story of the "Monkey King," Superman of ancient China, as told on the Corridor of the Summer Palace.
Dec 25: We went to a university in Beijing and met with some local students and teachers. One professor gave a lecture about calligraphy and it was actually pretty boring. But we had lunch at the university with students studying English which was fun. I talked to a woman named Judy who wants to go to California or Utah to do Chemistry research. Quite the ambitious woman! That afternoon I went to Kung Fu show! It was almost like a musical, there was singing and the show had a plot line and everything. I thought it would be like a demonstration so I was really excited about the show when they started singin. The King Fu was really good, it was almost like a dance. I loved it! Afterwards, they took us to dinner. The dinner was ok, but the best part were the cookies! It’s not Christmas without some cookies after all!
Dec 26: Went to the Great Wall of China! This was definitely a major highlight of the trip! On the drive over we went past some of the Olympic stuff they are building: the Water Cube and Bird’s Nest. The summer Olympics are going to be very interesting. Olympic stuff is all over the place in China, the people here want it so bad, and they got it. But the pollution really will be a problem. At the Great Wall we got to walk along it. The wall runs along the mountains so it’s all stairs, making it more of a climb than a walk. After the wall, they took us to lunch and then gave us the option of going to the Silk Market or to the Ming Tomb. I chose the market. People who went to the tomb said we didn’t really miss anything anyways. The silk market was about 6 floors of people selling fake things. I bought some fake Puma sneakers for 55 yuan (7 yuan - $1). I also bought make-up, chopsticks, and fake Burberry scarves. You have to barter with the people too, and pretend to walk away and then they call you back and you get the good price. It took us a while to learn the process and most everyone got had on the first item.
Video of me Acting out Mulan:
Video Shout-Out to my Asian Friends:
Dec 27: Flew to Shanghai, had really bad food on the plane. In Shanghai the guides took us to the Bund and then Nanjing Road, the main shopping street in all of China. I didn’t buy anything though. But I did get an ice-cream cone from Hagan Daas. Delicious! The hotel we stayed at in Shanghai was the nicest. I’m wearing the hotel slippers from there right now actually.
Dec 28: Another university visit. This one was a lot better than the first one in Beijing. My conversation partner was a really sweet girl named Fannie. She took me around the school on a tour. We also had a basketball match with some guys and a few girls from our program playing against a team from the ShanghaiUniversity. Our team won, but that doesn’t mean we were better players. The GiF team was good at getting the ball and made the Chinese team run a lot. But we shot and missed way more than they did. After the basketball we had dinner with the students. Fannie bought me tea as well.
Fannie and me watching the basketball game.
Dec 29: Slept in a little bit and they took us to lunch at Mongolian BBQ, a much appreciated break from Chinese food. It was almost exactly like Chang’s Mongolian Grill in Portland. The Mongolian restaurant was in the same building as a cashmere factory. They did to us a lot, the tour guides would take us to lunch and dinner in a restaurant that was owned by a pearl/silk/cashmere/enamel/embroidery factory, it got pretty old. After lunch we went to the OldCity and the Yu Gardens. The OldCity had a Starbucks and lots of shopping. The Yu Gardens were so pretty! If I had a lot of money, I would want something like that in my yard: bridges over a peaceful pond with koi fish. After dinner we went to an Acrobatic Show. It was mind blowingly amazingly incredibly awesome! I didn’t know people could seriously do things like that!
Old City
Yu Gardens
Dec 30: We went to a really tall building in the morning. The 4th highest in the world and next to it they are currently building the next highest in the world. From up on the observatory level we could see the whole city. Shanghai is HUGE! And for anyone who’s seen Mission Impossible III, I saw the tower he jumps from and lands on up close! After the tall building (JinMaoTower) we got to ride the Maglev train to the airport. It goes 430km/hr! Fun! The plane landed in Hong Kong in the evening and we had dinner at the hotel. After dinner I went with some people on a walk around the city. We walked pretty far and took the metro back to the hotel. This hotel was actually in a good location, GU usually puts us in weird places, so this was good. Hong Kong metro is really nice too, it even has air conditioning and is super clean! The stations are huge, they have to number the exits so you get out at the right street.
In Mission Impossible III, Tom Cruise jumps off the biulding with the red dot to the one with the slanty roof.
Posing with the Skyline at the harbor.
Dec 31: The tour guides took us over to Hong KongIsland to visit the Stanley Market, Aberdeen and VictoriaPeak. I bought a Rubik’s Cube at the Stanley Market for really cheap, a lot cheaper than in the US or Europe. Aberdeen was a supposed to be a fishing village, but it was more of a tourist spot. People were out on the beaches in swimsuits! It was that warm in Hong Kong! I still wore like a sweatshirt, but I felt plenty warm. Our final stop at Hong KongIsland was riding the tram up VictoriaPeak where we could see the island the peninsula on the other side. Back at the hotel I did not feel well at all, so instead of celebrating New Year’s, I went to bed. Oh, woe is me!
The Aberdeen Fishing Village on Hong Kong Island.
View from restaurant at the top of Victoria Peak.
Jan 1: I went shopping like Angie told me to! I walked all over the place and it was great. I went to the Jade Market and the Ladies’ Market. I walked along Nathan and Canton Roads, the main streets for shopping. I didn’t really buy that much stuff though. It was a lot cheaper in Beijing and they don’t bargain as much in Hong Kong. Compared to Beijing, Hong Kong was more like Las Vegas than China. In Hong Kong everyone has air conditioning (even though it’s January) and in most of Beijing and Shanghai they don’t even use a dryer to dry clothes. I wonder what the global impact would be if those 15 million people in Beijing and 20 million in Shanghai bought dryers. So thanks for the global warming Hong Kong! (JK, its mostly America’s fault) In Hong Kong, kids from my school were all so excited to eat at places like Outback Steakhouse and see so many Starbucks (which I had my fair share of hazelnut lattes). The only American chain we have in Florence is McDonalds, and there’s very few of them. I do find it a bit odd that China is more like America than Europe. Thank you British people for colonizing Hong Kong!
Jan 2: Came back to Florence. The plane ride from Hong Kong to Frankfurt, Germany was over 11 hours! Easily the longest plane ride of my life! But I have realized that fighting jet lag is easier going West than East, so I’ll be ready when its time to come home to the Portland!
Chinese words I leared:
Hello: Ni Hao
Yes: Sur
No: Bu
Thank you: Shi Shi
and I can write/draw exit.
Also, there's a TON more pictures (ok, 88 more) on Shutterfly. So you can enjoy even more of my trip to China!
I'm a Junior accounting major at Gonzaga Universtity in Spokane, WA. I'm spending the academic year (Sept 07 - April 08) studying abroad in Florence, Italy!! I am spending a lot of time traveling around Italy and Europe and enjoying Florence as much as I can when I am not busy with my school work, of course. ;)
Jessica Minor c/o Gonzaga-in-Florence Via Giorgia La Pira 11/13 50121 Firenze, ITALIA
Places I've Traveled...
Germany: -Berlin
Poland: -Krakow
Czech Republic: -Prague
Italy: -Florence -Isle of Elba -Cinque Terre -Pisa -Bologna -Sorrento -Amalfi -Capri -Pompeii -Rome -Ravenna -Faenza -Venice -Siena -San Gimignano -Assisi -Lucca -Pienza -Montepulciano -Montecello -various teeny towns from in the car -Antognod -Cervinia (Matterhorn)
Spain: -Barcelona
Bosnia: -Medjugorje -Mostar
Croatia: -Dubrovnik
Vatican City (it is its own country)
Netherlands/Holland: -Amsterdam
Belgium: -Brussels
China: -Beijing -Shanghai -Hong Kong
Austria: -Innsbruck -Vienna
England: -London
Scotland: -Glasgow -Paisley -Loch Lomand -Luss -Edinburgh -Stirling -Glencoe -Loch Lochy -Isle of Skye -Loch Ness -Inverness -Culloden -Kinguisse -Dunkeld Cathedral -Bridge of Allan (town, not a bridge) -Aucterarder -lots more on the tour that we drove through or stopped at briefly for snacks and toilettes
1 comment:
What's that onions-on-a-stick weird building in Shanghai?
Cute title, btw.
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