Last morning in villa – take a little sunshine, and take light breakfast (no butter!) and a bit more sunshine etc.
Pack and stroll and prepared to leave. Chat briefly with Max in the sunshine before leaving.
Uneventful journey to Shanghai p.m., checking in to Ramada Pudong airport hotel. Not special!
Snacked on toast etc. evening then early night after wrestling with ineffective air-conditioning!
27 April 2010
Light breakfast at Ramada followed by uneventful journey home!
Airport transfer was like clockwork, did duty-free shopping then boarded the plane on time only to sit on runway for an hour and a half – perhaps for Sarkozy!
Land at Heathrow one hour after scheduled time – Not too bad.
This was a light day on our itinerary. In particular, I would describe it as an “easy morning”:
23rd Shanghai -> Xian – “free morning” (read hour) in Shanghai – went to arts & crafts exhibition (shop) bought a few things -> hotel -> Mongolian Barbie (again!)…
…but the thing I didn’t mention directly in that note, despite one of the undocumented events of that morning being embedded in my memory, was the historic movement of my bowels.
Because, folks (and this is a matter that is rarely discussed in travelogues), I had, until that morning, spent the entirety of our China trip free of any bowel movement whatsoever.
Let me be clear about this. Between our departure from the Excelsior Hotel, Heathrow on 15th November until that morning of 23rd November just before leaving Shanghai…nada.
I even honoured myself with an:
Ex-Lax Award For Industry
This was not an entirely private matter on our tour. People on such tours talk about their bowel movements; in most cases because they are reporting excessive or unusual activity. My deficiency in that regard became a matter of some legend in our tour group.
“Any news?”, I would sometimes be asked by a curious (or plain nosy) fellow tourist at breakfast or perhaps at the start of the evening, after an hour or two of down time in the hotel. I’d reply with a doleful shake of the head, unwilling or unable even to simply say, “no”, or “not yet”.
I suppose this quiet morning in Shanghai was the first opportunity Janie and I had to sit still for a while, take stock on the many events of the holiday (including the lack of one particular type of event) and reflect.
Janie reflected that it was getting to the stage that further prolonging of the inevitable might be a health hazard for me. I was very resistant to the idea of taking medication which might easily send my system into the opposite, therefore even more troublesome, mode.
Janie tried some site-specific massage which, quite quickly, had the desired impact. A quite magnificent offering at that.
I think I might even have got a round of applause on the coach when we announced my (or perhaps I should say, our) delivery.
Flight to Xian -> long drive to hotel -> dinner at hotel and early night.
Of course there must be loads of big hotels in Xian now, but in those days we stayed in one simply named The Xian Hotel, as I don’t suppose there were all that many hotels in that city.
In that hotel, I awarded our floor boy (who was a girl):
The Brain Of China 1993
…although I cannot remember why. I also honoured the hotel itself with:
22nd Shanghai – Traffic! – Went to garden and around market in old town…
My comment on traffic was an abiding memory of the day – it took so long to get from place to place in Shanghai at that time. The city was growing much faster than its infrastructure would allow and it really was traffic bound. I honoured Shanghai with…
The Department Of Transport Award For Traffic Congestion
…which took some winning in China back then – all the cities were pretty congested, with a mixture of cars and bicycles, mostly the latter, not well separated.
…Jade Factory and Carpet Factory -> The Bund & Nanjing Road, on to Mongolian Barbecue…
I recall being fed “Mongolian Barbecue” on several occasions on that tour. It was a “bit of a thing” in England back then and I guess the Chinese thought that the English thought that this was sort-of Chinese food. Actually, it turns out that this “comedy dish – Mongolian Barbecue” is slightly more Chinese than I imagined, although it has no connection with Mongolia whatsoever.
Jade Buddha Temple including Monks Prayer Ceremony…
Janie and I loved this bit. Remember, this was before we became “templed-out” and “monks-prayered-out” – this was our first experience of such stuff.
-> Children’s Palace – Chinese violins, ballet, violins, computers…
-> dinner at Rooftop Restaurant (everyone else hated) -> early night
Interesting observation about the Rooftop Restaurant. I guess that Janie and I felt we were getting a rare authentic Chinese meal there, whereas many of the other tourists missed their sweet and sour balls and chips. I don’t really remember – Janie might recall more, but I awarded that restaurant:
The Egon Ronay Award For Most Appetizing Food
Praise indeed.
All the photos we took on that day – by which I mean all 57 photos – can be seen in raw form in the Flickr album below:
-> Embroidery Factory -> Water Gate and on to street market (Portobello style)…
I think we were advised/asked not to take photographs in that street market – it would be unheard of for Janie to resist taking pictures in a market otherwise.
Lunch -> sandalwood factory (fan making) with amazing solder artist…
…climbed pagoda…
We both felt the need to provide photographic evidence of the pagoda and the fact that we had climbed it.
-> railway station, train to Shanghai -> straight to dinner -> hotel -> Peace Hotel for Jazz Evening.
The Jazz evening was good fun. I’m not sure whether the loud-looking redhead is Katherine, but I did give an award to a couple named Matthew and Katherine:
The Richard Branson Award for extrovert behaviour.
All the photos we took on that day – by which I mean all 46 photos – can be seen in raw form in the Flickr album below: