Monday, September 18, 2017 - Shanghai
First a word of explanation.
We asked Julian why we couldn’t get Google or Gmail or Blogger and he
said it was because the United States sided with the Dalai Lama, so the Chinese
government blocked them! This entry will
post when we are settled in Thailand tomorrow evening. Now back to our regularly-scheduled program!
The Holiday Inn breakfast buffet is eye-popping! They have to appeal to so many different
international visitors that you can get just about anything you want!! It’s so hard to choose!! We are starting to get to know some of the
people on our tour and that’s fun.
After breakfast we hurry back up to the room and are
downstairs in time to meet Julian at 8:45, our appointed hour. We all hop on the bus and head for our first
stop, the Shanghai Museum, in downtown Shanghai. The drive takes about an hour and Julian is a
wealth of information about Shanghai.
Shanghai is “the city above the sea” and is one of the four largest cities in
China. The looong bridge we saw last
night is the longest bridge in China at 34 km.
The population of the city is 21 million, with two airports and 78
long-distance bus stations. There is a
floating population of 3.5 million.
The trees we see everywhere are camphor trees. When a girl is born, the family plants to
camphor trees and when she marries they are cut down to make boxes for her
wedding gifts, generally of silk which is a major Chinese product. Nowadays many people live in apartments and
can’t plant trees, so the boxes are purchased.
Camphor oil is also good for putting on mosquito bites.
All the beautiful furniture is made of mahogany; but there aren’t any mahogany trees! That’s because the silk traders took their
silk to southeast Asia and couldn’t bring back empty ships because that is
unsafe; so they brought back mahogany!
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| Truly a modern city, or at least what we could see. |
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| Very large Buddhist temple in the heart of the city. All yellow buildings are either temples of palaces. |
The Huangpu river divides the city into an eastern half and
a western half. It also used to divide
the rich from the poor. This changed
after the president visited in the 1980s and encouraged the construction of a a
new commercial center on the “poor” side of the river. The four largest buildings in Shanghai are in
this center. There is one that was
designed by a Japanese architect with a large circular hole at the top. It looked like the Japanese flag and the
Chinese government made him change it.
Now it looks like a bottle opener!
And from the side it looks like a Japanese sword!
Newly constructed buildings are all designed to sway in a
typhoon.
There are four million cars in Shanghai, with a thousand
more being bought each day. They are
primarily VWs and Buicks. GM has two
plants in China. No one buys Japanese
cars; they are called “moving coffins”
because they are so light. (As a side
note, the Chinese antipathy toward anything Japanese is not well concealed by
our guide!) A Buick costs about $20,000
to purchase; however, you must also buy
a license plate. If you do so in
Shanghai, it will cost another $15,000, to discourage even more traffic on the
congested streets. Smart people,
therefore, go to a close-by town to purchase their cars and plates, where a
plate might cost only $200! The drawback
to this plan is that you can only drive on the surface roads. If you are caught on one of the elevated
expressways you get four points on your license. If you get twelve points in a year, you have
to take the driving course again. It is
380 hours long and costs $2,500!!
There are taxis in six different colors. The green ones are best but you should never
take a red one. They are private and
will rip you off.
“Do you know BMW?”
“Sure, Bavarian Motor Works”.
“Yes, German car; but not in China.
Here is biking, metro, and walking!”
That’s how most Chinese travel in the cities.
Housing is extremely expensive which is why there are so
many apartment buildings. If you
purchase a house, you may only live there for seventy years because the
government owns the land and can kick you out then. A one-hundred square meter house in a
not-so-good part of Shanghai will cost about 8 million yuan or about 1.1
million dollars. A house in a good
location will go four about $25,000 per square meter!!
The air quality in Beijing is so bad that it is call “Gray
Jing”! Another funny thing – iPhones are
called “kidney phones” because young men who can’t afford one will sell a
kidney to get the money!!
Another interesting tidbit – there is a dish called drunken
shrimp. They put the shrimp in Chinese
alcohol with is about 50 to 60% and leave them for about half an hour, until they
are drunk! Then they eat them alive!
Our first stop of the day is the Shanghai Museum, which is
four stories tall and filled with cultural treasures. As we’re waiting in line for security, we
meet Helen from Washington State. She’s
a retired special ed teacher, and a quilter!
There are several other educators in our group, too!
We only have an hour to see as much as possible and start at
the top, working downward. The very
first exhibit is clothing from the many different parts of China, though it’s
history! We might have spent all day
there! We tear ourselves away and
investigate as many other galleries as possible, including the jade gallery,
the furniture gallery (Wow!) and the bronzes.
We really needed a whole day!!
Our next stop will be the silk museum, so Julian educates us
before we arrive. Silk worms will only
eat mulberry leaves and the leaves have to be dry and clean or the worms will
get diarrhea and die! They are described
as “delicate as babies”! Their droppings
can be put into pillows to cure headaches. Each cocoon produces a filament that
is one to one and a half kilometers long!
It takes two hundred cocoons to produce enough silk for one man’s
tie. Good silk thread is made from
twisting together eight filaments. Cheap
silk goods are made from threads with only two or three filaments and will come
apart after a few washings. “You get
what you pay for.”
The cocoons are put in hot water to kill the pupa; however the Cantonese will eat them
fried. Julian says they taste
awful! That’s why it is said that the
Cantonese will eat anything with four legs, except a table”!
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| Stretching the filaments to make a silk duvet, which is covered in bamboo. |
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| When you want something you can't have, take a picture! |
At the silk museum we are shown the entire process from worm
to cocoon to filaments to actual silk products.
They sell clothing and ties and purses and sheet sets; but the best thing is silk duvets!! They are
so light-weight and guaranteed not to bunch up or make you too hot. It’s an effective sales pitch, especially
since Ginger loves hers and I’ve always wanted a duvet! She tells me not to get the silk cover,
though, because it will make the duvet slide right off the bed!! Now I’ve got to carry this thing for another
three weeks or so!! But it will be worth
it!
After the silk museum comes lunch with our new best
friends. To get there we drove along the
Bund and could see all the financial buildings that have been there for more
than a hundred years. They include the
Bank of China, the Customs House, the China Merchants Bank, AIA, and numerous
others.
We are seated at two round tables for ten or so. There is a
large glass lazy susan in the middle of each table and the serving dishes are
put on it. People serve themselves from
the closest dishes and then the glass is moved around for access to new
goodies. We have hot tea and beer to
drink and I think there must have been ten different offerings, each one
delicious.
We are right by the river, so after lunch we climb upstairs
to see the modern architecture across the river, making a stark contrast to the
Bund. We wander a little further down to
get a different angle, then go back down to street level to check out the Bund
a little more.
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| See the one that looks like a bottle opener? |
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| This one is a copy of Big Ben and sings every quarter hour. |
Back to the bus for the Embroidery Museum. These are truly works of art. Some look like photographs and others like
oil painting. It is hard to believe that
they are done with needle and thread.
Some are even two sided, with a different image on each side! There is a short demonstration, then we are
free to gaze in awe and wonder, just like in any art museum. There are price tags; but for us it’s a
museum! They also have silk rugs that
remind us of our trip to Turkey.
Next we are driven to Shanghai’s luxury shopping street, Nanjing
Road, It is like the Champs Elysees in
Paris or Rodeo Drive. Julian warns us
not to go with anyone who says he has a warehouse filled with bargains. He says we will go through here kitchens, two
bathrooms and wind up locked in a warehouse until we agree to buy
something! Also, don’t agree to help someone
practice his English over a cup of coffee.
After a few minutes he or she will remember that they have to go home
and study, and you will be stuck with the bill.
Those two coffees might cost as much as two hundred dollars!
We’re not big shoppers, so we start by having a mint ice
cream cone and people watching. Then we
head back to our meeting spot; but we take a detour down a side street and
Ginger finds a gorgeous blue and gold tea cup that comes with it’s own diffuser
and lid! It is worth noting that we
weren’t as impressed with this street as with others we’ve seen elsewhere, certainly it is nothing like Tokyo!
Back on the bus we go to the fanciest hotel in Shanghai, the
Portman Ritz-Carlton. It’s where
President Clinton stayed! The Shangai
Centre is part of the complex and we ride the escalator to the top floor, where
there is a theater that probably seats about a thousand people. Julian says he will tell us the regulation –
which states that there will be no videos or still photography. He then says that in China regulations are
sometimes suggestions and that as long as you don’t use flash, photos are
probably all right. I’m willing to take
the chance, especially since the entire audience is made up of Sinorama
clients! We’re going to see an acrobatic
show.
The performers are all lovely and skilled although not
really acrobats. There are several
balancing acts, an aerial silk artist, a couple who work on a pole and also a
magician, a juggler, and two clowns, one of whom spins plates and throws
knives! They are, fittingly enough, the
comedy relief!
After the show we drag back to the bus and head home. Even though there’s no internet or Google,
there is still typing to do and photos to post.
Ginger manages to get on line and, using Safari, can access Bing; but my machine is still stuck on the old
password and it doesn’t matter anyway.
Tomorrow night we’ll be in Thailand, and I’ll bet they don’t care about
the U.S. and the Dalai Lamas!
We’re to meet Julian in the morning at 9:15, with our
luggage, so we can move on to the next stop and eventually fly to Bangkok! (That sounds even more exotic to me than
China!)






































Glad I'm not driving! I couldn't understand the signs no matter how hard I tried!
ReplyDeleteBut you already know how to drive on the wrong, er, other side of the road! It's getting so I can't remember how we do it, between New Zealand, Ireland, China, Thailand, and Japan!!
DeleteFascinating! So should we bring kidney phones to sell in Thailand? Would we be profiteering? Only joking. Did you have to wear masks to breathe? Would I be okay with asthma? Trish wants to go to Shanghai to visit Disneyland when she gets her Doctorate and Emma graduates from Univ. of Hartford. But there appears to be so much more to see and do than the Mouse in his Asian house.
ReplyDeleteWe only woe masks when we rode the tuc-tucs or the pick-up trucks, because then you are right down in the traffic, where the air is the most polluted. I think you'd be fine if you took cabs or were on a tour bus. As for the Mouse, it seems to me that a mouse is a mouse, regardless of his house; but that's just me. Did you see much difference between the American Mouse and his French cousin?
DeleteActually there is a difference - in crowds & people. Paris had two different rides (Crush ride & Ratatouille) & some rides were faster or more exciting. Shanghai has a TRON ride that looks very cool.
DeleteThen my all means indulge!!
Delete