Tuesday, September 19, 2017 – Hangzhou – Bangkok
Since the French tour had to leave by 6:30, it is easy to
find a breakfast table. We’re completely
ignoring the American foods this morning and start with a crepe that is filled
with Chinese yummies. It tastes great
but probably doesn’t have a ton or food value, so I go foraging and come back
with assorted goodies, like a purple sweet potato, sour beans (I think those
small pieces are green beans), tofu, bok choy, and some others. And a second cup of coffee!
When I return we’ve acquired a new tablemate, a lady from
Quebec who enlightens us about the divide in the educational system between
French and English speakers. Soon her
husband joins us. He was a teacher and
adds details. It seems that the Catholic
church was quite adamant about the French speakers having separate
schools. Although all the schools are public,
there was quite a split. It is a little
different now and while there used to be discrimination against the
Fracophones, now the tables are turned and it is better to speak French than
English!
They also have a daughter-in-law who is not the same
nationality as their son, and they and Ginger compare their situations.
There is just time to go back upstairs, finish packing, and
go downstairs with all our luggage to check out and meet Julian. Everyone heads out to the bus and loads
up. We choose seats on the other side of
the bus, just for variety – and because I want a window that isn’t divided by a
support!
We have a three-hour drive ahead of us to Hangzhou where we
will take a boat ride on the West Lake (a UNESCO heritage site) and visit a green-tea
plantation. After dinner we will take an
Air China flight to Bangkok. It leaves
after ten and arrives around one in the morning. Flinch.
Julian starts us off with some more interesting data about
life in China. First he tells us that
each city has it’s own dialect and that it is not understood outside the
city. Because of this the government
requires everyone to speak Mandarin when conducting public business. He tells us that each character can be
pronounced four different ways, depending on whether the sound goes up or down
and how much. Each pronunciation has a
completely different meaning.
The women in Shanghai are called Dragon Ladies and their
husbands are all hen-pecked, doing all the domestic chores. The ladies accomplish this by never giving
their men any clues about what they are thinking. For example, if a man asks his lady what she
wants for lunch, she’ll say, “Anything is fine”. But to each thing he suggests, she’s say,
“No, I hate that.” Finally, in
exasperation, he’ll ask, “Well what the heck do you want?” and she’ll say,
“Anything is fine!”
Here they say that marriage is like graduating from
college. First you get a BA – barely
available; then an MBA – married but
barely available; then PhD – person who
has daughter!
Regarding the policy of only having one baby, Julian says
that is was only changed about three years ago, to allow two children. He says that it is very expensive to have
children for several reasons. One of
which is that, although English is taught in school, most children take classes
from private schools. A forty-five
minute class with, perhaps, fifteen students in it can cost two hundred yuan
per class.
Another reason it is so expensive, especially for boys, is
that a boy’s parents are expected to provide a house for their son and his new
wife. A girl’s parents only have to
provide some furniture and electronics.
Often, the boy’s parents will move out of their own home and give it to
their son! Many people still live with
their parents until they are twenty-eight or thirty! (Actually, that didn’t
sound so strange!)
There are parks where parents go with a photo of their son
or daughter. A parent will strike up a
conversation with someone and ask about the child – age, occupation, do he have
a house, etc. If they are pleased with the answers, they will ask to see a
picture of the child and the other parent will reciprocate. Then they will exchange the children’s email
or cell phone number and the kids will pursue the relationship! Many marriages
are arranged this way; in fact it is how
Julian met his wife!
When you are invited to a wedding you bring a gift of cash
in a red envelope. The newlyweds keep
track of the amounts, and when you get married, they will bring you a red
envelope with as much, or slightly more money!
The same is true for babies.
That’s why wedding invitations are called “red bombs”!
It is said that money lubricates relationships. If your child is in preschool with two
teachers and a nurse, you would bring a red envelope to the teacher or nurse so
she will pay extra attention to your child.
Also, if you are having surgery, you bring a red envelope to your
surgeon, even though there are signs in the hospital saying this is illegal.
Because the population is growing so quickly, the country is
losing farm land. They can’t grow enough
rice for the population, so it is imported from Thailand.
Julian told us a bit about Hangzhou. It is famous for its freshwater seafood and
is home to 98 Fortune 500 companies. The
residents are said to be very clever financiers and Julian called them the Jews
of China. It is considered a good place
to live because the air is good and the pace of living is slower than other
large cities.
If you want to be a monk, you must study Buddhism in college
for four or five years!
Interesting facts – there is no free health care in
China. Everyone pays into an old-age
pension and a health-care plan. There
are various levels of health-care plans.
There is also an income tax. If
you earn less than 2,800 yuan, you don’t pay any tax. It scales up from there from 5.5% to 45% if
you earn 70,000 yuan or more. Large
companies avoid this for their higher-level employees by giving them bonuses
instead of high salaries, since bonus don’t count toward your taxable
income. (Doesn’t sound very Communist to
me!)
Young people who can’t get good jobs in small towns often go
to Japan for several years to earn more money which they save and bring back to
China to buy goods and perhaps even a house.
During our three-hour journey to Hongzhou we have a rest
stop and Ginger discovers a monument to the first national congress of the
Chinese Community Party, held in Shanghai in 1921.
Back to the bus and on to lunch at the Royal Lily
Restaurant, with another pair of tables with glass lazy susans, some familiar
dishes, and more beer. AT the bar there
is a large jar with a poisonous snake in it.
They make snake wine by dropping a live snake into alcohol and leaving
it for six months. Julian says it is
very popular; but he hasn’t tried it!
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| Now these look like a communist country. |
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| Two extremes |
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| Snake wine - related to drunken shrimp? |
Our first official event is a boat ride on the West
Lake. There are mountains on three sides
of the lake with the city on the fourth. Although Julian says the air quality
today is good. You can barely see the
mountains for the haze. He calls it
“vapor”, not what we’d call it. After
the ride we have some free time to walk around and take pictures.
![]() |
| Our new best friend, Helen! |
Onward to the Tea Plantation, which is run by the government
and grows green tea. We watch a presentation
by a young woman who has studied the science of tea at university for five
years. She touted all the health
benefits of green tea with a visual presentation in which she used a glass to
symbolize the human body. She put some rice into the “body”, then added some
iodine which symbolized calcium (??).
She then added water to show that drinking water wouldn’t change the
black water. Then she added some of the
green tea we have all been drinking and the water cleared almost
immediately. In theory this showed that
green tea will detox your body.
![]() |
| Tea plants |
![]() |
| The tea leaves are fried in tea oil, from tea seeds, in these bowls. |
At the beginning of her talk everyone received a glass with
some green tea and a bit of hot (not boiling) water. We were to smell it and agreed that it smells
like spinach. Then we covered part of
the top of the glass and let the steam southe our tired eyes. It takes about thirty seconds for each
eye. Now we get enough hot water to fill
the glass and as the talk continues we sip our tea. She tells us that we can eat the leaves; but not to eat them all, as you can add water
five times before the leaves are finished.
The whole production is a sales pitch for the green tea
leaves that are picked in Spring and for Empress tea which is the very first
picking. The summer and autumn pickings
are inferior and go for export.
She is also selling tables of tea polyphenols. Both products are supposed to be good for
weight loss, diabetes, high blood pressure, kidney disease and gout. And there are specials if you buy large
amounts.
We stop for an early dinner (you know the scenario) and
nothing much is different. There are a
couple of new dishes and a different beer.
From here we go to the Hongzhou airport for our flight to
Bangkok. We arrive at 7:15 for our 10:40
flight. Julian leaves us here to return
to Shanghai by train to pick up another tour group. He tells us to line up for check in around
8:30; but that isn’t the three hours we
were told were mandatory. We sit for a
while, then decide to line up anyway, as there are lots of people in line. We have to decide if we’re “group” or
“economy” and choose the economy line, since that’s what is says on our
tickets. The ticket agents arrive a
little after eight. (So much for the
three hours) We make it through the
line, drop our bags, get our boarding passes and move on through the whole
process. At immigration we are told that
we need a departure card, so we go back and find those and fill them out. Back to the agent and on through customs to
security. Remove laptops but not shoes
and finally we are at our gate. What a
long day and it’s not over. It’s a
three-hour flight and who knows how long it will be until we get to our hotel.
Well it turns out that we cross a time zone, so the flight is actually four hours and when we have cleared all the hurdle to get out of the airport we find we are with another group, so fitting everyone's suitcases - and bodies - on the bus is a trick. But we arrive at our hotel, The Royal Orchid Sheraton and get our rooms sorted out. it's well after four in the morning by the time we are in our room. We are supposed to meet to load the bus at 7:30. One couple is quite annoyed; but everyone else understands that it's just life - get on with it!! Ginger opts for a couple of hours sleep and I just stay up. As the sun comes up we can see that we're on a river! Very pretty!






































I'm with Ginger! A couple hours of sleep is what I would have opted for since I'm horrible at staying up all night and then being coherent the next day. But then, you probably already knew that. You weren't in China long but did you feel you got plenty of the land, people and culture while you were there?
ReplyDeleteThis is wonderful! Thank you so much for sharing your journey!
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