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Over the Easter Holy Week break, Ray’s mom, sister, brother-in-law and nephew flew to Shanghai for a week long tour of China along with our family. The first night, we just got our bearings and laid low so that the group coming from the US had a chance to adjust their biological clocks after the 20-hour trip through 14 time zones. We did walk out Nanjing Road, a long international shopping area that stretches from People’s Park (near our hotel) to the Bund. With all the familiar western stores and restaurants with their English language signs in addition to all the Chinese characters (or Hanzi), we felt both at home and on the other side of the world.
We had set up some tours through an on-line website and had our own English speaking tour guide and private tour bus. When we left the hotel the first morning, a large 25-passenger coach bus was waiting for us. I questioned if others were going to join us, and found out that it was just us! We had a full schedule of places to go and see and plenty of room to do it with.
We visited many temples and gardens. The temples are large and filled with burning incense. Offerings that are made at the altars include money, script (pretend money) and food. The temples were very wide open and busy as people were moving in and out on their own schedules.
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One of the lighter moments occurred during one of our evening activities when we went to the Shanghai Center Theatre at People's Square to watch the Shanghai Acrobatic Troup. We were there early and had some front row seats, so I wanted to get some photos of our family waiting for the show to begin. I went up beside the stage and stepped into an area that was cut open in the stage and immediately fell from view. I had stumbled into the orchestra pit! I emerged to a nice ovation from the people in the audience.
Another highlight of the trip was our day tour to Suzhou, which has been called the Venice of China, as it is a city built in and around the waterways. It is about 100 kilometers from Shanghai to Suzhou, and took about 2-1/2 hours to get there. We stopped at one of the rest stops and had our first exposure to the eastern trough toilets. From that point on, we never let a western toilet go by unused.
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Our last stop was at the Humble Administrator's Garden. This was a beautiful garden area that included foliage, historic buildings and a large pond area with many walkways
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Due to the road construction between Suzhou and Shanghai, our 2-1/2 hour trip became over a 4-hour trip going back to Shanghai. Thank goodness we were not driving and we had a lot of room in the bus. It seemed like there was one stretch of about an hour were we moved less than a mile, keeping a large billboard in site for a very extended period of time.
In addition to the historical sites, we also made a few stops at local factories that allowed you to watch craftsmen at work, and then of course purchase their wares at the end of the tour. The silk factory was one of the most interesting tours. We watched how the silk was unwound from the silkworms cocoon and then turned into thread and eventually fabric. The conjoined cocoons are pulled apart rather than unwound and are actually used to make the interior of silk comforters. We got to stretch some cocoons over a bed-sized frame. A comforter is made up of many layers of stretched silk. Although very light, they offer tremendous warmth.
With the completion of the Shanghai portion of the trip, we loaded up and headed to Beijing.
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