Tuesday, 15 September 2009

The Last Post?...Maybe...but then again!.......

As my journey comes to an end, I attach a link to a short video of my own favourite pictures and moments. I also attach a montage video of some of the many great travellers and people I met and got to know along the way.
I've met some fascinating people and seen some incredible things that have stirred such emotions in me, from one end of the scale to the other. Along the way I've felt.... happy, ecstatic, nervous, terrified, overawed, confused, disorientated, tired, hyper, love, humility, horror, sadness, desire, anger, elation, courageous, invincible and also very insignificant at times. I can say hello and thank you in an extra 7 different languages and I know my way around 33 more towns and cities than I could before. I also realise how incredibly lucky I am to have been able to travel to the places I have seen.

I've arrived home to see the people I love and who love me after an amazing journey both personally and in miles. Thank you for following me on my travels. Hope to see or speak to you soon, I've missed you. I hope you find me a more tolerant and balanced person but ultimately still the person that you know. As they say in Asia, "Same, same......but different!"
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FN_pbiNOq00
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MwKisMoRm7k
(follow the link, then best to wait until the video buffers completely before playing)

Tuesday, 8 September 2009

A wonderful way to end my trip.........travelling home in style

On arriving at Beijing airport and showing BA check-in my e-ticket which detailed all the many flights I had taken with them and their flight partners over the last 5 months, I was delighted to be given a free upgrade to Business Class for the flight home. Wowee! What a way to come home, eh? I was one very happy traveller, I can tell you!

Monday, 7 September 2009

Homeward bound........

I'm starting to get excited about the thought of going home. First thing I'm going to have after I get through the door? A big mug of tea of course!!

Friday, 4 September 2009

A plethora of gorgeous sights to behold......(Beijing, China)

Well, it's been a busy week sightseeing and our feet are aching big time! But it's been worth it. Beijing is a fascinating, interesting and absorbing city. It is also massive and it takes a while to get around the main sites even with a great metro system, very reasonably priced taxis and a lot of stamina. Just to give you a rundown of the main ones I visited plus pics.....
Forbidden City:
This is a huge site and takes a minimum of 2-3 hours to do just the main parts. But it does conjure up the impressive images seen in the film, The Last Emperor, and the restoration work has really helped bring it to life.
Tian'Anmen Square:
A tiny bit disappointing as they had scaffolding over most of it. But a must because of its history. They now have a large amount of guards and cameras in place and you are searched before being allowed to enter to save a repeat of the public and student activity of the past.

Houhai district:
Locals gather here at night to spend time doing activities such as salsa dancing, badminton, skipping and a Chinese version of line dancing. Very surreal. Of course, I had to join in with the line dancing - the locals thought it was very funny that I did and I blended in seamlessly being the only Westerner in a line up of about 100 people!
http://picasaweb.google.co.uk/PocketGem/ChinaBeijing#

Summer Palace/Temple of Heaven/Lama Temple:
These are beautiful and so worth the visit.
http://picasaweb.google.co.uk/PocketGem/ChinaBeijingPalacesAndTemples#

Beijing Opera: This can be an acquired taste for Western ears but is famous in China. The female lead had the most piercing voice I have ever heard, very high pitched and it could lift the lid off a jam jar. But it was also very colourful and the second act was visually very exciting - see video links below for a taster.
Olympic Park:
I had to visit if only to see the Bird Nest stadium. The park is spread over a large area and they had some really interesting art scattered throughout it. It was also the quietest place I had been to in Beijing! As an aside, the stadium is now used for concerts aswell as sports events. To kick start this new stage of it's usefulness, it was said that they needed a big international male singing star as the first artist to perform there. Who do you think it was? Elton John? George Michael perhaps? Maybe even Billy Joel? No, it was that well known singer......Jackie Chan!
Oh, and somewhere along the line we managed to see England win the Ashes in an Irish bar in Beijing - a very multi cultural experience!

Wednesday, 2 September 2009

Could you remove the scorpions, please? ...........Chinese food

China has produced the greatest mix of strange, good and quite bad food of my travels. The quality of food within this country varies widely and I've had tasty and healthy food in the equivalent of a fast food outlet and dire quality food in more expensive restaurants. Very pot luck and I must admit the sin at times of being pleased that McDonalds and KFC were around and have taken over the world!
For Western palates, there are challenges. They eat tofu here with the most foul smelling sauce - it produced a massive gag reflex in three of us who were passing by the stall - and possibly explains away the street and toilet smells you come across here. Unless you specify otherwise, they chop chicken as it is with the bones and all. Chicken knees and ankles need a bit of practise to eat with chopsticks, I can tell you, and puts you in danger of whizzing a part of your dinner over to the next table. I decided to waive the opportunity of expanding my appreciation of international cuisine by passing on the roasted chicken feet and the fried ants, grasshoppers and scorpions which are considered very yummy here. Mad Mark was brave enough to try the fried scorpions - see the video evidence below! Also, abalone is not an Italian dessert but an ocean mollusc and sea cucumbers are like giant slugs, rather than a ocean equivalent of the vegetable we know. (They apparently have the peculiar ability to expel their internal organs when startled by a potential predator and then regrow them!) But anything that looks like a large, wet muscle turned inside out, is not for me I'm afraid. We were advised to peel fruit unless it was in a skin of its own such as bananas, due to the copious use of pesticides and the fact that they are often sold at the sides of busy roads - carbon flavoured apples have not caught on in the UK as of yet are far as I'm aware.
You are best going to a more expensive restaurant to enjoy the famous Beijing duck or Peking duck as it's still known, to really appreciate this dish and get a good quality bird. We ate this at my last hotel and it was decidedly tasty. Dishes I have really enjoyed are: boneless chicken with cashew nuts and chilli - in fact most things with chilli in so that the food made your lips go slightly numb were fine by me. Also, stir fried beef and peppers, meat and vegetable dumplings and broccoli dishes as they cook the vegetables 'al dente'. Sometimes the sweet and sour dishes came with a thin sauce rather than the thick, gloopy sauce we know in the UK and it was so much better for it. And you can always rely on rice, boiled or fried,...or McDonalds if nothing else appeals. :-))
http://picasaweb.google.co.uk/PocketGem/ChinaFood#
http://picasaweb.google.co.uk/PocketGem/AudraSTravelVideos#5379240906235275986