“English” on signs

I included some funny English signs in the post about the journey to Longquan; I saw a lot all in on the same day, mostly in the same place. But I saw and took photos of others in various other places. Rather than put them in posts about those places, I’ve collected the rest of the strange English signs here. Enjoy!

Continue reading “English” on signs

Sightseeing in Shanghai

My parents’ visit is coming to an end, and they will shortly fly off from Shanghai Pudong Airport back to the US (via Seoul), and Siqi and I will return to our home and respective offices Hangzhou. But we have time to see a few more sights before we part.

See below for photos of The Bund and Yu Old Street (including some from 2010!), plus a couple of Shanghai Hongqiao Railway Station, where Siqi and I caught the train back to Hangzhou.

Continue reading Sightseeing in Shanghai

The Shanghai Museum

Although the Wikipedia article hasn’t realized it yet, there are currently *two* Shanghai Museum locations: the old one on People’s Square on the west bank of the river in Huangpu District, which opened in 1996 and is shaped like a ding (an ancient round bronze cooking vessel), and the extremely new huge rectangular one in the east in Pudong New Area, which opened in phases in 2024 (February, June, December). The museum (in both incarnations) is dedicated to ancient Chinese art, and has galleries displaying bronze, calligraphy, paintings, seals (stamps or chops), ceramics, numismatics, and jade. It is waaay too big to see everything in one visit!

On our visit to the new location in the east, we borrowed some audioguide devices and went through the ceramics gallery and the jade gallery—and that was all we had time and energy for before dinner.

Casting around for a restaurant, we wound up at what turns out to be Tripadvisor’s first-ranked mid-range dinner restaurant recommendation for the whole city of Shanghai! It’s a Turkish restaurant called Efes, and it was fantastic.

See below for photos of the museum, lots of porcelain, and a bit of jade. Plus, read about what I discovered when I looked through photos from my visit to the old Shanghai Museum in 2010.

Continue reading The Shanghai Museum

Hengshan Garden Hotel, Shanghai

How do you choose a hotel when you travel? I wanted a nice hotel in Shanghai, somewhere reasonably central, not too expensive, and not too modern and soulless.

I figured I could skip the research phase of hotel selection and just book the hotel in the French quarter that I remember staying at before, in 2010—if I could figure out which one it was. Luckily, in 2010 I took a photo of the hotel sign!

Still, booking was not as straightforward as I assumed it would be. The hotel had been bought by the hotel next door, so the name had changed, from Hengshan Picardie Hotel to Hengshan Garden Hotel. Upon arrival, we discovered they had closed down what had been the main entrance on the corner. In fact, not just the lobby, but also the rooms we stayed in weren’t in the original building I remembered. Still, the experience was fine overall.

See below for 10 photos of the hotel, then and now.

Continue reading Hengshan Garden Hotel, Shanghai

Impression West Lake

Someone at some point recommended seeing the Impression West Lake show, and my parents expressed interest, so we made a plan to go and went. Siqi drove us to the Yellow Dragon Stadium complex and parked, and we all walked to the ticket office, had dinner at a noodle place nearby, watched the show, and went back to the car.

See below for 20 photos from our walk and the show.
Continue reading Impression West Lake

Back to Hangzhou

On the way back to Hangzhou, we detoured to two places that had been recommended to us by the hotel guy in Huangshan City.

First, we tried to visit Ancient Huizhou town. We drove there, parked, got out,  visited the washroom, went in the ticket office… and decided we just weren’t up to it. It was just too sunny and hot for walking around. So we got back in the air-conditioned car and left. In the parking lot, I got some photos of car license plates that I needed for my collection of photos of car license plates, so that was good.

Then, we went to another tourist site, a place with yellow mud Hui-style houses. Same problem, but worse: we would have had to take a shuttle bus into the tourist area, which would have made it hard to leave if we got tired of walking around. We called it quits and headed back to the highway to Hangzhou. But we enjoyed the scenery on the little roads on our detour, and the mountains along the highway looked pretty cool too.

See below for 16 photos from our drive from Huangshan back to Hangzhou.

Continue reading Back to Hangzhou

Liyang Old Street, Huangshan City

The driver we hired picked us up in a van at the park exit and took us back to the neighborhood of our hotel in Huangshan City, a vibrant retail area called Liyang Old Street. We went back to the hotel for a rest, then went out again later for dinner. See below for a handful of photos, including another of our hotel’s cats!

Continue reading Liyang Old Street, Huangshan City

Walking down Yellow Mountain

We went back to the same cable car partly the same way and partly a different way. There were stairs up and stairs down… lots of stairs. There were more other tourists walking around. We saw a lot of porters, which I think means the path we followed was either the shortest or the least interesting, because porters would want to take the shortest and/or least crowded path from the cable car station to the hotel. We also saw a lot of water rushing down the mountain. And we got a few more glimpses of mountains and trees in the mist.

Continue reading Walking down Yellow Mountain