пятница, 5 апреля 2013 г.

Yep! This is China!

China: Traveling Tips

(source: tripadvisor.com)

1.   Once you buy it in China, it is yours.  Like most foreign countries, make sure you are happy with the exact merchandise being sold to you.  Inspect what you intend to buy, and not a sample with a "factory sealed" package to be delivered upon payment.
2.   China has competitive and generally reliable electronics malls in the major cities.  Be sure you are geeky enough to make an informed purchase.  There are bargains, but do not expect the technical help you might get from your own electronics stores at home.
3.   You should be an experienced shopper to know what something is worth in a Chinese market.  
(totally true, in my experience you can buy ANYTHING (and I do mean anything!)
 at least 10 times less from the initial price)
Generally the shopkeeper will start at 10X what you should counteroffer.  You could ask strangers what they would typically pay for it.   Taxi prices are set by meter.  Food merchants naturally will jack up the price for foreign-looking people, so be sure to bargain.  Bargaining is an art in China.  If you do not care for it, have someone else buy things for you.
4.   Beggars and street people?  There are a few, but no where near the number of homeless on the streets of the U.S.  Chinese pay them no mind and neither should you.  Just walk on.  
5.   Like anywhere, some tourist attractions are overrated.  Avoid visiting mid-morning and mid-afternoon when group bus tours unload hundreds, if not thousands, of tourists to overrun a previously enjoyable attraction.  The cacophony of multiple battery-operated bullhorns in several languages will spoil any visit to a Chinese garden, the Great Wall or landscape scenery. 
(and don't even think about visiting during national Chinese holidays (01-10 October, 
Chinese New Year week's holiday) - unless 
you enjoy waiting in long-long-long lines with hundreds of Chinese people staring at you

6.  Tour groups are a good convenient way to see some outstanding things and get taken to tourist trinket stores.  When you ditch the tour you probably see more on your own, but with more time spent planning about being a stranger in a foreign land.  You cannot hope to get a pulse of the people on a typical tourism visit, as you will not be exposed to common worker Chinese, the hundreds of millions who form the majority in the country.  You will see a lot of Chinese hospitality industry workers who speak some English, and maybe some Chinese tourists who also are enjoying the country.  They are not at all representative of the country, 48% of which still live on the farm and do not speak one word of English, even if they allegedly learned it in school.

7.   Chinese people are delighted if you make any attempt to speak Mandarin, even if it’s only a couple of words.  The best way to introduce yourself is with a warm, broad smile.  Even when you might be upset or frustrated, smile.  It works.

8.     Traveling in China on its holidays can be a nightmare.  Plan your trip carefully so you know what to expect on the Chinese Official Holidays.  China-briefing.com is a good source, so search for the current year.  While the holidays may be the same from year to year, even tied to fixed dates, the entire holiday period will shift.  New schedules are posted in December, just a week or so before the year begins.   Do not assume the May Day holiday is May 1-3.  It might be April 29 and 30 and May 1.  That mistake might ruin sightseeing and cause you to be stranded without transport tickets. 
(already said that, but maybe you'll pay extra attention)

9.   Anyone who approaches you trying to practice English should be greeted with a smile and skepticism.  Most Chinese are shy and will not speak to you unless you speak first.  Those who overtly approach you and make the first move are likely to be selling something or worse.  Many tourists reports scams in Shanghai, so be friendly but careful.  Never ever follow a stranger anywhere.

10. Chinese restaurants with lots of foreigners (non-Chinese) are almost always unauthentic, as well as overpriced.  Usually frequented by group tours, these places change recipes to conform to what they think are "western tastes."  Many middle-class, white linen restaurants, hosting complete nuclear (three-generation) families around big round tables, have English menus with sometimes humorous translations.  The more crowded with families it is, the better value and food it has.  The menu's color pictures will help also.  If they just show you an English menu, ask to see both.  They might be pricing the food twice to five-times higher for tourists.  If so, just walk out before you drink any tea.   Compare the photos and prices.  No tipping in restaurants, taxis, or anywhere for that matter.
 (if you see a dish that looks like garbage - it's probably VERY TASTY
don't the look of it fool you, those who lived in China for a long period fully 
confirm this awkward relationship) 
11. Luxury goods are expensive in China, thanks to a luxury tax.  Go to Hong Kong to make a killing on name-brand bargains.  In China you can find some good buys in silk, pearls, jade and handicrafts, but you must study a bit to make sure you are getting the real thing.  Bone porcelain can be a good buy too, but it must be carefully packed for your air travel.
12. The internet is censored in China.  You need a VPN to see Facebook and any blog for that matter.  Hotel internet charges rise along with the room rates.  Lower cost three-star hotels will frequently have free wired and WiFi internet.  Luxury hotels will charge you USD$15-25 per day.  Internet cafes can be a huge inconvenience with lots of smokers and unclean surrroundings.  Book a hostel or hotel with free WiFi.  They are everywhere.
13. Before you leave home, get a good guidebook and buy street maps on line or in bookstores for cities you wish to explore. Free tourism maps are never to scale or easy to follow, with half the streets not there, names unclear. and big advertising splashed right across where you want to go.  Amazing how many people budget well over USD$1,500 per person for China travel, yet won't spend USD$30 for an excellent book to help them along the way.  DK Eyewitness Guides are well regarded for their color pictorals of everything there is to see, while Lonely Planet has logistics info on most anywhere you want to go.  Other books more resemble a group tour itinerary, only covering the overvisited tourism sights and avoiding any real detail.  
14.  Personal sanitation is important while traveling.  Since you are on the "tourist trail," you are actually mixing with people from dozens of countries on six continents, not just Asians.  Bring your own alcohol-based wet wipes for water-free hand sanitation.  Never drink tap water!  Bottled water is common everywhere and cheap at the corner convenience stores.  
15. Bring your own toilet tissue with you (I'm not kidding), as you will  rarely find a public toilet supplied with it.  Carry it always in your purse, camera bag or backpack.  Small flat travel packs (dry tissue and wet toilet wipes) are now available many places.  You may use little packs of alcohol wet wipes to go over places your body will touch. 

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