Thursday, August 30, 2012

Hotels - part 2

Travelling is such hard work, especially in the planning. So many hotels to look at and evaluate. What crieria - location, customer reviews, amenities, price and complimentary WI-FI.

After a couple of solid days we have now completed all but one of our bookings. Looking over them, there is an eclectic mix.

Kunming - Fairyland Hotel Dongfeng Square - no images worth showing.

Dali - Mountain Delights - just outside the old town but the reviews were great and the bus stop close.



Lijiang - FarnerBa Hotel - good reviews, wi-fi, just outside the noisiest part of the old town but a close walk. One factor was that, unlike many hotels in the old town, a taxi can actually get to the front door.


Yuanyang - Yunti Hotel -  hard to book a hotel here on-line. This one looks OK and has had reasonable reviews. The location is as good as they get here.


Guilin - JIngGuanMingLou Museum Hotel - located on one of the lakes, it is central but with views and some nice walking.


Yangshuo - Camellia Resort - I hope we get a room with this view. If not we will have to spend some time in the restaurant.



Huangshan - this is a stop-over place on the way to and from XiDi so we chose two hotels. The first, the Huangshan Hukaiwen Hotel is close to the bus station for the following morning. A fairly utilitarian choice.


The second hotel, also just for one night, looks a bit more interesting. The Huangshan Design Boutique Hotel is located close to the train station for the next morning. The exterior looks harmless enough, but the rooms .....





Nanjing - Orange Hotel - good location and we couldn't resist the fruit on the bed.


And finally, Shanghai - the Elegance Bund Hotel - less elegant than the name might suggest but a good location, close to the Bund and Nanjing Road, and what looks like the world's smallest hotel 'swimming' pool.



That's it. Just waiting for an email from the last hotel - perhaps they couldn't understand my Chinese.

Thursday, August 23, 2012

Hotels - part 1

We made a start today. As mentioned previously we had already booked a place in Beijing, next door to Brent. Today we looked at our next three destinations - Pingyao, Xian and Leshan.

In Pingyao it was impossible to go past a place called Cheng Homes for The Aged Folk.




Xian is a much bigger city and the hotels all looked a bit boring. We eventually settled on the Citadines Central, mainly because it was, well, central. Besides, who could resist that lobby and, in case we don't get enough walking, a gym.




The choice in Leshan was even more limited. We are tending to do most of our bookings through Agoda. They have been good in the past and it enables us to pay by credit card before we leave rather than carry a bundle of cash - a lot of hotels won't accept credit cards at the door. Anyway, Agoda only had three hotels in Leshan. I guess we won't spend much time in it - the wonderfully named Anyi 158. Who knows where the other 157 are. 



More bookings another day. This travel business is tiring.

Tuesday, August 14, 2012

Train Bookings

It looks as if most of our train trips have now been booked.
Mind you, it took some time to go through the timetables and choose the trains that best fit our proposed itinerary. Then there was the issue that tickets are not made available or issued until shortly before the date of the train's departure - a somewhat uncertain and changing 5-20 days before. This makes it a little difficult to plan in advance with certainty. But leaving it all until we arrived in China raised the prospect of endless hours at railway stations across the country trying to buy tickets, often with only Chinese spoken.

The best option we found was to use an online agent. They charge a fee of about $24 per ticket for their services. Sometimes this is higher than the actual ticket price, although not for overnight sleepers or long journeys. It seems worthwhile, however, as they obtain the tickets and deliver them to your various hotels across the country.

We ended up using travelchinaguide.com. Their website had easy access to the train timetables. They also had free phone access in Australia as well as China, Skype, MSN. We couldn't book online as we didn't have all our hotel bookings made so did it all by email. They were quick and efficient. Lets hope the rest of the process goes as smoothly.

Now it's on to looking at hotels.

Monday, August 6, 2012

Visas

We had been told that it might be hard to get a visa for more than 30 days in China. One of Andi's fellow Chinese language students had planned a longer trip but only been given a 30 day visa. She eventually got a longer one but only after some difficulty and extra fees.

Forearmed with this knowledge we applied with a detailed itinerary and accompanying letter explaining why we wanted a 60 day visa. With no consulate in Adelaide we couldn't speak to anyone personally and just had to post the application to Canberra.

Within the stated 10 days, back came our passports with 60 day visas inside. No problem at all.

Next job is to try and book some railway tickets online.

Initial Bookings

To get things started we have booked our flights and our first week's accommodation in Beijing. The five star Swissotel was recommended by Brent and is located next door to his place. At about A$90 a night it looks like luxury we can afford. It is also located close to the centre of the city and on the railway line.

#1 China

Planning is underway for the first of the big ten.

The idea is to fly into Beijing and, eight weeks later, fly out of Shanghai. In between, a long anti-clockwise sweep by train should enable us to see a reasonable bit of the country.



View China in a larger map