Thursday, February 19, 2015

Dalian, China.  Once again getting through Chinese immigration was a long process.  Because we left China last week to visit Japan and Korea we had to do the process all over again.  Their system is the worst we have experienced.  You would think that they would be pleased to welcome over 500 tourists this time of year, definitely not the case.  I do not think I saw a single smile or kind word from any of the immigration officials, they treated us like we were criminals trying to break into their country. The tour guides were very much the opposite, they were all young people and were very enthusiastic about showing us their city.  They actually got very emotional when we complemented them on their English and their guide skills.

Today was the first day of the Chinese New Year and their were many decorations throughout the city and many families enjoying the outdoors despite the very cold weather.  Our first tour stop was the "Green Hill" platform to see a view of the city (it was not very green this time of year!).  The city is known for its squares and we visited several of them, the Russian designed "Zhongshan Square", The "People's Square" across from the local government building and a popular place to fly kites, and the huge "Xinghai Square".  This square was very impressive, completed in 1997 it is the largest in Asia, over 12 million square feet (twice the size of Tiananmen Square in Beijing.  It has an amusement park, many interesting sculptures, beautiful landscaping and it is surrounded by modern tall apartment buildings and hotels.  We were told that the whole square, including the landscaping, is lighted at night.  We also drove their winding coastal road to the city's most popular beach "Tiger Beach".  The last stop was at a tourist oriented shopping center.  By the time we reached the shopping center it was after 4 pm and it was starting to get colder so we decided to just catch the ship's shuttle bus back to the dock.

This will be the last post.  We are in Tianjin on Friday morning and will spend the night there.  We are not taking any tours as we have been here before and it is a long drive for any of the offered tours.  We will be leaving the ship early Saturday morning for the three hour drive to the Beijing airport.  We will arrive back in Las Vegas on Saturday as we gain a day heading home.  Thanks to those of you that followed the blog.  Tom wrote many of the comments but Noel did the post and pictures.  Thanks dear - good job.  Tom has also learned that he is far too compassionate and understanding and has vowed to change.





Our ship was greeted by colorfully costumed folk dancers

There were eight of these huge lanterns in "People's Park"

There were four of these huge New Year displays around the Xinghai Square.  We have heard them called goats, sheep and rams?

Around the perimeter of the square there were sculptures representing different sports

Huge apartment buildings surrounded the square, we were told that they were the most expensive in Dalian.

The amusement park was busy despite the cold

Six star "Castle Hotel"

Huge sculpture of five tigers at "Tiger Beach"

As in other Asian cities they do like to have animated lights on their buildings!


Wednesday, February 18, 2015

Incheon and Seoul, Korea.  We came in through the locks at 6:30 in the morning, really bitter cold, right around freezing temperature.  We are shipping four pieces of luggage from this city as they do not have the restrictions on the content as we would face in Beijing, ie: nothing but clothing.  This turned into a nightmare as no one seemed to know what was going on and the customs officials seemed to be arguing about it.  We had been told that we would need to identify our bags on the dock at 8:15 but they had not even been taken off the ship by that time and the passengers were starting to leave for the early tours so the crew was waiting for the line to stop which was not happening as they just kept calling more tours to the buses.  Finally the cruise director stopped the line of passengers so the bags could be off loaded.  Tom went into theater to wait for our tour to be called and Noel went out to the dock to "id" our bags.  It was really freezing outside.  Noel waited for 20 minutes, turning into a popsicle, and no one seemed to be around and the bags had been driven off in a truck. Tom finally came with the tour tickets and we decided to just go ahead and leave.  Later we found out that other people sending luggage had been driven to the customs office in a van to id their luggage and send it through the scanner.  Luckily one of the other passengers knew us and when they were going to leave our luggage he told them it was his and was able to get it processed.  We really owe him big time!  Thanks John!
On our previous visit here, Tom visited the DMZ and Noel had taken a city tour so we took a city tour this time.  We say the Jogesa Buddhist temple, The Presidential compound, Insadong shopping street, and the Deoksugung Palace.  We had a good tour guide and he gave us a lot of his personal insight into the situation with North Korea, most interesting.  Only two days left, but we are ready to go home.
Colorfully decorated Buddhist Temple

Large tile mural at the beginning of shopping street

Entrance gate to Deoksugung Palace

Guards outside the palace

Tom with the head guard

Thousands of new cars awaiting shipment

Ship's atrium decorated for Chinese New Year

Tuesday, February 17, 2015

Kobe, Japan, Happy Valentines Day!  We had a smooth night of sailing and arrived in early afternoon.  It was very cold.  As this was the ship's first visit to Kobe we were greeted with a water display from a fire boat.  There were also many people lining the balcony of the cruise terminal, many waving flags.  Some officials came on board to present flowers and gifts to the ship.  We cancelled our afternoon tour as it was very cold and our scheduled tour was to ride a tram to the top of a mountain to view the sunset.  We were able to use the time to go into the cruise terminal to take advantage of the free WiFi.  The next morning we had an early tour, 8 hours to Kyoto.  The weather was cold with light rain.  There was not much to see on the 1 hour drive as the highway is mostly enclosed in high walls, luckily we had brought our books to read.  We visited another World Heritage site, "Nijo Castle".  this dates to 1603. We then went to a Japanese lunch in a nice restaurant with a beautiful garden. Of course many passengers on our tour complained about the food!  Our other stop was a famous "Golden Pavilion" also with impressive gardens.  It was Sunday and the Kyoto marathon was being held.  This made for many closed streets and lots of people causing our bus to have to take several detours.  We noticed about 20 McDonalds during the day and many other US brands, our bus even gave out water from Costco!
Entrance to Nijo castle

Part of the castle grounds

Our Japanese lunch

Kyoto marathon runners

The "Golden Pavilion"

300 year old tree grown on a bamboo frame

Monday, February 16, 2015

Hiroshima, Japan.  After a day at sea we had a nice sail in to the harbor through hundreds of islands.  The surrounding waters have hundreds of oyster beds on raised frames.  The oysters have been raised here since the Shogun era.  The weather was clear and cold, about 40 degrees.  We had to clear Japanese immigration with a temperature check, fingerprinting, and facial recognition, it took a long time to clear 580 passengers.  We skipped a tour to the Peace park, site of the 1945 atomic bomb blast as we had previously been to the Nagasaki site and thought the narrative was very biased.  As an alternative tour we took a trip to Miyajima Island that we reached by ferry boat after a short bus ride.  The island is the site of  Itsukushima, a famous Shinto shrine, that dates to 593 and is a Unesco World Heritage site.  It is built on stilts and the water comes in under it at high tide, it makes for some dramatic photos, unfortunately it was low tide when we visited. There are hundreds of small deer everywhere, they are very tame and even go into the shops.  There were many souvenir shops and other      shops selling a local specialty, a sponge cake in the shape of a maple leaf with different fillings.  There was only one ATM and it was very busy, but we did find a shop that took credit cards so we bought a selection of the cakes to try.  Tom thought this qualified as a Valentine gift.
O-Torii gate is 16.6 meters high and weighs 60 tons, it is free standing

Noel and her new friend

Tide was just starting to come in under the shrine

Machine making the small cakes

Ship's atrium decorated for Valentine's Day

Fancy Valentines desserts for afternoon tea

There were two huge ice sculptures at afternoon tea, unfortunately most passengers were on tour and did not see them.

Thursday, February 12, 2015

2/9  This was our roughest night at sea so far, 40 knot head wind and the swell was over 20 feet.  Around midnight it was really rough and we thought we would bounce out of bed!  The sliding door to our balcony came open and the wind sucked the sheer drape outside.  Noel made it across the room by hanging on to the furniture to close the door, Tom never woke up!  It finally calmed down about 4 am.

2/10 and 2/11 Shanghai, China, We arrived at our dock on the Huang Po river at about 6:30 am.  It was very cold, somewhere around 36 degrees F.  We had an afternoon tour so were able to relax around the ship in the morning.  The first part of the tour was to the Shanghai Museum where they have a vast collection of ancient pottery and ceramics, jade, furniture, art, calligraphy and more.  It is a nicely designed modern building and the displays were well done with descriptions in both Chinese and English.  Our next stop was the Yuan Garden in the middle of "Old China Town".  The garden is hundreds of years old and has beautiful buildings as well as decorative plants, trees and limestone rock formations.  Since it is the middle of winter none of the plants were in bloom but were showing buds.  We visited a silk shop and figured out how to use an ATM.  Getting Chinese Yuan from a bank account in Las Vegas in 10 seconds amazes us.  There were evening tours offered but since we had done them on a previous visit we stayed on board and had dinner. We were seated by the window on the river side so we could watch the dinner cruise boats sail by.  Many of the boats had elaborate decor and bright lights including large advertising signs.

On the morning of the 11th we took an early (7:45 am) tour to Zhujiajiao, a water village.  The Chinese refer to it as "like Venice, Italy" (that is really a stretch).  We had a good tour guide and she took us for a walk through the narrow winding streets where we visited  an old post office and a Chinese pharmacy.  We had about a half hour of free time and then boarded a boat for the trip on the canal back to the entrance where our bus was waiting. It was an enjoyable day other than the horrible traffic we encountered on our way back to our ship. Our bus driver was very aggressive and changed lanes continually causing a lot of cars to honk and slam on their brakes.  We won, the bus is bigger!

Shanghai continues to grow by leaps and bounds.  There are many new sky scrapers and huge new apartment blocks since our visit in 2008.  Many of these buildings are very modern designs and it looks like each one tries to out do all the others.  Old housing areas are just being torn down and the residents are relocated far out of the city.  Shanghai has about 24 million residents, double the number of when Tom visited here 20 years ago.  The air quality was fair while we were in Shanghai, but certainly better than when we visited in 2008 when we could not see across the river.

We will not have access to email or phone calls while in Japan, something to do with the ships system not being compatible with the system in Japan.  So will probably not be able to post anything for a few days.
The view across the river from the ship
The Shanghai History Museum
The McDonalds in "Old China Town" seemed very popular
One of the buildings in the Yuan Garden
One of the more elaborate dinner cruise boats
Buildings in water village are combo of homes and businesses
Inside the very old Chinese pharmacy
Our boatman

It was cold enough to wear the down coats!
One of the more bizarre buildings with these weird "pod" things hanging in the middle



Saturday, February 7, 2015

We were at sea on February 6 and continue to be amazed at the number of small fishing boats that are well over one hundred miles from land.  One of our recent tour guides mentioned the fact that many fishermen have had to give up fishing because of depleted fish counts, this is certainly not surprising given the huge number of boats we have seen, many dragging huge nets between two boats.
We arrived at Xiamen, China at 8 am and had to endure the usual bureaucratic mess entering China.  We had to have both our passports and a "certified copy" of our passport, then we had to stand in a huge line to have the "police" compare our copy to our original and put a bar code and stamp on our copy that we have to use to check on and off the ship the entire time we will be in China. Since we docked overnight in Xiamen we have had at least 6 or 8 Chinese officials on the ship the whole time.  They certainly take advantage of the   situation, they are constantly in the coffee area and the restaurants and it is obvious that the crew does not like to wait on them.  Last night we were having dinner in the small Italian restaurant on the top deck.  During the day this is the buffet for breakfast and lunch but at night it is sit down Italian.  Just after we were seated, 7 Chinese officials came in, the staff was not quite sure what to do with them as this restaurant gets full very quickly as it is only half the size it is during the day.  They did seat them at two tables and then tried to explain that it was not buffet and they would have to order off the menu and it appeared that they did not really understand and probably could not read Italian or English! (the menu has both).  As the restaurant started to get busy the staff started to panic and eventually called for a management person who made an excellent decision and moved the Chinese over to the closed side of the restaurant and just brought them a variety of food, problem solved!
Our tour during the day was a "Day at Quanzhou", which is a historic seaport.  It was a two hour drive on fairly good highway but the local drivers do not seem to understand the concept of driving in your own lane.  Our bus driver appeared to drive with one hand on the horn constantly honking at other vehicles to warn them that we were coming!  Motor bikes were not allowed in Xiamen but there were thousands of them in Quanzhou and traffic was intense for a Saturday morning.  We toured a Buddhist temple and a ship museum where they had a relic of a 700 year old ship on display.  Of course the signage touted the superiority of the Chinese even centuries ago.  We had lunch at a hotel and luckily had a couple at our table who lived in Arizona but were originally from Taiwan and spoke Chinese so they were able to find out what we were eating!  After lunch there was another walking visit to a mosque and a temple.  Noel did the visit and Tom stayed on the bus. This area is not visited much by foreign tourists and we were a bit uncomfortable as people really stared at us and were saying things in Chinese that sounded unfriendly.  We will probably cancel our tour for tomorrow as several people told us they did not think much of the tour we are scheduled for that they had taken today.
Decoration on the Buddhist Temple wall

Pagoda at the same temple

Relic in the ship museum

Hotel where we had lunch

Lunch with friends Mickey and Richard who had been on the South America cruise with us in 2012.

Elaborate decorations on second Buddhist temple

Thousands of motor bikes were everywhere

Going back to the ship through very fancy cruise terminal

Thursday, February 5, 2015

Hong Kong.  We had a beautiful sail into the harbor about one hour earlier that we had expected and docked on the Kowloon side of the harbor.  By 8 am the ship was very busy with a turnover of about 500 passengers as one segment ends and another begins.  We took a tour even though we have been here before, it is always a good idea to get out of the way as the hallways get crowded with lots of luggage and laundry and every crew member is very busy.  Our tour was more oriented to how the locals live since we had previously done all the tourist things.
We had a small tour group and were on a small bus so were able to maneuver in the traffic very well.  We made our way through the tunnel to Hong Kong. Our first stop was a "dry" market where an endless variety of dried fish, seafood, mushrooms, etc was displayed.  Every shop seemed to be selling the same things and most was even displayed in a similar manner.  Next we visited a "wet" market where shops sold fruits, vegetables, meats, flowers, etc.  After walking through this market we boarded a double decker tram that was crowded with locals.  We rode a short distance and went into a local cafe where we were served a very tasty egg custard tart and a choice of coffee, tea, or "yin yang" a combination of tea, coffee and milk.  Noel chose the tea and Tom tried the yin yang.  The tea was so strong that even with milk and sugar Noel could not drink it.  Tom was able to drink the yin yang.  We got back on our small bus and made our way back across to the Kowloon side where we visited a temple and walked around a jade market.
After returning to the ship for a late lunch we went into the huge shopping center that is connected to the cruise terminal.  Noel was looking for some warmer clothes.  This was not the place to shop for bargains, even a poorly made sweatshirt was $50, needless to say, we did not buy anything.  We had dinner and then went up on the top deck to see the evening light show that happens every night at 8pm.  We sailed out of the harbor at 9 pm and were treated to one of the most spectacular skylines in the world.
Hong Kong continues to change with new buildings and a high speed train line is being built to connect Beijing and Hong Kong.  There are still under currents and concerns about Hong Kong being changed into mainland China, but it appears to be inevitable.
Sailing in to Victoria harbor 6:30 am

Mostly dried fish displayed in bins and jars

Lots of beautiful flowers in the wet market

One of the booths in the jade market

Lasers are part of the evening light show

Many of the buildings have elaborate light displays

We weren't sure what this picture was, it looked like a dragon dropping gifts off a building??