Hotel! Hotel! Hotel!

To travel in a different country is different than traveling in the same country, especially different from travelling to very familiar cities. This trip made me understand what is the most important stuff for people just arrived to a new city – “How can I get to my hotel, as fast as I can?”

I started to understand why many travellers asked me the question: “I will go to Shanghai on xxxx, and I will stay in xxxxxx hotel. Would you please tell me how I can get to xxxxxxx hotel from Pudong Airport?”

In an airport full of charaters you don’t understand, with people that you are not so easy to communicate, and with the jetlag, hungry/thirsty/tired, maybe the only thing that people care is, where is my hotel? My reserved hote!

Hotel is so sweet. For example, when we set our foots onto the land of Sydney, without checking anything else, we rushed to the IBIS hotel, and even slept for two hours.

So a guide to tell people how to get from Pudong Airport to their hotel must be very useful. Nothing more, nothing less, just a page with direction to get to THE hotel.

Airport ======> Hotel!

P.S. ibis is a very nice hotel. We stayed in

  • Hotel Ibis World Square, Sydney
  • Hotel Ibis Sydney Airport, Sydney
  • Hotel Ibis Melbourne
  • Hotel Ibis Brisbane

Train from Shanghai to Nanjing

Many people asked me for suggestion to visit other places by train. It is a FAQ, and I finally found out the train schedule (in English). Please check out this sample. You will see how frequent the train from Shanghai to Nanjing is. If you check out this table, there are 53 trains leave Shanghai and go to Nanjing every single day! That is one train every half an hour. Click the train no to find out more about the specific train.

< td align="right">303

Train # Shanghai -> Suzhou -> Wuxi -> Changzhou -> Zhenjiang -> Nanjing Duration Distance (km)
5152/5153 >0025 0132 0204 0256 0346 0431   4:31 303
5054 >0415 0518 0548 0622 0719 0812   4:12 303
5046/5047 >0422 0525 0555 0641 0743 0827   4:27 303
5056   0520 0624 0704 0749 0854 0942   4:42 303
5026/5027 >0553 0656 0731 0825 0941 1027   5:27 303
2526/2527 >0650 0800 0830 0901 0957 1105   5:05 303
T732/T733 >0658 0751 0818 0847 1005   4:05 303
K376/K377 >0816 0944 1014 1046 1150 1232   4:32 303
T704 >0830 0929 1047< 2:47 303
T706 >0837 0919 1054< 2:54 303
T708 >0844 1016 1134< 3:34 303
K290/K291 >0851 1009 1039 1113 1204 1301   5:01 303
K56/K57 >0907 1002 1032 1106 1157 1239   3:39 303
1346/1347 >0914 1016 1046 1120 1224 1308   4:08 303
L78/L79 >0925 1052 1242 1317 1415 1502   6:02 303
T712 >0935 1026 1054 1127 1213 1254   3:54 303
K234/K235 >1142 1245 1317 1350 1443 1525   4:25 303
K294/K295 >1225 1341 1416 1449 1539 1623   4:23 303
K34 >1300 1401 1431 1504 1555 1639   3:39 303
2182/2183 >1314 1416 1446 1524 1630 1743   4:43 303
1352/1353 >1347 1510 1540 1613 1713 1756   4:56 303
T740   1410 1501 1528 1600 1644 1729   3:29 303
1462 >1425 1528 1617 1651 1746 1903   5:03 303
T736/T737 >1450 1541 1608 1640 1723 1802   4:02 303
N516 >1457 1558 1628 1659 1838 1921   5:21 303
T132/T133 >1523 1614 1641 1710 1754 1833   3:33 303
T726/T727 >1544 1634 1700 1840   3:40 303
K461/K464 >1551 1726 1820 1851 1941 2025   5:25 303
T718 >1604 1714 1853< 2:53 303
T760 >1618 1710 1752 1830 1946< 3:46 303
T138/T139 >1625 1717 1744 1813 1929   3:29 303
1658/1659 >1632 1745 1843 1918 2033 2226   6:26 303
T116/T117 >1643 1734 1801 1939   3:39 303
K152/K153 >1652 1801 1832 1909 2000 2045   4:45 303
T730   1701 1752 1955   2:55 303
T722 >1733 1830 1857 1927 2011 2052   3:52 303
K188/K189 >2017 2113 2144 2216 2341 0028   4:28 303
K372/K373 >2026 2137 2208 2255 2348 0044   4:44 303
T52/T53 >2038 2129 2156 2225 2341   3:41 303
T178   2052 2148 2216 2246 0003   4:03 303
2582/2583   2059 2159 2230 2303 0005 0051   4:51 303
K282/K283 >2106 2206 2237 2310 0015 0058   3:58 303
5018/5019 >2113 2214 2245 2328 0023 0106   4:06 303
L114 >2122 2247 2350 0054 0210 0257   5:57 303
N512/N513   2144 2256 2328 0002 0057 0202   5:02 303
N518/N519 >2202 2311 2342 0017 0113 0155   3:55 303
K360/K361 >2209 2303 2335 0010 0104 0146   3:46
N538/N539   2225 2328 2358 0031 0126 0211   4:11 303
5016   2317 0023 0054 0133 0242 0334   4:34 303
5022 >2324 0034 0111 0145 0249 0340   4:40 303
L102/L103 >2333 0141 0232 0315 0413 0500   6:00 303
5008/5009 >2342 0051 0122 0155 0256 0358   4:58 303
1228/1229 >2350 0105 0150 0239 0335 0417   5:17 303

Drive on the Right in China

After visiting Australia and drove on the left for one day, the question attracted my attention that why in Australia, Japan, and England people drive on the left while many countries drive on the right.

China Used Drive on the Left

The first record of traffic rules was found in China in the book “The Book of Rites” 礼记, that requires “”The right side of the road is for men, the left side for women and the center for carriages.” That was in 1100 B.C. [1]

Before 1946, most places in China drive on the left, for example, Shanghai. In certain provinces in north China, people drive on the right. (Maybe at that time, “Drive” may mean drive horse-cart, instead of automobiles)

I checked old pictures of Shanghai, and confirmed that in 1930’s, people really drive on the LEFT!

shanghai-traffic-1930.jpeg

Image in courtesy of anactofbalance

China Changed to Right-Hand-Drive in 1946

In 1946, the Republic of China government announced that all cars in China must use the right lanes from Jan 1, 1946. This maybe the result of closer relationship with American and imported greater American cars than British cars.

So, people start to drive on the right.

There is not right or wrong – it is just part of the history.

In China, Trains Go on the Left

Believe it or not, in China, all trains still go on the left, as the early days when the railway were built in China. I guess the change to railways is much harder than change the car system. Till now, if you travel in China, you still see trains traveling on the left.

BTW, all closed system trains are right-handed, like in Shanghai Metro and Beijing Metro, the train is on the right.

There are a lot of interesting things for us to explore, isn’t it?

P.S. It is also the learning that we should NOT ask questions: “Why people in the other countries drive in the WRONG way?” In this world, there are just different ways, instead of “WRONG ways”.

I Love Koala!

Koala is so cute, so lovely, and so funny!

Koala embraces the tree branch tightly, like the branch is the great thing in the world for it.

Koala in the Dream World, Gold Coast, Queensland

Koala is shy and slow. Look at this one. It is moving from one branch of tree to the other, slowly, and gracefully.

The other one.

I share at least one habit with Koala – sleeping. A Koala sleeps as much as 20 hours a day. This lazy little guy falled sleep again.

This sleeping Koala is in the Tangaro Zoo in Sydney

I start to wonder what the Koalas are thinking about everyday. They seem to be very happy everyday with a smooth tree branch to stay, nice sunshine to keep them warm, and delicious tree leafs to eat… Seems pretty good life, isn’t it?

Facade of Nice Buildings

During this trip, the facade of many nice buildings caught my attention. They are shining in the sky and is just as the graphs I draw in university.

Service apartment in Surfers Paradise

Building along the George Street in Sydney

The tall building along the Martin Place in Sydney

The building on the east side of the Circular Quay,Sydney

Beach of the Gold Coast

These days, I am working hard to post some pictures of the trip and share it with my family and friends. Here is another such post.

The tide of the Surfers Paradise, as the name implies, is very suitable for surfer, and not so good for swimmers.

I like the tide (only the tide, not water) in Qingdao better, since it was soft and gentle. In the Surfers Paradise, when the tide goes away, the water is just as high as your knees, but when the tide comes, it is higher than your head. The strong force of the tide sometimes create that kind of “water hole”, which the surfers love so much. For me, without a surfer board, it is just a water wall that I need to break into. The force strongly pushes me directly onto the beach. I have to get back to the original position.

In conclusion, very good for surfers with surfer board, and kind of depressing for swimmers – you just cannot swim in tide like that.

Seagull at Sea

DSC_0628

Photograph by Jian Shuo Wang

DSC_0621

Photograph by Jian Shuo Wang

DSC_0619

Photograph by Jian Shuo Wang

DSC_0614

Photograph by Jian Shuo Wang

DSC_0611

Photograph by Jian Shuo Wang

DSC_0605

Photograph by Jian Shuo Wang

Photograph by Jian Shuo Wang

Photograph by Jian Shuo Wang

Photograph by Jian Shuo Wang

These pictures were taken at the Surfers Paradise, Gold Coast, QLD.

Look at how clean the water in the beach is! I cannot believe it is the water from the sea! It is as clear as the creeks in mountains. However, it is still bitter – as bitter as sea water.

Comment from Sarah Khider

What a surprise! The singer of Chivas’ commerical Mermaid, Sarah Khider, left a comment on my blog during my absence (OOB).

Hi Jian

I introduce myself, I´m Sarah Khider and I just read comments about me and the song. Thanks to everyone and to you for creating this blog. I have also mine www.sarahkhider.com/blog/ and soon my website will available for all. You can also go to myspace and listen to other pieces of songs of mine.

Nice to meet you…

See you

Sarah K

Posted by: sarah khider on September 30, 2006 09:52 PM

I admit I am not a fan of music, and have not been a fun of any music star since I was in high school. However, Sarah’s song really touched me. The world is small!

You can visit Sarah’s blog at http://www.sarahkhider.com/blog/ and leave comment to her. She has other songs in her MySpace page as well. All the songs are good – with the same style and feeling as the Mermaid.

Blog made the world flat.

Drive on the Left in Australia

During travel, people expect to experience different things. The more different, the better. Driving on the left is obviously one major difference between Australia and China.

Look Right!

On the major roads visitors first arrive in the city, there are sign on the road to remind people to look right first.

I saw many signs like this in Hong Kong also. The sign above is shot in the Metro Museum Station (Cnr Liverpool & Elizabeth)

Keep Left

It seems obvious but since it is too important to do that, there are countless Keep Left sign throughout Sydney, Melbourne, Brisbane, and, I believe, in all other Australia cities.

Keep left sign on the Great Ocean Road, Victoria

No Entry

Some other places use the No Entry to notify people not to go to the wrong way.

Wrong Way! Go Back!

On the freeway, imagine what happens if someone go to the wrong way and drive the car onto the freeway with 100+ km/hour only to find out all other cars are running at the same speed toward them?

In Australia, I found more “Wrong Way” sign than in any other countries.

The Wrong Way sign in Brisbane, near the North Quay of Birsbane river

The Wrong Way sign on the M1 freeway near Melbourne

My Experience of Converting from Driving on Right to on Left

The shift was not hard – after several km out of the parking lot, I start to get used to it. However, the road width in Australia seems to be narrower than in China or the States, which is very scary for me.

The gas paddle and the brake paddle are of the same position. The problem is about the turning lights. In cars running on the right side, the shift to turn on left or right turn sign is on the left of the wheel. In the car of Australia, it is on the right side. The other side is the wind glass brush.

In the first half an hour or so, I kept turning on the wind glass brush in the Sunny coastal freeway.

P.S. When I am back to Shanghai, and drove for the first few km, everything is perfect OK, but I just turn on the wind glass brush when I turned right.

Other Traffic Signs in Australia

The speed limit sign is everywhere.

Speed limitation

The traffic signs in Australia are maybe the most interesting signs I saw in the world. They have details! Look at this pedestrian crossing sign. It is the only traffic sign that shows the shoes of the people on it!

Wang Yang Lee (ICBC) May be Fraund

Warning: If you happen to be ready to contact the person, or give them any of your personal information, please STOP now! It seems to be a serious fraud

Look at these report of losing money on my website:

Fardous

Mudduraj

Melad Youssef

Mr. Muhammad Tirta Chariti

They reported that someone called Wang Yang Lee announced to be a manager from ICBC and collected ID and bank account information from victims. People searched in Google and arrived my website. What a mistake to trust someone in this common fraud case! (Another mistake is to take my personal website as ICBC official website).

Typically, the following signiture is included in the scam email:

Mr. Wang Yang Lee

Telex manager

Icbc Bank

Telephone: + 86 20 3365 5054

Fax + 86-20-38664428

Fax + 86-20-85648258

Web site: www.icbc.com.cn

Email: info@icbcbank.zzn.com

E-mail: icbcbonline@asia.com

Shanghai’s Weather is Like Sydney in Oct

These days, I found Shanghai’s Weather in early Oct is very like Sydney.

When I stepped out of the China Eastern Airlines flight MU562 from Sydney to Shanghai, I didn’t feel any difference in the temperature. I sweat a shirt in Sydney and in the noon time, a T-Shirt is OK. It is the same in Shanghai.

Later, I found out that it is exactly the date that Shanghai and Sydney are the same in weather.

The Two City Mirror Each Other Along the Equator

Shanghai is at 31°N 121°E;

Sydney is at 33°S 151°E.

On September 23, 2006, the Sun went directly onto the the Equator.

About 10 days after Sept 23, I guess the Sun moved to Sydney a little bit, so moved to exactly the middle of the two cities. Afterwards, Shanghai is going to autumn and winter, Sydney is going to spring and summer.

This time in Sydney, the biggest different in the South Semi-sphere for me is, the Sun shines on the north, instead of South in China.

Remove Comments? Maybe Not

I saw requests to me to remove some comments people made on this blog. I suggest everyone to check out my Emails and Privacy Policies, especially the section on censorship.

To put it simple, my principle on comments is not do delete any comment as long as it is legal, not spam and is readable, and (this one is important) it is NOT personal attack.

I don’t like flaming comments that judges someone else’s personality, generalize them to people from a country, with certain religions belief, or simply the language they use. I do remove these comments.

Just be back from the trip, and it is about 10 days’ comments I didn’t reply. Let me take some time to clear these backlogs.

Again, thanks for commenting.

Learnings from the Australia Trip

Several learnings from the Australia trip – something I don’t know or not so clearly before the trip. Share with everyone.

Shanghai, the Gateway to Eastern China

I finally realized Shanghai is more important to international travellers than I thought. When I really planned my trip to Australia, we found out that Sydney is the gate way to Australia. There is Shanghai to Sydney direct flight, but no such flight between Shanghai and Brisbane, Gold Coast, not to mention the other attractions along the east coast. The Shanghai to Melbourne flight is not as frequent.

I believe it is the situation for Shanghai, Beijing or Guangzhou. Travellers must visit these cities first before they visit other cities. Since they are in the city, they spend one day or two in the city, just as we did in Sydney.

This helps me to understand why there are so many inquiries about from Shanghai to Nanjing, from Shanghai to Yiwu, and even from Shanghai to Chengdu. When I was put into the shoes of international visitors, I realized how valuable this kind of travel information is.

For me, Shanghai is a city. But for most international travellers, Shanghai is the gateway to China, (or at least eastern China).

Shanghai in the Chain of Pacific’s Coastal Cities

Just as someone put it in a brochure about Melbourne’s history, you can understand the coastal cities’ history better and easier if you put every single city in the background of international trading:

Shanghai, Hong Kong in China

Sydney, Melbourne, Brisbane in Australia

Auckland in New Zealand

San Francisco, Los Angeles, Seattle in the United States

Vancouver in Canada

Travel and Tourism are Still Different

Tourists are totally different from business travellers, or visitors. Australia has done a great job on tourism. They have great brochures, nice tourism information centers, nice public transportation and hotel pickup buses, and nice travel tours. They wrap up the attractions and points of interest in a appealing and convenient way so visitors are willing to go and spend $$$$ on it.

There is a long way for Shanghai to go on the tourism industry. I see I can do something to make Shanghai more accessible. Yes. “Accessible” is the right word for Shanghai.

Last Day in Sydney

After nice 9 day trip to Australia, this is the last night in Sydney. The last night. Sydney, Melbourne, Brisbane – all these nice cities is stored in my memory. We also visited many small villages, and towns, along the Great Ocean Road, in the Blue Mountains, near the Suffers Paradise… I even tried to drive the left-going car for one day to the Hunter Valley on National Highway No. 1.

Tomorrow I need to say goodbye to these nice cities, this nice country, nice continent and even the south hemisphere. Also, need to say good bye to the lovely Koala, and Kangaro. I love these lovely animal so much.

I will post more pictures on this blog later when I am back to Shanghai. It takes some time to choose the best pictures out of the 2000 pictures I took in the 10 days.

The Art of Travel

As Alan de Botton put it in the Art of Travel, the true meaning of travel is sensation. People are much more sensitive to the world around them when they travel.

It is a great experience for me. The major benifit is to enable me to see the world from a new and different angle. The goal of my journey in the world is to enable me to understand the humanity, the nature, the business better.

The right is no long the right;

the expensive is no longer the expensive;

the common is no longer common.

It enables us to jump out of our daily life for a moment, view it from a remote and new land, and understand it better. Then I believe I can get back to the life with more joy, and more confidence.

Sample Photos

Photograph by Jian Shuo Wang. 2006.

Photograph by Jian Shuo Wang. 2006.

Photograph by Jian Shuo Wang. 2006.

Photograph by Jian Shuo Wang. 2006.

Photograph by Jian Shuo Wang. 2006.