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Survival China Travel Tips and Tricks
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by:
Colin Jin
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These
China Travel Tips, Survival Techniques, will help you get around and
make your trip to China easier, so you will be able to experience the
real China with a little less stress. China is an odd beast that needs
to be respected; the major cities,Beijing, Shanghai, and Xian, all have
their own personalities.
Some complex situations that you think would be an organizational
disaster turn out to be great and you wonder afterward what all the
fuss and worry was about. Then the simplest of tasks can turn out to be
a major calamity.
This is when you have what we call here a "China day".
These days come and go and are part of the experience of everyday
travel in China. One needs to have an open mind when travelling China.
It is a place with thousands of years of history and culture that is
trying overnight to adapt to Western ways of living.
You need to have a very open mind when you Travel in China. I have
listed below a few China Travel Tips that will make life that wee bit
more bearable on your Travel China experience.
1. China Travel Tips - Be Toilet Wise
* Never expect a clean toilet 100% of the time.
* Be prepared; Carry some tissue.
* You may have to use a squat toilet, again if you know this before
hand it is not a shock. If you don’t know how to use a squat
toilet, try the following experiment at home.
While holding onto something for support with both hands, lower your
body down into a low squat position, so that the cheeks of your bottom
is almost touching your heels or the back of your calf. Now, let go
with your hands. See if you stay in this position for at least 1
minute. If you fall backwards or you cannot get up, then a squat toilet
could be a problem for you! Practice, you will be happy you did.
* If you see a clean toilet, Go… it may not come again for a
while.
* There are many public toilets around the cities, usually the ones you
pay for are OK, (RMB .5), the others best to stay away from if you can.
You will soon notice them as you walk around the cities.
* Be warned that public areas like bus and train stations are usually
what I class as “tough toilets”, however if gotta
go you gotta go.
* Outside of the major cities, the toilet systems are old or have very
narrow plumbing/pipes and get blocked easily. In these cases a small
basket is usually beside the toilet, this is for your used toilet paper.
One of the best China Travel toilet Tips I can give you, is use hotel
lobby toilets; these are everywhere and are always clean. Still they
may not always have toilet paper. It depends on the class of hotel that
you are using.
I do not wish to scare you. However, of all the China Travel Tips in
all the other web sites I have read, this is a topic not often
mentioned, but it is very important to us all.
So outside of the major cities conditions can be tough. But most of the
time everything will be fine, especially if you book a tour; everything
will have been checked out before hand. However even the best laid
plans can go wrong, so be prepared, the toilets in the smaller cities,
towns and villages can be scary.
2. China Travel Tips - The Food
* The food is great and the variety is overwhelming. Most of the time
you get to choose what you eat, or you can recognize what you're
eating, however sometimes you do not get a choice. Carry a chocolate
bar or something; this will keep you going until some food that you can
recognize turns up. Drink bottled or boiled water, as the tap water is
NOT safe to drink, this is for the whole of China. Even boiled water,
while sterilised can
contain a lot of minerals and iron deposits that you probably do not
want in your system. The safest bet is to drink bottle water. Tap water
in most big cities is OK for brushing teeth.
* Eating habits - Most Chinese people have a great habit of being very
noisy when they eat and lunch and dinner times can be a wonderfully
noisy celebration, food tends to go in all directions, its just part of
being in China.
* People also smoke at the table while everyone is eating, so some
restaurants get very loud and smoky.
* If you get stuck what to order as most of the menu's are in Chinese
just look at the table next to you and point to the dish you fancy and
ask how much it is, this system works really well and know seems to
mind.
* I have a basic menu that will help you order safe food, (no Cats or
Dog) this will enable you to visit a larger selection of restaurants,
not just the tourist ones with high prices. You can carry it with you
and use it in the local restaurants where most will be able to serve
what is on it. This way you will know what you are eating.
These local places are very cheap and the food it great. Contact me if
you would like me to send it to you.
3. China Travel Tips - Taxis
* Taxis are an experience that can have you griping the seat and
gasping for breath; however you soon get used to it, after the first
few rides, you're an old hand.
* The taxis in Shanghai are, overall, quite good. Try to get the Blue,
Blue'ish Turquoise, Gold and White taxis, these are the
best… these are the four major taxi companies and are
generally recognised by their single colour paintwork. The others are
OK, just older and a rougher ride (the others also may have faulty
metres). No drivers will speak English.
* Carry your hotel or accommodation business card with you, written in
Chinese, this helps if you get lost walking around town.
* In all the taxis around the country you will see the drivers name and
taxi registration number in plain sight. If you have any problem, or if
you think you have been over charged etc, just take this number down,
make a big fuss about it, and the driver then should wake up and fix
whatever problem you have. Even better is to take the receipt. This has
all the trip details on it and you can ring the taxi company if you
want to take things further or if you’ve left something in
the taxi.
* The government takes rip-off drivers in all cities, Beijing and Xian
especially, very seriously and if you complain they will lose their
license. This is their livelihood. So far I have had not one driver in
3 years that has not backed down and we have then agreed a price for
the trip or solved our problem.
* In Shanghai, it is common practice for taxi fare increases after
11pm. However, one can usually bargain for a 20% discount, which will
get the fare back to the pre-11pm rate. Be strong with the taxi
drivers, never-the-less, keep your cool, smile and negotiate.
4. China Travel Tips - Shopping
* China is a shopper’s paradise, Markets, Bargains; Top
labels… anything and everything if you have the time. With
clothes, the larger (Western) sizes can be quite hard to find, however
in the major cities where you get a lot of tourist traffic, you can
find them.
* Electrical gear, DVD’s, Cameras, stuff like this is not
worth buying in China, Hong Kong is still the best place for this.
* Store hours in the major cities are from 10am to 10pm, 7 days a week.
* Visa card is still the best card to carry, with ATM’s in
good supply all with PLUS access etc. There is usually a surcharge for
use of VISA, MasterCard or other forms of credit card.
* Wait on purchasing if you can, look around to get a feel for the
prices. The Chinese are VERY experienced at selling and know that we
halve the opening price when bargaining. In the markets go for 25% of
what they first ask; go so low that they let you walk away. This will
give you an idea of the bottom price. The resulting end-price will
probably be around 40% to 50% of where they started.
Whatever the market people say, they are used to pushing and haggling
for best prices. Do not worry about being too hard, they are used to it
and will not sell you an item unless they make a profit. Don't be
concerned with the apparently hurt body language when you go low
– it is all part of the game. As soon as they have wrapped up
your first purchase, they will try to sell you something more. Remember
to keep smiling and having fun
while bargaining.
5. China Travel Tips - Medical Treatment and Records
* Most hotels will have a doctor that you can see. In the major hotels
English will be spoken.
* Always take a small first aid kit, cold remedy, headache tablets at
the very least. WATSONS is a very large chain chemist. Most of the
remedies, tablets etc, that you may require should be in these shops.
These shops are all over China.
* There is a great network of pharmacy type shops; these are indicated
by a Green Cross. There will always be a 24 hr Green Cross pharmacy in
the city you are in. It is handy to carry a Phase book, as no one will
speak English, however you will end up with something that will help.
* INPORTANT POINT – for most of the mass produced packet type
medicines, the packaging will be written in Chinese on one side,
English on the other. However in the shops you only see the Chinese
side. Have a good look, turn the packs over, it gives you a lot more
confidence knowing you can read the package.
* If you have a specific medical issue, take records, most of the
Doctors will have OK written/reading English, even though their oral
English will be poor.
6. China Travel Tips - Telephone
* Using the phone is as easy as at home. However the person picking it
up will not speak English or have very broken English… the
Major 4- or 5-Star Hotels will all be OK.
* What is worth doing is buying a Chinese Telecom SIM card, they are
about RMB100 and with this you get RMB50 in calls, the other 50 is for
the price of the SIM card; this SIM card will go into all major brand
phones and work OK.
By doing this, people can reach you within and out of China if there is
an emergency. If you have a couple of phones, you can short (txt)
message each other (SMS). Also you are able to call your tourist guide,
hotel etc if you have any major problems. It is a cheap way to keep in
touch.
Note: Before you buy a Chinese SIM card, check that it will work in
your Cell/Mobile phone. There are plenty of China Telecom shops that
can help.
7. China Travel Tips on when NOT to move around China
* Spring Festival, this would be the Chinese New Year time, around the
end of January/Early February
* Early May; Labour day Holidays
* Early October; National Day Holidays
Of all the China Travel Tips National Day is the biggest one. Millions
of Chinese travel at these holiday times of the year. Most are
travelling back to home towns or visiting family. Hotels, trains,
planes, cars, buses, and roads are all crowded to the maximum. Major
congestion, everywhere.
Also travel fares are at their full price. No discounts are offered!
Stay in one place and enjoy where you are. It’s best and
causes fewer hassles.
8. China Travel Tips - TV
* If you want to watch TV, most of the major hotels will have cable and
if you are in the smaller places, the national channel, CCTV9 is in
English. Over the last couple of years it has got a lot better, with
some great China Travel Tips programs, news and views on people and
places around China.
9. China Travel Tips - Airport Tax
* There is a “construction fee” at almost all
airports.
Domestic flights RMB 50 International flights RMB 90 - which is to be
paid in local currency. Just recently, tickets are being tissued with
the Construction Tax included; however make sure you have the Tax money
with you just to make sure. About the author John Mckenna John Mckenna
is from New Zealand and have been traveling within China for more than
3 years. For more on China Travel information, pls visit
http://www.chinatravel.com, the portal on China Travel and China Tour,
and http://www.travel-the-real-china.com, experienced based Travel and
Tour information on the wonders of Travel in China. |
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