I am writing to you from the Beijing Airport waiting to board the plane to Xi’An. I couldn’t wait to come back home and start sharing with you this phenomenal experience. After a long, long flight from Miami to Beijing and a twelve hour time difference my husband and I finally made it. Our friendly Chinese tour guide, Zoe, was waiting for us and took us to the hotel. The next day, our private tour started visiting the Tiananmen Square, the largest one in the world surrounded by buildings such as the Great Hall of the People (Chinese Legislature), the China National Museum and in the centre the Monument to the People’s Heroes. After taking pictures of all the buildings and Mao’s Mausoleum, we continued our visit to the Forbidden City, officially known as the Palace Museum, where 24 Emperors ruled for nearly five hundred years. Following the visit, Zoe was kind enough to take us to a truly Chinese restaurant where we enjoyed different delicacies. After lunch, we finished our sightseeing visiting the Summer Palace, summer retreat of the Qing dynasty.
As you probably know, Beijing was selected as the official city for the 2008 Olympic Games. Zoe showed us the Olympic site showing the magnificent buildings, facilities, stadiums and gardens.
Our second day in Beijing started by visiting the Great Wall initiated back on 221-210 BC, estimated to be 6.000 miles long; it was recently named one of the seven wonders of the world and it is the only monument that can be seen from space. We then visited a local jade factory, with stone carving demonstration. Out tour finalized at the Ming Tomb which is the resting place for thirteen Ming Emperors which is preceded by a four mile road called the “Sprit Way”, also named by locals the Sacred Road with thirty six stone statues.
On our way back to the hotel, we had a chance to visit the Hutong area which are the old Beijing alleyways with typical courtyard houses. The best way to explore this area is by rickshaw.
Beijing, as the capital of China has plenty of cultural activities, like the Beijing Opera as well as numerous Temples, Museums, Markets and Parks. Unfortunately for us, it was already time to say goodbye and continue our journey into Xian, which was home to 11 dynasties over a period of 4,000 years, it was the old capital of the state.
After a 90 minute flight, we met our guide Silvia at this modern airport, and she took us to our hotel in a truly Chinese comfortable sedan, the Red Flag. On our way, we had a chance to take some pictures of the Bell & Drum Towers, as well as the four gates of the nine mile city walls.
The next day, Silvia took us to the Terra Cotta warriors site, discovered by a farmer in 1974, where more than 6,000 warriors (soldiers, horses and chariots) made in terracotta are exposed to the public. They were made to protect the despotic Emperor’s Qin Shi Huangdi’s tomb built 2200 years ago.
In the afternoon, we visited the Great Goose Pagoda, as well as a lacquer finished furniture factory. In the evening we enjoyed the performance of a traditional Show with a delicious dinner consisting of a huge variety of typical Chinese dumplings
Then, we continued our trip on a one hour flight to Chongqing, a 32 million inhabitant city where our tour guide Ming took us to the Zoo. We enjoyed taking pictures of the Panda Bears while they were eating the bamboo leaves. We then visited the Great Hall of the People with a magnificent theater, followed by the General Joseph Stillwell Museum, and a local market where we saw a huge variety of vegetables, fruits, live poultry, grains, spices, soy products, fish and meat
On my next article I will continue with our journey through the Yangtze River cruise with a visit to the Three Gorges Dam as well as our last visit in China, the city of Shanghai