Day 1:
While William was taking his CISSP exam I took a subway to the French Concession area because the guide book said this was the area that gave Shanghai the name "the Paris of the East."
Tea Ceremony:
Later in the day, during one of the sporadic rain storms, I met 3 Chinese students. The guy on the left had a Chinese name I can't spell or pronounce, then there's me-Sarah 1, then Sarah 2 (when I told her my name she laughed, then told me her English name and gave us numbers), and Andy on the right end. They were very friendly and invited me to a tea ceremony, after which we exchanged email addresses and took a photo.
Both William and I wanted to try as much food as possible during our short trip. We went to a restaurant called "We Make the Best Noodles" and tried egg noodles with asparagus in a cream sauce, along with some fresh fruit drinks. But mostly we ate from small food stands rather than restaurants. It's too bad the U.S. doesn't have more food stalls, and I don't mean for selling hot dogs. Some of the "o.k." things we tried were: spinach-filled and pork-filled dough bun things, fried dumplings, and a bean-paste pastry (similar to a Korean snack).
The best things: a bowl of lo mein and bubble tea. Ummm, delicious!
There were the usual squid and octopus-type things that I will always be too squeamish to try. (William tried the crawling tentacles in Korea, not while I was around, thankfully, but I cannot!)
On Sunday we did more walking around a shopping area and were followed for a good 20 minutes or more by 3 guys trying to talk us into going to their specific store. It was incredibly ANNOYING!!! So we left and took a very long walk to Old Town.
Old Town:
This was by far the coolest part architecturally, I thought. But it was a tourist trap...not for foreigners necessarily because we didn't see many, but for Chinese from other areas it seemed. There were loads of little trinkets and knick-knacks to buy within the 100+-year-old buildings, mixed in with the occasional Starbucks or McDonalds. There were some cool shops too. I especially liked the ones that sold chopsticks and tea.
We packed a lot of things into a short amount of time. Maybe later I'll think of other things I wish I'd written about, but for now I'm all typed out. I'll let my photos speak for themselves :)

We packed a lot of things into a short amount of time. Maybe later I'll think of other things I wish I'd written about, but for now I'm all typed out. I'll let my photos speak for themselves :)
1 comment:
Great post Sarah! You are doing such a good job chronicling this awesome adventure.
Post a Comment