We wake up surprisingly refreshed after yesterday’s, well, depravity. Given our recent penchant for studying all day to prepare for the bar, I think I drank more beer yesterday than in the previous three months combined. But we stayed up late enough and ate enough delicious, delicious Ali Baba chuanr that we weren’t spinning when we went to bed. So there is no hangover to ruin our sublime hotel buffet.
Posts Tagged ‘train
Day 23: Adios, Qingdao; Ni hao, Shanghai
Tags: "oriental pearl tower", "world financial center", airport, Asia, Bar Trip, butchered english, China, Chravelphlogue, digital photography, Food, Journal, Meals, Photo, Photoblog, Photography, qingdao, shanghai, train, Travel, travel photography, Travelogue
Day 21: Welcome to Qingdao
Tags: Asia, Bar Trip, China, Chravelphlogue, chuanr, digital photography, Food, Journal, Meals, Photo, Photoblog, Photography, qingdao, train, train station, Travel, travel photography, Travelogue
Today is right at about the half-way point of the trip. (Crap, we’re gonna be leaving so soon!)
After the twenty-six hour train to Tibet, the trip to Qingdao (think: Ching-dow) is just a quick jaunt. To me at least. It might be a different story for Kristy, who’s had a little tubster of a child kicking the back of her seat the whole way.
Day 9: Treacherous Train Trek to Tibet
Tags: Asia, Bar Trip, China, Chravelphlogue, Food, Journal, lhasa, Meals, Photo, Photoblog, Photography, tibet, tour, tour guide, train, train station, Travel, Travelogue, yak
We had planned on being in Lanzhou and exploring the surrounding environs for four days. Circumstances (ticket availability) forced us out in less than twenty-four hours. So we are on our way to Tibet.
Day 8: Serendipity in Lanzhou
Tags: Asia, Bar Trip, China, Chravelphlogue, Journal, Lanzhou, Photo, Photoblog, Photography, train, train station, Travel, Travelogue, Xiahe
Lanzhou is a place you go when you want to get to other places. It’s like community college. We came here dreaming up big plans of taking a day trip to a small buddhist village called Xiahe (pronounced: Jah-hoo, with the J sound from “dijon” and the OO sound from “book.” Sorry, that’s as well as I can explain these sounds.) and then going to Tibet. Of course, in an effort to make the trip as exciting and unpredictable as possible, we didn’t bother to have the transportation for these trips reserved yet.
More Day 5: Leaving on that Midnight Train to Xi’an
Tags: Asia, Bar Trip, butchered english, China, Chravelphlogue, Food, Journal, Meals, Photo, Photoblog, Photography, train, train station, Travel, Travelogue
An introduction to the last-minute overnight train ride in China.
- Be sure to assume you won’t have trouble getting tickets. If possible, wait until the day before you want to leave before you try to get the tickets. This will create the following interesting results:
- You’ll have to join a two-day Xi’an tour in Mandarin in order to get train tickets. Therefore you won’t have any idea what is going on while in Xi’an.
- One traveler may have to use a bunk in an entirely different train car than his friends, leaving him feeling abandoned and alone.
- That same traveler may be stuck on the uppermost third bunk, which has about two feet of clearance to the ceiling. This is hard for the traveler when he is six feet three inches tall.
- That lonely bunk will be right next to the bathroom, giving the traveler the opportunity for a lot of interesting smells and sounds.









