Aussie Wendy
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Jul 4, 2008
- Messages
- 2,298
Day 5 Saturday “The whole world at your feet”
Once again I lamented not having even just one extra day to spend poking about the markets and shops in our local area, going to the museum or the Chi Lin nunnery and gardens, or up the peak etc. But I didn’t want to leave Lantau and the Big Buddha which were on my “must do” list til our last day as I knew DH would be stressing constantly about getting back in time to catch the plane.
So we had a light breakfast and were out by 8am with a plan to reach Lantau by 9 am to beat the crowds as I hadn’t prebooked our cable car, not being sure what day we might do this. It was about a 45 min trip and we changed lines at Lai King for Tung Chung. The queue for the cable car was short and we booked a combi with a crystal cabin with the see through bottom over and a normal cable car back.
We shared the cabin with an excited young Thai couple. One thing that surprised me was the number of people lugging big suitcases with them-I know lots of people do this trip in combo with their flights but there were lockers you could pay to hold them in. Luckily the couple only had smaller cabin size cases which mostly pushed out of the way but I would have been cranky if we had had to share a see through cabin with someone whose cases took up most of the floor. (DH says I am turning into a grumpy old woman – lol!)
The see through cabins were great fun as you soared over the sea and then the mountains looking down at the pathway that follows the cars below – looks like a crazy long, hot walk though there was a stream in one place. We took it in turns to take pics sitting on the floor and of each other.
"Off we go"
What the crystal cabin means - every cable car should have these as an option, they are great fun to those of us who love heights.
View of the airport
You can be crazy to walk up or down
Trying out the floor

Once again I lamented not having even just one extra day to spend poking about the markets and shops in our local area, going to the museum or the Chi Lin nunnery and gardens, or up the peak etc. But I didn’t want to leave Lantau and the Big Buddha which were on my “must do” list til our last day as I knew DH would be stressing constantly about getting back in time to catch the plane.
So we had a light breakfast and were out by 8am with a plan to reach Lantau by 9 am to beat the crowds as I hadn’t prebooked our cable car, not being sure what day we might do this. It was about a 45 min trip and we changed lines at Lai King for Tung Chung. The queue for the cable car was short and we booked a combi with a crystal cabin with the see through bottom over and a normal cable car back.
We shared the cabin with an excited young Thai couple. One thing that surprised me was the number of people lugging big suitcases with them-I know lots of people do this trip in combo with their flights but there were lockers you could pay to hold them in. Luckily the couple only had smaller cabin size cases which mostly pushed out of the way but I would have been cranky if we had had to share a see through cabin with someone whose cases took up most of the floor. (DH says I am turning into a grumpy old woman – lol!)
The see through cabins were great fun as you soared over the sea and then the mountains looking down at the pathway that follows the cars below – looks like a crazy long, hot walk though there was a stream in one place. We took it in turns to take pics sitting on the floor and of each other.
"Off we go"


What the crystal cabin means - every cable car should have these as an option, they are great fun to those of us who love heights.


View of the airport

You can be crazy to walk up or down

Trying out the floor



