OK, I'm only partially caught up, but that's because I'm not going to look at these photos from my phone and I've only been looking from my computer so I am having trouble keeping up. I do have to say that your pictures are incredible! I know you have been doing "etudes" in your photos and posting them in albums online, but on FB all I have time to do is look at headlines and besides from my phone, pictures are pictures and it's hard to enjoy whether or not they are any good.
I have to say that your pictures have evolved to absolutely exquisite. I mean you have always taken great pictures, but they have become even more artistic as you have honed your craft!
I enjoyed the story about the Father and Son, I'm sure they were wary because they thought you were "fan girls" when in reality you just wanted to cling on to someone as a lifeline. When you showed that you were simply another "person" and that you didn't know they were famous, they probably lightened up. I think you made a good choice to bail on the tour, why bother go to something where they are selling you stuff, although I might have been enthralled with a silk factory as to how they made stuff. I just wouldn't have bought anything. Don't like the feel of silk. But that guide was absolutely rude. I spend plenty in food and beverage, I don't need to bring home unnecessary souvenirs from your country. Fran takes care of that!
Glad you got the rickshaw ride in before you went home.
I hope you got some Pho in the last couple of days! I decided that I needed some Hot Pot; so we had the home version for dinner last night. I suspect home made Hot Pot might make it to my dinners a bit more over my winter months.
Well that Nomad Asian Bistro has a pretty good "Chicken Noodle Soup" that I picked up that morning. It did the trick.
You can either hire guides or book yourself in with one of those vacay tour companies. But knowing how you two travel, I think the individual guide might be the better way to go for you.
We don't want to be on a bus, so we would probably book a guide that would accommodate Fran's scooter. You will see this in my current TR.
The areas that I headed to in Shanghai were mostly flat and well paved, so it would be easy to navigate. But then...my idea of flat and well-paved may not match yours.
That's kind of like what we found in New Zealand. They called a lot of things HA that we had to laugh at. Yes they were flat, but in reality if you were to push a wheelchair or ride a scooter it was a joke.
The restrooms.....you know that China does a lot of squat toilets, right?
You mean like the holes in the ground like they have in Europe?
If you're thinking about taking the scooters, you might want to take your scooters with very good brakes on them.
Well I would walk, and we would just take it slow. I don't need a scooter as long as we don't cover too much ground in one day. You'll see that at the end of my current TR. However they have no brakes, just that they stop once you release the throttle. Fran is pretty good negotiating crowds. It's just whether or not she can make it up curbs or not, so the curb cuts are important.