Saturday 27 October – Our last day in Shanghai and we have a new tour guide Zoe from Miki tours. We had a busy but very interesting day visiting:
Old Shanghai – First stop was to walk round Old Shanghai, which is full of magnificent historical buildings many going back many hundreds of years. It was very crowded with tourists, mostly Chinese but we did see a few more westerners than we had seen before.
Yuyuan Gardens – This is a magnificent large house and gardens built in the Ming Dynasty (1368 – 1644). In China every part of a house or garden has a meaning, nothing is built just because it looks nice. So it was interesting listening to Zoe explain the meaning of the various features and why they were built in a particular way. One interesting fact is that large stones were a sign of status. The rich would pay out lots of money to have an elaborate rockery designed and built and even more for a large individual and naturally sculptured stone to put in their gardens.
Lunch – For lunch we went to a famous but very basic and small noodle restaurant. The tables were crammed in with hardly any room between them. People were waiting for tables to come free but rather than wait outside they pick the table who they think are going to finish first and then they stand by the table waiting for that person to finish. Scott being Scott he walked out through the kitchen and found an old kitchen top in a narrow alley at the back of the restaurant which had a few old rickety stools round it and that is where we had our lunch. The food was great, we had dry noodles in a gorgeous peanut sauce, small pieces of pork in a nice sauce and a pork chop.
Bird, Fish, Insect Market – This is an old style market packed into a small area full of stalls selling all sorts of animals. The most popular were crickets of every size from very small to very large. People buy them to put into fighting pots and then bet on the outcome. But there were also turtles, kittens, birds, rabbits, newts, every sort of animal you could think of.
Peoples Park and Marriage Market – The main reason for going to the park was to see the marriage market. Elderly parents come to the park every Saturday and Sunday and sit there all day trying to find a partner for their son or daughter. I expected to find a few people but there were loads of them. They all had umbrellas and on the top of the open umbrella is a description of their son or daughter and what they are looking for. Our guide Zoe said her cousin met her husband in this way but it had taken her mother 5 years going to the park every weekend before she found her daughter the match!!
Tomorrow we fly to Guilin so tonight we are packing.