Sunday 30 September 2012

Our Trip to Beijing


It is not mandatory to “do Beijing” when adopting a child from China.  However, I strongly recommend that families adopting children from China take the time to do this.  Adopting a child is stressful, both on the parents and the children.  An extra 2-3 days to adjust to the time/climate differences makes a difference in your level of resilience and ability to handle a new child.  I absolutely cannot imagine flying halfway around the world and passing on the chance to experience Beijing.  For those in the “this is not a vacation” camp…I say to each their own.  To say our trip to add our newest family member was not a pleasure trip would not be quite right, would it.  It was not like being at an all-inclusive resort by any means and the paperwork and adjusting to a new child was...well, work, but there were many vacation-like aspects to our travel.  If you are traveling to adopt and you don’t take advantage of how close you are to a fantastic cultural experience…well, you’re really cheating yourself.  I really enjoyed our visit to Beijing and could have easily done more than 2 days.  For adopting families, more than a short visit is not feasible, but I really think it is a shame that more Americans do not get to this part of the world.  Since we’ve completed our adoption, we’ve actually talked to two families who are planning to visit China purely for the purpose of tourism.

It is expensive to get there – it is pretty darn far away from most everywhere – but the in-country costs are actually pretty reasonable.  Americans traveling to China need a visitor visa.  A visa will cost between 90 and 140 USD, depending on the number of entries you want to make.  I have included a link to the visa form – pretty basic – that has to be submitted to the Chinese Consulate.  Most adoptive families use some type of visa courier service, either independent or through their adoption agency.  I don’t know how to go about submitting the visa directly to the Chinese Consulate or how you’d go about doing this if you are not located near one.  The visa for China is a sticker visa that goes in your passport, so you do have to give up your passport for a period of time.  We processed our visas through our agency’s courier and had our passports back with visas in just over a week.  There is a visa courier website called “There’s Always Hope – Denise Hope” that I used as a resource when filling out our visa applications. 


From London, it is about an 11-12 hour flight to Beijing.  Most people traveling to mainland China will enter through Beijing or Shanghai.  We did not take a direct flight, although they are widely available from here.  We flew Emirates and had a layover in Dubai.  The airline is very (very, very, very) nice, there were some upsides to having the flight broken up (roughly 2 6-hour flights) and the deal sealer for us – about a $900 per person savings doing it this way.  Sold.  We used a travel agent that specializes in adoption travel – Sue Sorrels, email me if you ever want her contact info, she’s wonderful.  She was able to beat any rate we found on our own, plus, she was able to easily book the one-way return for Zack – who did not have a passport at the time we booked his ticket.  We spent about $1300 per round trip ticket. 

We booked the majority of our travel through Sue Sorrels.  Our agency, Wasatch Adoptions booked most of our domestic China travel.  Sue booked our Beijing and Guangzhou hotels (the rate she was able to get was much better than what we could get on our own or what our agency could get), our train tickets from Beijing to Taiyuan, and our Beijing tour services, in addition to booking our international flights.  We were picked up at the airport by our Beijing tour guide, Michael and our driver, whose name I can no longer remember.  We had the same guide and driver our entire time in Beijing.  They were great and really made a lot of effort to show us their city. 

We did not land in Beijing until after 10PM.  We got upgraded to business class on our Dubai to Beijing flight at the gate – so awesome and I am forever spoiled.  It really sucked to fly coach on the way back.  It was totally wonderful except for the guy who sat next to me…he was Stinky McStinkerton.  Yuck.  Those cushy looking seats we look longingly at as we trudge back to the cattle car are as awesome as they look.  I actually had to stretch to reach my seat pocket and I am a tall girl.  We got cozy, plush velour blankets, there were fresh flowers in our cabin, and we were served a glass of champagne and a dish of warm almonds before takeoff.  We had several choices of food and I actually got brought a wine list.  The flight attendant kept coming by and refilling my glass out of a real wine bottle – not a serving sized plastic bottle accompanied by a plastic tumbler.  My butter was molded in to the shape of a little flower, and we were brought a little box of Godiva chocolate after our meal.  I accidentally ate Lee’s.  So, after not sleeping very much on the London/Dubai leg (although Emirates coach is very nice and roomy) and a stressful layover in Dubai (we thought we’d had a snafu with our travel arrangements and we couldn’t find any place to sit down because the airport was really that crowded), I had my meal, my wine, my chocolate and I slept most of the way to Beijing. 
The "BEFORE" shot of us...outside of London Heathrow

Best.Airline.Ever.

This is how I roll (or at least how I rolled that day).

I was just so impressed by the little butter mold...I know, I am easily entertained. 
It was pretty easy to clear Chinese immigration.  I wanted to take pictures, but I was kind of afraid to.  The immigration officers did not look like they wanted to put up with any tomfoolery.  They took our picture (for their files?) and we were on our way.  We got our bags and went out to the entrance, where our car and driver were waiting to take us to our hotel. 

We stayed at the Novatel Peace Hotel in Beijing.  It was in a great location as far as being close to places to eat and shop and it seemed a short distance away from many of the sights we visited.  It was recommended by other adopting families as a nice place to stay.  The lobby was very nice (posh, even) but the rooms were kind of…well, below average.  There was a really funny smell that I can’t really put my finger on and the shower door leaked.  The mattress was super hard…I’m actually not convinced there actually was a mattress.  I slept well the 3 nights we were there, but my back was sore in the mornings…it felt like sleeping on the floor.  There was WIFI in the room, but it was not a great signal…actually, the only place we could get a really great signal was standing in a certain spot in the middle of the reception area.  The room was clean enough and quiet, though.  The breakfast was not included…it ended up being about $20 per person…we had it once and it was extensive.  The other days we skipped/ate the emergency cereal bars from the backpacks.  We were rushed/had early days and didn’t want to spend $20 if we had to hurry and just grab a piece of toast and a cup of coffee.  We ended up eating the dinner buffet at the hotel one night as well.  It was actually rather good although it was not super cheap…I think it cost about $70 for both of us, which included a bottle of wine.  The buffet was really extensive – there was not much you could have wanted to eat that they didn’t have out, and it was a good combination of Chinese and Western food…really pretty deserts, too!  I didn’t think to get any pictures of the hotel. 

Our first day of touring started at 9AM.  We visited Tiananmen Square…which I was really excited to do.  I have no idea why…it is really just a big square with a lot of people milling about.  It is right across the street from the entrance to the Forbidden City, though, so it’s not really a separate stop.  The Forbidden City is WAY COOL.  We spent about 3 hours walking through and really…we could have spent the entire day there.  It just goes on and on and I really don’t think I have ever seen more people in one space.  We went on a Friday morning and it wasn’t as crowded as it could have been.  Not annoyingly crowded but there were a lot of people.  Our guide was really attentive and knowledgeable but really, a lot of what he was saying was going out my other ear.  I was tired and I kept thinking “wow, I’m in China!  I’m on the other side of the world!” and just looking at all of the people and taking everything in.  There are a ton of Chinese tourists that come to Beijing and there were a lot of organized tour groups going through.   We would have been content to spend the entire day at the Forbidden City, but time did not allow, and we kind of rushed through.  Late August is a wonderful time to visit…it was hot but not unbearably so.  Wear good walking shoes for this – there are lots of steps and cobblestones. 
Lee and I in the square, entrance to the Forbidden City in the background


Entrance to Forbidden City


Inside Forbidden City
So many people...can you imagine this place packed?!?

Love the detailing on the roofs
 

We went to the Hard Rock Café Beijing for lunch.  We collect pins and thought this might be a nice addition to our stash.  This was about a 30 minute drive from the Forbidden City, give or take, and at lunchtime, the place was totally dead.  We looked online before we traveled and 3 Hard Rock Café locations in China have closed within the past few years – if lack of business was a reason, I sure believe it.  It was lunchtime and there were only 2-3 other table occupied.  It was the typical Hard Rock- we have been to a bunch and they are all pretty much the same.  I ordered something “local” – a noodle dish with shrimp and squid with some spicy chili paste.  It wasn’t too bad, although it was heavy on noodles and light on the seafood.  We also tried some locally brewed-in-Beijing beer.  I am pretty sure it was really Lone Star – ew.  Lee went more traditional and had a pulled pork sandwich.  After lunch, we went to the Rock Shop – and they were OUT OF PINS.  Sheesh!  We bought a couple of souvenirs, had our picture taken out front and moved on. 
World Rockers!!!
 
We spent the afternoon at the Summer Palace.  We were in to the heat of the day, and the grounds of the Summer Palace really did seem to be about 10 degrees cooler than the rest of Beijing.  This was a beautiful and tranquil park that I could have easily spent the entire day in, just walking around, people watching, and maybe having some ice cream…I think I spotted green bean flavored popsicles, which I sadly did not get to try.  Rushing through like we did trying to “cross it off the list” did this great place an injustice.  Michael was great and informative, but this would have been the kind of place I would have enjoyed just hanging out with Lee in for a quiet afternoon.  We saw more Chinese tourists and family groups just enjoying being out together.  I took several pictures of one little boy walking around bare-assed with everything hanging out.  In China, diapers aren’t used on toddlers like they are in most of the Western world – well, every part of the Western world I have been in, anyway.  Children wear “split pants” that allow for convenient squatting without the hassle of removing a diaper (!) and in fair weather, they apparently go for the “no pants” look.  He really was a cute little boy and was having the time of his life hopping around with his friends and family.  An aside – I just got the photos from the disposable cameras we sent the foster family back.  Zack is “posing” in several photos with no bottoms on.  I think I will save these in the event I need some ammo to really embarrass him when he is a teenager. 




 
This is NOT Zack.  

I enjoyed the Summer Palace, but walking along the streets to get in and out of it was just as fun.  There was so much life going on; so much hustle and bustle.  People were coming and going and doing their errands...the setting was a little more rustic than what I am used to in my day-to-day, but it struck me that these people really aren’t so different than us, fundamentally.  They go about their day – they shop, buy snacks; hang out with their families, just as we do.  I got some pictures of Chinese street life that I am really happy with…just candid stuff to give my little snapshot in time of what was happening outside of Beijing on a hot August day. 





 

They day would not have been complete without a trip to the “state sanctioned” pearl market.  We went for some “pearl education”.  We saw a quick presentation on pearls – I actually did learn some stuff – and then we were invited to shop in the pearl store.  We were saving our shopping for Guangzhou, but we did buy a couple of “lesser quality” drop pearl necklaces.  I have one purplish color pearl on a sterling chain that I have been wearing quite a bit of and really like it. 

Day two of touring started early with a 3+ hour ride to the Great Wall (Mutanyu area).  We were told to expect an hour to an hour and a half but the traffic was bumper to bumper most of the way.  Apparently there are some restrictions on how many cars that can be on the road during the week (not sure how that is set up) but anyone can drive on Saturdays.  We also noticed a lot of cars pulled over on the highway and people just “hanging out”.  Michael explained that these people were “waiting on their friends”…WTH?  Using the highway as a meeting point?  Michael seemed a little surprised that we found this odd.  To pass the time on the long drive, Michael gave us a lesson on Chinese counting and numerology.  Essentially, the numbers 6, 8 and 9 are very lucky and the number 4 is not lucky.  If you have lots of 6’s, 8’s and 9 in your phone number, that is a good thing…if you have a 4 in your phone number, your service is free…

We stopped at the “state run jade museum” on our way.  We got to hear a presentation about jade, watch some artisans carving jade and – shocker – got the opportunity to purchase some jade.  As with the pearls, we opted to wait until we got to Guangzhou, but they really did have some amazing and beautiful items…many of them way too big to bring home in our luggage.  And I really did learn a lot about jade! 

This man is carving a jade "Family Ball"...it is 4 balls, intricately carved and nested inside one another.  Each ball represents a generation of a family.  

 
 

The Great Wall really is awesome.  We rode a cable car up to the top and then hiked/walked around for about and hour and a half.  I had thought the Great Wall would just be some strolling around on the wall – NOT.  It was a warm day and it is actually kind of physical…there are a lot of uneven stones and steep steps.  I wore Columbia skort and my sturdiest shoes – just dumb luck that I had this on – and this well-suited to climbing around on the wall.  I was “THIS CLOSE” to wearing a summer dress and my sandals which would have not been good.  I guess we were out of the city or above the smog…something…because the air was really crisp and clear.  We had a good time and saw a lot of interesting people.  I wished for more time…we could have climbed a little higher. 





 

Our guide took us to a restaurant outside of the Great Wall and ordered lunch for us.  We had some type of spicy chicken with peanuts, some eggplant and potato dish in a sweet glaze, and a savory leek dish served with wontons.  We like Chinese food a lot, but this stuff wasn’t really the sort of stuff we’d normally order.  Boy was it YUMMY!  This was our first meal eaten exclusively with chopsitcks.  I am not going to lie – I did try to ask for a fork.  They gave me another serving spoon.  We just toughed it out with the chopsticks and did so for most of the trip.  I actually “acquired” some “sporks” from Taco Bell and took them to China.  However…I kept forgetting to put them in to our bag when we went places and most places outside the hotels did not have forks available unless you asked…and asking was really not super easy.  So, we’ve come away from China fairly proficient with chopsticks.  Fairly.  We didn't starve!  Yay us! 

That evening, we went to an acrobat show.  It was neat and lasted about an hour (no pictures, sorry).  The performers are all really young and the things they can do are pretty amazing.  Interestingly, I saw a piece on Sesame Street just recently about the life of a child acrobat/student.  It was on Global Grover…who knew Grover had gone global by the way…long time since I watched Sesame Street!  After the show, we went to a traditional Chinese restaurant and had some traditional Peking duck…well; I guess it is Beijing Duck now.  Hopefully everyone does know that Beijing was once called Peking.  It was actually very good, and I am not a fan of duck.  I had a bit of a meltdown in the restaurant, though…I was tired and emotional.  Add jet lag and the fact that I really had to go and the only thing that was available was a squat toilet…not my best moment.  But the restaurant was nice.  If there is a place to try Peking Duck, this would be it. 

I’ve left out our trip to the tea shop and our rickshaw ride in the Hutong area.  We went to the tea shop at the suggestion of our guide to “learn about tea culture”.  Afterwards, we got the opportunity to purchase tea – I know, shocking!  But seriously, the tea ceremony was one of my favorite parts of Beijing.  We actually did buy some tea and have enjoyed a cup here at home in the tea set we brought home from China.  The Hutong area was amazing…although the rickshaw ride was a little bit scary.  If I ever go back to Beijing again, I think I would like to stay in the Hutong area and spend more time hanging out and just soaking up the atmosphere – it seemed much more “real China” than the other stuff we saw in Beijing. 
 
Our host at the tea house. 
Ladies hold their tea like a lotus flower....
 
 
This is party tea!  It's actually realy good!
 
 
 
Do I look tense?  I thought this rickshaw driver was going to get us killed!!!

Man-oh-man, we really did a lot in just two days.  At the end, I was completely exhausted and ready to go meet our son in Taiyuan.  Our guide and driver were first class…we were chauffeured around in a very nice, air conditioned sedan, and we were treated like rock stars.  We got curb service, front row, jump the line level service every place we went.  Michael and our driver were very attentive and we came away from our whirlwind in Beijing knowing a little bit more about China than we did when we arrived.  I know about lucky numbers and I’m going to find a way to get free phone service, I swear I am – our home phone number has a “4” in it.  I learned how to count to 10 in Chinese.  I learned what the yellow stars on the Chinese flag mean.  I was ready to move on, but the trip to Beijing definitely left me wanting more and I really think this part of the world is something everyone should jump at the opportunity to experience, if you get a chance.  One thing to note – Michael really did tout the “Chairman Mao” party line.  He had a deep reverence for his country’s government and it wasn’t what I thought it would be.  His chats with us were peppered with remarks about what was “good for the people versus what an individual wanted”.  The Chinese overall are very loyal to their form of government but they are very respectful, tolerant and curious about ways of doing things that aren’t their cup of tea.  They are also not as heavily restricted to travel outside China as I’d imagined.  I think they might have a few more wickets to jump through than Westerners if they want to travel internationally, but they are actually not discouraged from experiencing more of the world than just China. 

If you have a chance to go to Beijing, go. 
Jill

Tuesday 25 September 2012

Shanxi Province - Taiyuan

If you are not interested in traveling to Shanxi province…stop reading. I wrote this post primarily for other adoptive families who will travel to Taiyuan.  The odds of anyone else who reads my blog traveling to Taiyuan are slim.  Shanxi is one of the northern provinces in China - not to be confused with Shaanxi which is a different province.  Shanxi is pronounced “Shan See”. 

All adoptions in China are finalized in the capital of the province the child is from.  China has 22 provinces, in case you were curious.  My research told me Shanxi is one of the most polluted places in the world, Yuncheng City in particular (that is where Doodlebug is from).  Yuncheng City is one of the southernmost cities in Shanxi, about a 6 hour train ride from the capital.  Yuncheng means “transportation city” and their main industry salt mining. I learned all of this stuff from our guide, Lisa.  

All families adopting a child from Shanxi province must travel to Taiyuan (not Taiwan, don't get it twisted). If the children are living elsewhere in the province, they are brought to Taiyuan on their “gotcha day”. 
I’m going to write as honestly and as descriptively as I can about our experience in Taiyuan, for the benefit of other people who are reading this to get information on adoption travel.  I also want to preserve what I experienced so I can share with Doodlebug when he's older.  I imagine how he joined our family will be of interest to him at some point, and I want to be as descriptive as possible. 
I will start my descriptions of Taiyuan with a disclaimer:  I’ve traveled A LOT.  Different or weird doesn’t freak me out and I’m OK with being outside my comfort zone.  I’m not even sure I have much of a comfort zone anymore.  I try to be positive and appreciate the opportunity I have to experience a country or a culture that not everyone gets to experience.  I have not read many positives on Shanxi from other families who have traveled there, which makes me sad.  I hope I can offer a different spin on things without sugar coating our time in what is NOT the vacation capital of Asia.  I traveled with determination to keep positive.  Attitude is everything. 
 
How to get there (or at least how we got there) -
The nearest city is Beijing.  If you’re flying in to Beijing it is easy to get to Taiyuan from there.  We took the train from Beijing in to Taiyuan.  We explored the idea of flying – the flight was hour long and cost about $150 per person.  The train ride was 3 hours and cost about $120 for both of us, first class.  I’m not sure what “first class” got us, but I think it may have been just a reserved (non “cattle car”) seat.  We bought our tickets through the same travel agent that booked our international flight.  Our Beijing guide (also booked through the travel agent)had our train tickets and gave them to us right before we boarded. He practically put us on the train.  It was very easy. 

The train station was easy to navigate – super crowded, but fairly clean – and we had no trouble finding our platform.  You have to show your passports and go through  security before boarding, but that did not take especially long.  The train was clean and made minimal stops (Taiyuan is the end of the line so there was no worrying on what stop was ours).  Announcements were made on a PA system and were said in English.  There was also an electronic sign in our car that let us know what was going on.  The train had a snack cart with refreshments for purchase.  By the way, they don't have Diet Coke in China.   
Train station in Beijing, getting ready to board
I'd hoped to get a gander at some of the scenery, but there wasn't much to see.  I could see the air outside was very polluted and smoggy.  The train was comfortable enough and we managed to get a bit of a nap.  I would recommend the train to any traveler.  It is cheaper and faster, when you factor in drive time, standing in line to check bags, going through security, and so on.  There are baggage storage areas in each train car and there is no worrying about weight.  China domestic flights have strict weight limits on bags and I know we were over.  Once we got Doodlebug in Taiyuan, we'd have an extra traveler, eliminating our baggage weight problem.
The train station was very crowded when we got off in Taiyuan.  We were swept along with the sea of people toward the exit.  Our guide, Lisa was waiting with a sign that had our name on it.  I felt a little like a celebrity.  I was certainly getting stared at enough.  We had a short walk to the parking lot and I remember thinking “I’m not in Kansas anymore”.  I have never been to Kansas in my life, but I really did feel like we’d just dropped out of the sky in to a very strange land.  It was surreal.  This was my third day in China and I hadn't yet experienced this kind of staring.  There was no attempt to hide it.  I later learned we were probably the first westerners some of the locals had seen.   
Where to stay – we stayed at Shanxi Grand and found it adequate.  We got some feedback from other families and were told the Continental Hotel wasn't very nice and that the World Trade Hotel was great.  Our agency had made the travel arrangements and they had a partnership with the Shanxi Grand.  

Lisa actually took us to the Continental Hotel by mistake and tried to get us to stay there, but since we'd prepaid and had a reservation at the Shanxi Grand, I made her take us there.  She tried to tell us the Continental Hotel was nicer, but I insisted.  It seemed like a nice enough hotel to me but I wanted to go where we were booked.  

The Shanxi Grand was OK.  It was neither the best or worst place I’d ever stayed.  The lobby area was very nice with marble and sculpture.  There was a lobby bar where a pianist played most nights and a basement bar/ice cream shop.  We sat in the lobby bar to do paperwork a few times and it was pretty nice.  There was also a shop in the basement that sold sundries and trinkets.  It was really smoky down there.  

The hotel had 2 restaurants.  One was exclusively Chinese and one had more Western food on the menu (but some Chinese dishes too).  The Chinese place had good food.  There is some stuff on the menu that most Westerners would find gross (duck web, sea cucumber, abalone)but there were also more familiar Chinese dishes as well.  The wait staff in the Chinese restaurant didn’t speak  but there was an English/picture menu.  The staff in the Western restaurant spoke better English.  They had a variety of things to eat – sandwiches, burgers, steaks, pasta, and a few Chinese dishes.  The Western restaurant (and I’m sure it has a name, I just don’t remember it) had more extensive hours than the Chinese place.  The food was okay.  If you’re going to Taiyuan, you are probably not going for the food.  

A buffet breakfast came with the room.  They had an omelet bar/noodle bar, fresh fruit, cereals and pastry, and a wide variety of Chinese dishes (noodles, dumplings, rice) every day.  It was all pretty good and I got to try some stuff that I wouldn't ordinarily eat for breakfast.  
Our agency reserved us a standard room and we upgraded after our first night.  For a couple, the standard room was fine but once we got Doodlebug, we felt we needed more space.  The difference was about $30 a night and worth it.  You have a lot of down time on an adoption trip and it is nice to have some room to spread out.  
This was the standard room and our totally craptastic "crib". 


I always do this.  I know it's dorky. 

 
 
The rooms were OK.  They were clean and comfortable enough.  The bathroom was stocked with a variety of toiletries and the towels were nice.  We had a fridge and a hot pot and we got 2 bottles of drinking water per day (all standard issue with a hotel room in China).  The TV had 2 English channels – BBC and HBO.  Doodlebug also really liked the Chinese children’s cartoons (love me some Pleasant Goat).  

Housekeeping was great, but I will say I thought the hotel room smelled funny.  While the  room did not smell like smoke, the hallways did.  I took a few Yankee Candle "car jars" and they helped some.   
There was usually at least one person on duty at the desk that spoke passable English.  Word to the wise – speak slowly and avoid using twenty dollar words.  Stop periodically and make sure you are being understood.  If a Chinese person does not understand you, they are unlikely to tell you.  If you have any sort of regional accent factor that in to a non-English speaker's ability  Chinese person’s ability to understand you. You southerners who add extra syllables to words...I mean you.  This is one of the few places I have traveled where most people between the ages of 18 and 30 don’t speak at least some conversational English.  
There is an indoor pool with a nice shallow kiddie area.  Swim caps are required.  I packed these Hubs and I and they allowed our 2 year old (who had very little hair at the time) to wear the shower cap from the toiletry selection in the room.  It wasn't the best fashion moment for any of us.  It actually took me awhile to feel romantic toward Hubs again after seeing him in a royal blue swim hat.  I am sure I didn't look much better.  The hotel had swim caps available for purchase, too, but I was prepared and brought our own.  Based on what I saw, the Chinese are more conservative in their swimwear than we are.  I took what I considered to be a modest 2 piece bathing suit, but if I had a do-over, I would have taken a one piece or something with more coverage.  I did get stared at A LOT in the pool…most Chinese women don’t have a whole lot going on in the boob department.  I’m sure I was quite the novelty. 
There was a flyer in our room advertising massages – they were really inexpensive.  We decided we wanted to get a massage on gotcha day (we weren’t due to leave until 3PM) and we had some time to kill.  I might have been a tiny bit tense.  Weirdest experience – we went up to the “massage room” and there was a lady lying on a twin bed taking a nap.  I had gone in to the room first and I thought we had accidentally gone in the wrong door and I turned around and started to leave.  The lady stood up and said something like “You want a massage”…it was pretty obvious that she was the only one on duty giving massages and we didn’t have enough time to go one after the other – so we decided not.  We said no thank you and left…and the lady slammed the door behind us…I think she wanted to get back to her nap.  It was weird. 
The Shanxi Grand was in a good location.  There was a Spar supermarket on the next block that had a good selection of baby supplies and quick foods.  We bought some noodle bowls (super tasty, puts Top Ramen to shame) but the best part about this store was that we got to buy BIMBO CAKES!  Bimbo is a line of cake stuff (it looks like Little Debbie but without the girl in the cowboy hat). 

Shopping in this store was quite the experience.  We had fans - a group of store employees that followed us around the store looking to see what we bought. They would literally "oooh and ahhh" when we picked up an item and then giggle when we dropped it in our shopping basket or reshelved it. We bought noodles, Bimbo Cakes (they are yummy, by the way), bottled water (much cheaper than in the hotel gift shop) and baby powder.  I wonder if they were disappointed.  I should have bought something racy just to make it more interesting for our little audience. 

There is a “Super Store” next door to the Civil Affairs Office (where you go for your adoption appointments in Taiyuan).  It is like a super Wal-Mart. Tip:  it is hard to find apple juice in China but pear juice abundant.  
Front of the Shanxi Grand.  This statue played music.


 Some shots of the hotel exterior - I would call it a businessman's hotel
 Would I really make up a thing like Bimbo Cakes? 

There is a very nice park that is about a 10-15 minute walk from the Shanxi Grand.  It is called Yingze Park.  You go out the front door, take a left and then another left at the first major intersection (one word - FROGGER).  Travel down the main road and you will find the park just after the next major intersection on your left.  There is a large rock wall/fountain…it is hard to miss.  The park goes a long way back and has some fun things to do –(animal shows, aquarium, boats, kiddie rides, a playground and concessions.  It is a very nice green space to walk around in.  It is stroller friendly and there are some places to sit.  The pictures below don't do it justice. 




There was also a Pizza Hut/KFC combo across from the park.  We ate dinner at Pizza Hut one night.  It is different than American Pizza Hut.  It was a casual with table service that happens to have a few pizza dishes on the menu.  We had a pizza (Doodlebug was not impressed).   It was decent but not quite the same as American Pizza Hut.  We also had desert.  Hubs had some type of strawberry cake.  He ate it fast and didn't offer me a bite, so I guess it was good.  Doodlebug and I had ice cream, which he clearly thought was the bees knees. 
 
We never tried the KFC or tried to find the McDonalds (there was one somewhere in the general area) and honestly I was a little ashamed of myself for eating Pizza Hut instead of trying to find someplace cool for dinner.  Although we are wannabe foodies and always try to sample the local food, this was a little different.  We were tired most of the time and dealing with a baby who had a limited window of good behavior in a sit down restaurant so we didn’t eat outside of the hotel.  I wish we had.  
 
What else to do?
We spent 4 days in Taiyuan and 2 of them were devoted to  adoption stuff.  We had “electives” on the other 2 days.  First, we went to the City Museum.  It is very nice and  modern – 4 stories tall.  We went with our guide Lisa and another family that was adopting a little girl from another city in the province.  We probably saw about half of the museum.  It wasn’t super exciting for the little kids but our crew did really well.  We had a really fun experience while we were there:  2 school-aged children approached and talked to me (through Lisa).  They could not believe “real live Americans” were visiting their city.  They were very friendly and when I commented on her Angry Birds shirt she was AMAZED I had heard of Angry Birds.  So funny to experience that world view. Some museum pictures:

  

The second free day was spent at Yingze Temple.  This was about a 45 minute “death ride” from our hotel (seriously, I thought Hubs' driving was bad).  It was a nice, peaceful haven in the middle of a crowded, smoggy city. We saw lots of Chinese tour groups and I think they were most interested in checking us out than they were seeing the temple.  The air was cleaner here, which was nice.  Some pictures: 


Bee!

On our last morning in Taiyuan we had just enough time to eat breakfast and check out of our hotel.  Lisa brought Doodlebug's Chinese passport to us, which why we'd been hanging out in Taiyuan. "Orphans" don't get passports, so his identify documents weren't processed by the Chinese until we stepped forward as his parents.   It took about 20 minutes to get to the airport, which was new and modern.  The security was the most…um...shall we say thorough...I’ve ever experienced.  The girl “waving” the wand over my boobs totally owes me dinner.  Shots of the lobby:


 
We took China Southern Airlines to Guangzhou…about a 2 hour flight.  Nice airline…the flight attendants spoke decent English, and we got served a hot meal that was actually pretty tasty. If it would have been Southwest, we'd have had to pay for pretzel bits, so the "Lean Cuisine" was bonus. 
Go to Taiyuan with an open mind.  It will be “different”.  It will look different and smell different. Keep positive.  If you don't find your usual brand of Pringles, is that what's really important?  Try new things, get outside your comfort zone and soak up the little glimpse of your child’s home province that you get the opportunity to see.  You'll be the turd in the punch bowl.  Suck up the staring.  Ignore it or smile.  It is not rude, ugly staring.  The people of Shanxi province are generally friendly but you are just so far from what they are used to seeing.  Imagine if you had NEVER (ever, ever, ever) seen an Asian and one dropped in to your town for a visit.  The pollution is rough (take throat drops and eye drops).  Don’t harp on how the food/traffic/air/people is/are different.  It will be different.  It is half a world away.  Embrace it and remember why you get to be there – your time in Taiyuan will be over all too quickly. 
This is Doodlebug asleep in his crib on his first night as our son.  Worth all of the smog and staring.