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Nanjing and Shanghai in 144 hours

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Posted

Last year, I used the 144 hours transit with no visa in Shangai, arriving from Vienna (Austria) and continuing to Bangkok afterwards. I had no problem to board the Austrian Airlines plane and no problem entering China.

 

The only hickup is that at the immigration an officer has to come to check with Thai Airways my plane ticket leaving Shangai within 6 days after arrival (=144 hours rule). This took 15 minutes but was worth waiting, taking into account saving the cost of the visa and the visits to the embassy to get the visa.

Posted

Last year, I used the 144 hours transit with no visa in Shangai, arriving from Vienna (Austria) and continuing to Bangkok afterwards. I had no problem to board the Austrian Airlines plane and no problem entering China.

 

The only hickup is that at the immigration an officer has to come to check with Thai Airways my plane ticket leaving Shangai within 6 days after arrival (=144 hours rule). This took 15 minutes but was worth waiting, taking into account saving the cost of the visa and the visits to the embassy to get the visa.

 I will enter China at Shanghai or Beijing next time. They must have more experience with the process than other places. 

Posted

Weekend in Shanghai

 

I was going to try the fast train from Nanjing to Shanghai for the weekend but they were all fully booked on the Friday so I took the only flight available with China Eastern airlines. On my last visit to China both of my China Eastern flights had been delayed by up to five hours so I was very happy when we departed only a few minutes late from Nanjing. On the flight I chatted with a young Chinese guy who is working as a Mechanical Engineer and living in Canada. He said that he believes that China is at least five years ahead of the west with its technological advances and heading towards a cashless society but was still more than happy just to visit his relatives and friends in Nanjing and live with more freedom in Canada.

 

I tried the very fast Maglev train for 50rmb ($AU10) from the Shanghai Pudong airport which took about 8 minutes to travel the 30km to the Longyang Road station. My hotel is next to a metro station so I needed to transfer to line 7 which took a bit of finding as the signs were not the best at Longyang Road. I could take taxis from the airports but I like to try the train systems as part of my trip at least one way to see what they are like.

 

I stayed at the 4 star Shanghai Pine City Hotel which is in the Xuhai district and adjacent to the Zhaojiabang Metro Station. Again the bed was a bit firm but acceptable and the rooms facing inwards away from the road are very quiet and comfortable. The staff speak good English and the hotel is near the old French concession area and some very nice leafy streets, cafes and restaurants located on or nearby Wulumuqi south road. There are shopping malls in walking distance or one station away by train to Dong'an Road Metro station. The gay bars are also a short taxi ride away which is convenient when returning to the hotel late at night. To get to Peoples Square, Nanjing Road and the Bund was a 15 minute trip on the metro. I have stayed near Nanjing Road before and much prefer the quieter Xuhai district.

 

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Shanghai Pine City Hotel

 

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The streets near my hotel. A very pleasant walk for a coffee or meal or just looking around.

 

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We rarely see a corner store in Australia any more

 

Something that I noticed in Nanjing and especially Shanghai on this trip were the large number of bicycles available for hire by using a bar code scanner on phone apps like Ofo and Mobike. Bikes can be left anywhere for the next user and very inexpensive at 15 cents per hour. I saw other foreigners using the bikes so I will need to find out the process for my next trip to China.

 

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Scan the bar code to unlock the bike

 

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Bikes parked near the Bund and Yu Garden

 

I spent most of the weekend with a slim 26yo Chinese guy who contacted me on the Blued app last time that I was in Shanghai. He is better than good looking with very smooth and soft skin. He is not a money boy and loves older, average build or larger white guys and is very popular with international visitors so one of his friends told me. No startling news to me as I have read the updates on his We Chat and could see the photos in the moments section when he is out with his friends. I just said that I did not care and know that he is a popular guy and that this weekend was my time with him. I have had enough experience in Thailand to know when I am being pursued by guys looking for a sponsor so I am confident that is not the case with this lovely guy.

 

Some Chinese guys like to pay for meals etc for their guest and my friend used the We Chat app to pay for just about everything. Over the whole weekend I saw him pay with cash only for train tickets and one soft drink. I kept offering to pay for meals and drinks and had to pay quickly before he could get his phone out.

 

On the Friday night we went to the Lucca 390 gay bar about 1130pm. The club is a short walk from The Crowne Plaza Shanghai and there was a nearby metro station with more directions on the lucca website. http://www.lucca.cc

 

My friend paid the entrance of 50rmb ($AU10) each with his We Chat app and the price included one drink each. Beer was 30rmb and spirits 40rmb so it was not expensive. The bar staff were friendly, music was good and not excessively loud like some Thai venues and no smoking allowed inside the building. I maybe biased but I thought my guy was the best looking there and as usual I could see that look on some of the faces of people there of wtf is that hot young guy doing with the old guy and probably thinking he was a money boy. We stayed till about 300am most of the time up close on the packed dance floor and then caught a taxi back to the hotel. If you are in Shanghai I definitely recommend Lucca 390 for an enjoyable night out on the weekend with friends or if you go alone and not too shy there were plenty of single guys who looked available to meet.

 

On Saturday we just walked around the area near my hotel and took the metro to Peoples Square late in the afternoon. There were thousands of people walking along Nanjing road towards the Bund river. If I walk along Nanjing road alone I will be offered a massage at least ten times by the time that I reach the Bund but walking with a Chinese friend nobody bothered us. Be careful of those massages as they are a scam and you might be threatened with violence to pay large sums to escape before or after your massage. If any Chinese approach you in the tourist areas of Shanghai and Beijing to offer to take you for tea or to have your name written with Chinese calligraphy keep walking and ignore them or your day out may become very expensive.

 

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View across the Bund

 

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The buildings along the Zhongshan East Road side of the Bund

 

The skyscrapers at night do look spectacular and on my last visit to Shanghai I took the sightseeing tunnel across to the Pudong side of the Bund for a closer look around near the Oriental Pearl Tower and the other tall buildings.

 

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The sightseeing tunnel is worth doing once and then return by metro

 

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The Oriental Pearl Tower

 

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There is extensive condominium and road construction happening further along the Zhongshan South Road near the Bund. The old dark building below looked a bit depressing for the less affluent residents of the area

 

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A one stop shop for all your basic needs near Peoples Square

 

On Sunday we walked along the Bund again all the way to the streets around the Yu Gardens. There were many shops and restaurants and very similar to the tourist areas that i have seen in other Chinese cities. Still its a nice enough place to spend some time and have a meal.

 

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On Monday morning I took a taxi to Pudong Airport which cost 234rmb $AU45. No problems with the heavily regulated taxi drivers in China unless you take an unofficial taxi. It was an early start for the 7.35am Thai airways flight to Bangkok to arrive in Pattaya the day before the Morlum concert on the 18th and the Songkran celebrations the following day.

Posted

Two years ago, I got a Chinese visa...the price for a one time visit or a ten year visa was the same...so i took the ten year.  

Posted

Seems the multiple entry 10 year visa is only available for US passport holders. A trial scheme is underway for Australian passport holders but the cost is a lot more - AUD1,000.

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