- March 4, 2001 (Day -4)
- March 6, 2001 (Day -2)
- March 7, 2001 (Day -1)
- March 8, 2001 (Day 1)
- March 10, 2001 (Day 3)
- March 11, 2001 (Day 4)
- March 12, 2001 (Day 5)
- March 13, 2001 (Day 6)
- March 14, 2001 (Day 7)
- March 15, 2001 (Day 8)
- March 16, 2001 (Day 9)
- March 17, 2001 (Day 10)
- March 18, 2001 (Day 11)
- March 19, 2001 (Day 12)
- Time Check: Day 12
- March 20, 2001 (Day 13)
- March 21, 2001 (Day 14)
- March 22, 2001 (Day 15)
- March 23, 2001 (Day 16)
- March 24, 2001 (Day 17)
- March 25, 2001 (Day 18)
- March 26, 2001 (Day 19)
- March 27, 2001 (Day 20)
- March 28, 2001 (Day 21)
- March 29, 2001 (Day 22)
- March 30, 2001 (Day 23)
- Time Check: Day 23
- March 31, 2001 (Day 24)
- April 1, 2001 (Day 25)
- April 2, 2001 (Day 26)
- April 3, 2001 (Day 27)
- April 4, 2001 (Day 28)
- April 5, 2001 (Day 29)
- Time Check: Day 29
- April 6, 2001 (Day 30)
- April 7, 2001 (Day 31)
- April 8, 2001 (Day 32)
- April 9, 2001 (Day 33)
- April 10, 2001 (Day 34)
- April 11, 2001 (Day 35)
- Time Check: Day 35
- April 12, 2001 (Day 36)
- April 13, 2001 (Day 37)
- April 14, 2001 (Day 38)
- April 15, 2001 (Day 39)
- April 16, 2001 (Day 40)
- Time Check: Day 40
- April 17, 2001 (Day 41)
- April 18, 2001 (Day 42)
- April 19, 2001 (Day 43)
- Time Check: Day 43
- April 20, 2001 (Day 44)
- Intermission
- April 21, 2001 (Day 45)
- April 22, 2001 (Day 46)
- April 23, 2001 (Day 47)
- April 24, 2001 (Day 48)
- April 25, 2001 (Day 49)
- April 26, 2001 (Day 50)
- April 27, 2001 (Day 51)
- April 28, 2001 (Day 52)
- Time Check: Day 52
- April 29, 2001 (Day 53)
- April 30, 2001 (Day 54)
- May 1, 2001 (Day 55) – Part I
- May 1, 2001 (Day 55) – Part II
- May 2, 2001 (Day 56)
- May 3, 2001 (Day 57)
- May 4, 2001 (Day 58)
- May 5, 2001 (Day 59)
- May 6, 2001 (Day 60)
- May 7, 2001 (Day 61)
- Time Check: Day 61
- May 8, 2001 (Day 62)
- May 9, 2001 (Day 63)
- May 10, 2001 (Day 64)
- May 11, 2001 (Day 65)
- May 12, 2001 (Day 66)
- May 13, 2001 (Day 67)
- May 14, 2001 (Day 68)
- May 15, 2001 (Day 69)
- Time Check: Day 69
- May 16, 2001 (Day 70)
- Time Check: Day 70
- May 17, 2001 (Day 71)
- May 18, 2001 (Day 72)
- May 19, 2001 (Day 73)
- May 20, 2001 (Day 74)
- May 21, 2001 (Day 75)
- May 22, 2001 (Day 76)
- May 23, 2001 (Day 77)
- May 24, 2001 (Day 78)
- May 25, 2001 (Day 79)
- Intermission – Part II
- May 27, 2001 (Epilogue)
April 13, 2001 (Day 37): Shang Chuan Hotel, Shanghai – 11.30pm
Health: good.
Morale: OK. Communications problems are again exacerbated or caused by being tired, hungry or other things.
Anna is not comfortable in Shanghai and it is beginning to show. She still comments about being stared at. Not surprisingly, we draw the attention of people in Shanghai. They also tend to stare longer if we make eye contact so it is perhaps a self-perpetuating issue. She admits that she does not like the crowds. The evident poverty is also draining, in great contrast with upscale shops next to shanties. And there is the language problem. Neither of us is even close to fluent in Chinese so it is a hard situation to be in. This is perhaps the slippery slope to our becoming Ugly Americans. It is easy to identify in others; harder to admit to yourself.
Since breakfast is not a meal Anna wants to experiment with, we began our last full day in China at the Deli France. At long last, we got the Internet sorted. We went to Book City, a large book store with an Internet Café tucked away on one of the floors. We grabbed a computer, had a couple instant coffees and got in touch with home. As expected, we discovered a plethora of Internet Cafés in our subsequent wanderings throughout Shanghai.
Business sorted, we made our way to the Shanghai Art Museum in People’s Park. The design of the building is well done: the top floor is circular with a square atrium in the center – the same symbol that represented the Chinese view of the universe. We rented the headsets and went off to see what we could see. They had an excellent collection of seals. My favorite was intricately carved orange soapstone displaying seven eternal beings on a mural that spanned three of its sides. It was more a bas relief than anything. The best part was the little head of a dragon peeking out from below. Wonderful detail, especially on such a small piece.
We took time to explore sections on our own for about half an hour. I visited the painting exhibits, which were hit and miss. I liked a lot of the Ming stuff but cannot say that the Qing stuff did much for me. The painting that had the greatest impression on me was a rather simple one of an envoy leaving for a foreign assignment. The focus is on the six figures on the right. Five friends gathered together to wish the sixth farewell. The scenery to the left is less distinct, evoking an early morning departure to places unknown.
Anna went to see the Minority Group display – in particular to see the costumes. She found it impressive, especially the incredible embroidery work as well as detailed weaving. The range of costumes, most pretty brightly colored and the range of fabrics demonstrated to her how big a country China is. One costume of the Moai, when fully adorned including the silver headdress, could be several kilograms. A costume can take many years to make, but demonstrates the wearer’s abilities to suitors when she wears it. One of the cultures believed they descended from butterflies and so butterflies are a major factor in their needlework designs.
I have to admit to feeling a bit under-dressed in this city. Looking around, I must be the only person not prominently displaying a designer label.
We took a dinner break at a German brewpub near the Bund. The menus continue to contain interesting dishes. After seeing something described as ‘xxx with five delicacies’, Anna decided her definition of a delicacy may not match the chef’s so she ordered fried rice and vegetables. The beer was nothing special.
Fortified, we embarked on a moderately successful shopping expedition to obtain shoes. Shopping is not all fun and games. There is a shop on Nanjing Lu across from the Metro station where the Madonna song Holiday blares incessantly in a constant loop. Over and over again. In dreams, I hear the maddening wails of the sad employees who work there and imagine the convulsive fits that will overtake them later in life when they happen to hear the song again.
Shopping taxed our limited Chinese language skills. It was a challenge to try to describe the fit we needed in a shoe. Between the phrase book and the occasional employee that spoke some English we found a pair of shoes for Anna – curiously, the shoelaces were sold separately. I landed a simple pair of black slip-ons with a distinct tar-like aroma. At $2 a pair, they may not turn out to be such a bargain.
Tonight we bade farewell to Shanghai with drinks atop the Peace Hotel. Sitting in the Art Deco bar with the band performing a piano and violin duet in the background. Below us, ships glided by on the Huangpu silhouetted against the backdrop of the new modern Shanghai. A nice final image.
Tomorrow, we leave the Eurasian landmass for Japan. It will be a short night and a busy morning, but we should have a couple days to rest a bit. I am looking very forward to being on a ship again. Will I be as excited to be back on dry land in a month after so much time at sea?
Excerpts from Anna’s journal included
Life’s like a road that you travel on
When there’s one day here and the next day gone
Sometimes you bend, sometimes you stand
Sometimes you turn your back to the wind
There’s a world outside every darkened door
Where blues won’t haunt you anymore
Where the brave are free and lovers soar
Come ride with me to the distant shoreTom Cochrane, 'Life is a Highway'