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 Shanghai Travel Guide
 

Tour Code: S-SH20

5 Days Standard of Shanghai - Chongqing - Dazu - Chongqing
Starting from $509 per person
Luxury| Standard

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Day by Day Itinerary

Departure: Daily

Day One: Entry Shanghai
TCG guide will hold a welcome sign to meet you at the Shanghai Pudong (Hongqiao) Airport according to your international (internal) flight schedule. Transfer to the 4-star hotel for 2 nights stay. Escort you to stroll along the Nanjing Road to reach the famous Bund area along the Huangpu River.

Meals: None
Hotel: Holiday Inn Downtown Shanghai   (4 star) 


Day Two: Shanghai
A whole day excursion covers the Shanghai Museum, the Yuyuan Garden and a local family visit.

Specials: Portman Acrobatic Show and a tasty dinner at Wangbaohe restaurant
Meals: Breakfast, Lunch, Dinner



Day Three: Shanghai - Chongqing
Today fly to Chongqing. TCG guide will wait for you at the airport ahead of the flight schedule and transfer you to the 4-star hotel for 2 nights stay. See the Residence and Headquarters General Joseph W. Stilwell Chief Commander. Enjoy your time by visiting the pandas in Chongqing Zoo. 

Meals: Breakfast, Lunch
Hotel: Holiday Inn Yangtze Hotel ( 4 star)


Day Four: Chongqing - Dazu - Chongqing
Take car to Dazu Grottoes. See the Baoding Carvings for the well-known stone carving figures and cliffside figures. Drive back to Chongqing. 

Meals: Breakfast, Lunch
 

Day Five: Chongqing Exit
Private transfer takes you to the airport and your pleasant China tour ends here.

Meals: Breakfast

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Prices (based on per person and shown in US dollars)

Prices  (Valid from Mar. 1st, 2008 to Feb. 28th, 2009)
Group size
Season
2-5 travelers 6-9 travelers 10 travelers & above
High season Double Occupancy $849 $669 $559
Sole Occupancy $1019 $849 $709
Low season Double Occupancy $819 $639 $509
Sole Occupancy $969 $789 $619
Remark : Quotations listed are valid excluding the periods of F1 Grand Prix staying in Shanghai.

Quotation Includes
  1. Domestic airfares with taxes;
  2. Hotel accommodation with breakfasts;
  3. Lunches and dinners as itinerary specifies;
  4. Private guides and drivers;
  1. Air-conditioned vehicles;
  2. Tourist sites permission fees;
  3. 2 bottles of mineral water each day;
  4. Government taxes.

For our quotation inclusions & exclusions, booking and cancellation terms, please read details.

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  Our Private Tour is customized for you or your personal group specially. You will enjoy our private guide, driver as well as car service during the whole land tour individually, instead of sharing with other travelers.


How often have you been lured into a Chinese restaurant by the promise of an ‘all you can eat’ banquet featuring colourful pictures of glisteningly pretty gourmet dishes that make your stomach grumble in anticipation? Once inside have you found yourself queuing up with other disgruntled diners for a meagre scraping of dried-up dishes from stainless steel vats? Yes, we have fallen for those promises too, but never again now that we have discovered Shanghai.

The restaurant’s pride in its banquet is obvious from their giant banner flapping in the wind, the diners spilling out of the restaurant with loosened belts and the orderly queues forming to enter the popular Chinese on a Saturday evening. With word of Shanghai’s reputation as a well-priced eatery spreading as quickly as the diners’ girths, there wasn’t much arm-twisting needed to drag a few hungry companions along to the brightly-lit Bristol Road restaurant. It was packed with twenty-something birthday celebrations, young families and a smattering of couples when we were seated swiftly and opted unanimously for the all you can eat offerings.

We deliberated over the menu, with more than a hundred choices, like a cryptic game of suduko – deciding on the exact number and combination of dishes needed to satisfy each of the picky eaters on our table for six. There are rules, despite the seeming anarchy of an all you can eat restaurant: you shouldn’t order more than three dishes per person or more than ten dishes for the entire table at once – as there are serving and kitchen time constraints as well as limited surface area on a table – but you are free to order more dishes once the empty plates have been cleared. Once you have moved onto your main course choices, you can’t order more starters, and you shouldn’t order more than you can feasibly eat – well, that would just be wasteful. Swigging Tiger beers and cheap plonk we decided on a definitive list of dishes, which we forgot five minutes later, and had to decide again once the cheerful waiter was hovering over us.

Such was the quality of the starters that some tables ordered nothing else – with the juicy prawn satay skewers, saucy barbeque ribs and crispy meat-filled wontons being particularly good, while the hot and sour soup left a warm glow and the crispy aromatic duck was a tender choice, followed-up swiftly for repeat orders. The texture of the crab claws was not a resounding success however, and faired on the wrong side of bland. For our main course selection we sampled the ubiquitous sweet and sours – chicken being unsurprisingly popular – as well as crispy chilli beef despite being more crispy than beef. The satay roast pork was also a success with delightful lashings of sumptuous sauce, accompanied by a selection of noodles, rice and bean curd with vegetables.

The service was relaxed and informal, with a friendly hostess found chatting with regulars – of which there are plenty. And who can blame anyone for returning time and time again, aside from the rather raucous antics on Bristol Road (we lost count of how many revellers we saw stumbling past the window in fancy dress) at the princely sum of £9.50 per person Sunday to Thursday and £13.50 Fridays and Saturdays, the range and quality of this all you can eat Chinese banquet really was a feast for a king.

Client's information:
Ms.Michelle Byrne , United States , 2008-4-8 16:45

Shanghai is overall a pretty nice place. It is very convinient for eating, shopping, and recreational purposes, although getting to them is the hard part; the traffic is often quite awful, because the city is very crowded. However, getting the transportation is easy, there are thousands of taxis waiting to be of service, and if you're a bit more advernturous, you might even want to take the cheaper way: the bus. Although with some resturaunts you have to be careful, most of them hold exotic foods that many foreigners have never even heard of before.
There are plently of places to interest you, Nanjing Road, The Oriental Pearl Tower, the Science Center, and of course the Shanghai Zoo and Aquarium. You might also want to take a visit downtown, or somewhere in the Bund.

It doesn't really matter much where you stay, as long as it's some high class hotel like the JW Marriott and other similar hotels. You might want to pick out a hotel that's closest to the attractions that you want to see, so that you wont be stuck in traffic.
Shopping is fun, although what you get may not be entirely genuine, and some places to go are Huaihai road, random places in downtown, and any shopping mall that you might come across. On the streets, you can find the flea markets, where you can buy high-class-looking stuff that, although it might not be authentic, is very cheap.

Shanghai is a very interesting place with its own ups and downs just like any city. I would recoment going there, not only to see the wide-viewed attractions, but also take a look at the rural conditions there like the ancient buildings and houses that normal Shanghainese live in.

Client's information:
Mr.Norman , Belgium , 2008-4-8 16:30

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