53 منشورات · نصائح سفر صينية مختارة
Monday tomorrow. Both kids have school, I have three trip proposals to finish, and somewhere in between I need to buy groceries and figure out what a 7-year-old means by "I need yellow socks for the school play." Some weeks feel like a juggling act. But I wouldn't trade this life for anything. Here's to a good week ahead — for all of us juggling our own versions of yellow socks.
I took a British family to a night market in Kunming last week. The dad stopped in front of a stall selling fried insects and just stared. "The scorpion. Is it... is it good?" he asked. I told him the truth: they taste like prawn crackers with extra crunch. The grubs are nuttier. The scorpion is mostly just a vehicle for the seasoning powder they toss on it. He bought one scorpion stick (¥15), closed his eyes, and bit. His wife filmed. His kids screamed with laughter. He opened his eyes, chewed, and said: "...it's actually not bad." That's the night market experience in a nutshell. You try things you'd never order in a restaurant. You eat while walking. You discover that some of China's best food comes on a stick from a cart with a single lightbulb. Every Chinese city has a great night market. The biggest are famous — Wangfujing in Beijing, Yuyuan in Shanghai. But the real ones are the local night markets three blocks from your hotel. Ask your front desk. They'll point you to the right street.
Food tip for this week: if you see a restaurant with a plastic curtain at the door, plastic stools, and a crowd of locals eating with their heads down — go in. That's where the good stuff is. Not the place with English menus and laminated photos. I've eaten at ¥800-a-person banquets that I forgot the next day, and I've had ¥12 bowls of noodles from a street stall that I still think about years later. Trust the plastic stools.
A client once asked me: "Why do you do this? Isn't planning other people's trips exhausting?" I laughed because... yes, sometimes it is. But then I get a photo of a family on the Great Wall at sunrise, or a message that says "my kids still talk about the hotpot night," and I remember why. I don't sell tickets. I help people make memories they'll carry home. That's the part no booking platform can do.
I'm working on a Shanghai guide this week. Been visiting that city for 15 years and it still surprises me — a new alley cafe, a hidden rooftop bar, a tiny noodle shop that's been there since the 1930s tucked between two skyscrapers. The Bund is beautiful. But the real Shanghai is in those side streets. I'll share my full guide soon. Meanwhile, what's the one thing you want to know about visiting Shanghai?
My daughter told me last night: "Mama, when I grow up I want to be a travel planner like you. But I'll plan trips for grandmas." I asked why grandmas. "Because they're the ones who actually have time to enjoy things." Out of the mouths of six-year-olds. She's not wrong though. I've spent 15 years watching travellers pack too much into too little time. The 6-city, 10-day itineraries. The "we can sleep when we get home" approach. The frantic rush from one attraction to the next. And then I watch the ones who do it differently. The retired couple who stayed in one Chengdu neighbourhood for a week and got invited to a local family's home for dinner. The solo traveller who spent three afternoons in the same tea house and ended up learning calligraphy from an elderly regular. The best China trips aren't the ones that cover the most ground. They're the ones where you let the country happen to you. Not bad advice from a six-year-old.
Sunday evening. The girls are finally asleep. I reheat my tea for the third time and sit down to plan next week’s schedule. A family from Germany emailed today — they want a 14-day trip covering Shanghai, Guilin, and Chengdu. I’ve done this route a dozen times but every family is different. This one has two kids aged 7 and 10, so I’m thinking: fewer temples, more food markets, and at least one panda encounter they’ll talk about for years. Sunday evenings at home are my reset button.
Two years ago a client slipped on a wet marble floor at his Beijing hotel. Just a sprained wrist — but his travel insurance didn't cover China. He ended up paying ¥800 at a walk-in clinic and spent the rest of his trip anxious about what would happen if something serious happened. Don't be that guy. I tell every client: check your travel insurance covers China BEFORE you leave. Not all policies do. Here's what to look for: — Medical coverage in China (some policies exclude it) — Minimum $100,000 coverage — Coverage for TCM treatment (acupuncture, tuina — these count as legitimate medical expenses here) — 24-hour English helpline If your insurer says "worldwide excluding USA" — that usually covers China. But call and confirm. Don't rely on the fine print. The good news: China's hospitals are excellent and affordable. An MRI costs ¥480. An emergency room visit for something minor? ¥200-500. Even without insurance, it won't bankrupt you. But with insurance, you travel without that worry in the back of your mind.
I have taken China's high-speed trains hundreds of times. Last month I fell asleep and missed my stop by 200 kilometers. Woke up in a panic. The conductor saw my face, checked my ticket, and said calmly: "Get off at the next stop, cross the platform, take the train back. No new ticket needed." Total damage: 45 minutes and zero yuan. I sat there thinking — in what other country does missing your stop cost you nothing? 400 million people ride these trains every month. 99% on-time rate. And when you mess up? They just... help you. My client still scolded me for being late to our meeting. Some things even China's railway cannot save you from.
My 6-year-old watched my dad do his morning tea ceremony yesterday and asked: "Mama, why does Grandpa pour out the first round?" I explained: the first steep wakes up the leaves. It rinses off dust from months of storage. It warms the pot and the cups. And honestly — it is just what we have always done. She watched my dad with new eyes. Ten seconds later: "So Grandpa knows everything about tea?" My dad, without looking up: "No. I just know this one thing well. And that is enough." That is the most Chinese answer I have ever heard. Humble, honest, and completely unimpressed by the question.
A 70-year-old Australian lady needed a ride to her hotel last week. No Chinese. Never used a ride-hailing app in her life. I installed Didi on her phone, showed her how messages auto-translate, sent her off praying she would make it. She called me 20 minutes later, laughing. The driver had played traditional Chinese music the whole way and taught her to say 谢谢. She used Didi four more times during her trip — completely alone. Each ride she sent me a voice note: "Your Chinese robot is working!" This is the part of my job nobody talks about. Not the itineraries, not the hotel bookings. The moment someone realizes they can navigate China on their own. That is what I actually sell.
Took a French couple to a food market in Chengdu last month. They wanted to try everything but had no idea where to start. I told them: pick whatever vegetable or meat catches your eye, hand it to any stall owner, ask them to cook it. No menu. No prices. Just point, nod, and wait. The wife grabbed a green leafy thing she had never seen. Turned out to be water spinach (空心菜). The owner stir-fried it with garlic in two minutes. Cost: 8 yuan. She stared at the plate like it was magic. She told me later that was the best meal of their trip. She still does not know what she ate. Some of the best meals in China do not happen in restaurants. They happen on plastic stools in a market alley, eating something cooked by someone whose grandmother taught them.
A friend from Germany visited Chongqing and asked nervously: "Is it safe here at night?" I told him: I let my 6-year-old go downstairs alone to buy soy sauce from the corner shop. My 70-year-old mom square dances in the park at 9 PM. In 15 years of doing this work, violent crime against a tourist? Not one. Pickpocketing at crowded spots? Sure — same as anywhere. Lost my wallet in a Didi three times — got it back every time. He walked back from a night market at 11 PM on his last night. Messaged me: "This city feels alive at night, not dangerous." The real danger in China? Crossing the road in Chongqing during rush hour. That I cannot defend you from.
My son asked me last week: "Mama, why do Chinese people eat with chopsticks?" I didn't have a good answer. So I asked my uncle, who's been a chef for 40 years. He said: "Because we cut everything in the kitchen. No knives on the table. The chopsticks are for picking up what's already ready." And that's actually a great way to understand Chinese food culture. Western cooking leaves the knife to the diner. Chinese cooking does all the work for you — meat sliced thin, vegetables bite-sized, everything ready to pick up and eat. The chopstick is just the tool that delivers it. The real skill isn't chopsticks — it's the rice bowl. Hold it close to your mouth and push food in. That's how locals eat. Keeping the bowl on the table and leaning down? That's what kids do (and my four-year-old still does it, sauce on his chin, every single meal). If you can handle chopsticks well enough to pick up a single peanut, you're better than most tourists. If you can pick up a slippery mushroom? You've graduated.
A British couple joined me for dinner at a local restaurant in Chongqing. When the food arrived — six dishes for four people — the husband looked confused. "Should I order my own plate?" I explained: in China, you do not order for yourself. Dishes go in the center of the table and everyone shares. The round table with the rotating glass top (lazy susan) is designed for this. You spin it, take what you want, spin it to the next person. There are rules nobody tells you: wait for the host to start eating first. Do not stick your chopsticks upright in your rice bowl (that is for funerals). If you are the host, order one dish per person plus one more. The fish should face the guest of honor. The British guy spent the whole dinner trying to serve others before serving himself — which is actually the correct Chinese way of showing respect. By the end of the meal he had figured out the rhythm: you eat, you talk, you spin, you repeat. He told me: "This is how dinner should be. It is social. Western dining feels so lonely in comparison." He is not wrong. The round table is not just furniture — it is a philosophy. No head of the table. No separate plates. Just everyone eating from the same dishes, connected by a spinning circle of food.
My neighbor Auntie Wang has a key to our apartment. She feeds our cat when we are away, waters the plants, and once even picked up my younger daughter from kindergarten when I was stuck in a client meeting. I did not ask her to do these things. She just does them. This is normal in China. In the residential community (小区) where I live in Chongqing, the neighbors know each other. Grandmas watch each other's grandkids. Homecooked food gets shared across floors. If someone is sick, someone else will show up with soup. My Western clients often ask: "How do you build trust with people here?" And I tell them: you do not build it through contracts or formal agreements. You build it by showing up consistently. Same vegetable stall every morning. Same tea house every week. The fruit lady remembers what your kids like. The noodle shop owner knows your usual order. Over time, you stop being a customer and become a familiar person. When I first moved to this neighborhood 12 years ago, I barely knew anyone. Now I cannot walk to the grocery store without stopping to chat three times. That is how community works in China. It is not convenient — sometimes I just want to get home. But it is real, and I would not trade it.
A French client asked me last week: "Why does everyone keep asking if I have eaten? Is it a trick question?" She had been in Beijing for three days and every local she met greeted her with "你吃了吗" (have you eaten?). The hotel front desk, the vegetable vendor, even the security guard at the Forbidden City. I explained: it is not an invitation to eat. It is the Chinese version of "how are you." We ask about food because for centuries, having enough to eat was the most important concern. The question means "I care about your wellbeing." The correct answer is just "吃了" (yes, I have eaten) or "还没吃" (not yet) — and then you move on. She found it charming. By the end of her trip she was greeting people with "你吃了吗" herself. Her Chinese was terrible but nobody cared — they just smiled because she was playing the game. Three phrases I make every client learn: 谢谢 (thank you), 多少钱 (how much), and 我吃了 (I have eaten). The third one always gets the biggest smiles.
Just spent the morning sketching out a Shanghai-Suzhou trip for an Australian family of four. The dad sent me a voice note last night: "I showed the kids photos of the water towns, and now they will not stop asking when we are going." That voice note is going to keep me going all week. Here is the route we landed on: three nights in Shanghai (Bund view, Yuyuan Garden, a food tour through the old lanes), then a day trip to Suzhou by high-speed train (23 minutes, ¥40). The kids are 9 and 12, so I added a stop at the Shanghai Natural History Museum and a evening cruise on the Huangpu River. The mom asked me: "Is Suzhou worth it for just one day?" I told her: Suzhou is the Venice of the East, except the canals actually still have locals living along them. One day is enough to see the Humble Administrators Garden, walk a canal street, and eat the best xiaolongbao of your life before catching the train back. Monday morning — coffee in hand, a full week ahead, a family excited about their China trip. Not a bad way to start the week.
Took a German couple to hotpot yesterday. It was 38°C outside. The husband looked at the bubbling red oil and said: "You want us to eat boiling food in this weather?" I just smiled and ordered extra beef. Two hours later he was rolling up his sleeves, sweat dripping, declaring it was the best meal he has had in China. His wife was quieter — too busy fighting for the last piece of tripe. Here is the thing about Chinese food culture that surprises most tourists: we eat hotpot year-round. In fact, summer is when it hits different. The TCM logic is that the sweat cools you down from the inside out. I do not know if that is scientifically accurate, but I know that after a hotpot dinner in July, walking out into the hot night air feels... refreshing? It makes no sense until you try it. The German guy asked for the restaurant name before leaving. Said he wanted to come back tomorrow. I told him the place does not have an English name. He said: "Good. Means the food is real."
A German client asked me worriedly last week: "Will I survive China without speaking Chinese?" I told him about the time I watched a Swedish tourist order dinner at a busy Chengdu restaurant entirely through charades. He pointed at a neighbour's bowl, held up two fingers, and gave a thumbs up. The waiter nodded, came back ten minutes with the exact same dish, and the guy ate it happily. You don't need Chinese to travel China. But you do need three things: 1. Google Translate with Chinese downloaded offline. Point camera at menu, get translation. Not perfect, but good enough. 2. Pleco dictionary for when Translate fails. The handwriting input is a lifesaver for single characters. 3. A willingness to be wrong. You'll point at the wrong menu item, order something unexpected, and discover your new memorable dish. That's not a mistake — that's the experience. The three phrases I make every client learn: 谢谢 (thank you), 多少钱 (how much), and 这个 (this one — accompanied by pointing). With those three, you can handle 90% of daily interactions. My client survived. Thrived, actually. Ate his way through three cities without a single English menu.
China's high-speed trains are the best travel value in the world, and I'll die on that hill. ¥540 for Beijing to Xi'an (1,200km in 3.5 hours). ¥600 for Chengdu to Shanghai (1,800km in about 10 hours). Clean stations, departure on the dot, WiFi that mostly works, and food carts that come by with hot meals that are actually edible. I've taken the G-series trains hundreds of times. A few things I've learned: Second class (二等座) is perfectly fine — ¥50-70% of first class price for the same journey time. First class (一等座) gives you more legroom and a quieter carriage. Business class is only worth it if someone else is paying. Book through Trip.com if you want English. Use 12306 if you can handle some Chinese — it's cheaper by ¥20-30 per ticket. And bring your own snacks. The train food is fine, but the woman walking through the carriage with a cart of braised chicken feet and beer is where the real action is.
A client sent me a photo from a "jade market" in Beijing yesterday. She'd paid ¥2,000 for a bracelet the vendor swore was "real Burmese jade." I zoomed in. It was plastic with green dye. Here's the honest truth about shopping in China: the fake stuff is everywhere, and the prices tourists pay are often 3-10x what locals pay. But real deals exist if you know where to look. Tea is one of the safest bets. Real Longjing tea from Hangzhou? Worth it. Silk from Suzhou? Excellent quality. Pearl milk tea on every corner? ¥10 and life-changing. The places I tell clients to avoid: "silk factories" that bus tourists in, "tea ceremonies" in gift shops near major attractions, and any market where the vendor speaks perfect English and starts at 10% of your offer. Where I send them instead: the local wet market, a proper tea market (like Majiayao in Beijing), or just any street where vendors are selling to locals, not tourists. More on the shopping guide.
I had an Australian couple show up in Shanghai last month with nothing but a Revolut card and a prayer. No cash, no Alipay, no backup. "We heard China is cashless!" they said proudly. They're right. But there's a gap between "cashless" and "your foreign card works everywhere." Most places accept Alipay and WeChat Pay, but your Visa/Mastercard only works at international hotels, big malls, and some chain restaurants. Street stalls, local restaurants, metro tickets? App-only. Here's what I tell every client: bring ¥500-1000 in cash for emergencies, set up Alipay with your international card before you leave, and treat WeChat Pay as your backup. That combo covers 99% of situations. I once had a client try to pay for hotpot with his Amex. The waiter laughed. Not in a mean way — just genuinely amused that someone would try. We paid with Alipay. Everyone moved on.
Every time someone asks me if XiAn is worth visiting, I give the same answer: book your train ticket first and ask questions later. The Terracotta Warriors are incredible (obviously), but the real magic? Walking the ancient city wall at sunset. Rent a bike (45 RMB for 2 hours), ride the full 14 km loop, and watch the city transition from day to night. The lights come on over the Muslim Quarter, the call to prayer drifts across the old city, and for a moment you feel like you have traveled back in time. I have done this 30+ times and it still gets me.
7 AM at my local market in Chongqing. The vegetable vendors are already on their second round of customers. An old lady selling bok choy sees me coming and shouts: Hey! The mom with two girls! Your youngest liked the spinach last time! She remembered. I have no idea how she remembered. She packed me an extra bunch of scallions and said free, for the girls. This does not happen in supermarkets. This does not happen anywhere outside China. This is what I mean when I tell my clients: come for the sights, stay for the people.
A client sent me a voice message last night panicking because she could not add her foreign Visa card to Alipay. I talked her through it in 5 minutes (trick: use Tour Pass mode, not the regular wallet). She messaged me back an hour later: I just bought street food from a tiny stall in XiAn using my phone. The lady selling it was more excited than I was. This is the thing about China travel in 2026 — the payment problem is mostly solved, you just need to know the right setup. The old advice about carry cash everywhere is outdated. I have not used cash in over a year.
The best time to visit the Great Wall? 7:30 AM on a Tuesday. Seriously. Most tourists show up between 10 AM and 2 PM, and by noon the wall is a human river. I always tell my clients: book a driver the night before, leave your hotel at 6 AM, be on the wall by 7:30. You will have whole sections to yourself. The light is gorgeous at that hour too. I did this with a French couple last month and the husband said it was the only time in China he felt like he had the country to himself. Worth the early alarm.
Summer break is coming and my two girls have already started their campaign for the best summer ever. My 6-year-old wants to see pandas again (we went to Chengdu last year and she still talks about it). My 4-year-old just wants to swim. Win-win: I found a hotel in Chongqing with an indoor pool AND a panda-themed kids club. Booked it in 10 minutes. Sometimes being a travel planner means planning for your own family too. If you are traveling to China with kids this summer, send me a message. I have a list of hotels that actually welcome children — not just tolerate them.
The most common question I get from families: "Is China safe for kids?" Short answer: yes. Long answer: I've been raising my two kids here for years, and the things I worry about in China are different from what parents worry about back home. I don't worry about stranger danger — Chinese people adore children and will go out of their way to help if your kid is upset. A crying child in a Chinese park attracts grandmas like a magnet. They'll produce snacks, toys, and comforting pats from nowhere. I don't worry about traffic — Chinese drivers are chaotic but aware. They expect pedestrians to do unpredictable things. What I do worry about: heat (summers are brutal in most cities), food spice levels (my kids eat mild, ask for 不辣 at restaurants), and bathroom access (not all public toilets are kid-friendly — I always scout one before the kids announce they need it). More detailed tips on the family travel guide. But the bottom line: if you survived a trip with kids anywhere, you'll survive China. And your kids will eat more dumplings than you thought possible.
Three things I tell every client to pack that they never think of: 1. A power bank. China runs on phones — maps, payments, translation, everything. A dead phone means you're stranded. ¥80 at any convenience store gets you 10,000mAh. 2. An insulated thermos. Not for hot water (well, also for hot water) — but because most hotels and restaurants have free hot water stations, and cold bottled water from a thermos is surprisingly nice after a day of walking. 3. A small pack of tissues. Public bathrooms in China don't always have toilet paper. I learned this the hard way my first year in the industry. Never again. Everything else — clothes, toiletries, adapters — you can buy in China for less than bringing it from home. But these three? They'll save your trip. Full packing list on the blog.
Xi'an's Muslim Quarter at sunset is one of those places I'd send every traveller even if they had only one day in China. The narrow alleys fill with smoke from a thousand grill carts. Lamb skewers sizzle. Biang biang noodles get stretched and slapped on counters. Persimmon cakes fry in giant woks. The Yangrou Paomo (bread crumbled into lamb soup) at Lao Sun Jia is the same recipe they used 50 years ago. I bring every client here. The ones who love food leave overwhelmed. The ones who don't care about food also leave overwhelmed — because this place has a way of making you care. Two tips: go hungry (obvious), and start from the Drum Tower end working inward instead of the main gate. The crowds thin out and the vendors get more interesting the deeper you go.
The weekend is almost over. Both girls are asleep. The kitchen is clean (finally). I'm sitting on the balcony with a cup of cold tea that I reheated twice and forgot to drink. Sunday evenings always feel like this — a little tired, a little grateful. This week I'll be planning trips for a Swiss family who wants to see Zhangjiajie and a Canadian couple who want to eat their way through Chengdu. Not a bad way to start the week. Goodnight, everyone.
Sunday evening ritual: both girls in the bath, water everywhere, my younger one using her rubber duck as a submarine to "attack" her sister's boat. The bathroom floor is a lake. I'll have to mop it later. But right now I'm leaning against the doorframe listening to them giggle and negotiate bath toy treaties. This is the part of parenting no one puts on Instagram. And honestly? It's the best part.
My six-year-old just asked me: "Mama, when you die, will you still be my mama?" Out of nowhere. While I was chopping vegetables. I stopped chopping. Sat down. Told her: "Honey, I'll always be your mama. That doesn't stop." She nodded, satisfied, and ran off to find her sister. Kids don't warn you before they hit you with the big questions. They just drop them in the middle of a normal Sunday afternoon and leave you standing there with a knife in one hand and your heart in the other.
Called my mom this afternoon. She asked if I fed the kids properly this weekend (I'm 40 and she still asks this). Told her about the pancakes. She laughed so hard she started coughing, then said: "That's what you get for letting them watch YouTube instead of learning from your grandmother." Then she gave me her recipe over the phone — no measurements, just "a handful of flour, not too much, you know, until it feels right." I wrote it down but it's just three lines of "until it feels right." Classic.
Woke up at 7:30 today. That's "sleeping in" in this house. Found both girls already in the kitchen with their dad, "making breakfast." Flour on the counter, flour on the floor, flour in my younger one's hair. They'd attempted pancakes from a TikTok video. The pancakes looked like deflated footballs. I ate two and told them they were the best I'd ever had. The smiles were worth the flour cleanup.
I've walked the Great Wall more than a hundred times with clients. Every single time, I tell them the same thing before we start: "Don't look at your phone. Just stand there for one minute and let it hit you." The look on their faces when they finally look up — that never gets old. Most tourists go to Badaling because that's what the tour buses advertise. I take my clients to Mutianyu. Same wall, better experience — way fewer people, a cable car up, and a toboggan ride down that adults enjoy more than kids (don't tell my children I said that). Pro tip from hundreds of trips: arrive before 8am. The ticket queue at 10am can be 40 minutes. At 8am you walk straight through. And bring water — the vendors on the wall charge triple. If you really want to escape crowds, Jinshanling is where I go when I have a free weekend. It's unrestored, crumbling, and absolutely stunning. Pack a picnic and you can walk for hours without seeing another tourist.
My youngest asked me last night: 'Mama, do you plan trips for other families the same way you plan for us?' Made me stop and think. No, I don't. Not at all. When I plan for clients, it's all spreadsheets and time blocks and backup plans. Train A at 8:47. Buffer of 40 minutes. Restaurant B confirmed. Weather check at C. I treat their time like it's precious because it is — they flew 20 hours to be here. When I plan for my own family? Chaos. We miss trains. We eat lunch at 4 PM because the kids wanted to stay at the playground. We change plans on the fly. My husband has learned to stop asking 'what's the schedule' and just enjoy wherever we end up. But here's the thing I told my kid: both approaches work. A well-planned trip gives you confidence. An unplanned afternoon gives you memories. The trick is knowing which one you need right now. She didn't fully understand. But she will.
Last night I wanted 小龙虾 (crawfish) but didn't want to leave the house. Opened Meituan at 9:14 PM. Food arrived at 9:36 PM. Still steaming. Cost: ¥68 including delivery. China's food delivery ecosystem is something I don't think visitors fully appreciate until they experience it. Meituan and Ele.me cover everything — from hotpot ingredients delivered to your door to a single bubble tea at 2 AM. For travelers, here's how to use it: Download Meituan or Ele.me before your trip. The apps are in Chinese, but the interface is visual — food photos, star ratings, price tags. Open it, look at what's nearby, and point at something that looks good. Most hotel front desks will help you place an order if you show them what you want on your phone. I've done this for friends visiting from abroad countless times — they pick a photo, I type the address, and 30 minutes later dinner arrives. Payment is through Alipay or WeChat Pay, both already linked in the app if you've set them up. Cash on delivery also works in most places. The real magic? Late at night when jet lag hits and you've been in your hotel room for hours and suddenly realize you haven't eaten. A few taps on the phone and hot noodles show up at your door. That's modern China, and it's beautiful.
A friend is planning her first China trip in July and asked: "Is it really that hot?" Yes. It really is. Beijing in July hits 37–40°C with a sun that feels personal. I once walked from the north gate of the Forbidden City to the subway — 15 minutes — and looked like I'd jumped into a pool. Not my proudest moment. But here's what I've learned from 15 Chinese summers: the heat is different everywhere, and you can plan around it. Beijing and Xi'an: dry heat, intense sun, tolerable in the shade. Carry a portable fan and drink hot tea — yes, hot tea — it actually cools you down better than cold drinks. My grandmother taught me that. I didn't believe her until I tried it. Chengdu and Chongqing: humid heat that wraps around you like a wet blanket. But the nightlife makes up for it — shops, food stalls, parks all alive after 9 PM. Do your sightseeing in the morning, nap through the afternoon, then go explore when the sun goes down. Yunnan, Qinghai, and the Northwest: actually pleasant in summer. 20–28°C in most places. Lijiang, Dali, and Qinghai Lake are perfect July escapes if you want a break from the heat. One thing I always tell people packing for summer China: bring a light long-sleeve. Sun protection, air-conditioned buildings, temple dress codes — you'll need it. And don't forget a portable fan. Best 20 yuan I've ever spent.
Saturday 7:30 AM and I'm already awake — not by choice. My six-year-old was standing by the bed, fully dressed, announcing: "Mama, the sun is up! Park time!" I love that my kids have inherited this habit of early mornings. We walked to the neighborhood park, and as usual, the tai chi group was already there — the same people, same spots, same slow, precise movements. My younger one started copying them, arms wobbling, completely serious about it. An elderly lady paused her routine to adjust her posture. She held it for exactly three seconds before running off to chase a pigeon. This is one of those small China moments I never get tired of. Three generations in a park before 8 AM. Grandparents practicing qigong. Parents jogging. Kids stumbling around learning how the world works. No phones, no screens — just people starting their day together. My kids don't know it yet, but these Saturday mornings are shaping how they see the world. And honestly? They're shaping how I see it too.
This afternoon I dragged both kids up a mountain trail on the outskirts of Chongqing. The four-year-old complained for the first 15 minutes. Then she found a stick. The stick became a sword. The sword defeated every bush and rock on the trail, and suddenly hiking was the best activity ever invented. Chongqing is surrounded by hills that most tourists never see. A 30-minute drive from the city center and you're on trails that cut through bamboo forests, past small temples, with views of the Yangtze winding through the valleys below. We stopped at a little pavilion halfway up. An elderly couple was there with a thermos of tea and a bag of sunflower seeds. The wife offered some to my kids, who accepted with sticky hands and huge grins. We sat together in comfortable silence, looking out at the city far below. My oldest asked me on the way down: 'Mama, why do the old people in China always go to the mountains?' I told her: because they know that a mountain doesn't ask anything of you. You just walk, breathe, and remember what matters. She didn't fully get it. But one day she will.
Sunday lunch in our house is never planned. I open the fridge, stare at it for five minutes, and then improvise based on whatever my kids haven't rejected yet. Today's menu: hand-pulled noodles (the store-bought kind, don't judge me — I'm not my grandmother), a tomato egg stir-fry that's so simple it barely counts as cooking, and the leftover braised pork from yesterday that somehow tastes even better than when I first made it. My oldest insisted on 'helping' crack the eggs. Two out of three made it into the bowl. The third one ended up on the counter, where my younger one immediately tried to draw in it with her finger. I counted to five and decided this was fine. The best moment of cooking with kids isn't the food — it's the quiet that falls over the kitchen when they're both focused on a task. Chopping scallions. Tossing noodles. Licking the spoon when they think I'm not looking. We sat down at 1pm, the table a mess of mismatched bowls and spilled soy sauce. My younger one announced: 'Mama, this is the best lunch ever.' She says that every week. I still believe her every time.
Saturday 8am and I'm already losing an argument with a six-year-old about why 2+2 equals 4 and not 5. She was so confident about it too — 'Mama, think about it. Two and two. That's five.' The conviction in her voice almost made me doubt basic arithmetic. I try to make Saturday mornings our slow study time. No rushing. No pressure. Just the three of us at the kitchen table with textbooks, crayons, and a plate of cut fruit that I spend more time arranging than anyone notices. My younger one 'helps' by coloring the margins of her sister's workbook. I pretend not to see. She's so proud of her artwork that I don't have the heart to stop her. An hour later we've covered: 4 math problems, 3 pages of Chinese characters, 2 minor meltdowns, and 1 breakthrough — she finally agreed that 2+2 is indeed 4, but only because 'you said so, Mama, not because I believe you.' Weekend mornings in our house. Chaotic, loud, and I wouldn't trade them for anything.
The Northwest Grand Loop is still a memorable multi-day trip to recommend. Xining → Qinghai Lake → Chaka Salt Lake → Dunhuang → Zhangye Danxia. I took a Swiss couple on this route last September. On day three, standing on the edge of the Gobi at dusk, the wife turned to me and said: "I didn't know China had this." Most tourists only see eastern China — Shanghai skyscrapers, Beijing hutongs. The northwest is a completely different country. Endless highways cutting through desert. Tibetan prayer flags at Qinghai Lake. The rainbow mountains of Zhangye that look photoshopped but aren't. Few practical things: altitude at Qinghai Lake is 3,200m — take it slow the first day. The drive between Dunhuang and Zhangye is 6 hours but the landscape changes every 20 minutes. And bring a mask for the Gobi wind — real sand, not pollution. Book at least 2 weeks for this loop. You could rush it in 10 days but you'd miss the moments that make it special — like watching the sun set over the Singing Sand Dunes while someone plays a flute in the distance.
A solo traveler from Brazil asked me yesterday: "Is it weird to travel China alone?" I told her about the afternoon I spent by myself at a temple in the mountains outside Chengdu. No phone signal, no itinerary, just me and the sound of wind through bamboo. One of the best afternoons of my life. China is actually great for solo travel — especially if you want time to think. Morning tai chi in a park full of strangers who don't mind your presence. A quiet corner in a tea house with a book. Walking the Great Wall sections away from the cable car crowds. The secret most people don't know: Chinese culture values that kind of solitude too. The concept of "独处" (being alone) isn't loneliness — it's self-containment. A chance to reset. My advice: pick one city and stay 4-5 days instead of jumping cities every 2. Find a neighborhood coffee shop. Visit the same noodle place twice. Let the place find you instead of chasing it. That's where the real China shows up.
You can spot the regulars in any Chinese park before 7 AM. The lady with the fan doing tai chi under the same tree — same spot every morning for ten years. The old man writing calligraphy with a sponge on the pavement, disappearing characters before your eyes. The group doing slow-motion badminton without a net. This is 养生 (yangsheng) — nurturing life. It's not a diet or a workout routine. It's a whole philosophy woven into daily habits. My aunt in Shanghai starts every day with a thermos of goji berry tea. My neighbor in her 70s does qigong on her balcony before sunrise. When I asked her why, she said: "I'm not exercising. I'm moving energy." I tell my western clients: if you want to understand China, skip a museum and go to a park at dawn. You'll see more about how Chinese people actually think about health, aging, and happiness in one morning than in a dozen history books. And honestly? After 15 years here, I think they're onto something.
A family from London asked me to take them to a 'real' restaurant in Chongqing. Not the tourist ones on Hongyadong. So I took them to my uncle's hotpot place in a side alley near Jiefangbei. No English menu, no pictures — just the smell of numbing Sichuan pepper hitting you from the street. The dad looked nervous. Two hours later he was dipping beef tripe like a local, sweating through his shirt, asking me what else Chongqing has that tourists miss. That's the thing about this city — the best stuff is never on TripAdvisor.
A Canadian guest asked me today why Chinese people always drink hot water. I laughed — I tell my own kids the same thing. In Chinese medicine, cold drinks shock your system. Hot water aids circulation and recovery. And when it is humid and sticky in Shanghai summers? Red bean soup is the traditional fix. You do not need to believe in TCM to feel the difference. My guests are always surprised how good they feel after a week of eating and living this way.
Just reminded a Swedish client to check the lunar calendar before booking March dates. Qingming Festival — the whole country goes tomb sweeping. Streets empty, everything changes. Chinese festivals shift every year with the lunar calendar, most foreigners do not realize. Spring Festival (Jan/Feb) = nationwide travel rush. Qingming (April) = spring outings and grave sweeping. Dragon Boat (June) = zongzi rice dumplings everywhere. Mid-Autumn (Sept/Oct) = mooncakes with family. Travel with Chinas rhythm, not against it.
Brought my clients to a tea house in Hangzhou this afternoon. The owner brewed seven different teas for us — Longjing, Biluochun, the works. My Australian guests kept filling their cups to the top until I stopped them. In Chinese tea culture you never fill it all the way. That is for noodles. Tea gets small refills. And you tap the table twice when someone pours — an old thank you gesture. Such small things, but they make the whole experience.
One of my guests from Germany pointed at the Laozi quote in the hotel lobby yesterday. Asked me what it means. I told her: A journey of a thousand miles begins with a single step. She smiled — said that is exactly why she booked this trip. You see Tao Te Ching everywhere in China. Not just in books. On office walls, restaurant scrolls, park stones. Its how people here actually think, even if they have not read it.
Took a French family to the panda base this morning. 7:30 AM opening, pandas at their most active — always the best time. I bring all my clients to Dujiangyan base instead of the main breeding center. Same pandas, way fewer crowds. One of the kids asked me why baby pandas are pink. Told her they don not get their black-and-white until three weeks old. She did not believe me until the guide confirmed it 😂