WanderPeng
June 18, 2026
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.\n\nFor first-time visitors, here’s the skeleton of what I’m building:\n\n- **Shanghai (4 nights)**: Land at PVG, book a river-view room on [Trip.com](https://www.trip.com) (usually $120–$200/night, around ¥800–¥1,400). Skip the Bund crowds—take the kids to Yu Garden’s food street for xiaolongbao. Use the metro; it’s stroller-friendly and cheap, about $1 per ride.\n- **Guilin (4 nights)**: Fly from Shanghai to Guilin on a domestic airline like China Southern (bookable on [Google Flights](https://www.google.com/flights), around $80–$120 per person). Stay near the Li River on [Booking.com](https://www.booking.com) ($50–$80/night, ¥350–¥560). The 7-year-old will love the bamboo raft ride, but keep it short—2 hours max.\n- **Chengdu (4 nights)**: Direct flight from Guilin (about $100 per person on [Trip.com](https://www.trip.com)). Book the Panda Base visit early—entry is $15 (¥100) on [Airbnb Experiences](https://www.airbnb.com/experiences) for a guided tour. The 10-year-old will remember feeding a panda forever. Skip the hotpot if the kids are picky; try mapo tofu instead.\n\nPro tip from 15 years of traveling with my own two: pack snacks from home for the first few days. Jet lag hits hard, and a familiar granola bar can save a meltdown in a Shanghai subway station. Also, download WeChat before you go—it’s how you’ll pay for everything from street food to train tickets.\n\nThis family’s budget? I’m estimating $5,000–$6,000 total (¥35,000–¥42,000) for flights, hotels, and activities, not including meals. That’s mid-range—luxury would double it. For a first-time visitor, this route hits the highlights without overwhelming the kids. Trust me, I’ve learned the hard way: one city too many and you’ll be carrying a tired 7-year-old through a museum at 8 PM.\n\nSunday night planning feels like a meditation. The tea’s gone cold again, but I’ve got a solid itinerary. Tomorrow, I’ll send it to the family with a note: “Less is more. Let the kids lead sometimes.” That’s the secret to China with little ones.

More from the feed

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.

Jun 18· personalstory · travelplanning

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.

Jun 18· travelphilosophy · personalstory

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.

Jun 16· shanghai · suzhou

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.

Jun 15· travelplanning · traveltips