Home sweet home

We flew home yesterday. The flight was pretty uneventful, and luckily was only about half full. Yanmei was able to move to an empty row and lie down and sleep across three seats for most of the flight, which is good because she is still battling that cough.

Our trip ended up being 76 days long. It felt much longer, and I mean that in a good way. When we were sitting in the Beijing airport reminiscing about our trip we both felt like the stuff we did at the beginning (New Zealand, etc.) happened a year ago. I think most people have had the experience of time passing faster as you get older. For example you suddenly realize it’s almost Christmas and it feels like Labor Day was just a couple of weeks ago. I think routine causes this feeling. When you do the same thing everyday it all blurs together. But when you travel and every day is full of new experiences it subjectively feels longer.

Compared to our trip in 2015 we did some things better and some worse. First the worse, this time we were a bit over confident. In 2015 Yanmei read several travel books and I researched the countries online a lot. We used the same flexible style of not booking anything too far ahead, but in 2015 we’d done a lot more research and preparation. We both wish we’d spent more time in New Zealand (and I wanted more in Australia too), but we were constrained by our plan to go to India and we knew we’d have to go there by early March to avoid bad weather. We couldn’t leave much earlier either because we had to wait for Yanmei to get her US passport. So we ended up rushing a bit as usual.

We also cut several countries from the itinerary. For example I wanted to go to Angkor Wat in Cambodia and I brought Malaria medicine and everything. It is very close to Kuala Lumpur (2 hour flight), but we went to Sri Lanka instead. Then we had a second chance to go there, since it is not far from Kunming, China either. We actually went to a travel agency in Kunming and looked at Cambodia, but by that time I was exhausted and couldn’t muster any excitement for it (Yanmei has been to Angkor Wat before, so it wasn’t a big deal for her). This leads me to another mistake I think we made, which was not setting an end date. In 2015 we didn’t either, but Yanmei’s travel visas gave us a de facto end date. An end date gives you something to look forward to when you get tired or frustrated.

For better I think we packed better, I brought less useless stuff. I actually had a great plan and brought mostly expendable clothes with the plan that I would gradually replace and throw away the old clothes with new stuff I bought on the trip. The problem was the airlines are much more restrictive now than 2015, not only must your carry-on bag meet the size limits, it generally must be under 7kg. Even packing lightly, when you add a camera plus lenses and an iPad my backpack was 10+kg. We had flights where the overhead compartments were more than half empty because everyone was forced to check everything. So we bought a big suitcase and offloaded a lot to that so I only ended up throwing out one shirt on the trip, but we had checked luggage every flight which was frustrating compared to 2015. At least we never lost a bag.

We also definitely did better with food this trip. One of my regrets from the 2015 trip is we often went with “safe” restaurants instead of really trying the local cuisine. This time we did a lot more of randomly stopping in a local restaurant that looked good, and we had some really good experiences because of it.

We stayed almost entirely in Airbnb’s this time. The only hotels were in Ella and Delhi (and technically 1 night in KL when we stayed overnight at the airport hotel because we had a very early flight). Nepal was a hotel too although it was booked through Airbnb and they let Yanmei use their kitchen. Airbnb’s have three big advantages over hotels, if you pick the right ones.

  1. Kitchen to cook your own meals
  2. Laundry to wash your clothes
  3. Local host to give to recommendations and assistance

Anyway to summarize we went to Kauai, Hawaii, then New Zealand, Australia, Singapore, Malaysia, Sri Lanka, India, Nepal, and China.

David

Food and family

As I mentioned in the previous post, we stayed with Yanmei’s niece, Chingching. Sunday night Chingching and her husband took us out for Beijing style hotpot.

I should have taken a picture when all the meat was on the table but I forgot. I could tell the restaurant was good because the place was huge, but it was still crowded. Very good meal.

On Monday, first we visited Yanmei’s parents and they served us a feast for lunch.

You can see where I fumbled with my chopsticks and dropped some zucchini on the table.

After that nice visit we went to Yanmei’s big sister’s (Chingching’s Mom) place. They were also looking after Chingching’s son while she was at work. That makes Yanmei a great aunt, and me a great uncle I guess.

Yanmei’s big sister with her grandson. We had another feast for dinner.

After that we went to visit Yanmei’s younger sister. Since China ended the one child policy in 2016, she decided to have another baby, and they had boy. We only stayed a short time because they were about to have dinner and they had guests.

David

Beijing, China

We made it to Beijing successfully, although Yanmei now has a cold that started in Kunming. Strangely, it is different than what I had. I thought she would catch what I had, but she resisted that and somehow caught something else. She has a cough and sore throat, whereas I had sneezing and sinus congestion. We are staying at her niece’s apartment.

Yanmei was reluctant to come to Beijing because it is “too cold.” But I’ve been checking the Beijing weather on my phone and most days it has been 55-60F (13-15C), not hot or warm like most places on this trip, but also not winter weather. I convinced her it wouldn’t be too bad, and as a compromise on the last day in Kunming we went shopping for a winter jacket for her.

We arrived late Friday afternoon and it was pretty chilly, about 45F. Then Saturday morning I got up and looked out the window and it was snowing, heavily. Good thing she has that winter jacket! Although at least it was warm enough that the snow didn’t accumulate, it just became slush that melted to water later when the snow turned to sleet. Lovely day.

The good news is Yanmei saw her son and he is doing well and looks tall and handsome.

David