Hong Kong, Macau and China

Author’s Note: This is a series of selected highlights from two years (1986-88) of budget backpacker travel through 15 countries and a half-dozen US States – hosted all along the way by national and local YMCAs – from the Pacific Islands to selected Asian countries including: Indonesia, Singapore, Malaysia, Thailand, Burma, The Philippines, Hong Kong, Macau, China, Taiwan, Korea, Japan – and the USA.

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Colonial Hong Kong, Public Domain

Once again, the Mielke brothers would tempt doom and strike off together for more Asian adventures. This time, we met up in the flea-bitten but affordable traveler flophouses of Hong Kong, where we took day trips around the city, to the outlying islands, and over to Macau.

Entering China, we sailed up the Pearl River on an overnight ferry to Zhaoqing Prefecture, a spectacularly scenic part of southern China’s Guangdong Province where we rented bikes and cycled through open countryside and rice fields spiked with tall “karst” limestone mountains – each topped with a tiny temple.

Popular with Chinese tourists, the dramatic landscape around Zhaoqing is reminiscent of the world famous Guilin Prefecture, one of China’s most popular tourist destinations, but more laid back and much less crowded.

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Celestial Star, the oldest Star Ferry vessel in service
By I, Leockh, CC BY-SA 3.0 Wikimedia Commons

But all of this had to wait until after my release from a three-day stay in hospital. Having just arrived from the States, Dave got a shock when handed a note at the hostel saying that I was in hospital – and set about finding his way to the hospital, with no idea what my condition was.

I had slipped in the shower and developed a nasty infection in my lower leg. But compared to my tiny box-like budget high-rise accommodation at Chung King Mansions — — well known as nearly the cheapest accommodation in Hong Kong, popular with backpackers with names like “Moonbeam”, the well-used sheets alive and itchy with the creepy sensation of minute critters crawling all over your body, and notorious for drugs and other criminal activities — my four-bed shared room at Hong Kong’s Queen’s Hospital was a superbly deluxe accommodation.

Compete with three good meals, color TV, round the clock diligent nursing care, a beautiful view of the harbor from my window, and excellent medical care that brought my infection under control within a few days. And at about $3/day for my in-patient stay (even as a foreigner), it was a much better deal than even the cheapest rooms at Chung King Mansions, and I was sad when I had recovered sufficiently to leave the hospital and return to my tiny flea-bitten hostel room.

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View across Victoria Harbor from the Peak Lookout on Hong Kong Island. By PaddyBriggs, Public Domain

Hong Kong was like a huge, space-age Disney World – but in real life! A spectacularly beautiful, fast-paced city – you practically have to run to keep up with the masses of rushing pedestrians – and with a great harbor, night lights, and efficient public transport. Like a giant computerized machine all programmed to run smoothly – but expensive.

I was able to meet with YMCA leaders at the three YMCA centers while I was there – two on the Kowloon mainland, including the headquarters of the Asia and Pacific Alliance of YMCAs, and one spectacular high-rise residence on Hong Kong Island. As elsewhere in the region, the early Christian missionaries had done well – managing to acquire the choicest pieces of real estate.

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Fortaleza do Monte (Portuguese for Mount Fortress), Macau

The lure of more unexplored territories took us on to Macau by hydrofoil across the channel to the oldest European settlement in the East — leased to Portugal as a trading post in 1557, then handed back over to China in 1999, and now a hugely popular casino and gambling center.

And with over half a million people living in a area of just 30.5 sq kms (about 12 sq miles), it is the most densely populated region in the world. It was intriguing to imagine this place 150 years ago with clipper ships and the early traders as described in James Clavell’s novel “Tai Pan.”

Armed with a simple phrasebook, we crossed the border from Hong Kong into Guangdong Province, China, and made our way up the Pearl River packed in with an overnight boatload of students – stretched out in open, box-like structures that separated our sleeping quarters.

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Zhaoqing Gate, Guangdong Province

At the time (1987) all foreign visitors to China were required to conduct transactions with Foreign Exchange Certificates (FEC) issued by the Bank of China. Only certain, special “Friendship Stores” and specifically designated hotels accepted FECs, which restricted where foreign visitors in China could stay and shop.

Of course, this created a huge black market. Foreigners, fed up with the limited options available with their FECs, wanted to have the local currency to use in regular Chinese restaurants and shops. The Chinese too, wanted FECs so that they could buy the “luxury” goods — like Johnnie Walker Red Label and Marlboro cigarettes.

So, at the border, I exchanged a $20 traveler’s check for the equivalent amount in Chinese FEC, then promptly exchanged this on the street for a huge pile of small, torn and grimy bills – known as ‘The Peoples Money’ or Renminbi. 

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Zhaoqing Prefecture, Guangdong Province, China

Riding local buses past steep, limestone mountains and the surrounding rice fields, we toured the area for 10 days, staying in magnificent old 1930’s era hotels, eating a wide variety of local food – not always sure what it was, and guzzling an assortment of excellent local beers –- all for about $15 US dollars.

When we arrived at the Hong Kong Border, I was informed that the Renminbi could not be taken out of the country.

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Zhaoqing Prefecture, Guangdong Province, China, CC BY-SA 3.0 Wikimedia Commons

So I exchanged my remaining torn and grimy “People’s Money” notes for about five US dollars equivalent in Hong Kong dollars. Clearly the best deal yet for budget traveling – and a very pleasant experience overall!

Stay tuned for Asia-Pacific Tour: Taiwan, Korea and Japan – coming soon!

You can read more about Jim’s backstory,  here and here.

 

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