Today Dave, Mom and I headed out to Zhujiajiao, a small water town within the Shanghai city limits. (JP stayed home because he was feeling a bit under the weather.)
If you've seen one Chinese water town, you've seen them all. They all have lovely architecture, waterways and boats - complete with singing boatmen and of course plenty of shops along the canals just waiting for any tourist to walk by. We began by going into a very large garden. This was one of the best working gardens we've seen so far. There were a lot of rock formations that were carved out for you to walk through, around and up. One rock formation had stairs you could climb that lead to a pagoda. They also had different kinds of herbs and fruits growing in the garden - wolfberry - that we were to not tread on or pick according to the signs.
We wandered down the canals in and out of old houses and museums taking in all the sites of this old water town. We ate lunch by the grand bridge along the largest canal. We visited a Buddhist temple and then went into a Taoist temple, where we climbed to the top of the temple and thought about ringing the temple bell. We weren't sure if it was OK to do this as no one was around to ask.
After seeing the sites we meandered back towards the bus, shopping along the way.
If you've seen one Chinese water town, you've seen them all. They all have lovely architecture, waterways and boats - complete with singing boatmen and of course plenty of shops along the canals just waiting for any tourist to walk by. We began by going into a very large garden. This was one of the best working gardens we've seen so far. There were a lot of rock formations that were carved out for you to walk through, around and up. One rock formation had stairs you could climb that lead to a pagoda. They also had different kinds of herbs and fruits growing in the garden - wolfberry - that we were to not tread on or pick according to the signs.
We wandered down the canals in and out of old houses and museums taking in all the sites of this old water town. We ate lunch by the grand bridge along the largest canal. We visited a Buddhist temple and then went into a Taoist temple, where we climbed to the top of the temple and thought about ringing the temple bell. We weren't sure if it was OK to do this as no one was around to ask.
After seeing the sites we meandered back towards the bus, shopping along the way.





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