This is the last of three posts on traveling in Japan on a budget. In previous posts, I wrote about the cost of a trip to Japan and the Shanghai-Osaka Ferry.
Dan and I set off for Japan last month armed with very little in the way of research under our belts. We had a copy [...]
Filed under: Travel Beyond China by Jess on March 10th, 2010 | Tags: blogsherpa, budget travel, Japan, Japan budget, Japan Rail Pass, trains
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This is the second of three posts on traveling in Japan on a budget. Yesterday, I wrote about the overall costs of a Japan trip. Come back tomorrow for part three, on the cost-effectiveness of the Japan Rail Pass.
To be honest, when I began thinking about where I would go this winter, Japan was pretty [...]
Filed under: Travel Beyond China, Travel in China by Jess on March 9th, 2010 | Tags: blogsherpa, boat, China, Japan, Osaka, Shanghai, transportation
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This is the first of three posts on traveling in Japan on a budget. Come back tomorrow and Wednesday for parts two and three.
One of my biggest concerns before leaving for Japan last month was how much it would cost. The country is famously expensive, and since I make my living teaching in China, I’m [...]
Filed under: Travel Beyond China by Jess on March 8th, 2010 | Tags: blogsherpa, budget travel, Japan, Japan budget
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This Buddha statue stood out from others at Wat Xieng Thong in Luang Prabang because the gilt on his face and neck was not the usual smooth gold paint that I had seen on other Buddhas in Laos. Instead it appeared as if small postage-stamp-sized pieces of gold leaf had been haphazardly applied over the [...]
Filed under: Photos, Travel Beyond China by Jess on March 5th, 2010 | Tags: blogsherpa, Laos, Luang Prabang, Northern Laos, Photos, snapshot
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Happily for those who spend a full week there, Luang Prabang has more to offer than just wats, wats, wats. In February, I spent two full days taking a weaving course through OckPopTok, which operates two shops in the town and a weaving center just outside of it. I had never done any weaving before [...]
Filed under: Travel Beyond China by Jess on March 1st, 2010 | Tags: blogsherpa, class, Laos, Luang Prabang, Northern Laos, textiles
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After two weeks of all cities, all the time, it was a bit of a relief to arrive in Takayama, a small town* in the Japanese Alps. We’d seen Japan’s hypermodern side on display in Tokyo and learned about its 20th century history in Hiroshima. In Takayama, we would get in touch with its rural [...]
Filed under: Travel Beyond China by Jess on February 25th, 2010 | Tags: blogsherpa, Central Honshu, Japan, Photos, snapshot, Takayama
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Earlier today, I received the following inquiry from another travel blogger via Twitter:
@chinaandbeyond have you got a ny recommendations for a months stay in china. leaving hk nxt week
This got me thinking. A month is long enough that you can really see a range of what China has to offer, but you still have to [...]
Filed under: Travel in China by Jess on February 21st, 2010 | Tags: blogsherpa, China, Q&A
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Kiyomizu Temple was our first stop in Kyoto, due mostly to its status as a World Heritage Site (I’m traveling with a collector) and its proximity to our hostel. It turned out to be an ideal introduction to the city. Kyoto is famous among tourists for its temples, shrines, and gardens, and quaint streets like [...]
Filed under: Photos, Travel Beyond China by Jess on February 17th, 2010 | Tags: blogsherpa, Japan, Kansai, Kyoto, snapshot
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Japan is full of wonderful things, many food-related — among them, okonomiyaki pancakes, conveyor belt sushi and convenience-store food of the highest order. But nothing screamed out to be written about here until last night, when we discovered Kyoto’s truly weird “Sweets Paradise.”
We were trolling the streets of Kyoto in search of something sweet when [...]
Filed under: Travel Beyond China by Jess on February 15th, 2010 | Tags: blogsherpa, food, Japan, Kansai, Kyoto
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One of Luang Prabang’s most distinctive traits is its superabundance of wats — Buddhist monastery-temples. The wats themselves create the ritual of morning alms, one of the most popular “sights” in the city.
At promptly 6:30 a.m. each day, orange-clad monks leave the wats and process around town to collect alms of sticky rice. The alms-givers [...]
Filed under: Travel Beyond China by Jess on February 2nd, 2010 | Tags: blogsherpa, Laos, Luang Prabang, Northern Laos
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