Thursday, October 26, 2006

Cha-cha-cha-China!


We made it to Beijing, via Los Angeles and Guangzhou. Total travel time from walking out of the house until plopping in our hotel room was about 37 hours. We boarded the plane in L.A. at 11:00 p.m., then sat for two hours (the stewardess said they were looking for a "document")...and then it was 15.5 hours up in the air, in black sky the whole time. We were in the dark half of the world, flying into the next day. Despite taking some Ambien, neither one of us slept great (but no worse than usual, says Joe), sleeping a couple hours at a time, then waking up, readjusting, going potty, listening to music, going back to sleep, etc. We got to Guangzhou about 7:30 a.m. and because of the late L.A. start had to be rescheduled onto a later connecting flight to Beijing (walked and walked and walked through long airport hallways--see photo--until our necks were damp from the Guangzhou humidity). We got to Beijing around noon and found a young guy holding a "Haynie Family" sign (he'd been there two hours because he thought we were on a previous flight). He brought us to the Capital Hotel in downtown Beijing where we are now gratefully parked. We've met two of the other four families in our travel group (one of them is from White Bear Lake, Angie...last name Heubing?) and in a few minutes we are meeting in one of their rooms with a tailor who will show us a selection of Chinesewear should we want some specially made. Our guide, Chen Chen (first name Chen, last name Chen) told us that tomorrow we will see Tiananmen Square, the Forbidden City, and some of the older historic parts of Bejing. Saturday we'll go to the Great Wall.

Impressions of Beijing: Sprawling, many tall high-rise apartments, acrid smell of air pollution, many bicyclists, surprisingly quiet and peaceful walking outside around our hotel despite the congestion. We'll see a lot more tomorrow and can give a better report.

One of the best parts of the day: A shower.

Very best part of the day: Knowing we're closing in on Emma...

7 comments:

andrea said...

Aren't airports the worst? The more I fly, the more things seem to go wrong with my flights. Glad you finally made it there. I'm sure you guys are exhausted. Hope you can get a better night's sleep. I can't wait to read more about your adventures!

Anonymous said...

You're there! Even our flight from Hawaii home was hard to handle--so you sound surprisingly chipper. Good for you.
The name Heubing doesn't sound familiar . . . but isn't it a small, small world?? You can tell them that we lived north of White Bear Lake (the actual lake) just off of Portland in a subdivision called Mallard Ponds.
Hopefully you can get some sleep tonight. So fun to read your update!

Anonymous said...

Hi Denise and Joe! Glad to hear you made it. Hope you ordered lots of tailor-made clothes. I forgot to mention that part to you -- one thing I regret now is not having had more made for Ellen (OK and me too!). I'm sure you'll have a similar opportunity in your province as well.

Hope you've enjoyed the square, Forbidden City, and the Great Wall. I loved the tile roofs of the Forbidden City, and climbing the Great Wall was great way to work out the airplane cramps!

Can't wait to hear more!

Anonymous said...

I can't believe you sat on the plane for 2 hours before it even took off. It's not like the flight wasn't long enough already. I'm so excited to see a photo of you holding Emma.

Anonymous said...

Ohmygosh - I can't believe you're in China. This is just too awesome. I keep thinking about you and wondering where you are throughout the day.

What is Forbidden about the City? I know I should know. Tom probably knows, and I'm sure all the people on Jeopardy would be able to answer my question.
Julie

Anonymous said...

So far all our prayers are being answered....you arrived safely.
We're looking forward to the next installment.
How do you say "Breakaleg" in Chinese?

Anonymous said...

Every 45 minutes or so today I'd look at the clock and think "Denny and Joe are in CHINA" and be thrilled and time would stand still. It's too much - it's almost a "between heaven and earth" experience as a family - I hope you get lots of tailor-made clothes like your friend suggested - I am keeping my fingers crossed that you will not be slammed with jetlag and able to enjoy all the sights, smells, sounds and hmmmmm, what are the other senses? I forget......

Love you - love Emma.

Barbie