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    <title>Where is Kendra now?</title>
    <description>Where is Kendra now?</description>
    <link>https://journals.worldnomads.com/kendralh/</link>
    <pubDate>Sat, 18 Apr 2026 00:34:15 GMT</pubDate>
    <generator>World Nomads Adventures</generator>
    <item>
      <title>Hong Kong - first time visiting Sept 2011</title>
      <description>
&lt;div&gt;Hong Kong - first time visiting Sept 2011&lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;The
 great &amp;quot;Concrete Jungle&amp;quot; as it is referred to. Well... that is exactly 
what it is. A small area of land - an island actually- with tons of high
 rise buildings and millions of people living in a few square miles. 
Quite a sight to see, especially if you don't live in or have never 
really been to a big city. &lt;br /&gt;    If you didn't know any better you'd 
think the only thing they did here was shop (and build new buildings)! 
There is construction and tons of shopping EVERYWHERE!.... everything 
high end you could ever imagine and then of course all of the small 
shops and street side vendors and markets. The airport is like a giant 
mall too. &lt;br /&gt;   I knew Hong Kong was not going to be cheap, but 
everyday I continued to be surprised at how expensive everything was. 
For me - an avid budget traveler ever so conscious of every dollar that I
 spend - I was surprised to see a lot of stuff costs more than it does 
back home. The food, shopping, services and accommodations are all 
rather expensive in Hong Kong, but the transportation was fairly 
reasonable. &lt;br /&gt; &lt;/div&gt;
&lt;div&gt; *Things you may want to know before you go: you do not 
need a Visa as an American to visit Hong Kong, but you will need a 
Chinese Visa if you plan to visit anywhere else in mainland China. *They
 drive on the &amp;quot;wrong side&amp;quot; of the road - well it was a British Colony 
for many years! So the escalators also are on the reverse side from what
 we are used to, but people are still supposed to stand to the right and
 pass on the left. *The main &amp;quot;downtown&amp;quot; area of Hong Kong is on an 
island going up a mountain. So everything is up hill... lots of steep 
walkways and roads and lots &amp;amp; lots of steps. Be forewarned. However 
public transportation is very easy and convenient and not expensive. 
Through one area of town  there is a walkway (starting at the ferry 
terminal and IFC) and series of escalators going up for more than a mile
 through town (SoHo and &amp;quot;Mid-levels). That is very cool. It goes down in
 the morning from 6am to 10 am and then the rest of the day it goes up. 
Then there are trams, buses, taxis and a subway (MTR), also a direct 
airport express train to town - takes about 25 minutes and costs 
$100HK. A taxi is a minimum price starting at $20HK. * When I was here 
the US dollar equaled almost $8 Hong Kong dollars. *If you are staying 
for more than a few days you can get an &amp;quot;Octopus&amp;quot; card  and put money 
value on it. The locals use them almost exclusively. You can pay for all
 of your transportation with it except for in taxis, and you can 
purchase good at some stores - 7/Eleven, etc.... * Local calls are free,
 but international calls are cheap too. The Country Code for Hong Kong 
is 852. * I was told the water there was fine to drink, but I got sick 
after being there for less than 24 hours. However I was not feeling 
great on the plane over so I think I caught a bug before I went. 
Regardless after being sick for a day or so I was extra cautious and 
opted not to drink the water. *The weather was really HOT &amp;amp; muggy, 
very humid. About 30 seconds after walking outside you'll begin to 
perspire. Most places have cold AC blasting. There is a lot of pollution
 so there is a haze of smog around the island almost always. It is hard 
to see very far - sometimes not even across the harbor to Kowloon. 
Sometimes it clears up some by the afternoon, but the locals told me it 
is unusual to see the blue skies and sunshine very often. * Something 
else you probably won't hear anywhere.... They really don't like white 
people too much here! There is a little bit of &amp;quot;reverse 
discrimination&amp;quot;... much of which you would probably never notice. Of 
course maybe being charged more because you order off the English menu, 
but little things like being sat at the back of the restaurant, and no 
one will want to sit next to you on a bus or subway. I noticed a couple 
times someone get up and move to a different seat, and I had to 
laugh. And No - it was not because I stink!!! I heard about it from the 
locals and then I noticed when it happened to me. This is quite 
different from my previous experience in China 11 years ago, where the 
people really seemed to like or be interested in foreigners. It must be 
different here because of the British occupation for so long.&lt;/div&gt;
&lt;div&gt; &lt;/div&gt;
&lt;div&gt;* My personal experience. I arrived late afternoon on 
Monday and took the train into town, then a taxi to a location near 
where I was going to be staying and then I had to walk down a million - 
okay maybe 100 - steps to reach my destination. This was a task at 8:30 
on a hot &amp;amp; humid night with a 40lb backpack and being seriously out 
of shape! Anyway I finally made it to Martin's apartment, which happens 
to be in an amazing location! Martin came down to the street  opened the
 gate and brought me up to his 9th floor - top of the building 
apartment. It was very nice open space! I walked into a spacious living 
room dining room combo with lots of windows over looking the cityscape. 
Martin and his flatmate Fiona also had another guest/friend over for the
 night - he had just arrived back to town that day. He showed me to my 
room (the smaller third bedroom) and provided me with a towel, gave me a
 tour, explained how everything worked - AC, and water heater, etc.... 
He also gave me a spare key, a local cell phone, WiFi passcode and tons 
of travels books to look through. They were all in the middle of dinner 
and invited me to sit down and relax and eat or have some wine. So we 
all chatted awhile. Totally awesome hosts!&lt;/div&gt;
&lt;div&gt; &lt;/div&gt;
&lt;div&gt;I walked all over the escalator area - &amp;quot;So Ho&amp;quot;, Lan Kwai 
Fong, Hollywood and Queens Rd, and down the street alley markets on Li 
Yuen St E &amp;amp; W, down the famous stone Pottinger St (the oldest street
 in town) and up the farmer's market street on Graham St - at the end 
had fresh seafood and meat markets also. (Not the same type of meat 
market I am used to going to...) One day I walked down to the ferry 
station to check in to tours... I decided they were more than I wanted 
to spend and you can basically get the same experience out of just 
riding one across to Kowloon for only $2.50 HK.... But I did decide to 
take a local tour. There is double decker (open air on top) purple bus 
called the Rickshaw Sightseeing Bus; it seemed like a really good deal 
compared to the other &amp;quot;big bus&amp;quot; companies, however they probably provide
 more in the way of a &amp;quot;tour&amp;quot;.  The Rickshaw Bus was only $50 HK and that
 went all over town and pointed out sights of interest with a recorded 
tour along the way. You can get on &amp;amp; off all day at any of the 
stops. (The bigger tour companies were over $300HK for a tour) Anyway 
for a do-it-yourselfer like me this tour was fine. I got to 'get out' 
and see a lot more areas of town (which is mostly just big buildings and
 shopping) without having to walk all over the place! Then I took the 
Peak Tram up to the &amp;quot;Peak&amp;quot; and overlook of the whole city and harbor. I 
chose just to pay for the roundtrip tram ride ($40HK) and not the 
&amp;quot;special&amp;quot; skyview terrace thing they try to get you to add on 
extra. Once you are up there, there are lots of great places to view the
 city from.... I did not need to go on top of the building for that. 
While up there I met another lone girl traveler from Chicago. She became
 my &amp;quot;single serving friend&amp;quot; of the week! We hung out the rest of the day
 and went and saw some more sights together. We went to the Botanical 
&amp;amp; Zoological gardens; went and had Dim Sum at the famous  Luk Yu 
Teahouse, one of the oldest in Hong Kong. We also went into a tea shop 
and had a tea tasting. At night we took the Star Ferry over to Kowloon 
and walked - a long way - I recommend taking a taxi - all the way up to 
the Temple Street Night Market. On my last day in town I went with my 
host friend, Fi, to Hong Kong Disneyland. It was..... nothing 
spectacular! Very very small and not many rides or much to do there. Fi 
was not feeling great so we may have done the quickest tour of Disney in
 history. &lt;/div&gt;
&lt;div&gt;Overall Hong Kong was a cool experience and I am glad I 
finally got the chance to visit it. I think I did pretty well on my 
budget - I ended up averaging about $40 USD a day! Keep in mind - that 
was with a FREE place to stay and with me being very conscious about how
 much money I was spending on everything!! It certainly could have been 
much much more expensive!!! Great time, cool city and a few really 
awesome new friends!!  :-) &lt;/div&gt;
&lt;div&gt;Cheers&lt;/div&gt;</description>
      <link>https://journals.worldnomads.com/kendralh/story/77240/China/Hong-Kong-first-time-visiting-Sept-2011</link>
      <category>Travel</category>
      <category>China</category>
      <author>kendralh</author>
      <comments>https://journals.worldnomads.com/kendralh/story/77240/China/Hong-Kong-first-time-visiting-Sept-2011#comments</comments>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">https://journals.worldnomads.com/kendralh/story/77240/China/Hong-Kong-first-time-visiting-Sept-2011</guid>
      <pubDate>Sun, 4 Sep 2011 22:11:00 GMT</pubDate>
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