Dragon
Boat Festival, 2019 1320
There
is an art to buying tickets when flying domestically in China.
Try
to book too far in advance, unlike elsewhere, and you will pay
through the nose. Here it is a war of nerves and wallet. Optimum
prices are normally obtained somewhere between ten and fourteen days
prior to travel.
In
researching ticket prices to gauge the likely cost this year of
getting to Shanghai. It's not something I can even think about
finalising yet because I would also like to get to see Joan even if
she can't accompany me to the bigger city. Her mother is now out of
hospital and convalescing and she is caring for her, yet she has no
idea if she will be in her hometown or in Hefei when the time comes.
Either
of those destinations would mean a lengthy train trip, Suzhou Anhui
has no airport and Hefei which does, from here would entail flights
just as long – in some cases via Taiwan!
So
I was investigating straightforward travel direct from here to
Pudong. I was horrified to discover that business seats regardless of
proximity to travel dates were being quoted at an average of 4,000¥
each way and unlike previously, never fluctuated by date. Even
economy (ie no beer at the airport or aboard) were coming out at
1,000¥. At those rates even
getting to the Smoke was going to involve a lengthy train ride,
although for less I could actually buy all four tickets for a soft
sleeper compartment and have it to myself! Actually, not a bad idea!
Now
my searches for flight prices were conducted entirely on Skyscanner
but I had forgotten about Trip.com (formerly Ctrip) and today I
rectified that. Prices there, depending on takeoff times, are much
more akin to those I expected. But this is idiotic. Why so? Because
Ctrip – a Chinese firm – bought Skyscanner a few years ago and
are clearly inflating prices for international passengers! I had
expected uniformity. Silly me.
Alice
has also become a first for me. We are off for her birthday treat
tomorrow evening, on her birthday. Or so we all thought, including
her. This morning she was talking to her mother regarding visiting
Baiyin on Sunday. I have agreed to Holiday Inn for the meal and for
me to go with the girls to Baiyin because Mum will make dumplings for
lunch and someone else will foot the dinner bill. I have demanded I
be left somewhere with wifi and cold beer while the others go
trekking around the city.
Anyway,
apparently during the conversation with mater, she informed Alice
that her birthday is not in fact tomorrow but on Monday! Quite apart
from the fact she never even knew her own birthday (I thought only
old people and those from impoverished banana republics fell into
that category), her passport as I mentioned before, shows her date of
birth as 14th July! With three birthdays (8th
& 10th June as well) she has more than the Queen!
So
I actually have a somewhat full weekend for once and you can bet your
bottom dollar the girls will still expect me to cook on Monday. I'm
going to try once again to cook goulash and with luck the dim sum I
used to make in the UK to great acclaim. I did threaten to do it when
they came here and made their own because I reckon mine are far
superior. Nothing quite like proving a point!
I
daren't go shopping today (national holiday) or tomorrow (weekend) so
Monday is set fair to be a full day too. Dessert may have to be a
shop bought cake.
There's
a sodding cat nearby (feral) that for three days has been mewling
constantly. It sounds more like a kitten in distress to the
unfamiliar and on occasions I have seen people opening their car
bonnets before driving off because the thing is caterwauling
somewhere in their engine space. I have suggested that the easiest
way to get it to scarper is give the ignition a quick turn but no,
they have been poking around with sticks and poles. Fly spray would
work too.
In
the main the Chinese are not versed in the ways of animals and are
quite unsure of how to deal with them, be it a dog defending
territory or an insect which inadvertently flew into their home, so
how on earth (without being crude) to explain to them in body
language that the damned thing is almost certainly in season for the
first time and is calling out for a good rogering??? The universal
sign for “jiggy-jiggy” would probably see me branded a pervert! I
am however grateful that it is only audible from my office and is
nowhere near my bedroom or I would probably buy a net, capture it and
take it to the vets for the chop!
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