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Macau Adventures: Day 3 - The Venetian Hotel

Saturday, June 9, 2012 Category : , , 0





     It wasn't my first time at the Venetian but I was glad to be back.  I love the huge rooms and the opulence, and the fact that you can fit 6 people in the Bella Suite; more if you don't mind sleeping huddled like sardines on the bed, or sleeping on the floor.

     Anyway, Venetian is such a huge hotel so it's easy to get lost.  Good thing they give their guests maps for easier navigation.  While there are a lot of people milling around, once you get to the hotel wings, you'll see a staff checking people out, asking which room you'll go or asking to see your key card.  Security is good.




     As for the room, it's plush and very large.  You could do cartwheels in there.  The beds are kept separate from the sunken living room with railings.  There are two queen-sized beds and the sofa converts into a bed, too.  Just ask for extra sheets, pillows and a comforter if you want to sleep on it.  Oh, there are two tvs, too.







     Of course, the bathroom is huge.  The shower, toilet and bath are separate, with the dressing area taking up much of the room.



     My friends and I availed of Venetian's package which includes breakfast and one-way ferry to HK for two, a photobooth picture and 200 MOP shopping credit at participating stores at the hotel.

 This is the package we availed.


     The room we got has an amazing view of the surrounding hotels but I think most of the rooms have equally compelling views.  After all, the windows are floor to ceiling and there are no uninspiring edifice in the vicinity.  At night, you'll get glittering lights from the hotels.

 The Venetian is so huge we didn't even had the time to explore it in its entirety!
Like this place seen on our windows.


 City of Dreams, Crown and Hard Rock.

   

     There is another attraction at the Venetian that pulls people in, aside from its casino: shopping at the Shoppes at the Grand Canal, Shoppes at Cotai Central and Shoppes at Four Seasons.  These sections are interconnected so you could go from one section to another.

ASIA'S MOST UNIQUE AND OPULENT SHOPPING EXPERIENCE 
Experience the romance and grandeur of Shoppes Grand canal where guests are entertained by serenading gondoliers and enjoy performances by signature Streetmosphere™ performers with colourful antics of jugglers, living statues, musicians as they wander around the colourful Venetian streetscapes. Shoppes Grand Canal is a luxurious one-million-square-foot indoor mall with more than 330 stores featuring world renowned brands and the best boutiques from New York, Paris, London and Milan. From fashion, gadgets, jewellery, accessories to over 30 restaurants and an extensive food court, there’s bound to be something for you, for that special partner to something for the family.

MACAO’S ULTIMATE LUXURY DUTY-FREE SHOPPING EXPERIENCE
 With its addition of nearly 100 intimate boutiques and galleries, Shoppes Cotai Central, as part of Shoppes Cotai, Macao’s Ultimate Luxury Duty Free shopping experience, joins Shoppes Grand Canal and Shoppes at Four Seasons to offer a staggering 600 stores to choose from, the most in any one single location in all of Macao! This shopper’s paradise includes some exciting new first to market brands in Macao and is set in a refreshing environment abundant in natural light, with cascading waterfalls, green vegetation and rocky cliff sides.
  
A REMARKABLE LUXURY MALL THAT IS BEYOND COMPARE 
Shoppes Four Seasons personifies the bespoke elegance of the Four Seasons and is Macao’s first luxury mall, home to more than 160 luxury and designer brands like Audemars Piguet, Bottega Veneta, Cartier, Gucci, and Louis Vuitton. Every shop occupies a lavishly spaced area in which guests can truly enjoy the delights of shopping with bespoke service whereby guests can receive personalised attention from a shopping consultant, and rest assured that the Mall Concierge and limousine delivery service are always at the ready. For a comprehensive range of cosmetics, beauty & fragrance, DFS Beauty World, which features over 45 international cosmetic brands, to complete their new look.

     Of these Shoppes, the Shoppes Grand Canal is most frequented by visitors.  Why?  Because there's  an indoor canal with gondolas to take you around and the shoppes are Venetian-style which little arch bridges, lamp posts, and yes, the ceilings are painted with clouds.  

     Another reason why it's famous? Koreanovela addicts know the answer!  Boys Over Flowers had location scenes shot here.












Thoughts: Random But Important Things I Learned While Travelling in Singapore

Wednesday, July 6, 2011 Category : , , , 0

     I just got back home from Singapore and Malaysia around 1:00 a.m., and I have one too many tidbits of information I learned while travelling in these neighboring countries.  Well, you probably all know that you're not supposed to bring in gums in Singapore, and all those shenanigans, right?  After all, Singapore is a "fine" country, at least that is what the souvenir t-shirts say.  But I won't talk about things that will get you fined, but things that will make your life easier while in Singapore...those things that would not embarrass you.  And things you can do to save money.  So, this post is kinda long, but you'll get a lot of tips, for sure.



SHOPPING and FASHION

     1.  DON'T BUY COTTON-ON CLOTHES IN SINGAPORE AND WEAR THEM WHILE STILL THERE.

          For some reason, this clothing store from Australia is a favorite not only among Filipinos who frequent the stores in Hong Kong, Malaysia and Singapore, but also to the locals in those countries as well.  Yes, the clothes and the shoes tend to be really, really cheap when on sale, but if you have to buy Cotton On clothes while in Singapore, don't wear them while in there.

          Trust me on this one.  Don't do that.  You'll find yourself dressed the same way as with the people you see on the streets.  Yup.  I bought two Cotton On mini skirts, called the Annie skirts, which cost 2 for SGD 19.95.   Not a bad deal, eh?  When my friend and I hit the malls, I changed from pants to one of the skirts since it was so humid.  Well, it was a good thing that the skirts I bought were tamer than the Annie skirts in leopard and tiger prints because girls were wearing them around Singapore, too!  And those Jenny dresses they have?  Well, if you wear those, you'll come across at least 5 girls in Orchard Road wearing the same dress.  Yup, wear those and you'd be a dime a dozen.




     2.  DON'T BUY MANGO ITEMS ON SALE AND WEAR THEM WHILE IN SINGAPORE AND MALAYSIA.

          We all know that Filipinos love Mango, especially if they're on sale.  I bought a cream and blue drawstring dress on sale at Glorietta for Php 970.  It was light and cottony, so I brought it with me to Singapore.  Perfect for hot weather.  Guess what? A lot of people were wearing the same dress, in all sorts of colors!  Good thing I saw it so I didn't wear it while in  SG.  But I wore it in Malacca.  But again, guess what?  I passed by two girls on separate occasions wearing the same dress while I was wearing it, too.  One wore the dress exactly like mine, the other, a different color.  So embarrassing.




     3.  IT'S CHEAPER IN MALAYSIA.

         It is.  If you buy bus and train tickets to Malaysia from Singapore, say, for example, bus ticket from Malaysia to Malacca, you'd probably pay around SGD 22 TO 40, depending on the coach service.  I bought mine online from Luxury Travel and Tours for SG D31.  But if you're buying the tickets from Malaysia going to Singapore, you'd pay around MYR 22 up.  Yup, for the same price but different currencies.  SGD to PHP is around 35.5 while MYR to PHP is around 15.

         It's almost the same with Mc Donalds. In Malacca, a double cheeseburger meal is more or less MYR 9, and in Singapore, it's almost SGD 8.  Also, I've been to Kuala Lumpur, too, 2 or 3 years back and the Evita Peroni items in Kuala Lumpur cost less there than in Singapore. 

      4.  BEWARE OF GIRLS WEARING HEELS AT PUBLIC TRANSPORTATIONS.

          My friend and I went to Orchard Road via MRT from Vivo City.  It was rush hour, around 6 pm and the MRTs were packed.  We changed lines at Dhouby Gout station and what should have been a safe trip (it's just 2 stops away from Orchard Road station), became a disaster, at least for me.

          Singaporeans love to wear pretty shoes, in all kinds of heels.  They're either wearing really high heels or with much lower heels but stiletto-style.  They'll walk in those as if their feet do not hurt all around Singapore and while riding the bus and the MRT.  I say, those shoes are deadly at public transportations.  If the bus or the MRT lurches, chances are, your feet would get squashed, speared and wounded by those heels.  Something which happened to me at the MRT.

          There was this lady who was at the door and not holding on to anything for support.  When the MRT moved forward, she lost her balance, I saw it so I instinctively pulled my foot away from her, but what do you know?  The girl still managed to stomp on my toe with her stiletto heels.  It was painful.  It was like getting speared.  I shouted, "Ouch!"  She said that she's sorry, and I understood her but I couldn't get past the fact that it was painful. I almost blurted that if sorry could cut it, we won't need the police anymore (very Meteor Garden/Boys Over Flowers).  I said back to her instead, "It hurts!"  Her stiletto skinned my second digit and left a circular wound, the size of her heels.  And worse, it was bleeding!  I wanted to tell her that it's her responsibility to hold on to the railings for support and that she shouldn't be wearing those shoes while riding public transportation if she couldn't balance herself while wearing those.  They're deadly, really.  So, stay away from stiletto-wearing Singaporean ladies, okay?

     5.  THE GREAT SINGAPORE SALE IS JUST LIKE A REGULAR END OF SEASON SALE IN THE PHILIPPINES.

          Well, I don't know if I went to Singapore at the wrong time, right in the middle of the Great Singapore Sale.  There was not much of a sale in Singapore.  The on-sale items at the stores are the same items on-sale in the Philippines.  The Mango sale here is the same as the Mango sale in Singapore, and at the same prices, too.  Dorothy Perkins, which has a few select items on sale here, also has a few items on sale in Singapore. The malls have their own respective sales but there aren't many.  Just a few items here and there.  We rounded up the malls at Orchard Road and well, what's on sale?  Nothing much.  It was disappointing, really.  I am not sure if there was a sale at Chanel in Takashimaya, but there were a couple of people lined up at the doors.  Even if Chanel was on sale, I could not afford to buy anything in there.

          I bought a lot of stuff on-sale in the previous years I've been to Singapore sometime in October than during the Great Singapore Sale this year (shoes, sandals and bags).  I didn't buy any on-sale this year.

     6.  SOUVENIRS ARE CHEAPER IN CHINATOWN.

          Yup, it's cheaper in Chinatown.  Those keychains are SGD 2 per packs of 6.  The Singapore shirts are 3 for SGD 10, etc.  Just don't complain about the quality.  A similar looking keychain at Mustafa is around SGD 6.50, so it's 3x pricier, 3x heavier and thus, 3x more durable.  The same is true with the Singapore t-shirts in Mustafa.  While pricier, their shirts are more durable; thicker and cottony.       

    7.  MUSTAFA IS THE PLACE TO BE.

         I don't know, but Mustafa's the shopping center I really, really love in Singapore.  The perfumes are way cheaper, the luggages and the shoes, too.  There's not that much selection of clothes and shoes but they're cheap, and the best of it, the items are not even on sale.  Chocolates are cheaper there, too.  And, it's open 24 hours.  Also, you don't have to haggle, so for those who are not good at haggling, like me, this is the place to go to.  Did I say the products are authentic?  Yup!  And, the exchange rates are way better here. 

 
UNIVERSAL STUDIOS AND RESORTS WORLD

     1.  UNIVERSAL STUDIOS SINGAPORE IS SMALL, BUT FUN.

         You can probably round up the entire park in 10 minutes, without stopping for pictures, of course.  But most attractions are great; some are so-so, especially the kiddie rides.  Let's just say that some kiddie rides look as if more fitting in Boom na Boom (the Madagascar carousel, for one) rather than at an international theme park.

         There are few rides but the studios compensate it with lots of shows, like the very funny and entertaining Shrek 4D experience, the Lost World, Lights Camera Action, Monsters Rock, etc.  I think we've just gone to the Madagascar water ride, the Jurassic water ride (you get wet, a lot), the Revenge of the Mummy, the Sahara dessert-like kiddie ride, and that's about it.  We just couldn't get the courage to ride the Battle Star Galactica loops, as with most people.  In fact, there are no lines in there, and very, very few people try the ride.  It's scary, you know.  And we didn't get to ride the canopy at the Jurassic Park because there was some technical problems.  And that's after we waited in line for 15 minutes.

         Also, there are a lot of Filipinos visiting the park.  It's as if you never left home.  And some performers are Filipinos, too, like the Rockefeller Streetboys who seemed to capture the hearts of the young Indonesian girls who were watching their performance when we were there.

        I almost forgot to add that there are limited rides for the kids.  Oh well, at least there are a lot of shows to watch.


     2.  USE YOUR MASTERCARD FOR BUYING TICKETS AT THE UNIVERSAL STUDIOS SINGAPORE AND YOU'D GET 20% DISCOUNT PLUS A SGD 10 VOUCHER (Only for this year, I guess).

          I was trying to buy tickets online because I thought there's a 20% discount if you use Mastercard in buying your tickets.  Apparently, it was just until May, and the new promo is for August onwards or something.  So, when I bought tickets at the gates last Saturday, I was surprised when the staff told me there's discount if buying with Mastercard, and we got the SGD 10 voucher since we're the first 200 to sign up for that.  Cool!  You can use it to buy souvenirs from the stores inside the USS.

     3.  WHEN GOING TO RESORTS WORLD HOTEL TO CHECK-IN OR WHEN COMING BACK TO THE HOTEL, SHOW YOUR HOTEL CARD KEY OR BOOKING CONFIRMATION TO THE TOLL GATE ASSISTANT AT SENTOSA.

          Otherwise, you'll be charged SGD 3.00, if I remember correctly, for toll fee.
          
     4.  WHEN STAYING AT A RESORT WORLD HOTEL, ASK THE CONCIERGE FOR THE COMPLIMENTARY MONORAIL UNLIMITED PASS VALID FOR 3 DAYS.

          Just in case the concierge or the front-desk receptionist forgets to tell you that they have complimentary monorail passes for check-in guests.  Generally, a room is allowed 4 mono rail passes, but you can ask for more.  I saw a family of 2 adults and 3 kids being given 5 monorail passes.  Heck, the room I booked is good only for 2 adults but they gave me 4 monorail passes when I asked them.  If you don't have the monorail passes, you'd be constrained to take a cab to get out of the hotel with SGD 3.00 surcharge on your fare, or take the boardwalk (a good 10 to 15 minutes on foot to Vivo City) or wait for the bus or something.


     5.  WHEN STAYING AT A RESORT WORLD HOTEL, DON'T BE SHY TO ASK FOR COMPLIMENTARY BOTTLES OF WATER, OR FOR MORE TEA/COFFEE/MILO, ETC., OVER AND OVER AGAIN.

          For the price of your stay at the Resorts World chain of hotels, you should be able to stretch every dollar you paid for and ask for complimentary bottles of water, as well as for their teas, coffees, milo, sugar, etc.  Besides, bottled water is expensive in Singapore, so don't fret!  And, the hotel staff who brings the water to your room are good looking, too.

          In fact, you should do this at every 4 or 5-star hotels you're staying at.  They're not stingy on water and refreshments.  Really.  It never hurts to ask.

      6.  TRY TO VISIT THE UNIVERSAL STUDIOS IN THE MORNING, EAT LUNCH OUTSIDE FOR BETTER AND CHEAPER OR MORE EXPENSIVE CHOICES, SLEEP AT YOUR RESORTS WORLD HOTEL IN THE MEANTIME, AND RETURN WHEN IT'S NOT THAT HOT ANYMORE.

          Yes.  If you're staying at a Resorts World hotel, you should do this.  Besides, the USS is small, and it's hot in Singapore.  By lunch time, head out for the exit but don't forget to get your skin stamp for re-entry, eat where you want to, nap and freshen up in your room, and return to USS when it's not hot anymore.  Don't worry, USS closes at 9pm and there's not much of a line by the time you return to USS.  In our case, we returned to USS around 4:30 p.m. in time for the Lost World show, and we stayed there until closing time for the fireworks.


GETTING AROUND SINGAPORE

     1.  TAKE A CAB IF YOU'RE 3 OR 4 IN THE GROUP.

         Yes, there is this thing called the Singapore tourist pass for bus and MRT rides. Yes, I know that public transportation is way cheaper than hailing a cab.  However, if you're 3 or 4 in a group, why not take a taxi and split the cost three-way or four-way?  It'll save you the hassle of transferring, of walking great distances under the heat, of getting lost, etc., etc.  It's very convenient, too, and time-efficient.

         If you're going to somewhere far, far away, then, that's the time for you to take public transportation, I think.  But anyway, we've taken cabs from many points in Singapore and we didn't have to spend more than SGD 20.00 per trip.  For shorter trips, we just spent around SGD 7.00 up, and even less for super short trips.  From the airport to Mustafa Center, we paid only SGD 17.00, surcharge for late-night ride already included.  And from there to Chinatown, we paid around SGD 7.00 or so.

     2.  KNOW AT LEAST ONE TAXI SERVICE FOR LATE FRIDAY NIGHTS OR RUSH HOUR.

          Despite claims that it's easy to hail taxi cabs in Singapore, it's quite hard to find one during Friday nights and during rush hours.  Most cabs by that time, even after midnight, mind you, are either HIRED, or BUSY, as their lighted signs say.  When the cab says, BUSY, or something like that, it's going to pick up a passenger who called for a taxi service.  And during Friday nights, it's really, really hard to hail a vacant taxi.

          In our case, we got stuck for more than an hour waiting for a cab at Mustafa on a Friday night.  We walked further the road, the last MRT had already departed, and still, we could not get a vacant cab.  I presume most people were still partying somewhere, hence the lack of vacant taxis.

          At taxi bays, there are signs telling you which numbers to call when you're in need of a cab, but there are some places with no such bays at all, so if you don't know at least one number to call for a cab, good luck to when when your luck runs out of gas.  Heehee.


   

Vietnam Travel Adventures - Day 1: Taking a Break, Dining and Night Market

Wednesday, April 6, 2011 Category : , , 0

     



     From the Cu Chi Tunnels, we came straight back to the Sinh Tourist office.  By then, we were already famished.  It was past 1:00 p.m. already.  We just picked out a place to eat near the area.  We would have wanted to have some Vietnamese food but we have not yet scoured the area, and all we saw were those western-styled restaurants since we're in the backpackers' area.  We picked the Buffalo, and dined al fresco.  Prices were reasonable considering the taste.  I got a lasagna, because I'm Garfield and I love lasagna, and my friends got some subway-like sandwich, similar to the ones sold by the street vendors in Ho Chi Minh, and some steak.  My lasagna was really yummy; the sauce was made of real tomatoes and it was served in a clay pot. Very cute.  It cost around VND 110,000 and I ordered some Vietnamese iced tea (iced loose leaf tea sans sugar), and paid 10% service charge.

    Afterwards, we went back to the hotel to rest for a while before we head out to Saigon Square.  But the bed was so inviting that I slept from 2pm to 7pm.  No kidding!  Half of my day was gone!

     Oh well.  Guess we were dead tired for not getting enough sleep during the previous day with our late flight to Vietnam and all.  So, we just went to Ben Tanh Market to get some dinner.  According to the hotel staff, the night market is open till midnight or so.  We asked for directions and the competent staff gave us their version of a map where all the places of interest are pointed out.  The hotel staff told us that we could walk to Ben Tanh Market from our hotel.  We finally decided to check out the market and pick up some souvenirs; after all, we only had 3 days to spend in Ho Chi Minh.  Also, we'd be out for the whole day the next day for our Cai Be, Vinh Long, and Mekong Tour.

     Since Ben Tanh Market is just walking distance from the hotel, we really walked all the way there!  It was not far away and the hotel staff made us walk the busy streets, not the dimly-lit ones, where there are a lot of people and vehicles passing by. So, even if it was night time already, we felt completely safe.  But still, crossing the street going to Ben Tanh was a challenge; there was no stop light.  Haha!  But the motorists were kind enough to let us pass through, or at the very least, they tried not to hit us.  Heehee.




     Well, the night market is not a huge place; just a couple of short streets on both sides of the Ben Tanh Market.  The items on sale are touristy, with some bags, shirts and home decor and paintings thrown into the mix.  Naturally, we bought the usual Vietnam key chains, bookmarks and souvenir shirts from the night market stalls.  Some of the storekeepers were willing to accept USD and Philippine peso in lieu of Vietnamese dong, since we said we didn't have VND with us while shopping.  Some will tell you that they have not yet made a sale and will plead for you to buy, and some will not let you leave the stall without buying anything.  Apparently, if you leave without buying, people will think that their prices are expensive.  Some will get angry with you if you just ask without buying anything.  The sellers at the market employ all marketing tricks to entice the buyers, especially the foreigners, to part with their money, in whatever currency it may be.

     Apart from buying all those touristy trinkets to bring back home, we also had our dinner at Ben Tahn.  There were a couple of similar-looking makeshift outdoor eateries, the ones with the plastic seats and/or stools.  All were serving Vietnamese food and we just picked one of those eateries and we were quite happy with our choice.  I had some noodles and they gave us plateful of green, leafy veggies, including fresh mint.  It was a treat, really, to eat fresh veggies with our noodles.  The food are priced cheaply, very affordable and the taste is great!  Very satisfying.

   
     I think we just stayed there for less than 3 hours and then we returned back to our hotel, well, to sleep again.  We need to leave the hotel very early in the morning for our Mekong river tour the following day.


Beijing Adventures - Shopping in Beijing

Monday, February 28, 2011 Category : , 0


  Astroboy at a mall in Wangfujing.

   It took me so long before I had the time to blog again.  I was hoping to wrap-up my Beijing Adventures before February but certain circumstances didn't allow me to do so.  I was so busy with work (I do have a day job which pays not only for my basic needs, but also for my wants and caprices, including my travels).  And I was sick the past two weeks (allergies; cough and cold).  Really.  I mean it.  Well, okay, let's just say that there's a little procrastination thrown in...little is relative, though.  Heehee.

     I think, this is going to be my last post about my travel adventures in Beijing, and it's about shopping in Beijing! 

     To tell the truth, there is not a day when my friends and I didn't go shopping in Bejiing; at least, window shopping.  Well, it's really inevitable. First, The Courtyard by the Marriott adjoins the New World Shopping Center, which is just one of the many shopping buildings in Chongwenmen.  So, every night, after our tour, we'd roam around Chongwenmen and shop for anything.  We scoured the aisles at the grocery in the basement of the New World Shopping Center, and it was glorious!  There were a lot of candies, like White Rabbit and Nougat which we used to eat when we were children back home.  We bought some, and I added some facial cleansers, Mentholatum, a brand I discovered in Taiwan (also available in HK) and which I actually adore.  Plus, it's cheap, too.  I was supposed to buy a set of Tsubaki by Shiseido shampoo and conditioner but it's way expensive in China.  The fun in shopping for food items in Chinese groceries?  Not knowing what they are made of.  Heehee.  So, caveat emptor.

     There are four malls at each corner of the intersection in Chongwenmen near our hotel.  One's the New World, one which I forgot the name, one with an H&M inside and Soshow.  We entered all the malls but I think we found our mecca in Soshow.   For one, it's just like a more organized 168 Shopping Mall.  I think, we went there thrice.  Also, you can haggle, and even if you walk away, the store keeper wouldn't call you back, unlike in the Pearl Market.  I wanted to buy a pair of Ugg-like boots which sells for just RMB 100, but it was one size smaller.  My friend bought a winter coat for like RMB 150.00; a bargain because it's of great quality, plus it's colorful and unique and it stands out in the sea of solid colored winter clothes.  I think the shop keeper would have given a lower price if my friend insisted because we were the first customer for the day (we bought the item immediately after opening hour).


Bread shop like Bread Talk.

     I think, there was more than 6 floors of shopping levels in Soshow; each level for a different department; ladies wear, accessories, men's wear, toys, etc.  As I said, it's like 168, but thinking about it, stock-wise, it's like Platinum Plaza in Bangkok.  The clothes are more fashionable, and younger.  First floor has a bread shop, like Bread Talk...well, it's almost a rip-off of Bread Talk, or if the said bread shop came first into existence, then Bread Talk ripped it off.  The breads are almost identical, but Soshow's breads are cheaper.  I forgot the name of the bread shop, but I have photos of it [see pics above].

     Considering that it was late autumn/early winter when we were in Beijing, a lot of shops were selling winter clothing of all colors imaginable!  The only colors I saw being sold in the Philippines were the basic black, blue, brown, red, gray.  In Soshow, there were coats in hues of pink, green, lavender...so glorious!  Plus, the designs were really girly and cute.  Some of the clothing at the other malls are like those, too.




      On the upper floors, we saw rows of stalls selling cute accessories and some stalls were selling anime figures and plushies and house slippers and winter booties for kids.  I even saw a Totoro plushie of some sort.  I was able to buy a set plushies of the famous Plants vs. Zombies characters, including the Zombie, of course!







     If you're wondering what treats or souvenirs to buy for your friends and family back home, why not try circling the local malls and supermarkets?  That is what we did.  We bought those vacuum-packed Peking duck, which, although cheaper, are not as great tasting as the duck from Quanjude.  A duck at the grocery costs around RMB 40 up if I remember correctly.  Then there are also assorted Chinese sweets, like sugared plums, etc., on sale by the package, or you could just pick whatever candy you may want.  We also bought some tea, loose-leaf and in teabags.  They're cheap, and teabags are dirt cheap.  You can try the flavor and scent of the teas in the different stalls inside the grocery or the mall.

     Then, if you're in the Pearl Market, do pick-up those "I Love Beijing" t-shirts, especially the ones which says, "I Love BJ," and believe me, if you give this to your Filipino guy friend or relative, his reaction upon seeing the shirt would be priceless.  There are also those Chairman Mao shirts and caps, too, as well as the "I Climbed the Great Wall" shirts.  Although you need to haggle really good with the shopkeeper at the Pearl Market.  It's for tourists, so expect the prices to be highly inflated.  I didn't buy a shirt because I was thinking I could find it anywhere in Beijing, but I was wrong.  I was not able to find those in other places.  Perhaps, I didn't try hard enough.

     Locals and tourists alike also buy souvenirs from those thrift stores, just like the 100 yen stores in Japan, only, it costs 10RMB.  Some items are cheaper than 10RMB per piece, some higher than 10RMB.  You could buy a dozen of decorative chopsticks, or pocket mirrors for the ladies.  Purses and figurines, too, can be bought from the store.


     Animal hats are also everywhere in Beijing, and selling like hotcakes is the panda hat, of course. But it's only good for use in the winter, so it's probably only sold during winter/autumn.  Funny thing, though.  I wasn't able to buy anything to remind me of a panda.   Sadness! 



     So, one thing I learned cool about Beijing, aside from all those culture stuff, is that there's an abundance of malls, and there are lots of shopping places.  You'll be the one to say you're tired because the choices are endless.  In Wangfujing alone, the malls are side by side and the mall strip stretches quite long.  Have a fun time shopping!

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