Air Travel

HanShan Temple17

On day 5 of our packaged travel to China, we got a morning call at 7:30am. My room was on the other block from where we were going to have our breakfast. We packed our luggage as we would leave SuZhou later today for another historic city of Nanjing. When I stepped out of our hotal block, I found 1 interesting scene on another building fascade next to our hotel (photo below). On top of their painting skill, these painters are cliff hanging experts as well! :)

SuetXiangHai hotel2

SuetXiangHai hotel1

This morning, we would wander around SuZhou town centre. Our destination in the morning was HanShan Temple (寒山寺) or Cold Mountain temple. Perhaps many of you who learn about chinese culture should have heard that HanShan temple is Chinese favourite spot of Lunar New Year celebration where its bell ringing at midnight marks the New lunar Year which could be heard from miles away.

HanShan Temple2

Eh Hmm… we were being squeezed to the other corner of the frame as tourists are lining up to take photo in front of these 3 words, Han Shan Si. Yeah, yeah, yeah… I’ve been there, you see the photo? :(

HanShan Temple1

It is located at the town of Fengqiao (枫桥, Maple Bridge), about 5 kilometres west of the old city of Suzhou. Next to the entrance of the temple is the site map of Hanshan temple. It is a huge compound. However, we have only got time to cover one third (30%) of the temple… :(

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Two bells are currently used at Hanshan Temple, both dating from the late Qing Dynasty when the temple was last renovated. One was forged in China in 1906, and the other was forged in Japan at around the same time.” This is the bell which rings to famous.

HanShan Temple15

A new 108 tonne bell commissioned by Hanshan Temple and built by a foundry in Wuhan was completed recently, and is on its way to Hanshan Temple to replace the hundred years old Japanese built bell. The new bell tall 8.5 meter, widest diameter 5.2 meter.” Beside the bell, there was a rockery referred as GuanYin Rock (观音石).

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What locals would do in the temple is praying with joss sticks to GuanYin, Buddha and Lohan….

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…hanging wishes written red papers on tress that believed could make wishes come true. We learned the culture and did the same things.

HanShan Temple5

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Though not much else we could do there, beautiful architecture and holy scenes made me snapped quite some photos to share. :)

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Beyond the praying courtyard of 3 themed temples in front, there is the main temple located within the multi-storey Pungming pagoda (普明宝塔) at the backyard.

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Buddhist should be able to explain more on the story scultured on this wall….

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We spent only about an hour in the temple, which is definitely insufficient to cover the whole site. Well, it’s a typical packaged travel disadvantage. The only thing we could do were to snap as many photos as we could :(

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At the exit of Hanshan temple, we saw the identical scene: shops selling local products, silk, tea pot, chestnut and souvenirs.

HanShan Temple16

After that, we visited the local silk factory which was one of the ‘compulsory’ itineraries on this trip. Contrary to the travel destination of Hanshan temple, we were given more than sufficient time to shop at this factory before we had lunch within the same factory. It seemed to be a popular item for our fellow travel group members as they spent not less than RMB20k just for just silk products!

SuZhou lunch

Funny to make note here is that we had complimentary beers for each and every meal in our China tour and different brand of beer was served in every different restaurant! :) In this case in SuZhou, ShanSui Icy Beer was served… – Travel Feeder.

All above photos were captured by Panasonic Lumix Fz28

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“….Ladies and Gentlemen, I would like to take this opportunity to thank Air Asia for its gracious offer of  500,000 free air tickets to public recently in Malaysia…” Wow! Too formal isn’t it? Let’s back to normal… Hooray! I managed to grab 6 return tickets to fly to Phuket this October, FREE, during the fest which ended 3 days ago! Not absolute actually. I still need to pay for the airport tax, insurance blah blah blah which eventually cost me RM972 or RM162 per person! Isn’t it great? Now everyone can fly, with Air Asia.

airasiapromotion

In fact I was trying to book free tickets online to Melbourne but only 1 way 2 tickets was still available and I need to pay for return ticket which would still cost me RM1,100 per pax. I know it’s still a steal of bargain but considering the flying time and other factors, I opted for phuket where we could fly with my family in a group of 6! Believe it or not, it is even cheaper than my last travel with Air Asia to Bali!

The point is: In view of the recent global economy crisis hitting most of the countries including here in Malaysia, huge numbers of retrenchment with more and more people became jobless, I really didn’t expect Mr Tony Fernandez could still offer 500,000 free seats to public! Isn’t it amazing? That’s why Air Asia has emerged as one of the largest low cost carrier in South East Asia or even Asia!

The Final line: Despite Air Asia‘s slogan of “Now Everyone Can Fly” and huge saving for tickets to Beijing, Australia and London, in view of the recent natural disasters in those countries, do you still wanna fly to London after its recent snow attack? Do you still wanna fly to Beijing after its recent CCTV complex hotel fire accident? Do you still dare to fly to Australia after its recent forest wildfire incident that claimed nearly 200 lives? Should Air Asia’s slogan be revised as “Now Anyone Dare To Fly?” – Travel Feeder.

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