

China isn't a country - it's a different world. From shop-till-you-drop metropolises
to the epic grasslands of Inner Mongolia - with deserts, sacred peaks, astounding
caves, and imperial ruins - it's a land of cultural and geographic schisms.
It's not that China has completely done away with its Maoist past - it's more
that the yin of revolutionary zeal is being balanced by the yang of economic
pragmatism, and the oldguard communists are giving way to the new wave dot-commers.
It's a land of towering mountains and epic landscapes - background scenery
to the fall of dynasties, the rise of emperors and the turning of the revolutionary
wheel. Unless you have a couple of years and unlimited patience, it's best
to follow a loose itinerary here, such as Beijing to Tibet via Xi'an's terracotta
warriors, following the Silk Road route, sailing down the Yangzi River, or
exploring the Dr Seuss landscape of Guangxi Province.
Full country name: People's Republic of China
Area: 9,596,960 sq km (mainland)
Population: 1.2 billion (mainland) Yikes!
Capital city: Beijing (pop 12.6 million)
People: Han Chinese (93%), plus Mongol, Zhuang,
Manchu and Uighur minorities
Languages: Putonghua (Beijing Mandarin dialect),
Cantonese
Religion: Officially atheist; Confucianism, Buddhism,
Taoism (no stats available); Muslim (14 million), Christian (7 million)
Government: Communist republic
Major industries: Iron, steel, coal, machinery,
textiles
Major trading partners: USA, Japan, Germany,
South Korea
Facts for the Traveler
Visas: Visas are required by all foreigners entering
mainland China although, at this stage, visas are not required by western
nationals visiting Hong Kong and Macau. A new visa policy allows foreigners
from 17 countries (Australia, Austria, Belgium, Canada, France, Germany, Greece,
Italy, Japan, Korea, Luxembourg, Netherlands, New Zealand, Portugal, Singapore,
Spain and the United States) to enter Shanghai (through Pudong or Hongqiao
airports) without a visa and stay up to 48 hours. Plans are afoot to extend
this new policy to other cities.
Health risks: Rabies, bilharzia, dengue fever, malaria and cholera are all
present. Immunisation against cholera, hepatitis A and B, Japanese encephalitis,
polio, rabies and typhoid is considered essential.
Time: GMT/UTC plus eight hours (the whole of China is set to Beijing time).
Electricity: 220V, 50 AC; plugs can be three-pronged angled, three-pronged
round, two flat pins or two narrow round pins.
Weights & measures: Metric
When to Go
Spring (March-April) and autumn (September-October) are the best times to
visit China. Daytime temperatures range from 20 to 30 degrees Celsius in these
seasons, but nights can be bitterly cold and it can be wet and miserable.
Major public holidays, in particular Chinese New Year, are best avoided as
it's difficult to get around and/or find accommodation.
Events
Chinese New Year (or Spring Festival) starts on the first day of the old lunar
calendar, which usually falls in February. Although officially lasting only
three days, many people take a week off. Ear plugs are handy at this time
to dull the firecracker assaults, and prices of hotel rooms tend to go through
the roof. The Lantern Festival isn't a public holiday, but it's big and it's
colourful. It falls on the 15th day of the 1st moon (around mid-Feb to mid-March)
and marks the end of the new-year celebrations. The famous lion dances occur
throughout this period. Ching Ming (or Tomb Sweep Day) is in April, and sees
Chinese families spend the day tending the graves of departed loved ones.
Hong Kong hosts one of the liveliest annual Chinese celebrations - the Dragon
Boat Festival. Usually held in June, the festival honours the poet Wut Yuan
and features races between teams in long ornate canoes. Many Westerners take
part in the races, but plenty of practice is needed to get all the paddles
working as one.
Special prayers are held at Buddhist and Taoist temples on full-moon and sliver-moon
days. Temple and moon-based festivities include Guanyin's Birthday (late March
to late April), Mazu's Birthday (May or June), Water-Splashing Festival (13-15
April), Ghost Month (late August to late September), Mid-Autumn Moon Festival
(October) and the Birthday of Confucius (28 September).