19-day
Best of China plus Tibet Tour (2012)
Beijing - Xi'an - Guilin - Chengdu
- Lhasa - Gyantse - Shigatse - Shanghai
This tour is suitable only for those
who are perfectly fit without any medical condition that may be complicated
due to high altitudes. The highest point during the tour is 4,800 metres or
15,744 feet above sea level.
Scroll down to bottom for
departure dates, prices and hotel list.
Day 1/Fri: Departing Home
City
The journey begins with your transpacific flight departing from a city of
your choice. You'll "lose" a day upon crossing the
International Date Line.
Day 2/Sat: Arrival in Beijing
Meet your guide on arrival in late afternoon and transfer to the hotel. The
balance of the day is at leisure. The tour leader will introduce the tour
members to each other either tonight or tomorrow morning.
Day
3/Sun: Beijing
Beijing had already been a
strategically important city in northern China for centuries when Kulai Khan
decided to move his capital here from
Karakorum in Mongolia. With
the collapse of the vast Mongol empire in 1368 AD, Beijing lost its status
as the country's capital but soon regained it when the imperial court of the
successive Ming Dynasty moved here from Nanjing. Beijing continued to serve
as China's capital after Manchu tribes dethroned the last emperor of the
Ming Dynasty in 1644 and established the Great Qing Empire (Qing Dynasty),
which lasted till 1911. Today Beijing remains
China's capital. It is also a
world-class cultural and educational centre with a resident population of 22
million (2011), ranking Beijing China's second largest city after Shanghai.
Beijing is renowned for its opulent palaces, temples, and huge stone walls
and gates, treasures that make Beijing the most popular destination city in
China among both domestic and international visitors.
Following breakfast, the tour
leader will host a brief orientation when everyone will get introduced. We
leave the hotel around 10 AM and begin our sightseeing at
Tian'anmen Square,
followed by the
Forbidden City,
Jingshan Park and an old
hutong - alleyway
flanked with traditional residential courtyards. Welcome dinner includes
delicious
Beijing roast duck, a
local delicacy. (B/L/D)
Day
4/Mon: Beijing
Morning visit to the
Temple of Heaven. Situated in southeastern
Beijing the Temple of Heaven is China's largest extant sacrificial temple
where, during the Ming and Qing dynasties, the emperors conducted the
elaborate and most exalted sacrifices addressed to "the Supreme Ruler of the
Universe." Construction of the temple started in 1406, during the reign of
the Ming Emperor Yongle, and took 14 years to complete. The temple was
expanded under the Qing emperors Qianlong (1736-1796) and Jiaqing
(1796-1820). Occupying 2,668 hectares (6,670 acres), the area of the Temple
of Heaven is more than twice that of the Forbidden City.

Afternoon sightseeing at the
majestic
Summer Palace, a royal resort during the
Qing Dynasty. We wrap up the day with a tour of Panjiayuan Flea Market or
798 Art District depending on traffic. The evening Peking Opera show is
optional if available. (B/L)
Day 5/Tue: Beijing
Enjoy a full-day excursion to the legendary
Great Wall
at Mutianyu, 75km northeast of the city. Zigzagging over 6,000 kilometres
from east to west along the undulating mountains, the Great Wall, said to be
visible from the moon, was built to hold off tribal invaders from the north.
Construction of the earliest sections of the Wall started in the 7th century
B.C. A major renovation started with the founding of the Ming Dynasty in
1368 and took 200 years to complete. The wall we see today in Beijing is
almost exactly the result of this effort. (B/L)
Day 6/Wed: Beijing - Xi'an
Enjoy some free time before flying to Xi'an after lunch. Eastern
terminus of the fabled Silk Road and one of the ancient capitals of China,
Xi'an is home to the
Terracotta Army
designed to follow the first emperor of the Qin Dynasty (221-206 BC) into
eternity. (B/L)
Day
7/Thu: Xi’an
Visit the excavation site of the Terracotta Army located 30km east of the
city. Afternoon sightseeing at
Shaanxi Provincial Museum.
The modern, well-organized museum was completed in 1992 and traces the
history of Xi'an from prehistory to the Qing dynasty (1644-1911). The
extensive galleries and exhibitions offer the visitor an excellent
introduction to the area that greatly improves understanding of the numerous
historical sites in and around the city. Tonight we enjoy a spectacular
music and dance show reminiscent of the Tang Dynasty (618-907 A.D.), a
period generally considered a golden era of the Chinese civilization.
(B/L/D)
Day 8/Fri: Xi'an - Guilin

Today's
schedule takes in the Grand Mosque and the adjacent Muslim Quarter.
Afternoon flight to Guilin. A medium-sized city by Chinese standard, the
city has long been renowned for its unique scenery. The name Guilin
literally means "forest of sweet osmanthus", owing to the large number of
fragrant Sweet Osmanthus trees in the city. We visit scenic Fubo Hill after
hotel check-in. (B/L)
Day 9/Sat: Guilin (Li
River cruise)
 
Day
cruise on Li River. The 83km stretch of the river between Guilin and
Yangshuo affords breathtaking scenery as the river snakes through tall karst
mountains, gigantic bamboo sprays, and picturesque villages -- sights that
have inspired countless poets and painters for generations. Disembark in
Yangshuo in mid-afternoon and drive back to Guilin. (B/L)
Day 10/Sun: Guilin - Chengdu

Free morning to explore on your own. Late afternoon flight to Chengdu,
capital of populous Sichuan Province. (B/D)
Day
11/Mon: Chengdu
Tour of the Giant Panda Breeding Centre is
followed by a visit to the museum built on the archaeological site of
Sanxingdui Culture (Bronze Age). First chanced upon by a farmer in 1929,
Sanxingdui, 40km west of Chengdu, continued to surprise the archaeological
community in the decades to come. In 1986, two major sacrificial pits were
discovered and the breakthrough aroused widespread academic attention from
around the world. The Sanxingdui finds are exciting, but they remain
enigmatic. So far no written records of this 5,000-year-old civilization
have been found. (B/L)
Day
12/Tue: Chengdu - Lhasa

Morning schedule includes Wang Jiang Lou Park and a typical local tea house.
Wangjianglou means "river-overlooking tower" and the park is so named
because of the ancient pagoda-shaped wooden tower onsite. The beautiful
little park dotted with verdant bamboo groves has long been a favourite spot
among locals for morning exercise. People in Sichuan enjoy going to tea
houses, their equivalent of pubs or neighbourhood coffee shops found in the
West, where people, especially retirees, exchange gossips and play chess
among other things. We board noon flight for Lhasa and upon arrival spend
the rest of the day relaxing and getting acclimatized to the high altitudes.
(B/L)
Day 13/Wed: Lhasa
Situated in a wide, mountain-fringed valley on the north bank of the Kyichu
River, Lhasa (elevation 3700m) is a rapidly expanding city with a population
of over 540,000. An important settlement for well over a thousand years,
Lhasa was originally called Rasa, but was renamed by King Songtsen Gampo in
the seventh century when he moved his capital here from the Yarlung Valley.
Following
the collapse of the Yarlung dynasty two centuries later, power dispersed
among local chieftains and the city lost its pre-eminence. It was not until
the seventeenth century, with the installation of the Fifth Dalai Lama as
ruler by the Mongolian emperor, Gushri Khan, that Lhasa once again became
the seat of government.
This
morning we visit the Dalai Lama’s Potala Palace. Afternoon sightseeing at
Jokhang Temple, one of the oldest Buddhist buildings in Tibet and a
remarkable combination of Tibetan, Indian, Nepalese and Han Chinese
architectural styles. No visit to Jokhang Temple is complete without
checking out the Barkor Street bazaar outside the temple. (B/L)
Day 14/Thu: Lhasa
Morning visit to the Dalai Lama's summer residence Norbulinka. This
afternoon we tour grand Sera Monastery, where lively debates held Monday to
Saturday from 3 to 5 pm between resident monks often draw a large audience.
(B/L)
Day
15/Fri: Lhasa - Gyantse - Shigatse

Following breakfast, we drive along the Southern Route to Gyantse
(265km). Highlights of the scenic drive include
Kambaba Pass (4700 metres/15416 feet above sea level) and the holy lake
Yamdrok Yumtso. Every summer throngs of Tibetan pilgrims come to the lake to
pray for blessings by the lake fairy. Afternoon sightseeing in Gyantse takes
in the Fortress of Gyantse Dzong and Pelkhor Choede.
We continue on to Shigatse (90km) in late afternoon
arriving at the second largest city in Tibet around dinnertime.
(B/L/D)
Day 16/Sat: Shigatse - Lhasa

This morning we visit Tashilunpo Monastery, the religious and administrative
headquarters of the Panchen Lama - paramount leader of the Yellow Sect of
Tibetan Buddhism. Return to Lhasa via better paved Northern Route (295km).
Vast pastureland, barren mountain slopes, snow-capped peaks, blue skies,
white clouds, scanty population, and ubiquitous prayer flags - these images
combine to conjure a sense of solitude and mystery. (B/L)
Day 17/Sun: Lhasa - Shanghai

Spend the morning relaxing or exploring the ancient Tibetan capital on your
own. We fly to Shanghai in mid-afternoon. Please note that depending on
flight availability we may need to leave Lhasa in the morning. (B/D)
Day 18/Mon: Shanghai
Shanghai is China's most populous city. According to the Sixth National
Census of China conducted in 2010, Shanghai's population density is the
highest among all municipalities in China. Shanghai's Hongkou District
averages 36,307 residents per square kilometre, making New York's Manhattan
(26,000 per sq km) look sparsely populated!
Our sightseeing in Shanghai
begins with a stroll on the Bund - a waterfront promenade famous for its
landmark neoclassical buildings of European style, followed by
Shanghai
Museum and
Shanghai Urban Planning Exhibition Center.
Evening entertainment is a dazzling acrobatic show. (B/L/D)
Day 19/Tue: Shanghai -
Home City
Spend the morning
packing and relaxing. Transfer to the airport to board return flight
departing in the afternoon. Cross the International Date Line and regain a
day, meaning when you arrive home it'll still be the same day as you left
Shanghai. (B)
Back to top
Back to top
|
Dates & Prices 2012 |
|
Depart (Fri) |
Return (Tue) |
Land Package
excluding int'l airfare |
Single Supplement |
|
6-Apr |
24-Apr 24 |
$5300 |
$1650 |
|
13-Apr |
1-May
1 |
$5300 |
$1650 |
|
4-May |
22-May 22 |
$5300 |
$1650 |
|
29-Jun |
17-Jul |
$5300 |
$1650 |
|
17-Aug |
4-Sep |
$5300 |
$1650 |
|
24-Aug |
11-Sep |
$5300 |
$1700 |
|
31-Aug |
18-Sep |
$5300 |
$1700 |
|
7-Sep |
25-Sep |
$5300 |
$1750 |
|
14-Sep |
2-Oct |
$5400 |
$1750 |
|
21-Sep |
9-Oct |
$5400 |
$1750 |
|
28-Sep |
16-Oct |
$5400 |
$1750 |
|
5-Oct |
23-Oct |
$5450 |
$1700 |
Back to top
|
Costs Not Included in Tour
Prices |
|
International Airfare |
Local Air Taxes & Surcharges |
Travel Insurance |
Recommended Tipping |
China Visa Fee |
|
contact us for lowest quote |
$32 per flight
Exceptions may apply |
available on request |
$10/client/day |
Click
here for details |
|