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Harper - Hong Kong -Guidebook Chapter

Here you can read online Harper - Hong Kong -Guidebook Chapter full text of the book (entire story) in english for free. Download pdf and epub, get meaning, cover and reviews about this ebook. City: Hong Kong (China);Place of publication not identified;China;Hong Kong, year: 2011, publisher: Lonely Planet Publications, genre: Detective and thriller. Description of the work, (preface) as well as reviews are available. Best literature library LitArk.com created for fans of good reading and offers a wide selection of genres:

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Harper Hong Kong -Guidebook Chapter
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    Hong Kong -Guidebook Chapter
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    Lonely Planet Publications
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    2011
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    Hong Kong (China);Place of publication not identified;China;Hong Kong
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Hong Kong -Guidebook Chapter: summary, description and annotation

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Lonely Planet guides are, quite simply, like no other. New York Times

This eBook offering is an excerpt of Lonely Planets latest China guide book and includes:

Hong Kong chapter

Understanding China & Survival Guide chapter

Need to know Chapter

Hong Kong map

Hong Kong quickens the pulse with skyscrapers marching up jungle-clad slopes, neon lights blazing across the harbour at night and bustling markets and restaurants offering foodies the very best of China and beyond.

This guide is the result of months of research by dedicated authors and local experts who immersed themselves in Hong Kong, finding unique experiences, and sharing practical and honest advice, so you come away informed and amazed. This guide includes up-to-date reviews of the best places to stay, eat, sights, cultural information, maps, transport tips and a few best kept secrets all the essentials to get to the heart of Hong Kong.

Lonely Planets China guide is researched...

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GETTING THE MOST OUT OF LONELY PLANET MAPS E-reader devices vary in their - photo 1
GETTING THE MOST OUT OF LONELY PLANET MAPS E-reader devices vary in their - photo 2
GETTING THE MOST OUT OF LONELY PLANET MAPS

E-reader devices vary in their ability to show our maps. To get the most out of the maps in this guide, use the zoom function on your device. Or, visit http://media.lonelyplanet.com/ebookmaps and grab a PDF download or print out all the maps in this guide.

This map was taken from our country guide. If you want to discover more about the locations highlighted here, head to our website to buy books, download PDFs or find out about our full eBook offerings. http://www.lonelyplanet.com/ebooks

need to know
CURRENCY
The yuan (Y)
LANGUAGE
Mandarin
Cantonese
MONEY
ATMs in big cities and towns. Credit cards less widely used; always carry cash.
VISAS
Needed for all visits to China except Hong Kong and Macau. Additional permit required for Tibet and a few other areas.
MOBILE PHONES
Inexpensive pay-as-you-go SIM cards can be bought locally for most mobile phones. Buying a local mobile phone is also cheap.
TRANSPORT
The train and bus network is extensive, domestic and air routes are plentiful. Cars can be hired with a temporary Chinese driving licence.
Set Your Daily Budget
BUDGET LESS THAN Y200
Dorm Beds: Y40Y50
Excellent, very cheap hole-in-the-wall restaurants and food markets
Affordable internet access and bike hire
Some free museums
MIDRANGE Y200Y1000
Double room in a midrange hotel: Y200Y600
Lunch and dinner in decent local restaurants
TOP END OVER Y1000
Double room in a top-end hotel: start at Y600
Lunch and dinner in excellent local or hotel restaurants
Shopping at top-end shops
When to Go
HIGH SEASON MAYAUG Prepare for crowds at traveller hot spots and summer - photo 3
HIGH SEASON (MAYAUG)
Prepare for crowds at traveller hot spots and summer downpours.
Accommodation prices peak during first week of the May holiday period.
SHOULDER (FEBAPR, SEP & OCT)
Expect warmer days in spring, cooler days in autumn.
Autumn in north China is the optimum season weather-wise with clear skies and fresh weather.
Accommodation prices peak during holidays in October.
LOW SEASON (NOVFEB)
Domestic tourism is at low ebb, but things are busy and expensive for the Chinese New Year.
Weather is bitterly cold in the north and only warm in the far south.
Websites
Lonely Planet ( www.lonelyplanet.com/china ) Destination information, hotel bookings, traveller forum and more.
Ctrip ( www.english.ctrip.com ) Excellent hotel booking website and air ticketing.
Danwei ( www.danwei.org ) Informative perspectives into real China; handy links.
Zhongwen ( www.zhongwen.com ) Includes a pinyin chat room and online dictionary of Chinese characters.
Exchange Rates

Australia

A$1

Y6.32

Canada

C$1

Y6.70

Euro zone

Y10.36

Hong Kong

HK$1

Y0.98

Japan

Y6.50

New Zealand

NZ$1

Y5.58

Singapore

S$1

Y5.10

UK

UK1

Y15.22

USA

US$1

Y7.72

For current exchange rates see www.xe.com .
Important Numbers

Ambulance

Picture 4 120

Fire

Picture 5 119

Police

Picture 6 110

Country code (China/Hong Kong/Macau)

Picture 7 86/852/853

International access code

Picture 8 00

Directory assistance

Picture 9 114

Arriving in China
Beijing Capital Airport
Airport Express Every 15 minutes
Express Buses To centre of Beijing every 10 to 20 minutes
Taxi Y85; 30 to 60 minutes to town
Shanghai Pudong International Airport
Maglev Every 20 minutes
Metro Line 2 to Hongqiao Airport; 75 minutes to Peoples Sq
Airport Buses Every 15 to 25 minutes
Taxi Y160; around an hour into town
Hong Kong International Airport
Airport Express Every 12 minutes
Taxi About HK$300 (40 minutes) to Central
English in China

English is not widely spoken in China, apart from in Hong Kong. Outside of, and even inside, big cities such as Beijing and Shanghai, you will frequently find English is useless, so avail yourself of the written Chinese in this book for Chinese phrases and as a guide to pronunciation. For first-time users of the language, Chinese pronunciation is tricky and getting the correct tone harder still, while showing the written Chinese to a local person immediately conveys the meaning. Youth hostels often have the best English-speaking staff so never assume the more expensive a hotel, the better the English level of the staff. Even at five-star hotels, you may encounter incomprehension. Restaurants in this book with English menus come with an English menu icon ( Hong Kong POPULATION 7 MILLION TELEPHONE CODE 852 Includes Why - photo 10 ).

Hong Kong POPULATION 7 MILLION TELEPHONE CODE 852 Includes Why Go Like - photo 11
Hong Kong

POPULATION: 7 MILLION / TELEPHONE CODE: 852

Includes

Why Go?

Like a shot of adrenalin, Hong Kong quickens the pulse. Skyscrapers march up jungle-clad slopes by day and blaze neon by night across a harbour criss-crossed by freighters and motor junks. Above streets teeming with traffic, five-star hotels stand next to ageing tenement blocks.

The very acme of luxury can be yours in this billionaires playground, though enjoying the city need not cost the earth. A HK$2 ride across the harbour must be the best- value cruise in the world. A meander through a market offers similarly cheap thrills. You can escape the crowds just head for one of the citys many country parks.

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