Tuesday, October 8, 2024

9. 19 Hours in China: Roaming Data Plan, Google Lens and Google Translate Save the Day

 

     We were on Hainan Island, China, for less than 19 hours, but oh what a memorable 19 hours. 

     The last morning in Hong Kong, October 8, was relatively leisurely. Leaving the hotel at 7:45 am for an 11:20 am flight gave us plenty of time to get stuck in traffic, to figure out where the “K” check-in desk was, to go through security, to find our way to the right concourse, and to have a Japanese breakfast of vegetable ramen (me), toast, and cold, runny scrambled eggs. We flew into Sanya’s Phoenix Airport on Hainan Island, suffered through China’s cumbersome immigration process, and ran across the street to catch the bullet train to the northern city of Haikou. I added the bullet train to our itinerary because I thought it would give us an opportunity to see the landscape on the island, but it added significant stress and confusion to our travel day.

     Hainan is China’s largest island and ranks #42 in size among all islands in the world. It has a tropical climate and is a popular vacation destination for Chinese and Russian nationals as well as renowned agricultural breeding location. From both the air and the train we passed field upon field of rice, tea, squash, and other crops we couldn’t distinguish. Since Hainan hosts so many Russian tourists, signage is more likely to be in Russian than English, and I was using Google Lens constantly to translate signs and information boards into English. It must have looked like I was using my phone as a divining rod – holding it in front of me and being drawn from sign to sign. Having roaming internet was crucial, both for Google Lens but also for Google Translate. To ask anything, including, “Where is the manual check-in line”, “Where do we get a taxi,” and “Why was that man angry,” I would type or speak English into my phone and then hold it out for the respondent to read and then either nod yes or no, point, or type a response into their own Google Translate program. The question about the angry man was a real question that I asked to a couple on the train platform in Sanya. A couple in the waiting area had been shouting at staff, almost coming to blows, and I was rubbernecking. Apparently, the altercation had something to do with a luggage check and the couple was ultimately allowed on the train.

So much had gone our way during early part of the day, that it was inevitable that something would go a little off the rails in the latter part. Getting to Haikou, we showed our taxi driver the address of the hotel from Booking.com and what we though was the location on the map, but it took pulling over twice and three phone calls to the Green Collection Care Hotel to find get there. Mom and I laughed thinking about the reaction my father would have to the situation. The hotel was not a hotel, per se, but instead a few rooms in a residential development adjacent to a mall. It was fine for our purposes with hot water, air conditioning, and two beds. The Wi-Fi at the hotel, and basically anywhere else in China, is useless unless you have a virtual private network (VPN). Facebook, many major new sites, and anything related to Google is blocked. Once again, Verizon’s international data roaming package to the rescue.

     For dinner, we walked over to the “BEING FUN MALL”. We passed many toppled palm trees and sawdust remnants of down trees during our short walk, and later learned that Typhoon Yagi had made a direct hit on Haikou on September 7. It was the largest storm in the region for 2024 and left 800,000 people without electricity in Haikou. The mall felt deserted, and we definitely stuck out as strangers. We went from restaurant to restaurant, led by the Google Lens translate feature, trying to find a place with anything vegetarian on the menu. We ended up in a fantastic little chain called “18 Bowls”. A throng of six women came running to see the question that I had typed into Google Translate…”Do you have any dishes with tofu? I do not eat any meat.” After lots of nods and thumbs up, we were given a table, had another round of communication through Google, and a 15-minute red egg timer was placed on the table to ensure that we got out food expediently. Mom was not impressed with either my spicy soft tofu or her bony chestnut chicken, but we got such a kick out of the experience that she gathered the staff for a group photo as we were leaving. As soon as the photos was taken, our server literally pushed me out the door. The restaurant was starting to get very busy, and she clearly was ready to move on.

     We stopped at the first-floor grocery store on the way out of the mall to buy water, and then I attempted to wash clothes when we got back to the room. There was a small washing machine on the porch, but halfway through the cycle we realized the drain wasn’t working. I ended up rinsing my clothes in the shower, wringing them out in the sink, and hanging them up throughout the studio to dry.

     This was a very memorable first visit to China, and not one that I care to repeat. When and if I return, it will be with a group and with VPN.

PHOTOS

Leaving Hong Kong



Landing in Sanya, Hainan Island


Taking the Bullet Train from Sanya to Haikou







Green Collective Care Hotel and Being Fun Mall





1 comment:

  1. I love the picture with the restaurant staff. So real :)

    ReplyDelete