Beijing Hutong tour - worth it?
#2
Joined: Aug 2003
Posts: 9,922
Likes: 0
Those rickshaw guys, unlike Beijing's cabbies, will take you for your last kuai if they can.
There's no need to us them, anyway - just buy a good map with both Chinese characters and pinyin (Roman alphabet), take a walk around the Back Lakes and strike off into any likely-looking area you see. It's much easier than it may sound.
This method has the advantage that you can take your time and stop off for a snack or drink whenever you feel like it. And when you get sick of it you can just walk to the first sizeable street in any direction and hail a cab to take you to your hotel or wherever. Just make sure that you have your destination written somewhere in Chinese characters.
There's no need to us them, anyway - just buy a good map with both Chinese characters and pinyin (Roman alphabet), take a walk around the Back Lakes and strike off into any likely-looking area you see. It's much easier than it may sound.
This method has the advantage that you can take your time and stop off for a snack or drink whenever you feel like it. And when you get sick of it you can just walk to the first sizeable street in any direction and hail a cab to take you to your hotel or wherever. Just make sure that you have your destination written somewhere in Chinese characters.
#5

Joined: Feb 2006
Posts: 27,709
Likes: 1
I've done it both ways. If you book the tour through one of the hotels you should be taken to a temple, the bell (or was it drum?) tower and Prince Gong's palace. You should go to Prince Gong's place anyway.
If you've never ridden in a rickshaw I suppose it might be worth it for that, but otherwise I found it much more fun to wander around on my own (map and guidebook in hand, of course!), stopping off for tea in one of the cafes on the lake.
If you've never ridden in a rickshaw I suppose it might be worth it for that, but otherwise I found it much more fun to wander around on my own (map and guidebook in hand, of course!), stopping off for tea in one of the cafes on the lake.
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#8
Joined: May 2003
Posts: 417
Likes: 0
I usually don't like the "touristy tours", but I liked the hutong tour on a pedicab that our guide arranged for a few of us. The young tour guide was very personable, we stopped at a hutong home and I was pleasantly surprised by the colorful occupant--a man that raises and trains crickets and is the proud daddy of a high profile chef. He was very entertaining and we spent about 30-45 minutes in his home. The ride around the area was most interesting, especialy with our guides extra information. The houses have been divided into smaller apartments and they share the courtyard.
We saw lots of guys walking around in pajamas. They lived in apartments without bathrooms, so they walk down the street to the large bathrooms. Young people don't want to live there, so you see lots of older people and they use the street as a gathering place.
We saw lots of guys walking around in pajamas. They lived in apartments without bathrooms, so they walk down the street to the large bathrooms. Young people don't want to live there, so you see lots of older people and they use the street as a gathering place.
#9
Joined: Mar 2003
Posts: 2,552
Likes: 0
Hi chiefie, I see that you have already asked Peter N-H for his hutong walking tour on this thread http://www.fodors.com/forums/threads...p;tid=34865395.
I found the information to be very useful, and interesting as a comparison given all the construction that has ocurred since he last updated the file. IMO, it is fun to just wander around on your own - but a tour such as the one Aleta describes sounds great!
Check out the lounge called Bed and its sister Thai restaurant called Cafe Sambal, both of which are in the hutongs, near the Back Lakes and the drum and bell tower. It's a very cleaned up (dare I say gentrified) section of hutongs. Yummy food at Sambal!
I found the information to be very useful, and interesting as a comparison given all the construction that has ocurred since he last updated the file. IMO, it is fun to just wander around on your own - but a tour such as the one Aleta describes sounds great!
Check out the lounge called Bed and its sister Thai restaurant called Cafe Sambal, both of which are in the hutongs, near the Back Lakes and the drum and bell tower. It's a very cleaned up (dare I say gentrified) section of hutongs. Yummy food at Sambal!
#10
Original Poster
Joined: May 2007
Posts: 40
Likes: 0
Aleta... sounds like you enjoyed your tour. Do you have a card, or more info on the operator?
ggreen... thx for the leads. since we have time, we might take a tour to get a "taste", then walk at leisure on our own.
There are several other walking tours detailed... may follow one of those.
Thx
ggreen... thx for the leads. since we have time, we might take a tour to get a "taste", then walk at leisure on our own.
There are several other walking tours detailed... may follow one of those.
Thx
#11
Joined: Sep 2004
Posts: 115
Likes: 0
We go to Beijing alot on business and frankly it was very educational and fun to do the tours. We also walk a great deal, but I would say do it by rickshaw. You won't be able to do it in a few years, but the wall, temple of heaven will still be there.
#12

Joined: Sep 2003
Posts: 733
Likes: 0
We took the same tour as Aleta back in 2005, booked through the hotel. We're typically independent travelers plus, as Chinese-Americans who've visited our parents' old village houses, are normally skeptical of Chinese tours. That said, we really did enjoy the rickshaw Hutong tour and found it informative and fun.



