China- The T99 Train from Shanghai to Hong Kong

in travel •  7 years ago 

My visa was up in a few days, so I decided to take the train from Shanghai to Hong Kong. If I’d had more time I would have taken several days to wander through Yunnan, but the consequences of overstaying on a Chinese visa, whatever they may be, were not on my bucket list.

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I had learned that the T99 train to Hong Kong (called Jiulong in China) left every other day from Shanghai Railway Station at 18:20. I purchased a ticket one day in advance and arrived on the day of departure at roughly 16:00. I ate a sandwich at KFC with that furtive, shamefaced self-loathing that is a hallmark of eating at KFC.

Then I waited in line with everyone else to go through customs to ride the Hong Kong train. When the gates leading to security finally opened what was a queue turned into a stampede as if starving people had all of a sudden sighted food.

A fight between grown adults, some of them elderly, somehow erupted just a meter or so in front of me, and it took several moments for the snarling, screaming and puffing-of-feathers to subside. I had never seen middle-aged people swing at each other over their place in a queue, their adult children holding them back and shouting obscenities in Mandarin at one another.

The funny thing was that the first queue led to the bag-check/metal detector, then another line formed for customs, then there was another waiting area before finally getting to the platforms. So, the adults were basically fighting to get to the metal detector security area first.

All combat aside, I had no problem shuffling through customs and eventually to my train car - number three.
I had once taken a train from Jinan to Beijing and was picturing a nice long eating car with dining tables to sit at and drink coffee, read and gaze out the window. These fantasies were quickly dashed as I shouldered through to my “seat,” which was like a coffin directly under the ceiling.

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But, the linens were clean and the pillows were a nice median between firm and giving; and after getting my bags stuffed into place, I took stock of my surroundings.

I was in the “hard sleeper” zone, which, despite its name, is actually a cushioned cot. Passengers are stacked three high in columns of two in a room, so six people were stuffed into a space the size of a minivan. In the “soft sleeper” you get more space as only four are stuffed into the same-sized area, plus there are hangers, wider beds and brown carpeting on the floor instead of navy blue carpeting.

The aisle, which accommodates conservatively the shoulder-width of an average-sized grown man, has fold-down seats and little tables for sunflower seed shells and a can or two of beer.

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It is a compact affair- they prudently spare no room where a ticket-holding passenger may physically fit- yet everything is surprisingly clean and the beds, granted you are able to reestablish your limbs in their sockets after getting inside, are as cozy as a womb.

There was a restaurant car, yet it only seemed to be open from about 19:00 – 19:30 and for the same amount of time the next morning at breakfast. After that it was off-limits. Luckily, a nice man came through the aisles with a cart of pre-packaged meals. The meal was tasty and a bit of a fun adventure in guessing which animal or vegetable its various elements came from.

The scene in the aisles throughout the cars was a lively affair, everyone smoking and drinking and spitting and licking their fingers and shouting at one another. It as if everyone knew one another.

Around ten the lights went out and I scampered up into my pod with acrobatic finesse. I read by a personal light on the wall behind my head and quickly fell asleep to the sounds of the swaying train.

In the morning I made instant coffee with the hot water freely provided by a courteous spigot in the joints between cars and watched the countryside zoom past on our way to Hong Kong. When we arrived the mood was gay, not a punch was thrown and customs was a breeze.

Hello, Hong Kong!

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Chinese were taught since birth to be always be in front of the line. Experienced this first hand at a shop in Vietnam where a 6 year old chubby Chinese girl push me out of the queue. It was a funny moment. I even thought that the parent would apologize but no she joined the little girl. I have heaps of Chinese friends and they are not surprise when I told them the story.

Haha- I accidentally used the word 'queue' in there when I should have said 'crowd.' Getting on and off subways can be brutal. I've had old women shove me almost to the ground- it's very cutthroat. But I loved all my times in China. Thanks for your comment!

Your description of the hard sleepers remind me of capsule hotels in Japan. Have you been in one of them? Very small, well equipped but incredibly claustrophobic!

You would be very similar, I would think, however I've not had the chance to experience the Japanese capsule hotel, although I have always wanted to. Where did you sleep in one?

Tokyo, in a cant find anything else moment. I travelled around Japan on my own for a few months. Awesome time but a bit lonely at times. As a vegetarian with only a small amount of Japanese I found it a veritable feast of mime, friendliness and general crazy food. I even ate pickled wasps/bees - not vegetarian I realise but there are days when it’s easier to eat a bee than just say no.

Haha pickled insects is a new one for me, interesting. It sounds like you had an interesting and rewarding time! Travelling alone can be just as wonderful as with others, once you get used to it. I would love to read a post about your time there.

Hope you enjoy China. Some Chinese are not used to queue maybe they are not so civilised. Also some poor people cannot enough money for bed they must have seat - only first person to get there can have seat. These days train tickets get more and more expensive. Hope you can have positive idea of most Chinese

Yeah, I have always loved my time in China. I will be posting many articles about China on this blog. I spent 4 months in a small town in Shandong Province (near Jinan), one month in Beijing and one month in Shanghai. I never had a bad time, people were so kind and welcoming to me, and I am completely fascinated by Chinese history, philosophy, art, etc. I think I am going to Yunnan Province in a couple months. Thanks for your comment!

HAHA, the remark about self-loathing when eating KFC got me. I had it last week at the Gwangju bus terminal and it was the worst fast food I have had here. I think it's funny that it is seen as a sort of luxary abroad when back home everyone steers clear of the place.

Sometimes you just need it. I don't know how else to explain it. I didn't need to include that misrepresentative detail in the narrative (since 99% of the time I eat street food) but it was funny to me how embarrassed I was. So I threw it in there. Glad you got a gas out of it =)