Suzhou is known as the Venice of the East. This is canal along Pingjiang Avenue. |
Pingjiang Alley is the home of local residents but it's also turned trendy with cafe's and higher end restaurants. I love how the locals simply plant themselves in cafe seats and linger! |
Hipster Dim Sum! |
The I.M. Pei designed Suzhou Museum. I expected something more spectacular....but then again we didn't actually go inside. |
Our first garden stop was The Garden for Lingering |
The gardens are famous for these various screens, which are placed before proceeding to the garden proper. |
The reason is to reveal only bits and pieces of the garden to the visitor/viewer. It's about subtlety and grandeur you find in European gardens. |
Chinese gardens are not expansive, but instead focus on water and paths and little areas to sit and contemplate. |
Mom and dad looking super cute. |
Mom signed us up for a day tour (ugh) but we did get a nice boat ride along the canals of Suzhou. |
The Humble Administrator's Garden, the most famous and grand of the Classical Gardens of Suzhou. |
The lotus flowers aren't out yet, and the day was overcast, but again, all about the water and the quiet recesses for reflection. |
The House of the 36 Mandarin Ducks. I expected to find mandarin ducks inside, but instead it refers to the fact that one used to see the ducks on the pond when there were ducks. |
This is what happens when three Chinese tour groups all headed in different directions intersect at a three way junction. |
Last stop, the Lion's Grove Garden |
It is particularly known for it's crazy rock sculptures and mazes |
These two free standing rocks in the middle of the pond are supposed to resemble lions. I'll give some interpretive leeway here. |
1 comment:
Hi, enjoyed your posting about Suzhou. I was there myself several weeks ago and absolutely loved it!
BTW, can you tell me the name of the restaurant that you liked? As a foreigner it's sometimes difficult to choose which restaurants to go to. Thanks!
- Kris
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