Oct 23
Bus skills
Since moving to the “Coastal City” neighborhood, I’ve become much more adept at riding the bus. I was a little skeptical about moving to Coastal City, having been so dependent on the subways before. But, I’ve adapted well. The busses, despite having a few with English announcements, are generally a tougher form of transportation than the subways. The main reason is that all of the routes “maps” are not really maps; they’re just ordered names of locations. And, those location names are only in Chinese characters. So, if you only know how your destination sounds, you’re out of luck.
However, since I committed to sending text messages in Chinese to Chinese people, my character recognition has gotten good enough to where I can go to a bus stop, read a route map and generally know if a bus can take me roughly where I want to go. I haven’t made a mistake yet and taken a bus to some bizarre location (that happened to Daryl on his most recent trip out here. Took a couple of hours in hard rain to get back. Daryl’s one of the few people I know who doesn’t speak Chinese brave enough to try the busses). It’ll probably happen to me eventually.
Since returning, three new subway stations have opened along the main line, extending westward into the High Tech Park where the MS office is located. There are many other stations still under construction and are set to open in a year or so (dang!). The new stations are very nice. Shenzhen is still rapidly transforming and it’s going to be a great city once all those subways are opened. Fix the air and this will be a world class place.
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