Fuzhou

From Wikitravel

Fuzhou (福州) is the capital of Fujian Province, China.

Table of contents

Get in

By plane

  • Fuzhou has air links to most other major Chinese cities. Airport an hour from town, 20 RMB by bus. You can get the bus at the Apollo Hotel. Shared taxis also go from there, at around 25 RMB. A private taxi would be at least 100, likely more unless you haggle well.

By bus

  • Direct overnight buses to/from Hong Kong, Shenzhen or Guangzhou exist, with sleeping bunks. 220 to 350 RMB; it is usually worth the extra for comfort.
  • Buses from Xiamen are 70 to 90 RMB.

By train

  • The train station is in the Northeast of the city.
  • Train to/from Xiamen takes a long route and is slow. Take a bus instead.

Get around

Taxis are cheap, 7 RMB for short trips and under 30 for any trip in town.

Busses are often crowded, but run often and more-or-less everywhere. 1 RMB, or 2 if they have air conditioning.

See

  • Gu Shan (Drum Mountain) a 20 min. bus ride from town. A Taoist temple houses nationally important archives written in monks' blood as well as superb veggie restaurant. It's a 1900m climb, or a 20 min cable car journey to the top.
  • Bai Yun Shan. Near Gu Shan and less heavily trafficked. After the gruelling top section, you'll be rewarded by some genuinely beautiful hospitality and refreshing tea in a cave! Magic. Plus some great views over the city.
  • Wu Shan overlooking the main square - a short walk to the hilltop which houses a pretty average temple. However, on the way up there's plenty of entertainment in the form of musicians and singers who congregate here to practice. The White Pagoda is also accessed by the same road behind Mao Tse Dong's statue and worth a look. There are several very good arts and crafts shops at the base of the hill. Haggle for all you're worth to obtain good prices.
  • Qi Shan, A 5 RMB bus ride from Fuzhou plus the last stage in a mian bao chi up the winding 17km road to the site. A forest park with big, sexy waterfalls and stunning views over receding mountain ranges from a vertigo-inducing suspension bridge. All this and monkeys to feed. Beware the alpha male!

Do

  • Visit A'an Tai covered market at night for cheap goodies and a lively atmosphere. It's on the corner of Jin Tai Lu and Ba Yi Qi Lu.
  • If pool's your game, you'd be hard pushed to find better tables anywhere in China than the Riley's club on the Yang Qiao Lu. Cheap drinks and open very late too!
  • Eat Yu Wan - Fish balls - a Fuzhou delicacy. Minced beef and pork inside a fishy flour ball of dough in a thin broth. Excellent. Other roadside cheapies include Ban Mian (noodles with peanut sauce) and Bian Ro (a small boiled dumpling) all under 2 RMB a portion.
  • Dawn and dusk, visit Wu Yi Guang Chan (a central square with a huge statue of Mao) and watch the ceremonial raising or lowering of the flag by highly trained and immaculate soldiers.
  • Watch martial arts in Wu Yi Guang Chan, 6 AM or so until about 8, or later on weekends. There are at least half a dozen styles being practiced, armed and unarmed. The founder of karate, Funakoshi Geishin, spent 13 years in Fuzhou. There are a group on the East side of the park who say their style is what he studied.
  • Go watch Fuzhou Fighting Ferrets Football Club - a motley assortment of nationalities who play at Jin Shan Wen Ti Zhong Xin every Sunday morning at 9.15. Like football, only funnier!

Buy

Handicrafts in the area include:

  • shou shan stone, a form of alabaster used for carvings
  • laquer work

Eat

  • Gu Yue Hu - a small, cheap, excellent sichuan place with an English-speaking manager (Wei Jing or Gemma), corner of Hudong Lu and Hubin Lu, at the Southeast corner of West Lake Park.
  • Hao Shi Jie on the corner of Er Huan Lu and Yang Qiao Lu is very expensive if you go upstairs, but stay on the ground floor and eat the dim sum which is cheap (under 25/head) and delicious.
  • Moby Pizza on the second floor, Northeast corner of Jin Tai Lu and Ba Yi Qi Lu opposite McDonalds.
  • Wai Bo Tai - just off Ye Shan Lu. Good menu, cheap, great fresh seafood. Never had a bad meal there so far!
  • Cafe Forum - on the corner of Er Huan Lu and Wu Shi Lu. Good quality meals in a box and reasonably priced coffee, but the service can sometimes be attrocious. Hit it on a good day, it's great. On a bad day, it's dire.

Drink

  • Le Cafe on Hualin Lu (Road) a block West of Wu Shi Lu is an expatriate hangout, although it has recently been taken over by the Taiwanese and has lost some popularity. It is busiest on Friday evenings. Tell a cab driver "wu yi dasha"; that is a hotel next door.
  • The Party Bar on Tong Hu Lu, about 50 meters South of the main gate of West Lake Park, has cheap beer, free pool table and live music. Popular with locals and expats, sometimes quite crowded or noisy on weekends.
  • Tony's Small Bar, across the street from Party Bar, has an English-speaking owner and is quieter.
  • Shao Yuan Yi Hao, on Bai Ma Lu has a host of foreign beers, British, German and Belgian as well as fine wines and beautiful decor and people. Bit pricey, but worth it for the music and atmosphere. It is a beautifully remodelled warehouse, the sort of design you might expect in a Western city or perhaps Shanghai, but unique in Fuzhou.
  • 1-2-3 Bar almost opposite Shao Yuan Yi Hao on Bai Ma Lu. Cheap beer, convivial atmosphere, sometimes live music, stays open as long as you're drinking/semi-conscious. The sign says 1-2-3, but Chinese pronounce it "do-re-mi" for reasons that are not at all clear to the writer.

Sleep

Budget

Mid-range

  • Ju Chun Yuan Hotel on Dong Jie Kou (a central intersection), very central for shopping and such. Has a well-reputed Chinese buffet, a KFC and a UBC coffee shop. 200-odd a night

Splurge

There are some nice hotels in Fuzhou:

  • Fuzhou Lakeside Hotel Ask for a room with view of West Lake.
  • Golden Resources Hotel Macau restaurant on ground floor, bars with Filipino bands across the street. Both expensive, but good.
  • Shangri-La Hotel. On the corner of Wu Yi Guang Chan, the city's central square. 5 star luxury. Try the burger in the lobby if you're tired of Chinese food. Also has a great and inexpensive coffee bar with free internet access.

Get out

  • Mount Wuyi, scenic area famous for tea, ancient cliff burials and relics of the 3000 yr old Min Yue culture. The landscapes here are surreally beautiful. This is a must see in Fujian. Avoid the modern "tourist" town - it's dull and pricey. Basically, turn right at the end of the station road to head to the old town and a friendlier, less hassled environment.
  • Xiamen, four hours by bus. Overrated, expensive, full of foreigners, their "beautiful" Gu Lang Yu island now charges an exorbitant admission fee and is cheesier than Blackpool. Avoid it like the plague. Nan Pu Tuo temple is worth a visit though.
  • Qin Yun Shan, about 65km from Fuzhou near the small town of Yong Tai. Lots of great walks through river valleys with tons of sub tropical flora and fauna and those ubiquitous waterfalls. Worth an overnight visit.
  • Lang Qi Dao, a 45 min bus ride from Fuzhou, via Ma Wei. On the east of the island there's a splendid beach with few visitors. Cute old ferry takes you there from the mainland for 2RMB.

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