Guangzhou 5 day travel thoughts š
I spent nearly 5 days in Guangzhou without knowing any Chinese, and honestly, it was both exciting and a bit overwhelming at times. The city is huge, fast-paced, and incredibly convenientāif you know how things work. I strolled along the Bund at night, and even witnessed the beauty of Guangzhouās blooming flowers. However, I also ran into some unexpected challenges, like trying to buy water without mobile payment or figuring out where to catch the right metro.
Here are the apps that made my trip much easier: Alipay (ęÆä»å®) On my first day, I walked around for hours before realizing that almost everywhereāstreet vendors, metro stations, even small cafesāonly accepted mobile payments, making it impossible for me to even buy a bottle of water. Eventually, I had to ask a stranger to help me pay, which was quite embarrassing. Later on, I figured out how to link my Visa card to Alipay, and after that, everything became much smoother.
Metro Guangzhou Guangzhouās metro system is super efficient, but buying tickets can be tricky if you donāt understand Chinese. This app turned my phone into a metro cardājust scan the QR code at the gate and go. The best part? It works offline once set up, which saved me when I lost my internet connection underground.
LaiTrip One evening, I was excited to try kung pao chicken, but before ordering, I scanned the menu with this app. It immediately flagged "peanut oil"āwhich Iām severely allergic to. When I tried explaining my allergy to the waiter, he didnāt understand, but once I showed him the appās red warning, he nodded and had the dish remade.
AMAP Google Maps worked fine for basic navigation, but inside shopping malls, it was useless. AMAP has detailed 3D indoor maps, which helped me find restrooms in Raffles Cityās maze-like basement. It also shows which bus doors are best for quick transfersāsuper helpful when I was rushing to catch my next stop.
Redbook (å°ēŗ¢ä¹¦) I found some cool spots here, like a hidden book cafĆ© and some delicious-looking food! But a heads-up: posts marked as "sponsored" are basically ads, and some travel packages arenāt as great as they seem. I filtered by "latest reviews" and avoided accounts that looked too polished.
Tips: Screenshot your hotel address in Chineseāsometimes taxi drivers donāt read English, and I learned that the hard way.