Overview : Hong Kong is often described as the quintessential East meets West location, but the eastern element is easily lost amid the glass and ... more »

Overview : Hong Kong is often described as the quintessential East meets West location, but the eastern element is easily lost amid the glass and ... more »
Tips:
The trail deliberately avoids some over-hyped Kowloon shopping areas including:
* The so-called Golden Mile of electronic ... more »
The trail starts with a ferry ride across Victoria Harbour, which is a worthwhile activity in its own right.
Look back as well as forward. It might not have the same drama and natural beauty as Sydney Harbour, but for $HK3, it's a great way to appreciate the scale of what has been created on Hong Kong Island. Impressive city views by ... More
Don't stop here at the start of the trail (you'll be tempted to settle in); save it for a special dinner later.
This stylish place in the One Peking building offers stunning views back across the harbor, but the food is the real spectacle. It specializes in northern Chinese fare, which is spicier than the local Cantonese cuisine. Ther... More
This market can be fun if you treat it as a source of trinkets rather than investments. Some of the 400+ stall holders have been trading here in jade for decades so they are probably better at spotting a bargain than you are.
The general rule seems to be look for cheaper items that you like and haggle for what they are worth to you. Hi... More
The area around the Jade Market is Yau Ma Tei and above it you walk into Mong Kok. The shops in different streets or blocks have traditionally specialized in particular products, creating a patchwork of themed shopping areas.
Shanghai Street provides good examples of this as you move north through blocks of herbalists, funeral parlors ... More
Prepare for some culture shock if your food normally comes from a supermarket. It's "wet" because the fish and other forms of (sometimes unidentifiable) seafood are kept in bowls or tanks of water until you buy. Hong Kong residents are passionate about the freshness of fish. The price will include the killing, cleaning or any other surgical prepara... More
You've got to admire the courage of entrepreneurs who would build a five-star hotel in the middle of a working-class district, but the beauty is that you can get a room here for three-star prices (by Hong Kong standards anyway).
This is a great accommodation option if you want all the attractions of this trail at your doorstep. The roo... More
Shop after shop on both sides of this section of Tung Choi Street will sell you anything from a simple goldfish to rare exotic tropical species costing thousands of dollars.
Trade can be brisk so store entries are lined with racks of bagged fish ready to go. They are the perfect pets for high-density living.
Shops are gene... More
This is where you come if you're in the market for a parrot or something less exotic in an elegant bamboo cage. Other visitors include past customers taking their birds for a "walk," while picking up a bag of live grasshoppers for the daily feeding.
It's all slightly bizarre, especially when you see owners hang their cages within squaw... More
The next attraction on this trail is the Hong Kong Museum of History. You'll be doing a fair bit of walking around its exhibits, so save your feet and take the Mass Transit Railway to get there.
The MTR is the highly efficient, modern and clean train subway system that carries 3 million people a day on eight lines stretching from Hong ... More
Hung Hom MTR is just one stop from Mong Kok East (the closest MTR to the bird market) on the East Rail line. Take the D1 exit and head east on Cheong Wan Road. The museum entrance is via the courtyard plaza off Chatham Road South.
There are eight galleries recreating the city's past from prehistoric to post-colonialism. It covers everything from natural to social history, so you may wish to skip to the periods of greatest interest unless you have a whole day to spare.
You walk through replicas of villages and city streets from different eras, and there are exce... More