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        <title>Been there | Tips</title>
        
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            Welcome to Been there. Your tips on the places you know - that you love,
            live in or have just visited - are what make this guide.
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                <title>The best views in Hong Kong</title>
                
                <link>http://www.ivebeenthere.co.uk/tips/19543</link>
                
                <description><![CDATA[If you've got time in your schedule, you've just got to take the star ferry across Hong Kong harbour - Hong Kong Island to Kowloon or vice versa.This Hong Kong institution is iconic of Hong Kong's colonial past and deep heritage. The fare can paid by your octopus card and is just pennies. The view is fantastic and leaves from TST terminal and goes straight into the Central business district. The journey takes around 15 minutes so slower than other forms of travel but there is nothing that can beat it for value and experience.]]></description>
                
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                <title>Mid-levels and above</title>
                
                <link>http://www.ivebeenthere.co.uk/tips/4554</link>
                
                <description><![CDATA[Some walks to show expat living - albeit a route I took relatives a few years ago.<br>Start at bottom of the mid-levels escalator, all the way up to Robinson Road (look for the small road spelt backwards). Along Robinson Rd, taking in Mosque Junction, and onto the Botanical Gardens, very peaceful early morning for tai chi exponents. Down Glenealy, possibly stopping for a refreshing drink and then down Ice House St, passing the Foreign Correspondents Club (possibly the world's best bar), and then arrive in Central.<br>Don't forget the views from the Matilda Hospital on the Peak (look out over Blacks Link and other very exclusive addresses) and for those with transport try and find the old service reservoir off Lugard Road on the Peak. It offers the best views anywhere on Hong Kong Island.]]></description>
                
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                <title>HK tram</title>
                
                <link>http://www.ivebeenthere.co.uk/tips/4552</link>
                
                <description><![CDATA[For a near-free tour of HK island's major attractions, travel on the upper deck of the old electric tram, from Kennedy Town in the west, through central to Quarry Bay and beyond in the east. You can peel off at Wan Chai for Happy Valley and the horse races. <br><br>Though very slow, you see virtually the whole of HK island and savour its flavour at street level, jumping off wherever you want - each trip is just HK$1-2 (20p). Avoid rush hour. Watch out for pickpockets. Anyone tall should find a seat quick, or face a crick neck all week.<br><br>If there's a few of you, hire your own tram, complete with its own bar for a Friday night trawl. Ask the tourist board.]]></description>
                
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                <title>Happy Valley - not the race course</title>
                
                <link>http://www.ivebeenthere.co.uk/tips/4573</link>
                
                <description><![CDATA[The race course is very nearby and well worth a visit (The Stable End buffet is endless and affordably liposuctionable), but the main road of Happy Valley (Sing Woo Rd) and the few streets that march off it are worth a visit. <br><br>Happy Valley has a slightly in-the-crowd-yet-not-of-the-crowd feel - visit the Jewish Cemetery for example, and you will have found a calm, romantic, sobering oasis of calm. <br><br>But let’s take a walk up the hill starting at the tram stop. Turn right. <br><br>First, you will notice Happy Valley has an almost "village" feel, but happens to have quite a few amazingly tall condos. This is village Hong Kong style after all. <br><br>Despite its twee Enid Blyton associations, it’s a very upmarket address, Happy Valley. Here you may see the great and good of Hong Kong in any number of boring old Mercedes and weird hairdos doing a speck of shopping, training their dogs to sit or, in the early morning, the not so great but just as good of the parish doing tai-chi and sword exercises.<br><br>There is a good hole-in-the-wall fast food place near the pedestrian crossing across from the pharmacist, a Wellcome supermarket, and across the street a pink-tiled community centre run by Leisure and Cultural Services housing a library, a wet market, a cooked food centre and an indoor playground for the kids. It’s cold in there. Bring thermals. <br><br>You will notice a plethora of foot reflexologists. And Chinese medicine shops. And pet shops.  And stylish furniture retailers. Ligne Roset has its showroom here. Why I don't know. <br><br>Further up Sing Woo, past the electrical retailers, the 7-11, the stationery shop and the Pacific Coffee (wireless internet here) there is a Dim Sum place, which serves all day (not always the case in HK) and has a wooden/tile interior and an upmarket clientele. Not cheap but very, very good. There’s a helpful picture-based menu for gweilos. <br><br>Cross the road burping your siu mai and lor mai kai and head back down the hill. You will pass a Watson’s wine cellar and a tau foo fa seller on the corner of King Kwong Street. Order a small portion of this quintessentially Cantonese confection for dessert and continue on your way. There are various dai pai dongs selling cheap meals (HKD25 for a pile of rice, pork and vegetables) fruit stalls, newspaper ladies, a photo shop and the pharmacist before you are facing the racecourse again. <br><br>The infield of the racecourse is accessible to the general public via a tunnel located in the sitting-out area across the Wong Nai Chung Road if you feel the need for the wide open spaces. It is hemmed in by condos, the cemeteries, the blue-coloured immensity that is High Cliff and Mount Nicholson - but at least you can feel the grass beneath your feet. Watch out for the sprinklers at 5:30pm.  <br><br>Worthy of mention for night owls are The Chapel bar on Yik Yam Street - good curries and a quiz night on Thursdays - The Jockey pub in the open area at the bottom of the Valley and the Movieland, which sells ex-rental, non-pirated DVDs very cheaply. Oh, and the Korean barbecue place, again on King Kwong Street. If you want your hair and clothes infused with the odour of seared bulgogi beef, this is casual and great. And won't break the bank. <br><br>And try the Cafe Very Good. It's Not Bad.]]></description>
                
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                <title>Walk the Talk audio guide to Central</title>
                
                <link>http://www.ivebeenthere.co.uk/tips/4537</link>
                
                <description><![CDATA[Walk the Talk's guide to Central: Barren Rock to World City is a marvellous collection of stories about how a city begun by drug dealers has become the energetic commercial metropolis it is today.  You buy a pack at a nearby bookstore (for example, Bookazine in Jardine House), a sim card if you're worried about roaming charges, and just dial a number.  Once you're connected, you're set and can just use your mobile as a museum audio guide, with entertaining stories about pirates, opium taipans and Eurasian mistresses.]]></description>
                
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                <title>Cultural tours</title>
                
                <link>http://www.ivebeenthere.co.uk/tips/4506</link>
                
                <description><![CDATA[There are actually many free cultural tours in Hong Kong. I've checked out the tourist board website and found something called Cultural Kaledeiscope Program, which you can book online. There are so many to choose from, like watching Chinese opera, cooking classes, feng shui class, or tai chi in front of the harbour. It's a lot of fun.]]></description>
                
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                <title>A Day Tour of the New Territories</title>
                
                <link>http://www.ivebeenthere.co.uk/tips/2076</link>
                
                <description><![CDATA[It's often a cliche when you hear people talk of 'seeing the other side' of a city, but there are such contrasts in Hong Kong that it's well worth doing. Take one of the guided minibus tours that leaves from the lobby of the Peninsula hotel and get to know a few little corners of old Hong Kong; ancient houses, incense-filled temples, bustling markets and open country.]]></description>
                
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