2 posts · Curated China travel tips
A client sent me a photo from a "jade market" in Beijing yesterday. She'd paid ¥2,000 for a bracelet the vendor swore was "real Burmese jade." I zoomed in. It was plastic with green dye. Here's the honest truth about shopping in China: the fake stuff is everywhere, and the prices tourists pay are often 3-10x what locals pay. But real deals exist if you know where to look. Tea is one of the safest bets. Real Longjing tea from Hangzhou? Worth it. Silk from Suzhou? Excellent quality. Pearl milk tea on every corner? ¥10 and life-changing. The places I tell clients to avoid: "silk factories" that bus tourists in, "tea ceremonies" in gift shops near major attractions, and any market where the vendor speaks perfect English and starts at 10% of your offer. Where I send them instead: the local wet market, a proper tea market (like Majiayao in Beijing), or just any street where vendors are selling to locals, not tourists. More on the shopping guide.
An American guest watched me buy watermelon at a street fruit stall yesterday and asked: 'How do you know which one is good?' Truth is, I didn't learn this from any book or travel guide. I learned it from the fruit lady at my local market in Chongqing. She's been at the same corner for twelve years. After the first few times I bought terrible watermelons, she took pity on me. Now she picks every one for me, taps it twice with her finger, and nods. That's the signal. There's a whole system here that foreigners don't see. The fruit lady, the vegetable auntie, the spice shop owner — these people are walking encyclopedias of their craft. And they genuinely want to help you get the good stuff. I tell my clients: find your local market within the first two days of arriving in a new Chinese city. Not the tourist market. The real one, three blocks from your hotel, where grandmas are doing their morning shopping. Buy one thing. Go back the next day. The vendor will remember you. By day three you'll have a personal fruit consultant. That's how relationships work in China. Not through apps. Through showing up.