Sam, Julia and Edgar traveled to Hong Kong via a Korean Air 747 from Atlanta to Seoul (approximately 14 hours) and then a Korean Air 777 to Hong Kong (approximately 4 hours), kudos to Korean Air!
Returned to Atlanta via Korean Air 787 from Hong Kong to Seoul and then Delta Airbus 350 to Atlanta, again kudos to Korean Air and the best plane award goes to the Boeing 787 Dreamliner
First full day in Hong Kong highlighted by Hong Kong Museum of History, Edgar's birthday dinner on Victoria Peak, evening walk on Tsim Sha Tsui Promenade, and Symphony of Lights at Victoria Harbor
Second day in Hong Kong started with famous pineapple buns and included unique street markets near the Royal Plaza Hotel
Day trip to Lantau Island to see the Giant Buddha, Po Lin Monastery, and the fishing village, Tai O
Day exploring the Central district of Hong Kong including Hong Kong Park and Man Mo Temple
Visits to gardens, temples, a famous dim sum restaurant, the tallest building in Hong Kong, and the Temple Street Night Market
Day trip to Shenzhen China nextdoor to Hong Kong with a population of 17,000,000 and the reputation of being the Silicon Valley of China
Sunday afternoon exploration of Avenue of Stars, Hong Kong Museum of Maritime History, and IFC Mall
Trip to Dr. Sun Yat-Sen Museum, Aqua Luna harbor tour, and Stanley Market
Day trip to Macau via TurboJET Ferry
A purchased photo from Sky100, the observation deck on the 100th floor of the International Commerce Centre in the West Kowloon district of Hong Kong, with the iconic panorama of Victoria Harbor behind us...what a remarkable place!
Summer 2019 we embarked on an extraordinary trip to Hong Kong. The trip was to celebrate Sam's graduation from high school, to unwind before his start at Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University, and to go where none of us had been. Julia's great grandfather William Burke spent 56 years in Sunkiang, now part of Shanghai (1887-1943) as a Methodist missionary, and one of his sons, Gordon Burke, became a US Consul to Hong Kong in the 1930s.
Our primary destination, Hong Kong, ceased to be a British colony in 1997 and was nearing the midpoint of a 50-year agreement to operate quasi-autonomously as a Special Administrative Region (SAR) of the People's Republic of China. We will forever remember Hong Kong, and we are thankful beyond words for opportunities to see "The Pearl of the Orient" in its full glory.