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Wednesday, May 17, 2006

Don't throw your tickets away

I had an experience like this once with U.S. Customs...

Extracts from
China Dispatch: Tickets, pleas.
By Brian Sack, the Banterist

When traveling China by rail it's important to remember one thing which they do not tell you when you buy your train tickets: you will need your used tickets to leave the station.

Granted the tickets may say this, but the tickets are in Chinese so it might as well be written in paw prints and coffee stains.

Therefore, when your train arrives at its destination do not leave the tickets on the train or throw them in a trash bin because, as I've mentioned, you'll need them to leave the station. Why? No idea. You're done with them, but they want them back.

Failure to have your tickets with you will result in significant discomfort, as evidenced by comparing these two scenarios:

Scenario #1:


1. As you approach the station's exit you hand your tickets to the guard.

2. He lets you leave.

Scenario #2:


1. As you approach the station's exit you don't hand your tickets to the guard because you don't have them.

2. He prevents you from leaving the station.

3. You pantomime throwing the tickets away.

4. He shows you a ticket and pantomimes you giving him a ticket.

5. You pantomime throwing a ticket away.

6. Five thousand Chinese people who have their tickets are behind you, eager to exit the station, and are attempting to do just that by pushing their bodies and baggage through you.

7. The guard talks to you in Chinese and pantomimes you giving him a ticket.

8. You shrug your shoulders and point back towards the distant train.

10. Instead of taking the tickets from the throngs passing by, the guard engages you in a one-sided Chinese conversation which seems to indicate that he expects to receive tickets from you.

11. Meanwhile, hundreds of people filter past the guard without having their tickets collected because he's engaged in talking to you - making you realize the whole collection process is pointless and arbitrary anyway.

15. You again pantomime throwing tickets away.

16. A crowd gathers to watch the Increasingly Frustrated Westerner Show.

17. Eventually you ascertain that you are being told to return to your train and un-throw-away your tickets. After much fuss you determine that the woman is telling you the train in question is still on Platform 2.

18. You run against more swarms of arriving passengers, bolt up a ramp and finally arrive on Platform 2, where your train isn't.

19. A Chinese gentleman appears and indicates his interest in helping you out of your predicament. After much pantomiming and finger-drawing he understands you were on train Z14. He seems to know where it is. You follow him as he runs down the ramp.

22. When you locate your car the helpful Chinese man explains your predicament to the overseer. She brings you into the train. You enter your compartment and notice the trash can has been emptied and the table cleared.

23. The entire cleaning crew gathers to watch The Panicky American Show as the overseer grills them on whether they saw any tickets. Eventually you come to understand that the cleaning staff claims they saw no tickets.

24. You begin to imagine life in a train station and wonder which platform you and your wife will make your new home in.

26. All hope is lost. Then you discover the tickets in your camera bag.

29. You run all the way back to the exit where your wife has been patiently waiting her fate under the gaze of amused passengers and security personnel.

30. She asks you where the tickets were and you parse your words like Bill Clinton so as not to appear guilty: "I found them in the room" is technically true.

31. You hand the tickets to the guard and he scrutinizes them, obviously looking for a fight. He finally waves you on.


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1 Comments:

At 3:32 AM, Blogger Badaunt said...

This happens in Japan, too. You give your ticket back. It shows where you came from and that you didn't cheat by buying a cheap ticket to go one stop and then go ten stops (or whatever).

Most of the stations are automated now anyway, so you put your ticket through a machine to get out, but if you lose your ticket be prepared to pay again!

 

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