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A Day in Hong Kong – Sharp Island & the Hong Kong Palace Museum
Tuesday, 28 April 2026
I hadn’t planned to stop in Hong Kong, on my way from Melbourne to London. I had quite different plans until Taco Trump decided he’d have a go at starting WW III. Hold on, I’ll get around to my original travel plans in June.
▲ Sai Kung seafood – Meanwhile I flew in to Hong Kong with Cathay Pacific Airlines, dropped my bag at the Regal Airport Hotel and, appropriately, was picked up by my retired Cathay Pacific pilot friend Rowland Burley. We drove out to his place above Sai Kung, a dormitory suburb for Hong Kong and Kowloon and one of the most popular places in Hong Kong for seafood. There’s a cluster of seafood restaurants across from the waterfront with what looks like an ocean full of marine creatures splashing or swimming unhappily in tanks. My photograph is of a boatful of them beside the quay.
▲ Sharp Island – Kiu Chau in Chinese – literally does have a sharp profile and it’s only 15 minutes by ferry from Sai Kung
▲ Sharp Island ferry from Sai Kung – so once the rain seemed to be slowing we jumped on a ferry, they run every half hour or so to …

▲ Hap Mun Bay – at the southern end of the island. There were young people camping above the beach and snorkellers in the water.
◄ Sharp Island Country Trail signpost – the island’s Country Trail starts from the bay and climbs up to run pretty much along the spine of the island for a couple of km to the ferry jetty at Kiu Tsui Beach at the other end of the island. Cute little sculptures beside the trail provide entertainment for the walkers and a tombolo, a shingle levee, joins the village to the small Kiu Tsui Pai offshore island. You can walk out to the island at lower tides, there’s even a lighthouse.
▲Country Trail Sign posts – Hap Mun Bay to Kiu Tsui Beach – back in Sai Kung we snacked on seaweed-wrapped rice triangles, a tasty snack I’ve never tried before, then took a bus to Kowloon and another bus to the relatively new and surprisingly large Hong Kong Palace Museum on reclaimed land looking across to Hong Kong Island.
▲ Dish with figures in the pavilion, Dish with dragons & Phoenixes among clouds, Hong Kong Palace Museum
We didn’t have time to really explore the museum, but I enjoyed the Ming Dynasty Ceramics Treasures gallery where most of the works seemed to come from China’s ceramics city Jingdezhen. In 2017, on Day 28 of my four-month Silk Road drive across Asia from Bangkok in Thailand to Abingdon, north of London in England, we stopped in Jingdezhen and met up with my Australian ceramic artists friends Alexadra and Leigh Copeland who work on their ceramics there every year. As we left the gallery an accidental phone call from Alexandra popped up on my mobile, there was clearly something in the air. Why did my drive across Asia end in Abingdon in England. Because we were all in elderly MGBs (eight of them) and that’s where they were made. Today MGs are manufactured just outside Shanghai in China.
Culture completed we dined outside the gallery, watching the lights come up in the city. Then I caught the Airport Express back to the airport and just before hitting the bed realised, yet again, that I am getting old and forgetful. I’d forgotten to take out travel insurance before I departed from home. I fixed that problem before I fell asleep and next morning flew out to London. A good flight, Trump’s crazy war was well to the south.