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We took one of those double-decker buses you can see in an earlier photo up to the top of Victoria Peak, a very high "hill" in HK, one evening. As the bus navigated the sharp switchback turns and steep angles of the road, I couldn't help feeling a bit nervous because with such a high center of gravity the bus could easily tip over if it took one of the turns a bit too fast. (The driver wasn't going particularly slowly, either.) The notice in the photo was posted at the top of the stairs to the bus's upper deck.
Here's the entrance to an observation deck and some stores at the peak. Unfortunately we couldn't take these stairs up to the very highest platform.
A view over the city from atop the observation deck. The tower with red and green lights on the left we called "The Empire State Building" for obvious reasons, and the colors changed gradually over time through the rainbow.
The same view directed more to the right. On midnight of January 1st of the new year, we were up on the peak again (figuring it would be a good place to see any fireworks if there were any). Unfortunately there weren't fireworks (those are saved for the Chinese New Year) but some of the buildings did interesting things with their lights. One of the towers lit up its windows to show "2002", and our "Empire State Building" flashed different colors wildly instead of it's usual gradual cycle.
This was the first place we found with public Internet access: the Pacific Coffee Company. Each of their shops had a terminal, and for the price of a cup of coffee (just to be polite), we could check our email and browse the Web for a bit. (Sorry Starbucks, you're not getting our business in HK.) Pacific understands the concept of "value added"...