It can be daunting for first-timers to visit China, given the challenges posed by language, culture, population and vast distances between major cities.

That's why a cruise is a convenient, efficient way for rookies to avoid many of these hassles. Cruisers don't have to worry about finding hotels or English-speaking guides, arranging ground transportation and other logistics.

“What's fascinating about Asia is its complexity,” said Carolyn Spencer Brown, editor-in-chief of CruiseCritic.com. “And that's precisely what makes it an ideal region to sample first by cruise, where you're onboard a ship with your own familiar culture.”

A year ago, my husband and I took a 10-day cruise on the 900-passenger Crystal Symphony from Hong Kong to Beijing, with ports of call in Xiamen, Shanghai and Dalian and a three-day land extension in Beijing. This itinerary showcased the trio of must-see cities — Hong Kong, Shanghai and Beijing — allowing us to experience them in a way we wouldn't have been capable of doing on our own, especially within such a short time frame.

Hong Kong

Our cruise began from a terminal embedded in the centrally located Harbour City mall. This luxury mega-retail complex with its three hotels, 450 stores and 50 food outlets offered an initial glimpse at how westernized China has become since Mao Zedong launched the Cultural Revolution in 1966. While this was my first time in China, my husband had visited the country as part of a medical delegation in the '70s, when people uniformly wore drab blue jackets, and bicycles greatly outnumbered cars.

A flotilla of flat-bottomed sampans, junks with red sails and vintage ferries paraded past our ship on Victoria Harbor. Skyscrapers dazzled along the shore during the nightly 13-minute light show synchronized to music.

The next morning we strolled around on our own, pursued by English-speaking hawkers who profiled us as targets for custom tailors. That afternoon we opted for one of Crystal Cruises' myriad shore excursions, this one exploring daily life in Hong Kong.

The tour began with a bus ride to Tin Hau Temple, one of the city's oldest. With more than 600 temples, half of them Buddhist, Hong Kong has a rich spiritual tradition. The restored 18th-century temple was painted in characteristic yellow, red and green.

Even in this cosmopolitan city, many traditions endure. We passed streets with laundry drying outside high-rise apartments and visited a “wet market” with live animals, where traditionalists shop twice daily for meat, seafood and vegetables. A crowded double-decker tram in service since 1904, called a Ding Ding, transported us to a neighborhood with traditional medicine shops and displays of dried seafood products.

Shanghai

A small fishing village until 1842, Shanghai became a commercial trade center thanks to its strategic location on the Huangpu River, a branch of China's longest river, the Yangtze.

Like Hong Kong, Shanghai is a fusion of old and new. The ship docked within walking distance of the waterfront area called the Bund, lined with block after block of historical buildings. By bus, we headed for a 45-second, high-speed elevator ride to the observation deck atop the 88-story Jin Mao Tower, its postmodern octagonal design based on the Chinese lucky number eight.

After exploring People's Square, the political and cultural center of Shanghai, we lunched at the Jin Jiang Hotel, which has received heads of state since 1929. Other stops: the Old City, with its colorful souvenir shops and dumpling houses, and Yuyuan Garden, a sprawling public garden with a teahouse, pagodas and bridges dating to the Ming dynasty.

One of Crystal's bespoke tours (with a private driver and guide) took us to the French Concession, a posh area administered by France and popular with foreigners from the mid19th to mid-20th centuries.

Beijing

With its congested roadways, severe air pollution and scarcity of spoken English (even by taxi drivers), Beijing can be especially intimidating to Westerners. Our bus driver patiently navigated traffic jams, and Crystal Cruises had negotiated access through special gates at some tourist attractions to avoid human gridlock.

“Stay together like sticky rice,” cautioned one guide.

We wandered through narrow streets and alleys and joined hoards of domestic tourists at two UNESCO World Heritage Sites: Forbidden City, a museum of 980 buildings that was once an imperial palace, and the Temple of Heaven, where emperors prayed for a good harvest. That night, Crystal arranged a dinner with musical performances at the Great Hall of the People.

The literal and figurative high point of the trip was climbing a 30-foot-tall section of the Great Wall, a fortification hand-built by slaves and prisoners of war that measures at least 5,500 miles by most estimates.

The price of our cruise started at $5,120 a person. www.crystalcruises.com