The Sights in Beijing
So what have we actually done so far in China?
The Great Wall
The highlight so far was the Great Wall at Simatai. It was another adventure of miscommunications and mishaps getting this trip even organized, but once we made it there, a 2+ hour drive from Beijing, it was incredible. It was a perfect blue-sky day, and we had the place almost entirely to ourselves, apart from the 4 local guides/postcard-salespeople who stuck to us the entire way and held us down when the wind threatened to blow us off the wall.
Mandrew at the wall:

The view from one of the many towers along the wall:

The great wall (and it is pretty great!):

Looking the other way:

Some steep stairs up:

Morna, Sian, John, Emily & Mandrew - with the wall stretching along the jagged ridge in the background:

The Summer Place
Although it would have been better to visit in Summer, the Summer Palace in Beijing was still pretty stunning. A huge park with interesting buildings, pagodas, bridges and a giant lake in the middle.
At the Summer Palace:

The long outdoor corridor at the summer palace:

One of the many cute bridges in the expansive gardens of the summer palace:

The Forbidden City & Tianamen Square
The Forbidden City was cool to see because it was totally off-limits to most people for 500 years, and because our audio-guide that we rented was recorded by Roger Moore, i.e. James Bond. Tianamen Square is basically a big concrete gathering area that is securely patrolled nowadays. Our first attempt to visit it failed because the national congress was in session ratifying the new constitution, and they didn't want anybody congregating there. I don't think anyone would've protested this one though, because it finally gives Chinese citizens the official right to own private property.
Tianamen Square:

Andrew in front of the Red gate in the Forbidden City:

The Beijing Pollution (with the Forbidden City in the background!):

Not really a tourist sight, but fun to watch - window cleaning in Beijing:
