Saturday, August 1, 2015

Five Weeks in China


Fascinating and Frustrating

Image result for big buddha hong kong





Started in Hong Kong, lively, bustling.  With my friend and colleague, Elaine, we went to Disneyland and Ocean Park, had a blast. http://www.oceanpark.com.hk/html/en/home/  


My favorite place in Hong Kong was the Big Buddha.  You take a half hour cable car ride to the mountain top.  Fresh air, open space and of course lots of people.  There is a mystical quality and it was a delightful day.

We then went to Shenzhen, followed by her home town, a delightful night in West Lake and a beautiful stay in Xitang, water town.



Met Marsha and Jay in Shanghai and began our tour.  Shanghai has a great skyline and beautiful buildings, the museum is also worth a visit.  Beijing was great, standing in Tiananmen Square, visiting the Forbidden City.  I’m reading (sort of) from  ”Emperor to citizen” and enjoying reading about when the Forbidden City was inhabited, intrigue and opulence.  The visit to the Great Wall was grand, I took the cable car up, visited the Ming Tombs too.  On to Xi’an and the Terra Cotta Warriors.  Impressive to visit the warriors home but I also enjoyed the city walls and liveliness of Xi’an.




Then I embarked on my own.  Flew to Yichang to cruise the Yangtze River.  Set out in the morning to visit the Three Gorges Dam, the biggest engineering feat in the world? What a bust from there on out.  I was the only foreigner not on the executive level, meals with no English. I didn't know there was an executive level.  Due to a landslide a big portion of the river was closed. We sat in dock all day, went through the locks in the middle of the night.  In the morning, we sat again, then a short shore excursion. At 6 pm they put us on a bus to go around the closed and supposedly most beautiful part.  We got on the other boat at 10pm.  At that point, I requested executive level meals.  Enjoyed meals with a lively and friendly British group, instead.  We cruised for the day with a visit to the Shibaozhai Pagoda, built into the mountain side.  The cruise ended in Chongqing, a province with the population of Canada. Had a day tour, including the Three Gorges Museum and then the flight to the south.
Interesting English or propaganda?


 From there I flew to the south, Yunnan province, to the towns of Lijiang and Dali. Lijiang was delightful, colorful, ethnic and friendly, even if I did have mystery meat at a restaurant with bull frogs on the menu and in the tank outside.  Took the train to Dali, another beautiful ethnic town, where I visited the three pagodas.  

I went to Kunming, reminded me of Los Angeles, so I could see the Stone Forest.  I booked a tour with the hotel, but it was a shopping tour.  The morning stop was a jade factory, then the stone forest, where I ditched the Chinese speaking guide,  had some time to wander, met them for the return. The afternoon stop was “Colorful Yunnan”, sort of a shrine to tea.   On to Anshun to visit the Huangguoshu  Waterfalls.    I wanted to see the natural wonders but they were a trial, too many people, vendors everywhere and few quiet Chinese spots. Met some local young people, college students and teachers.  I went to a classroom and taught them "Row, row, row your boat"!

 Colorful Yunnan
 Lots of grapes in Anshun

 Anshun Supermarket

Last stop Guillin to take the Li River Cruise.  Pretty city, leisurely tour, with beautiful scenery.


China is immense in its numbers, ethnicity, people, water, high rises etc., etc., etc.  I think it is going through transitions.  It is confusing, perhaps to the Chinese too.  They are rebuilding and refurbishing ancients sites and building highrises at every turn.  There are people that are immensely rich, Cadillacs are among the popular cars and there are poverty levels.  I found the people mostly delightful, helpful, interesting but also loud.  
China was fascinating but it never got easier.



I took more than 1000 pictures.  The slide show below is the best 26, I think. If you click on it, it should open in a new window.

Enjoy and thanks for reading!