Monday 13 June 2011

Raining Pandas

So time to say goodbye to southern China and hello to the bigger, busier, smoggier cities of Chengdu, Xian and Beijing. 


Our flight to Chengdu went without a hitch but we were in for a bit more, hmmm, "adventure" with the taxi driver from the airport to the guesthouse we'd booked the night before. Most drivers in China are pretty reckless and the road rules don't really mean much but this guy really took it to the next level! 120km an hour in very heavy traffic, using his horn AND flashing his lights, swerving across lanes, shaking his fist out the window at vehicles that didn't get out of his way quick enough... What a nutter! But he did deliver us in one piece to Sims Cozy Guesthouse, a huge place with much more going on than any of our other accom, a pretty slick operation. They had a great cafe with excellent Chinese food and some Japanese options as well. 


Mummy Panda

The next morning it was time to go see the main highlight for me in Chengdu, PANDAS! We made our own way out to the Breeding and Rehab center so we could be there by 8am in time for feeding and the most active time for the Pandas. It was well worth it, we saw three 1 year old Pandas playing with each other and climbing trees under the watchful eye of an older female, a couple of adult Giant Panda's eating their morning bamboo and a whole lot of Red Pandas playing and eating. The complex is not too bad as far as zoos go, my only complaint would be that some of the Red Pandas looked pretty stressed out and a few had missing ears, which is a result of stress. We watched the "educational" video which outlines the reasons Panda's are so endangered in the wild - basically they are just not that into sex (hard to reproduce without this important step) and their very specific bamboo diets mean that they don't adapt at all to changes in environment... pretty silly animals really, lucky they are sooooo cute. 

Happy Red Panda
We took a bus from the Panda Center back into Chengdu city and had a look around some of the tourist areas, Jilin "Old Town" was pretty ridiculous, basically a Disneyfied version of ye olde China, absolutely packed with Chinese tourists. We wondered why they didn't just head out into the countryside to see the REAL old China. We also made our first purchases - new trekking pants for Tim and a quick-dry top for me - it was amazing how many proper travel shops there were in Chengdu, and with real products not rip offs!

The next day we headed to Emei Shan, a mountain a 2hr bus trip South of Chengdu. Mum had really raved about her experience on Emei and everyone else we met who'd been echoed her opinion. The plan was to spend three days climbing down the mountain covering about 25km and staying in Monastery's on our way but it didn't quite work out like that because of the weather. It seems the rains are following us! It was rainy and cold when we arrived in Emei town but we decided to head to the top of the mountain by bus (another 2hr trip) anyway in the hope that it would be fine in the morning and we could get an early start. Of course there wasn't much of a view on the way up because of the cloud but we did see that it would have been quite spectacular if we could have seen it! We stayed in Jilian Hall, a monastery near the top of the mountain. We were allocated a drafty room in the attic by a Chinese lady with no English but some great miming skills, no power and very simple but quite atmospheric. We thought food was included in the (quite expensive) price so ate with the monks - pretty terrible food actually, some weird brown rubbery shoelace things, sugary tomatoes and a tasteless soup. It wouldn't have been so bad but they actually expected us to pay EXTRA for it, thanks for the advanced notice. Wasn't much to do in the monastery in the dark so we went and hung out with an American Peace Corps English teacher in the rather grim hotel restaurant nearby.

It seems we are destined not to see a good sunrise - it was cloudy and raining when we woke the next morning but we decided we may as well rainsuit up and head to the peak anyway. Talk about lots of steps! We saw a very cute chipmunk who was twitching and jigging about so much it looked like he had ADHD. After about 1.5hr of constant upwards walking we reached the peak - freeezzzzzing - could only take my gloves off for long enough to snap a few pics and then fingers were so numb it was hard to put them back on again! It was a little spooky up the top with lots of cloud cover and swirling mists but no views... looks like we'll have to add Emei Shan to our come back list! After having a warm up hot chocolate (with jelly lumps, hmmm) and watching the Chinese tourist numbers grow and grow we made an executive decision not to hang around in the rain and cold and to catch the cable car and then walk to the bus stop and take the bus back down again - a shame but spending 2 more days walking in the rain and freezing cold with no views didn't really appeal.  

Cliff path to the Big Buddha
We went back to Chengdu via Le Shan which gave us an opportunity to see the biggest Buddha in the world, carved out of the cliffs next to Le Shan river. There was also a very large line of people waiting to do the walk down the cliffs, weekends definitely attract local tourists to Leshan. We braved the pushing and shoving elderly ladies and did the walk down and back up again - yep that is one big Buddha!

We headed back to Sims for another couple of nights, it was Tim's turn to have a cold so we didn't do too much, just did some planning for the next sections of our trip, did some washing and sleeping and DVD watching. A good place to chill out and as it was raining we didn't feel too slothful :) 

Another flight, this time to Xian - because of a very tantalizing offer from a couch host in Beijing to take us hiking and camping on lesser known parts of the great wall we only had one night and one day to squeeze in Xian. When we arrived we headed to the Muslim quarter and wandered around the markets, ("hey lady, you looky!") with the usual cheap tourist items plus some yummy looking nuts, fruit and Muslim style food, and had dinner in a Muslim restaurant. We were on the second storey and the massive window right next to our table opened straight out into the street - a good birds eye view of all the goings on even if it would never pass Australian safety standards!

The next morning we headed out to the Terracotta warriors on a frustratingly slow bus. The warriors were pretty amazing, we enjoyed seeing the ones that were still being unearthed and hadn't been "fixed up" the most. Definitely a must see, a little strange to think of the HUGE efforts some go to to ensure a good afterlife! We also tried the Chinese version of a hot pocket from a street stall which wasn't too bad and we are still alive so all is good. Unfortunately we didn't get time to do too much else because of the slooooowwww bus. We had a flight to Beijing that afternoon - we would have preferred to catch the sleeper train but apparently it books out about a week in advance - a bit different to the experience we had in the South of being able to pick up a ticket the same day we wanted to leave, who knew!

We arrived in Beijing late but made it to our couch host Bryan's (American English teacher for a private company) place at the university just after midnight, thanks to him giving instructions in Mandarin to our taxi driver. Its a bit frustrating that the buses and trains from airports in China finish a lot earlier than the flights! We sampled some Chinese tea with Bryan, tea aficionado, and his mates Daniel and Julie and got our stuff organised for the next days adventure to the Great Wall and rolled out our sleep mats for a few hours sleep before we headed off. 

Unfortunately Bryan checked the internet the next morning and after months of dry weather the Great Wall and Beijing were due a big storm - no Wall hiking/camping for us! A bit of a disappointment but Bryan is still keen to take us out to the wall when we head back to Beijing after Mongolia - fingers crossed our bad weather luck doesn't keep following us. After trying out the local Banzoi (yummy breakfast buns filled with veges and meat) with Bryan and Daniel we used our unexpected spare day in Beijing to check out the Summer Palace and wander around the Hutongs - old style alleyways. We even worked out the metro system and how to use the transport cards. Found a great little local restaurant where we tried the Szechuan friend eggplant with a sugary sauce and tongue-numbing Szechuan peppers - i think it is my favourite food so far in China, just gotta watch those peppers!

The next day we wandered around Tienanmen Square (that's a lot of concrete) and checked out the museum in the huge East Gate. We had our first hot pot for lunch - it was something different but i think we could find a better example! We also went into the "Tourist Hutongs" and surrendered to the call of Starbucks (or to the call of a clean, western toilet??).  Unfortunately we caught the wrong train on the way home and ended up doing a massive loop back to Bryans but we did eventually make it and joined him and his mates for local dumplings (yum!), some more sweet red sauce eggplant and had a few beers at the local expat dive. 

Early the next morning - flight to MONGOLIA!!! Country 2 here we come....

1 comment:

  1. Loved reading this last post it brought back so many memories - either you totally took in all my suggestions or Intrepid travel picked most of the "must do's".
    Finger crossed you have better weather when you go back to Beijing - camping in remote area of wall sounds awesome.

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