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![]() ![]() A Visit to Mainland China - Part 2 |
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Day 9 (May 13) - A Day in Qufu and Tai'an
We were up at the usual time today for Chinese food and fruit (you know the routine by now). Luggage was picked up at 8 AM and we were on the bus at 8:30. We were leaving Ji'nan and travelling south to Qufu - home of Confucius and his decendents (right up to the 1900's). Confucius was born in 551 BC and his writings/ philosophy have played an enormous role in Chinese history and religion. Today he is highly revered. His name is Anglicized and is actually Kong Fuzi (Master Kong), so his family name is Kong. The bus trip was just over 2 hours. We drove through some moutainous terrain
and the land was terraced for farming. Every scrap of arable land is in use. Qufu
is a tiny village of only 160,000 people. It is a very poor area with rundown
buildings and basic living conditions. There were few buildings more than 2
stories high. The old part of Qufu is a walled city, so we had to drive through a tunnel
in the wall to get in. We parked and walked a long street lined with street vendors
(over 100 stalls!). Qufu is a Chinese pilgramage destination much more so than
a foreign tourist destination. It was interesting seeing souvenir stalls aimed at Chinese
pilgrims rather than non-Chinese tourists.
A long succession of gateways lead to the 11th century Kuiwen Pavilion.
The Apricot Pavilion dates back to the original shrine and is where
Confucius instructed his disciples.
The Hall of the Sage's relics houses carved stone plates with scenes from
Confucius' life. The Lu Wall is where one of his descendents hid his writings
from Emperor Qin Shi Huangdi, who wished to burn them. (The books
were rediscovered in the Han era.)
It was now lunch time, so we braved the souvenir gauntlet and headed to a nearby hotel for lunch. Today's lunch was Chinese food. We had a Chinese band and some dancers entertain us during lunch. The small trumpet had a very piercing sound, but the other instruments were more serene. Very nice!
After lunch, we drove to another park known as the Confucius Forest. This is a cemetery where Confucius, his son, his grandson and hundreds of the Kong clan are buried. It was certainly humbling to see the grave of Confucius himself considering the impact he has had on China, Japan, Vietnam and Korea. Then we headed back on the bus (about an hour) to head to the town of Tai'an at the base of Mount Tai (Tai Shan) which is China's most holy mountain. There we checked into our hotel - a Ramada. Once again the hotel is awesome - a study in comfort and high tech. The hotel is 9 stories, but for some reason, the elevators each seem to do only 3 or so floors. I'm on the 7th floor and have to change elevators on the 3rd floor to get there. To get to 9, it requires a 3rd elevator. Weird! For dinner, we drove a short distance to another hotel. It's funny that every restaurant we've been to is huge (serves about 100 to 200 people) and we're always sent up to the second floor. Must be a group thing. This time we had Chinese food. It was excellent once again. Apart from the steamed rice, I don't think we've had 2 dishes the same. We arrived back at the hotel about 9 PM. Time to
write up my journal and get to bed.
Day 10 (May 14) - On top of Mount Tai, Ji'nan to Xi'an
One interesting custom at a number of religious sights is a place to secure an engraved
padlock amongst hundreds of others. The locks are engraved with the names of loved ones
and may include a message as well. Our Professor located the lock he had placed there on
a previous trip. We also saw lots of people burning incense. Some of the incense sticks
were huge - 3 or 4 feet long and a couple of inches in diameter.
After lunch we went to the Dai Temple, located
in Tai'an city at the southern foot of Tai Shan. This
is the third most holy temple in China, the 1st and 2nd being the Temple of Heaven and
Temple of Earth in Beijing.There were lots of shade trees at the temple grounds which
everyone liked. They turned out to be ancient trees including the cypress trees of the
Han dynasty (206 BC - 220 AD) and the scholar trees of the Tang dynasty (618 AD - 907 AD).
Like other temples we had visited, there were many courtyards, gates and temples.
The main temple, the Tiankuang Dian, is an immense yellow-eaved hall that contained a
massive Song dynasty fresco depicting the Zhengzong emperor as the God of Tai Shan.
We arrived at the airport at about 5:30 PM and our flight was at 7:30. Our organizer had preordered PIZZA!!!! for all to be eaten while we waited for our flight. It was from Pizza Hut and was quite good. However, I was starting to get rice withdrawal symptoms. We landed in Xi'an about 9 PM and had a 1 hour drive to our hotel (remember, these
are huge cities). On the bus we met our new local guide Leo.
Once again the suburbs of this city are decrepit and crumbling (slums?)
and things get newer and bigger as you approach the center of the city. Our hotel here is
the Hyatt Regency and is quite nice, but not as new or fancy as our other hotels have been.
It was 11 PM by the time my head hit the pillow ready for an early departure to see the
terra-cotta warriors.
Day 11 (May 15) - Warriors in Xi'an
We were up for our usual 6:30 breakfast and then off on the bus at 8 to the home of the
terra-cotta warriors. It was about an hour's drive from the hotel. We got there quite early
and also were approved for the VIP entrance right by the main excavations. Being one
of the first buses there, we had the place to ourselves. The site is really huge and the
building housing Pit #1 is massive.
The largest display is Pit #1 protected within a huge aircraft hanger-like building.
The trenches containing the soldiers have long since collapsed, crushing the soldiers
and horses within. The excavations entail removing the collapsed dirt and recovering
the broken pieces of the terra-cotta statues.
Numerous soldiers have been repaired and replaced to their original positions in the
trenches. Another area (called the terra-cotta hospital) contains ranks of soldiers and
horses in the process of being repaired. The enormity of the display is quite overwhelming.
We also visited pits 2 and 3, which are under active excavation as well. one'of the pit buildings
had glass cases you could walk right up to, with examples of terra-cotta soldiers. Also on
display were the 2 half-size "horses and chariot" sculptures. Of course there was
a gift shop / book store where we met the actual farmer who discovered the site. He was
signing a very nice souvenir booklet about the warriors. I had to buy one!
We returned to the hotel at 5:30 PM and had 1 1/2 hours to relax and clean up for dinner at 7.
Dinner was at another Chinese restaurant and was very good. We have beer with every
meal and it's excellent. We have also had wine a number of times for various reasons, and
it takes some getting used to. They have a ways to go to develop some quality wines.
About 10 of our class abandoned the bus halfway home to visit a night market (at 9 PM).
I would have gone, but after a late night last night, I was tired and wanted to get to bed.
Day 12 (May 16) - Xi'an to Guilin
This morning was to be a sleep in day as we weren't getting going until 10 AM.
However I still woke up early and did my usual 6:30 breakfast. I was surprised to find
a lot of our group up early too. After breakfast I debated going for a walk around town,
but decided to check out the fitness center instead. It was quite nice, so I ended up
doing a 40 minute workout. Then it was back to my room to cool down and read up on
Guilin. By the time I had cooled down and showered, it was time to take my luggage
down for the 10 AM pickup.
After the mosque visit, we went to a nearby Muslim restaurant. Everyone was expecting
Turkish or Mediterranean fare, but Muslim is a religion, not a location. Hence, the food
was very Chinese, just replace pork with lamb. It was quite good though.
Guilin is completely different from the northern cities we had visited. We were now in rice paddy country. I saw my first water buffalo, walking beside an old lady wearing a conical hat (the lady, not the water buffalo). The "karst" mountains are sharp peaks rising straight from the vally. This is the China seen in the paintings and National Geographic photos. Beautiful! Guilin has a population of 700,000 and welcomes about 6 million visitors each year (90% of them native Chinese). It is very much a tourist city. The two draws are the stunning landscape and the beautiful Li River (which we will cruise tomorrow). The name Guilin means "Osmanthus Forest" and the streets are lined with sweet-scented Osmanthus trees. We stopped at a nice restaurant for dinner (Chinese food) and then continued
on to our hotel. On the way we passed a huge night market. No one seemed up to
heading to the market (too late), so maybe we'll hit it in two days when we return to
Guilin. Our hotel is a Sheraton, and it is very swank. So, here I am on the old laptop
again pounding out another trip report.
Day 13 (May 17) - Down the Li River to Yangshuo
We were up early for breakfast (the usual) and had to sort our bags by 7:30.
We were taking some stuff with us, and some we were leaving at the hotel. At least
that was the theory. I also
took the opportunity to use the "all you can stuff in one bag for 100 Yuan ($15 Cdn)"
laundry service. I had t-shirts, socks and underwear that needed cleaning. The only
challenge was getting them to wait a day and deliver it when we returned. I didn't
want then delivering my laundry to the new tenants of my room tonight! The
girl at the front desk assured me that everything would be just fine. All right!
At some point on the cruise we were offered some snake wine. The wine
bottles actually had two or 3 dead snakes inside. This is a specialty of
the Guilin area. I've never seen this wine at Willow park Liquor Store!
Needless to say, I didn't try it.
We headed off to dinner at 6:30 and, as a treat, we went for Western food.
Everyone was excited. However, the food (sampler of salad, pizza, spaghetti,
steak and fries) was mediocre to poor at best and everyone was wishing for
Chinese food before we were done. We did get Chinese beer though, and it
was great. We've had many different brands of beer now and they have all
been excellent. They have all been very similar in taste - light and not bitter.
The Tsing Tao beer imported into Canada is very close in taste (or identical).
We got back to the hotel close to 10 and that was that. Tomorrow we drive
back to Guilin on the bus, paralleling the Li River.
Day 14 (May 18) - Back to Guilin
We boarded the bus about 8:30 and headed out for a countryside tour.
We headed through farmland (mostly rice paddies), with ramshackle farm
houses, old farm trucks, water buffalo, etc. It was too bad with the rain as the
bus windows steamed up on the inside and streamed rain on the outside,
so it was very difficult to see out.
Next we stopped in a small settlement by the river with a stone bridge
crossing the water. There were a number of wide bamboo rafts with deck chairs
ready for customers wanting a float down the river. I suspect the rain was
keeping any customers away. I can't remember why we stopped here, but it was
interesting.
After lunch we took a short drive to the Reed Flute Cave
(Ludi Yan). It is a huge cave
system running into one of the limestone mountains
(Guangming Hill). They have built a
wonderful walkway through the caverns and have special coloured lighting
that very effectively highlites the walls and ceilings, stalactites and stalagmites.
There were several shallow pools with amazing reflections. We all really enjoyed
the tour. Then it was back to our hotel for a couple of hours of free time. The
rain had let up by now and it was quite pleasant out. Even better news was
that the hotel had my laundry set aside for me, all washed and clean!
By the time we headed back to the hotel, it was just Marni, Donna and myself.
Needless to say we got lost. We were only a block away from the hotel, but weren't
sure how to get there. We stopped into a small shop and the girl gave us directions.
We were back to the hotel by 10. Time for bed. Tomorrow is a free morning, more
local sightseeing and then we fly to Hangzhou. Another travel day!
Day 15 (May 19) - Guilin to Hangzhou
We are still in Guilin where it is overcast, but 30 degrees and very humid! I was
up at my usual time this morning, even though we didn't have to report in until 11 AM.
I hit the restaurant at about 6:45 and actually met 2 other classmates there. No one
else appeared. After breakfast, my good friend Donna and I headed out for a walk
along the riverfront promenade - a wide walkway with gardens and sculptures.
We passed some Tai Chi folks, a group exercising with fake swords, and a large
group doing ballroom dancing. They all smiled at us as I took their pictures. The
fruit bicycles were out in force too (bicycles with wooden platforms on the back
loaded with lichees, mangos, bananas, etc). It was a lovely walk along the river.
Then we visited
nearby Fubo Hill (Fubo Shan). This is a tall yellow rock rising from the river.
It is believed to calm the rough waters below, hence its name "Wave-Subduing Hill".
There is a steep path to the summit where a crumbling temple is located.
The temple houses a huge bronze bell and several hundred buddha images from the
Song era. At the base of the hill is a small cave system where some buddhist
carvings and religious items can be found. The gardens surrounding the hill were
especially nice, with some very large shrubs sculpted to look like a family of elephants.
We hit the airport at 3:45 and immediately boarded the airplane.
Our luggage had been
transported by truck earlier and was all checked in. It was nice not to
have to wait around for the flight. I don't think this would be allowed in
North America where you have to be with your checked in luggage all the
time.
The architecture here is very different than other cities we have visited. In the outskirts, there are large square plots of farmland surrounded by western looking condos. I don't know what the buildings remind me of, but certainly not Chinese. It was after 7 by now, so we headed directly to our restaurant. You may have gathered from earlier entries that we have been thoroughly enjoying the food (well, almost all of us - there's always someone who doesn't like the food). This was the first restaurant that everyone was disappointed in. Although the place was huge, it was packed due to a wedding party. The music and noise was so loud we could hardly talk to one another. The tables were dirty and the food was really bad. I hope this isn't typical for this area of China. Then we headed to our hotel for the night. It is the "World Trade Center
Grand Hotel" and it is beautiful. And, it has free internet. (That's the 5th hotel
that has had free internet in the rooms).
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