I arrived in Dali about a week ago and stayed here for so long because the Jade Emu is easily the best hostel I've ever stayed at and New Year's travel is impossible. Everyone in China goes home for the holiday and so most of China is traveling and closed the week before and after the holiday. Making sightseeing difficult but allowing for a totally unique Chinese experience.
The beautiful country side. I think the yellow flowers are a type of bean. Most of the industry in the south is agriculture with rice and beans as the main crops.
Bai, the local minority. Identifiable mostly by their brightly colored head scarves.
Bai architecture.
Along the hillside behind the city are several hundred Bai graves. Kind of like small ovens built into the hillside.
Several rivers run down the mountain and one creates seven succesive rock pools. This is the top most one known as Seventh Dragon Maiden.
Along the trail is Phoniex Eye Cave. Which is several defaced shrines and a lookout point. Though it was damaged it was a cool thing. What you can't see in this picture is the straight cliff face drop off to the side. It was a very thrilling but dangerous place.
And here is a view of the Old City Dali from the view point.
So, I left Dali for the nearby mountain of Jizu (Chicken Foot) one of the top five holiest mountains in Asia. Several centuries ago the monk that brought Buddhism to China fought a holy war against an evil warlord on this mountain and died here. Thus there are 40 monasteris and 73 nunneries built along it's slope. We hiked to the top most one, a height of 3100 meters and stayed the night at the summit. It was 5 hours hike of nothing but steps.
The whole mountain was covered in Tibetan Buddhist prayer flags. People hang these flags on mountains so that the wind will carry their prayers up to heaven.
A close up of the pagoda and the main shrine.
The temple was famous for the sunrise, so we got up and did the obligatory holding the sun picture. But it was really pretty.
Chinese New Year's happened on the 26th so the hostel welcomed the year of the Ox with a hot pot. (Boiling soup base that you cook raw meat and vegetables in with a group setting.)
After hot pot we hit the town and ended up celebrating with a Chinese family in their shop. This was pretty much music, hand signals and Bai jo, the local spirits.
And of course fireworks. Firecrackers have been going off all week and the on New Year's Day the air was still for of ash. These are the 3 Pagodas, what Dali is most famous for. They're picturesque but expensive to enter, so I didn't.
I'm just posting this picture because it symbolizes the Communist Party. Funnily enough one of the signs I found out later says "no photos"
This morning I met this guy. He speaks no English but was wearing this shirt.
On another note the plant life in Yunnan is particularly interesting. On one mountain I saw prickly pear cactuses next to a banana tree next to a Camellia plant. But what is interesting is in Yunnan marijuana is really a weed. It is still very illegal to have or smoke but it still grows naturally in people's back yards.
Tuesday, January 27, 2009
Sunday, January 25, 2009
More Photos
http://www1.snapfish.com/photolibrary/t_=103779950
I've started loading my photos on to snapfish. These are the ones that didn't make the blog but they are untitled.
I've started loading my photos on to snapfish. These are the ones that didn't make the blog but they are untitled.
Kunming:first stop in the Yunnan province
My first official stop in official China is a regional capital know as Kunming. It's a cool city with the usual temples and cool architecture. But about two hours away is Shilin or stone forest. A literal forest of a geological phenomenon called karsts. Very cool rock formations.
The other amazing thing about Kunming is the Wal Mart! I've never been to a Chinese Wal Mart but there are a few in southern china now. This one, as they all are, is massive. At least four floors and the size of a department store, it is always full of at least a few hundred Chinese. And the prices are still cheaper than the surrounding area which is hard to do in China.
The final cool thing about Kunming was it is home to the largest bronze temple known as the Golden Temple. It weighs over 280tons. Everything in ths picture is made of bronze.
It was also on top of a pretty mountain with some nice gardens and some smaller temples around it.
So, anyway Kunming was a good city but it really is just a jumping off point for heading to Vietnam or father into the Himilayan/ Tibet area. I'm currently in Dali and will be weathering out the Spring Festival week here. Look for photos soon.
The other amazing thing about Kunming is the Wal Mart! I've never been to a Chinese Wal Mart but there are a few in southern china now. This one, as they all are, is massive. At least four floors and the size of a department store, it is always full of at least a few hundred Chinese. And the prices are still cheaper than the surrounding area which is hard to do in China.
The final cool thing about Kunming was it is home to the largest bronze temple known as the Golden Temple. It weighs over 280tons. Everything in ths picture is made of bronze.
It was also on top of a pretty mountain with some nice gardens and some smaller temples around it.
So, anyway Kunming was a good city but it really is just a jumping off point for heading to Vietnam or father into the Himilayan/ Tibet area. I'm currently in Dali and will be weathering out the Spring Festival week here. Look for photos soon.
Wednesday, January 21, 2009
OMG! HKG!
The first stop on my second tour of the far east is Hong Kong and how I do love this city. But before getting into how attractive and interesting Hong Kong is first look at the photo below taken as I was flying in. You can clearly see the level of pollution that hovers over most of China. (the brown band beneath the blue) It doesn't really effect much but does make it difficult to see long distances and creates a shield that keeps in light and heat in most cities. But anyway I still liked Hong Kong alot. It's up their with Beijing and San Antonio, TX in my favorite cities list. I'll admit that I was in a nicer situation than my normal travels. Here is a view from my hotel.
But what I liked most about this city was the feeling that you were living in a tree house. The plants (jungle really) mixed and covered with the concrete city. And everything was built high (because of floods) and moving up the mountains (for space) This picture I'm actually standing on a sidewalk looking up at an overpass. I also really liked Hong Kong for it's mix of British and Chinese culture. Native Hong Kongians have a sense of propriety and civility that the rest of China doesn't have (they don't spit on the streets) but the essence of China was still there. For instance I ate something called "Beef flavored crunchies" that contained the warning "Product contains: milk products, soybean products, fish products and crustacean products." And no I did not get sick from it.
My first night in Hong Kong I went to see the world's largest fixed light show at Victoria Harbor that used 30+ buildings of the downtown buisness section to make a show set to music. The show was not so great but the skyline of Victoria Harbor blows away any competition from Shanghai's Bund or anyother waterfront I've seen thus far.
Also, included along the water is the Avenue of Stars, showcasing the handprints of famous Hong Kong people. Of course Jackie Chan was included in this, being a Hong Kong native, as were other famous action stars like Bruce Lee, Andy Lau and Sammo Hung. Jackie Chan has bigger hands than me.
And if you were not yet aware. The year of the Ox is approaching in the next few weeks. So everybody is decorating and preparing for the Spring Festival (It's not called Chinese New Year's in Asia since almost every Asian country celebrates it)
Hong Kong is made up of two big islands( Hong Kong Island and Lantau), a bunch of little islands and a pennisula (Kowloon)
I visited Lantau on the second day. It was beautiful with beaches and an indian summer made it warm enough to walk barefoot.
But one of the best things I've see so far was the Po Lin Monastery that kept up the Tian Tan Buddha. It's litterally a massive bronze buddha on a mountain. I think that's awesome.
A view from the Buddha at some of the other islands.
The other thing worth seeing on Lantau is Tai O, a traditional fishing village. Again, with floods being a problem the houses are built on stilts. And though toursits get bused through here daily the villagers still make their living fishing as evidenced by the smell of fish and fish paste drying in the sun.
And then you can take a lovely cable car over to Kowloon to meet the subway. Though all the islands are connected by ferries.
Did I mention Hong Kong is a mix of jungle and Europe. Here is City Hall, my favorite building. It has banana trees in the back.
The next day I went up Victoria Peak on the tram that has been running since 1888. And it goes straight up with an incline that I swear is more than 45 degrees.
At the top of the peak is everything. A mall, food, a daycare and pre-school, real estate agency... All within walking distance of the few massive mansions of people rich enough to live up here. Everyone else just comes on Sunday to walk their dogs on the paved path around the top and gossip with their girlfriends. Everywhere else I went in Hong Kong was mostly Chinese tourists at Victoria Peak it was all European natives. I don't think the two mix very often.
The rest of the day was spent getting lost and thus, subsequentially, climbing three mountains. (I really need to learn to ask directions) At the top of first mountain I climbed (everything is at the top of a mountain in China) I found the local Lutheran church. Asians are not particularly Christian but those who are are with an intensity that scares me. The second mountain led me to the city crematorium. This mountain was easier as there was an escalator that went most of the way up. (Those aren't stairs in the picture under the awning)
The crematorium was impressive with about 50 rooms each room holding the ashes of about 500 people. All marker with a slate with the person's name and sometimes a picture. As Spring Festival is coming it is tradition to visit the ancestors and so the place was hazy with incense and smelled like sandalwood.
I finally reached the place I was going on the top of a third mountain, the 10,000 Buddha monastery. The most camp place in the world. Built in the 1950's it is still a working monastery. The walk up this mountain featured at least 200 lifesized, plastic figures of Buddha, each in a unique position and none of them looking like Buddha at all.
Here is my personal favorite. Buddha of the Long Eyebrows. This monastery took Buddha lore from everywhere and made models of it. After going to this monastery I've been forced to go searching for answers as to why Buddha was shown riding a giant blue dog or why he had an extended arm. I'm still trying to understand all that I saw.
There were other figures that some how are attached to the Buddha myth but I don't know how.
The Buddha's extended up the hillside. But the reason this in the 10,000 Buddha Monastery is that in the main temple there are actually 12,800 unique figurines covering the walls. It's mesmerizing but doesn't do pictures well.
The last stop in Hong Kong was the Chi Lin Nunnery. I'm not sure exactly what a Buddhist nunnery is like but it's pretty. This one is made entirely of wood and due to the architeture style not a single nail was used.
But what I liked most was the Bonsai garden in the courtyard. Bougainvillae can apparently be pruned into bonsai trees.
And then there was a rock garden. A head monk was there arranging it. And I found this ironic that a monk was acting so aristocratically as to command the garden tennants to move and rotate the rocks this way and that while he watched under the shade of his umbrella.
I realized that I also have never really talked about the currency in Asia. I find it pretty. So here is a picture of a half Chinese yuen (also called renmenbi RMB), 1000 Korean won, a US dollar and 20 Hong Kong dollars. They are arrange in value increasing from least to greatest though the Yuen and the HKD are about equal and 1000 won is about 70cents US. Anyway. I liked Hong Kong alot and will move on to Kunming presently, a city in the Southern part of China in the Yunna province. But I will say one more thing about Hong Kong; the people are short. Everyone knows the stereotype that Asians are short and I've never found it to be true except in Hong Kong where I had about five inches on everyone.
But what I liked most about this city was the feeling that you were living in a tree house. The plants (jungle really) mixed and covered with the concrete city. And everything was built high (because of floods) and moving up the mountains (for space) This picture I'm actually standing on a sidewalk looking up at an overpass. I also really liked Hong Kong for it's mix of British and Chinese culture. Native Hong Kongians have a sense of propriety and civility that the rest of China doesn't have (they don't spit on the streets) but the essence of China was still there. For instance I ate something called "Beef flavored crunchies" that contained the warning "Product contains: milk products, soybean products, fish products and crustacean products." And no I did not get sick from it.
My first night in Hong Kong I went to see the world's largest fixed light show at Victoria Harbor that used 30+ buildings of the downtown buisness section to make a show set to music. The show was not so great but the skyline of Victoria Harbor blows away any competition from Shanghai's Bund or anyother waterfront I've seen thus far.
Also, included along the water is the Avenue of Stars, showcasing the handprints of famous Hong Kong people. Of course Jackie Chan was included in this, being a Hong Kong native, as were other famous action stars like Bruce Lee, Andy Lau and Sammo Hung. Jackie Chan has bigger hands than me.
And if you were not yet aware. The year of the Ox is approaching in the next few weeks. So everybody is decorating and preparing for the Spring Festival (It's not called Chinese New Year's in Asia since almost every Asian country celebrates it)
Hong Kong is made up of two big islands( Hong Kong Island and Lantau), a bunch of little islands and a pennisula (Kowloon)
I visited Lantau on the second day. It was beautiful with beaches and an indian summer made it warm enough to walk barefoot.
But one of the best things I've see so far was the Po Lin Monastery that kept up the Tian Tan Buddha. It's litterally a massive bronze buddha on a mountain. I think that's awesome.
A view from the Buddha at some of the other islands.
The other thing worth seeing on Lantau is Tai O, a traditional fishing village. Again, with floods being a problem the houses are built on stilts. And though toursits get bused through here daily the villagers still make their living fishing as evidenced by the smell of fish and fish paste drying in the sun.
And then you can take a lovely cable car over to Kowloon to meet the subway. Though all the islands are connected by ferries.
Did I mention Hong Kong is a mix of jungle and Europe. Here is City Hall, my favorite building. It has banana trees in the back.
The next day I went up Victoria Peak on the tram that has been running since 1888. And it goes straight up with an incline that I swear is more than 45 degrees.
At the top of the peak is everything. A mall, food, a daycare and pre-school, real estate agency... All within walking distance of the few massive mansions of people rich enough to live up here. Everyone else just comes on Sunday to walk their dogs on the paved path around the top and gossip with their girlfriends. Everywhere else I went in Hong Kong was mostly Chinese tourists at Victoria Peak it was all European natives. I don't think the two mix very often.
The rest of the day was spent getting lost and thus, subsequentially, climbing three mountains. (I really need to learn to ask directions) At the top of first mountain I climbed (everything is at the top of a mountain in China) I found the local Lutheran church. Asians are not particularly Christian but those who are are with an intensity that scares me. The second mountain led me to the city crematorium. This mountain was easier as there was an escalator that went most of the way up. (Those aren't stairs in the picture under the awning)
The crematorium was impressive with about 50 rooms each room holding the ashes of about 500 people. All marker with a slate with the person's name and sometimes a picture. As Spring Festival is coming it is tradition to visit the ancestors and so the place was hazy with incense and smelled like sandalwood.
I finally reached the place I was going on the top of a third mountain, the 10,000 Buddha monastery. The most camp place in the world. Built in the 1950's it is still a working monastery. The walk up this mountain featured at least 200 lifesized, plastic figures of Buddha, each in a unique position and none of them looking like Buddha at all.
Here is my personal favorite. Buddha of the Long Eyebrows. This monastery took Buddha lore from everywhere and made models of it. After going to this monastery I've been forced to go searching for answers as to why Buddha was shown riding a giant blue dog or why he had an extended arm. I'm still trying to understand all that I saw.
There were other figures that some how are attached to the Buddha myth but I don't know how.
The Buddha's extended up the hillside. But the reason this in the 10,000 Buddha Monastery is that in the main temple there are actually 12,800 unique figurines covering the walls. It's mesmerizing but doesn't do pictures well.
The last stop in Hong Kong was the Chi Lin Nunnery. I'm not sure exactly what a Buddhist nunnery is like but it's pretty. This one is made entirely of wood and due to the architeture style not a single nail was used.
But what I liked most was the Bonsai garden in the courtyard. Bougainvillae can apparently be pruned into bonsai trees.
And then there was a rock garden. A head monk was there arranging it. And I found this ironic that a monk was acting so aristocratically as to command the garden tennants to move and rotate the rocks this way and that while he watched under the shade of his umbrella.
I realized that I also have never really talked about the currency in Asia. I find it pretty. So here is a picture of a half Chinese yuen (also called renmenbi RMB), 1000 Korean won, a US dollar and 20 Hong Kong dollars. They are arrange in value increasing from least to greatest though the Yuen and the HKD are about equal and 1000 won is about 70cents US. Anyway. I liked Hong Kong alot and will move on to Kunming presently, a city in the Southern part of China in the Yunna province. But I will say one more thing about Hong Kong; the people are short. Everyone knows the stereotype that Asians are short and I've never found it to be true except in Hong Kong where I had about five inches on everyone.
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