Wednesday, October 24, 2012
云海
On the second night of the trip to Hubei, we stayed in a hotel on the top of a mountain overlooking Enshi. Much to everyone's surprise, we woke up the next morning and discovered a sea of clouds next to the hotel (see photos -- describing it does no justice). On sunny afternoons, the clouds disappear and the city of Enshi is visible below. Looking at the sea of clouds felt quite like looking out the window of a plane.
Photo 1: Clouds, taken from the lookout point
Photo 2: Clouds and the railing of the lookout point
Photo 3: More clouds and mountain
Photo 4: The hotel on the top of the mountain
Photo 5: Me at the lookout
Saturday, October 20, 2012
Enshi Grand Canyon
Just returned from a trip to Hubei province that was organized by the school for students in my level of Chinese. This post will only be about the first day, during which we hiked a series of mountains in an area known as the "Enshi Grand Canyon." Enshi is a region in Hubei province heavily populated by people of the Tujia ethnic minority (土家族). To get to the "Grand Canyon," we took a bus up extremely windy mountain roads, which resulted in motion-sickness for many students. For reasons unknown, our bus driver felt it necessary to drive a break-neck speeds up the rather narrow and unsafe mountain roads. Anyhow, we hiked for a total of about 4 hours, and by the end were completely exhausted. It felt similar to climbing the Great Wall -- up and down and up and down. The scenery was incredible, as can be seen in the photos. Although it was an overcast day, my nose got sunburnt -- one of the many joys of having pale skin. At the end of the hike we descended down staircases for about 40 minutes, which took a large tole on our knees and calf muscles. As a result, everyone was limping and wobbling for the next 48 hours or so.
Photos (in no particular order):
First one was taken at the end of the hike while descending. Second one is a view of the mountains we climbed. Third one was taken before we started hiking. It is of my class. Fourth photo is of the walkway on the side of the mountain that we walked along. Fifth is me at some point on the mountain. All were taken with my new camera, Milton!
Thursday, October 4, 2012
Revival of the Blog
New name, newish look, same blogger. Back in China at Beijing Language and Culture University (北京语言大学) for a year. Currently on break for the national holiday and thought I'd post some pictures of a recent trip to Tianjin (天津)(120 km from Beijing, urban population of about 4 million according to Wikipedia). Drove there with my old host family and stayed about 36 hours. Tianjin has a massive ferris wheel that affords a nice view of the city. Waited in line for it for three hours. The ferris wheel ride itself takes a half an hour because of how slow the wheel turns. My host mama's cousin lives in Tianjin, and went to the ferris wheel with us. She is 60, has lived in Tianjin her entire life, and has never received much of an education from what I gathered from my host sister. In line for the ferris wheel, she leaned over and whispered in my ear, "I wanted to ask you... In America, do white people discriminate against black people?" I gave her the simplest answer I could think of to avoid confusion, and told her that I don't, but some people do. My host mama later told me that her tendency to whisper about potentially controversial topics is a habit leftover from the Mao era.
For lunch on Tuesday, my host mama's cousin brought us to a rather undesirable restaurant filled with cigarette smoke and people. They had no tables, as it was lunch hour, so we ended up going to a nicer restaurant one block down, attached to a hotel. We sat down, ordered, food came, and all was well, for a while. My host mama had ordered a bowl of white rice when we ordered our food, but it didn't come for a while and eventually she decided she didn't want it. When she told the waitress, however, the waitress said that the bowl of white rice (an estimated 2 RMB, or 31 US cents) could not be cancelled, as it was already prepared. My host mama said that that was ridiculous, and my host sister immediately demanded to speak with the manager of the restaurant over the matter. When the manager came, she apparently gave my host sister a dirty look before explaining to us that the order of rice indeed could be cancelled but the waitress didn't have the authority to do it. Although the matter could have been calmly resolved, that one dirty look and bit of sassiness from the waitress and manager set me host sister off like none other. In no time my host sister was yelling insults and the entire restaurant was turning around to stare at us. I learned 5 new words from that conversation, including "worthless creature" (lit. "cheap bones"). The argument ended in my sister telling the manager that if the waitress didn't come over and personally apologize, we wouldn't pay the bill. All this mess over a bowl of white rice. Just another day in China.
About the photos: First one is my host sister and me in the car at 6:30 AM on our way to Tianjin. Second one is me holding three 10-day old baby kittens born in some distant relative's hutong-style home in Tianjin. Third one is of the "Tianjin Eye," the enormous ferris wheel. Fourth one is me holding onto the lantern my host sister and I bought. Seconds after the photo was taken I let go and it floated up into the sky. People buy them, write their wishes on them, and release them at night. It is quite a sight to see hundreds of them in the sky at once. Boy next to me is another distant relative. He is 16, dropped out of school years ago, and is now doing some sort of labor-intensive work. Very mannerly, friendly boy, and very down-to-earth.
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