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Monday, December 11, 2017

Chengdu 成都 - the panda capital of the world!


24.7.2013
From Yunnan we arrived to a new province, Sichuan, and its capital Chengdu (population of 14,427,500 in administrative area), which is surrounded by two rivers in Chengdu Plains. Our main goal here was to see the China's national treasure, the giant pandas, and any other sightseeing was just extra.

You've arrived to the panda capital of the world!

Chengdu airport is the sixth largest airport in China and it's so big, that we had to take a bus from the plane to the terminal. Everyone from our huge plane fit into one bus, because the Chinese are so much smaller than the Western people. At the airport nobody asked our passports anymore, so we just picked our bag and caught a taxi. The waiting line made it easy to take a taxi, the drivers are obligated to drive people on that line. The police also checks that meters are in use. The city center is about 16 km from the airport. We arrived to our hotel around eleven p.m. and weren't too happy with our room; it stank of cigarette and had no internet. Besides, there was no English service in the hotel, so we went to check out other hotels. We had no luck, there weren't many hotels around, so we decided to try and get our own internet working and see how well we will manage with the stinky room.

25.7
WENSHU (MANJUSHRI) MONASTERY

We decided to stay in the same hotel, as the cigarette smell had disappeared some and we didn't have stuffy or runny noses in the morning. The morning started with trying to get an own internet access. We found one store who helped us out, but it took at least an hour to sort out the problem. It seemed very hard for the employee to understand what we wanted, even though she spoke some English. During the process she, her co-worker and a customer had a laugh about us, we might've seemed like stupid tourists (and stupid for not speaking Chinese), but we were very clear with what we wanted and explained the matter in various ways, even with pictures. Sometimes it seems as though Western and Asian (especially Chinese) people are from different planets in their ways of thinking. We've stumbled upon this wall of misinterpretation so many times in China. It is much easier to communicate with people in Thailand, Malaysia, Vietnam and Laos. But finally our internet problem was fixed and everyone was happy.

Next we headed to the city for sightseeing. A vegan restaurant happened to be near the Wenshu monastery, so we ate there. The food was ordered with a tablet, with menu in pictures and only in Chinese. Sichuan and Chengdu cuisine is famous around the world and UNESCO has named Chengdu as the City of Gastronomy. We knew we should get some delicious food here. We ordered two dishes, both with tofu which looked good, and they actually ended up being the finest food we got during our travel in China! They were very delicious, yet very spicy with loads of dried chili peppers mixed in, which were also very delicious. The dinner was very cheap, about ten euros altogether. Of course China isn't as cheap anymore as it used to be and you can't compare the prices with Laos, where you get a meal for just one euro.

Yummy vegan lunch with tofu and chili peppers

Wenshu monastery and its park was near closing time, so we had to rush through the area and couldn't marvel at it as much as we wished to and see everything. The monastery was originally built during Southern Dynasties (420-589) and rebuilt in 1697. It has 190 halls and rooms and classical architecture in the style of Qing Dynasty (1644-1911). The beautiful Bell Tower and Drum Tower lie outside, with a bronze bell of over 4500 kg hanging in the Bell Tower. I especially enjoyed the small handmade details hardly found in Finland - due to Finns´ love for practicality and simplicity. Chengdu itself has characteristic constructive styles; there are compound houses around a square courtyard (called Siheyuan), suspension wood houses (Diaojiaolou) and small cottages in the woodlands.

Surrounding area of Wenshu Monastery

Peace Pagoda of a Thousand Buddhas at Wenshu Monastery

Wenshu Monastery

Wenshu Monastery

Wenshu Monastery

Aidao Nunnery gates near Wenshu Monastery

The park next to the monastery was small and only took about ten minutes to walk through. There were many all sized turtles in a pond, but no other animals. Chengdu is actually a turtle shaped city, and because of it one of its nicknames is The city of the Turtle. Near the monastery also lies the Aidao nunnery, but it was closed when we got there.

Turtles in the "City of the Turtles"

POETS, PARKS AND A SUNKEN PLAZA

At the Tianfu Square (天府广场) lies the Science and Technology Museum, with Chairman Mao statue greeting in front of it. Tianfu square has beautiful fountains and The Sunken Plaza is also interesting to see with the dragon shaped statue. At the time of our visit the plaza was still under construction. Here you can also find the metro station. The first metro line in Chengdu opened in 2010, so it was still very new when we visited the city. The lines worked well, were easy to use and the stations are also written in English. By using the metro we saw many places in the city and familiarized the center in short time. Other sights to see in Chengdu are (to mention a few) Jinli Ancient street and the park with shrines and temples (with Wuhou shrine and the tomb of warlord Liu Xiang), Jinsha site museum, which has a huge collection of ancient unearthed ivory, gold and jade artifacts, one of the most famous Taoist Palaces in China, the Qingyang Palace at Culture Park, the ancient towns of Lizhuang and Luodai and Four Girls and Qingcheng Mountains for trekking, climbing and sightseeing.

Metro map

Sunken Plaza

The Science and Technology Museum behind the Sunken Plaza. Greeting in front is Chairman Mao.

Fountains at Tianfu Square

We walked around the Chunxi road and Pedestrian street (between Kowloon Plaza and Tianfu Square), which is an area for fashion with many malls, most of them selling expensive fashion. We weren't there to buy stuff though, we just people watched. If you want to send stuff overseas from China be warned, it isn't cheap. This thought crossed my mind, but I had to forget it fast with these prices. Chunxi road, like few of the surrounding streets, has bronze human statues, which are fun to pose with. You might be startled by the statues, they are human size and some of them are in colours. I sometimes found myself thinking another person was standing next to me, when it was a statue.

Bronze human statues at Chunxi Road

Coloured statues at Chunxi Road

Chunxi Road and the surrounding streets are a good place for shopping and other pastimes

Chengdu

While in China I noticed that many of the city people dress the way Finnish people dress when they go to a party or even a wedding. They wear nice things on their average day, whereas in Finland you are looked upon if you overdress or wear fancy colours. Clothes are of course much cheaper here than in Europe so people can afford to dress nicely, and the city people earn better in China nowadays. Our Chinese friend said they earn about 350.- USD a month (in 2013), which is the most common pay. I love to look at all the nicely dressed people and I photographed some of the beautiful Chinese women. Chinese also dress nicely when they go to a sightseeing spot, where they pose for photos. Even in the Kunming Stone Forest, a demanding trekking place if you see everything, people dressed nicely. We realized though, that most local tourists don't do much trekking. They take the busses to see the main sights, so they're not there for the exercise.

Beautifully dressed city people

Later we went to the Huan Hua Xi park (浣花溪公园), which is the place for the Thatched Cottage of Du Fu, a very famous poet who lived in the Tang Dynasty (618-907). The original cottage, which was the poets home more than a thousand years ago, was destroyed, but the current building dates back to Ming and Qing Dynasties and is dedicated to Du Fu. During the four years he stayed here he composed more than 240 poems that are considered to be precious national treasures. Unfortunately the place was closed, but we got to see some of the area though. It is a beautiful place. The Southwest gate is close to the cottage entrance. The many statues seen in Huan Hua Xi are of poets from the past 2000 years.

Huan Hua Xi Park

Poets Qu Yuan, Li Bai and Du Fu, Huan Hua Xi Park

Poet statues of Huan Hua Xi Park

Huan Hua Xi park covers an area of 32.32 hectares, being Chengdu's biggest park with three gardens, bamboo forest, Huanhua brook and Gan river flowing across it. The park combines modern garden and architecture design, and the historical culture of West Sichuan. Cosplay can also be seen here and many photosessions. During our visit the park had two photosessions going on, one wedding and another one something else. The park has an artificial Green Lake where you can see various kinds of birds, even kingfishers, but we only saw the most common ones and egrets. The park is used as an emergency base in case of earthquakes and offered a lot of free services. We had luck with weathers, every day was sunny and there was no sight of the monsoon rains that hit Kunming. Chengdu has a monsoon-influenced humid subtropical climate with mild and humid weathers. Between July and August the 24-hour daily mean temperature is around 25 °C (77 °F), but during the winter months it gets colder.

Huan Hua Xi Park

Avenue of Poetry, Huan Hua Xi Park

Huan Hua Xi Park

26.7
PANDA BABIES!

On our second day we did what I was expecting the most from the trip in China, seeing the pandas. We were lazy though and only went to the Chengdu Research Base of Giant Panda Breeding (成都大熊猫繁育研究基地), or shortly called Chengdu Panda Base, only ten kilometers from the city. The other popular places for seeing pandas are Wolong National Nature Reserve, 150 km from the city, Bifengxia and completed since 2013 the Dujiangyan Base, located 65 km from Chengdu center. There are a few other places, but these are the most popular ones.

The giant panda (大熊猫, Dà xióngmāo, big bear cat) lives in a few mountain ranges in central China, mainly in Sichuan, but also in neighbouring Shaanxi and Gansu. Farming, deforestation and other development has driven the giant panda out of the lowland areas where it once lived. A 2007 report showed 239 pandas living in captivity in China and 27 outside the country. As of December 2014, 49 giant pandas lived in captivity outside China, living in 18 zoos in 13 different countries. Wild population estimates vary, but a 2014 survey counted 1,864 giant pandas. In 2016 the IUCN reclassified the species from "endangered" to "vulnerable".

Pandas in the wild live to about twenty years of age. The oldest panda in captivity, Basi, just died in September 2017 in China at the age of 37 (more than 100 in human years). Basi became somewhat of a celebrity, even living in the San Diego Zoo for six months in 1987. She was rescued in 1984 from a frozen river at four years old. The Sichuan bamboo forest began to flower and die back then, a rare natural phenomenon happening once every 60 to 80 years. This means that Basi might have starved in the wild, as pandas derive most of their nutrition from the shoots and refuse to eat a flower forming bamboo. A mass die-back of bamboo in the ´70s caused the deaths of about 250 pandas, which need more than one species of bamboo to survive.

Finland will get their first two pandas, male Huá Bào and female Jín Bàobào, to the zoo of Ähtäri in one months time and they will most certainly become huge celebrities in our country, because Finns love nature and animals and because another bear, the brown bear, is our national animal along with the whooper swan. I'm not too happy about the idea of bringing the pandas to Finland, but I hope they will live long, happy lives and maybe even reproduce.

Chengdu Research Base of Giant Panda Breeding

Chengdu Research Base of Giant Panda Breeding

Bamboo forest at Chengdu Research Base of Giant Panda Breeding

Movie star Jackie Chan is a panda ambassador

The Panda Base opened at eight o'clock. We arrived there earlier, but got right in. The area has recommended routes you can take to suite your visit best, and a full visit takes three hours or more. We skipped some stuff and mostly focused on the pandas, yet still spent many hours in the area. The base even has a veterinary hospital and a seperate delivery room for the pandas. As a research center The Panda Base does not focus on displaying the animals, so it's up to your luck and visiting time how many pandas you will see.

It didn't take long to find the first panda. It was a lonely one locked inside, walking the same steps over and over like it was in stress. It seemed to want to go outside though, as it went to the door later. The pandas are usually kept inside during the hottest days, so they can cool down in the air conditioned rooms. It was a very hot day on our visit, but as we were so early at the base we could see about twenty pandas! That was way more than I had hoped to see. Some people have only seen a couple of pandas on hot days. You can also see the red pandas at the base. The giant pandas we saw were all ages. They were engaging in various activities; either climbing in trees, playing, eating bamboo in groups outside, scent marking, etc. One panda got frustrated about not being able to go outside and started harassing its mate by playfully biting and pushing the other one around. These guys were hilarious, they even ran! We also saw a cub and its mother, among so many other things.

Bamboo snack time

Pandas can beg for food too!

Paw full of bamboo

The rowdy two. We watched them for an hour!

Young pandas, at least a year and a half of age.

Pandas are generally solitary animals

A mother and a cub at least six months old

Resting after play

The best part was to see the newborn male panda twins born on July 23rd, only four days old! These twins, He Xing and He Sheng, were born to Cheng Gong (born in September, 2000). I had just seen the news about them on TV, but didn't expect to actually see them in front of me! I was in heaven for a while! Our timing was perfect for visiting the center, as the best times to see panda babies are in August and September, and these cubs had just been born! The pandas get their black markings at one or two weeks of age, so these cubs were still pink with just a little fur. The keepers were cleaning them when we saw them. At birth pandas are blind, toothless and quite helpless, so when the other twin fell on its back it was quite hard to turn over on its stomach again, but eventually it managed to do so. He Xing will in the near future live in the Copenhagen zoo together with the female panda Mao Sun (her nickname, originally named Mao Er, also from Chengdu Base) for at least the next ten years for collaborative research between China and Denmark. We might have to go say hi to them again then.

Four days old! The fur color pattern is fully developed one month after birth.

The keeper doing mom's job, cleaning.

I didn't get to hold a panda though. From what we gathered it costs about forty euros to hold a larger panda and at least 350 USD for a few month old cub! You can do volunteer work, but it costs about 1000 USD a week and some never even met a panda! There is also one day volunteer work available for a good fee too. The volunteers we saw didn't seem too happy though, as they mostly clean cages and prepare food. Even though I didn't get to hold a panda I still had a blissful day! As we finished the visit at the base we walked through the Green Lake area, where black swans were plenty. They were like ducks, begging for food, just like the various coloured carps accompanying them.

Goodbye, pandas! These fellows clearly wanted to go outside.

Black swans and carps begging for food



Watch the video of some of the pandas we saw.



The next day we caught a bus towards Mt. Emei (also known as Emeishan), as we had now seen the most important thing in Chengdu, the pandas. The bus ride took about three and a half hours.

About Chengdu

Monday, July 10, 2017

Old Towns of Lijiang and Shuhe


July, 22, 2013.
Today we had to say goodbye to our friends who we met in Kunming a few days ago. We were continuing our journey by bus from Dali to Lijiang (丽江), which lies about 190 kilometers away. Our friends didn't want to travel to Lijiang, fearing what damage the rainy season has done along the way. It was at its worse now in China and Lijiang suffers most from it between July to August. Some mudslides had been reported in these areas, but since the bus was running we thought the bus company might know the roads are in driving condition.

The trip took a few hours and we arrived to Lijiang after sunset. Our hotel Pingshui Xiangfeng (萍水相逢) was nice with good service. The hotel is situated in the Shuhe Old Town, which is relatively unknown compared to the Old Town of Lijiang, thus being more rustic and tranquil with cheaper food and lodging and less crowded streets. Shuhe is also named Longquan Village (Dragon Spring Village, 龙泉村). It isn't the easiest place to travel from to the Old Town of Lijiang (busses pass irregularly), and Wikitravel advices to avoid this "more artificial area of Lijiang" and because you have to pay to get in (as you also have to in the other old town), but we never paid anything and enjoyed our stay here. Shuhe has similar old architecture to the Old Town of Lijiang and Naxi people. It was once famous for its developed leather working and education. Now it is a part of the Old Town of Lijiang.

Details of our hotel room. The keyboard is actually a coat rack.

View from our hotel room to the Old Town of Shuhe

Lijiang is an important transit point along the Ancient Tea Route. It was a center for the economic and cultural communication between various ethnic groups such as the Naxi, Han, Tibetans and Bai. Designated a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1997, Lijiang's Naxi people still preserve much of their native Dongba culture and deep spiritual connection to nature. The city is nestled in a valley surrounded by mountains, and is a great place to escape stress; it has spectacular natural scenery varying from snowy mountains and highland glacial lakes to majestic canyons, making it a great place for outdoor activity lovers.

Some of the Lijiang sights include Jade Water Village, the Tibetan-Burmese Naxi people's Dongba village, Old Town of Lijiang (丽江古城), Baisha town and Tiger Leaping Gorge (虎跳峡, a great trekking area), Jade Dragon Snow Mountain (玉龙雪山, at 5,596 meters), Blue Moon Valley at the foot of Jade Dragon Snow Mountain, Black Dragon Pool (黑龙潭, Heilongtan) at the Yu Quan Park (Jade Spring Park), Lugu lake (泸沽湖, the Kingdom of women, at the Sichuan and Yunnan border, 6-8 hours drive from Lijiang) and Shuhe Ancient town.

July, 23.
JADE SPRING PARK AND ELEPHANT HILL

On the first full day we walked through the Shuhe old town to find a bus that leaves to the Lijiang city center, where you can easily reach most touristic places. On our way we met many Shuhe dogs, who kept guard at the local shops and hotels and were very friendly and well kept. They might be a way to lure in a tourist or are just pets, but these dogs offered a good way for navigating inside the town; if you memorized where each dog was you could find your way around the area that sometimes seemed like a maze. There were dogs of all sizes, but most were pure breds and larger than I've seen in any other countries. The dog in our hotel was a golden retriever.

Dogs we met

Instead of getting a bus (busses 6 & 11 go to Lijiang Old Town) we caught a taxi sooner and it only took about ten minutes to get to Lijiang. First we went to the Jade Spring Park, where the Black Dragon Pool is. At the time of our visit (2013) the pool was mostly dried up. It was filled again in 2014 and is now a water conservation area. We started our visit with a climb to the Elephant Hill (Xiang Shan, 象山). Before getting there we crossed a bridge and saw glimpses of the emerald coloured water that was left. The pool is home to many birds, fish and plants.

Before entering for the climb we had to sign ourselves in for the park ranger due to robberies or in case we got lost. Entering to climb the hill requires at least four persons in the group, so we climbed with two foreign Chinese students. Lijiang lies at an altitude of 2,400 meters (7,900 ft) and the top of the Elephant Hill is at around 2,650 meters, leaving not much to climb, but the climb wasn't as easy as we thought it would be. The path, mostly dirt with just few stairs, doesn't go straight to the top but wriggles and we climbed there with just tofu and juice for breakfast. There are two pavilions at the top, Songbe and Wanxue, and on the way up a small cemetary with the tombs of Yunnan historian Fang Guoyu and Fong Ziyun.

A tombstone at Elephant Hill

The first beautiful sceneries of the city can be seen after just ten minutes of climbing. Here you can see the Old Town of Lijiang and the park area. But the grand views are at the top and take about 40 minutes of climbing. Here you can see the Jade Dragon Snow Mountain, the city, artificial lake nearby and farm land. The wind is quite strong and it got cold soon, so we sat inside the pavilion for a while to take pictures. It took us over an hour and a half to do the roundtrip to the mountain and we spent another hour down at the park.

View from Elephant Hill to the Old Town of Lijiang (on far left) and
Jade Spring Park below

View from Elephant Hill to North to Qingxi Reservoir

Most of the buildings in the park can be seen along the way walking out of the park. There are many temples and pavilions from Ming and Qing dynasties: The Deyue Pavilion (Moon Embracing Pagoda, center of the lake, was originally built in the late Ming dynasty. The current structure is a reproduction from 1963 after a fire in 1950), Dragon God Temple (Longshen/Longwan Temple, constructed by local Naxi people in 1737) and the threefold overlap Five Phoenix Tower (Wufeng Tower, built in the Ming dynasty in 1601). The tower was moved to Jade Spring Park in 1979 from the Fuguo Temple 30 km away. The park also has Dongba Culture Research Institute and the Dongba Culture Museum.

There weren't many people in the park when we visited it so it was peaceful. The local tourists can get very noisy here. The park probably wasn't a big attraction at the time because the main pool was dry. Nowadays it looks very different than at the time of our visit.

We entered the park from North through this bridge.
This part of the pool was not dry.

Hanyue stage and Deyue Pavilion in the back

The Suocui Bridge is one of the main sights here. The Jade Dragon Snow Mountain reflects perfectly to the water below the bridge (now that there is water) and makes a great place for photography together with the pagoda. We had bad luck with both the dry pool and the mountain being behind the clouds, so we didn't get the perfect picture, but if you want you can have a local photoshop the mountain etc to your picture taken at the park. We didn't go for that.

Suocui white marble bridge and the dry Black Dragon Pool
(also called Heilongtan)

Deyue Pavilion and Suocui bridge, with little water on the other
side. The Jade Dragon Snow Mountain is hidden in the clouds.

An idyllic place for a break

Dry scenery at the park

Walking to the Old Town of Lijiang from here is easy. You follow a path that follows the Yushui river flowing from the pool and goes straight to the Old Town. It's not a long walk and after the park you follow just one street that comes to Yulong Bridge in the Old Town.

One of the bridges at the park near the Old Town

OLD TOWN OF LIJIANG (DAYAN)

A good landmark in the old town is the big waterwheel near Yulong Bridge at the North Gate. Around it you can find many restaurants with food (even McDonald's, KFC and Pizza Hut) and live music at Bar Street, which starts from the waterwheel, and it's easy to start sightseeing the area from here to many directions. The only way to get around is by walking, but the town is so small that you can cover it in a day. The old town stretches to Jin'an Street in the east, Xianghe Road in the south, Minzhu Road in the west and Elephant Hill in the north and is a similar maze of winding cobblestone streets to that of Shuhe town.

The impressive waterwheel at the Old Town North Gate

The town has an ancient water supply system with waterways and bridges. There are three canals and the layout of the town was established to conform to the flow of these streams in adherence to Feng Shui design, so there was water and waste disposal for the inhabitants. Some famous bridges were built in the Ming Dynasty (1368-1644), like Retaining Green Bridge, Big Stone Bridge, South Gate Bridge, Saddle Bridge and Longevity Bridge. All these details make the old town a unique place, which time seems to have forgotten. Due to its characteristics it is hailed as the Oriental Venice and Suzhou in Highland. It is also called Dayan Old Town and is the only old town without a city wall among all famous historical and cultural cities of China.

Welcome to the Oriental Venice

One of the canals

A beautiful scenery

Lijiang Old Town

The Old Town takes up an area of 3.8 square kilometers and was first built in late Song Dynasty (860-1279). It is located on Yunnan-Guizhou Plateau with an elevation of 2,400 meters. The town blends elements from several cultures. It differs from other ancient Chinese cities in architecture, history and the culture of its traditional residents the Naxi people. From 1523, when the Naxi chieftain was given the surname of Mu in the Yuan Dynasty, 22 generations of Mu chieftain ruled Lijiang for 470 years based on a hereditary system. The Mu Palace is at the foot of the Lion Hill and in its forest the Mu chieftains worshipped the sky, their ancestors and Mother Nature.

Naxi woman at her home door

A UNESCO World Heritage Site since 1997

One of the beautiful courtyards in the Old Town

The town attracts young Chinese artists, students, and travelers. There are various shops for all tastes and you can watch locals at the streets make their own piece of art. Many of the tourist merch sold in China is the same as in Laos' Luang Prabang. I don't know who makes them, might be that the Chinese buy them from Laos or the other way around, but the colourful handmade clothes, bags etc are beautiful and not too expensive either. All the shops played the same tune over and over again and we couldn't figure out what it was and its importance, but it seemed to be local music and probably was Naxi classical music. The tune played in our heads still days after this visit.

Bar Street near North Gate with a lot of restaurants

Drying corn

One of the shops, mostly selling wooden handicrafts

Overlooking the old town is Lion Hill. The climb to the hill is not strenuous, but it is a hill and the cobblestones aren't the easiest to walk in. Here both the old and new city of Lijiang are visible and also the surrounding mountains and the entire Li River valley. At the summit lies the restored masterpiece of Qing Dynasty architecture, a 33 meters tall wooden Wangu Pavilion, which is covered by 10,000 dragon carvings. We only glimpsed it from afar, because it was either closed at the time or too crowded.

Wangu Pavilion

Building on Lion Hill

A mountain scenery from the Lion Hill

The many details in the Old Town together with willow trees and nature make the Old Town a charming place

We ended up walking a total of ten hours today. Mainly we were just wandering around and marveling at the Chinese history, architecture and nature, we didn't have any specific needs to see something. The last few hours we spent finding food, some supplies, an internet cafe and finding a bus or a taxi. Surprisingly the small supplies we bought were more expensive than in Finland. We couldn't find a vegetarian restaurant so we ended up eating tofu from the street again. As for the internet cafe, where we were supposed to print out our flight tickets for Chengdu the next evening, we found one but couldn't use the internet as we weren't Chinese citizens.

The last bus to Shuhe town didn't arrive. We waited for nearly an hour for it with locals, who were also wondering where the bus is at. Then we tried to get a taxi, but they didn't stop for us, so we ended up walking most of the six kilometers to Shuhe town, only catching a short ride from another bus, and walked the rest of the way to the hotel.

24.7.
This morning we had a lazy day in Shuhe town. As Shuhe is much smaller than the Old Town of Lijiang, it only took a while to check it out. You can even ride here in a horse carriage. The cobblestones and canals are present in Shuhe too and the town is very similar to the Old Town of Lijiang. Shuhe is a very important town in the Ancient Tea Route (Southern Silk Road) that leads to Tibet. The route started from Dali, Lijiang, Diqing, Lasa and led to India in the west. Shuhe is a famous cobbler town and is also known as the Village of Leather. The leather products are best sellers in Ancient Tea Route. Unfortunately fur is also sold here and some fur looked like it was from dogs. Because of trading activities along this road, the Naxi people gradually gave up the nomadic life, settled for farming and later started to do business.

Horse carriage at Shuhe Old Town

Fur products. Some of them look like they're from dogs.

Shuhe is called the Village of leather. Here is one
beautifully made costume from it.

Wood carvings

Two rivers run on each side of Shuhe and go through the whole village. The rivers, canals and roads make a dense web and link the town in a tight structure just like a honeycomb. Just like Lijiang Old Town, Shuhe is also a very picturesque little town, where time seems to stand still. The little canals that run through each house were dug this way so that each house would get water. When you walk on the streets you have to be careful not to fall into them, as no fences are around them. The town has many small bridges and boardwalks to walk at and they add more charm to the little town. Chinese are very skillful in making their environments attractive and serene. The houses here are more natural also than in the Old Town of Lijiang, as people use stones from the nearby mountains to build their house walls.

A canal on the street (on right)

Sifang square

One of the boardwalks at the Sifang square

Some of the sights include;
- Jiudinglong Pool (九鼎龙潭), from which the overflowing water winds through the village, has rainbow trouts. The fountain head of the pool is regarded as a holy spring by the local people.
- The Beiquan Temple (北泉寺, North Spring Temple) built near the pool is the same style as other temples in Lijiang.
- The Sansheng Temple (三圣宫, or Three Saints Temple) stands above the pool and is a traditional Chinese quadrangle.
- Longquan temple (holy palace) should also be somewhere near the pool.
- Qinglong Bridge (青龙桥, Green Dragon Bridge), built of stone pieces during the Ming Dynasty (1368-1644), measures about 25 meters long (27 yards), 4.5 meters wide (4.9 yards) and 4 meters high (13 feet). It was built by the Mu Family 400 years ago and is the oldest and largest stone arch bridge of Lijiang dam.
- Sifang street square is where the market is held during the daytime and here four paths lead to different directions. When we were here it was very busy, with a wide variety of foods on offer (except vegetarian) and handicrafts. You also find bars, restaurants and teahouses here.

One of the entrances to Shuhe Old Town

Shuhe architecture

Shuhe architecture

We only spent one full day and two nights at Lijiang, which wasn't enough for the sights the area has to offer. We missed out on so much, especially the hike at Jade Dragon Snow Mountain and Tiger Leaping Gorge, but these areas were closed at the time due to the weather. Because they were the main sights for us in Lijiang we decided to leave to Chengdu on a days notice. We also had to think of the days we still had left in China, we only had a month here. Chengdu was one important stop for us because of its pandas.

At five p.m. we got a ride to the Lijiang airport that lies thirty minutes from Shuhe. We had no paper confirmations about our flights, as we couldn't print them in the internet cafe or our hotel. We showed the confirmation from the laptop and that was it, nothing else was needed! The woman on the desk even spoke English, not too fluently, but still. Everything was strangely easy for us this time. Next we tried to find dinner, but somehow Western food for Chinese seems to be just pizza, burgers, French fries and baguettes. The only vegetarian food we found was French fries and fruit salad, so we had that. Meat burgers were everywhere. For breakfast we ate one dry rye bread and juice. That was our food for the whole day. It has not been easy to find vegetarian and decent food in China, especially when you don't speak the language.

Lijiang specialty sold here, dried yak meat.

Various snacks

Our one hour flight left at eight p.m. to Chengdu. We had a strange but kinda funny incident at the plane at take-off. As you can expect anything from the Chinese, this time one Chinese passenger was messing with his bags when the plane was already waiting to take off. The flight attendant got his bags sorted out only after the plane had already started gaining speed and he had to run fast to his chair to reach it before it was too late to walk or run anymore! We've never seen anything like this. The flight attendant was just seconds away from being bounced around at the aisle from "g-forces"!
We had a huge thunderstorm on the way with beautiful lightnings above the clouds. I even saw horizontal lightnings, which lit all the clouds in the area. It was amazing! I would've wanted to stay there and watch the whole thunderstorm through.

Lijiang airport at eight p.m.

A dragon shaped cloud said goodbye to us

More info on Lijiang: Chinaculture.org

Next blog: Chengdu and pandas!

 

Briefly

Escaping the madness of the Western world, a couple that has travelled most continents takes a year off to search a new direction to their lives, the next destination staying open

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