Social Icons

twitterfacebookgoogle pluslinkedinrss feedemail

Pages

Wednesday, June 27, 2018

Melting in the skyscraper city Chongqing


Chongqing, Yuzhong District
(渝中区 Yúzhōng Qū, 重慶 Chóngqìng)

30.7.2013
After our mountain adventure we headed to the central disctrict and capital of the municipality of Chongqing, the Yuzhong District. Our day started already at seven am by getting bus tickets to Chongqing. The busses often leave when they are full, but also on schedule, so it's better to be on time if you have any idea about the schedule. Sometimes the seats are numbered in the tickets, so it's best to take the seat given to you. Like most Asians, Chinese are also very keen on sitting at the right seats. It's another story of course if you asked for a certain seat.

Like most busses in China, the bus isle had a few rubbish bins where people were able to spit and throw any trash like animal bones from their snacks, but people still threw trash like nuttshells on the floor. It was very messy. Now - besides the nuttshells and watermelon juice on the floor - we even had a duck on our bus. Someone also ate something really stinky, so the whole bus stank rotten.

Our bus

After about an hours ride it was time for the first break. Usually it's for a quick toilet break, but sometimes for lunch or breakfast. If you don't speak Chinese and don't read it or interact with the people on the bus, before getting out of the bus take note of who the driver is, who are in your bus, the bus number, colour, etc, just to keep an eye on so the bus won't leave without you. It's also good to try to speak with someone, at least something, so someone knows you are on that bus. The driver usually checks the people on board, but as happened to a lady on our bus earlier, she was running to catch our bus and his husband was yelling inside to the driver that she is still out there. On longer breaks the driver usually locks the doors and gets the people out of the bus to keep the luggage secure.

I've mentioned about Chinese toilets before, but the toilets by the road are the most terrible you'll ever see in your lifetime. As in most places, they are holes on the ground, but these often don't have doors so you end up staring at other people while doing your business. There's never toilet paper either and chicken, mosquitos, flies, spiders, biting ants and even leeches can harass you. While on the toilet break we saw someone drying corn close to the toilets on the dirty street and a chicken went to eat the corn. No wonder diseases spread, hygiene still seems an unknown thing to some people.

Drying corn close to the toilets

The bus ride was supposed to take anything between six to eight hours. We hoped for six, as there is a good highway all the way from Leshan to Chongqing, but the highway was closed. So the bus drove small roads through every town. Getting back on another highway took four hours. The ride took seven hours with two breaks, one being a lunch break. At Chongqing's first bus terminal we weren't sure if the bus continued to another terminal close to our hotel, so we asked a young couple about it, who said it would go there. But then an older lady working in the bus came yelling at the young couple and showed us to leave with some taxi driver. The young couple stayed silent afterwards, so we figured it was a scam. Maybe the lady had a deal with the taxi driver (there are various tourist scams in China), so they both get money from tourists. We decided to leave the bus, the situation was unpleasant enough, and passed the taxi driver showing he wasn't getting money from us. We took another taxi to the hotel and paid much less than the earlier driver was asking. It was a good thing we weren't catching a flight or a train, we would've missed the connecting rides with this hassle. People who scam tourists don't care where you end up at. Our taxi driver was very nice and smiling, even talked to us a lot, but we couldn't understand him, so we just smiled back nicely and thanked him for the ride, xièxiè.

Skyscraper city Chongqing

Chongqing (or what we lovingly called John King, not pronounced this way though) is a large municipality, its maximum width is 470 kilometres (290 mi) and the maximum length is 450 km (280 mi), so it is the size of a small country. Chongqing borders the following provinces: Hubei in the east, Hunan in the southeast, Guizhou in the south, Sichuan in the west and northwest and Shaanxi to the north in its northeast corner. The former capital city of China during the WWII has a history of over 3,000 years and is the birthplace of Ba and Yu culture.
There are many sights to see, but as with China, usually the distances are huge and most sights are further out of the city. Some of the sights in Chongqing are the Luohan Temple (罗汉寺, luóhànsì), Great Hall of the People (人民大礼堂, rénmín dàlǐtáng), Dazu Rock Carvings, Diaoyu Fortress, Shibaozhai hill with a temple and a pavilion, Huguang Guild Hall, Chaotianmen Square by the river, the river cruises that take you to the Three Gorges of Qutang, Wuxia and Xiling, Eling Park, Ciqikou ancient town (磁器口, Cíqìkǒu), Chongqing Tiandi urban architectural etc area, Hongyadong (洪崖洞) scenic site with huge 11-story wooden stilted house complex on a cliff, Jiefangbei CBD business district around the People's Liberation Monument, hot springs, Wulong Karst National Geology Park and so on.

Luohan temple

Hongyadong has many restaurants and shops

Chongqing is built on mountains and is partially surrounded by the Yangtze and Jialing rivers. The Yangtze-river covers a course of 665 km (413 mi) and cuts through the Wu Mountains at three places, forming the Three Gorges. Chongqing is known as a "mountain city" and a "city on rivers", because it covers a large area crisscrossed by rivers and mountains. The Daba Mountains stand in the north, the Wu Mountains in the east, the Wuling Mountains in the southeast and the Dalou Mountains in the south. Karst landscape and stone forests are common in this area; numerous peaks, limestone caves and valleys can be found in many places.

Some of the mountains surrounding Chongqing

Also known as one of the "Three Furnaces" of the Yangtze River (along with Wuhan and Nanjing), Chongqing summers are long and among the hottest in China, with highs of 33 to 34 °C (91 to 93 °F) in July and August in the urban area. Chongqing is China's third largest centre for motor vehicle production and the largest for motorcycles. It is also one of the nine largest iron and steel centres in China and one of the three major aluminium producers. Natural resources are also abundant with large deposits of coal, natural gas and more than 40 kinds of minerals such as strontium and manganese. The "Fog City" is among one of the ten most air-polluted cities in China with over 100 days of fog per year. The polluted city might not sound too inviting, but with so much to see in this large area you can always leave the city on foggiest days to see something outside the urban area.

Chaotianmen harbour area

Our stay in the city was short, just two nights. We didn't want to stay too long in a large, polluted and very hot city. When we arrived to Chongqing we noticed the terrible heat. A heatwave blasted over China and on our arrival day Chongqing had 38 °C! The news even showed someone frying an egg on the asphalt! It was very exhausting to be outside. We went for a walk in the evening, but it was still too hot to stay out long. Even the local men had rolled their t-shirts up to their chest, showing belly, to get cooler. Not all approve the style which even has a name, Beijing bikini, disparagingly also described as “bang ye” (roughly translates as "exposing yourself like a grandfather").

Yangtze River International Youth Hostel turned out to be a nice place to stay by the Dongshuimen bridge and close to the city center. Hostels often serve tourists better than hotels - depending of course on the rating of your hotel -, but for budget travellers hostels have a lot to offer, for instance English service when hotels might lack it. We've even had our own room with a bathroom and TV in hostels. Also, most cheap hotels don't offer laundry services in China, but hostels do. It was sometimes hard to get our clothes cleaned. Sometimes we washed them ourselves but for larger laundry, like after hiking, you really need a washing machine. Besides all this, you also meet a lot of people from around the world in hostels and it's easier to make new friends there than in hotels.

Yangtze River International Youth Hostel

Yangtze River International Youth Hostel

Chongqing is one of the places in China where they eat dogs and we saw small dog skulls sold on the street with meat still on them. They were probably sold as food. Chongqing food is part of Sichuan cuisine, which is known for its spicy, numbing food, caused by the use of Sichuan pepper. Local specialties include dumplings, pickled vegetables, Dandan noodles, deep-fried spicy Sichuan-style chicken, hot pot, spicy rabbit head and fried silkworm chrysalis, to name a few.
Different from many other Chinese cuisines, Chongqing dishes are suitable for the solo diner as they are often served in small individual sized portions. Because it was hard for us to find vegetarian food, we once ate at Pizza Hut, where a woman customer got excited about seeing western people and asked her husband to take a photo with us and their son. We had completely forgotten about this side of China, since nobody had photographed us since Dali.

31.7
THE PECULIAR FOREIGNER STREET

Because of only two nights in the city we didn't have time to travel anywhere further in Chongqing for sightseeing (which means at least 100-200/km of travelling one way), so we decided to see the Foreigner Street (美心洋人街, Měi xīn yángrén jiē) on the full day. It is on the other side of the river near a ferry terminal. We took a taxi there though. The peculiar entertainment and amusement park opened in 2006. It wasn't meant to be an amusement park at first, but a place that celebrates multiculturism and where foreign people were encouraged to put up shops and restaurants. Eventually the place, which seems like time forgot, turned into a tacky mix of everything, where one can find a Christian church, an upside-down house, an Australian bar, a small train, a pyramid, a few house of horrors, little New York, water park, all kinds of rides, the world's largest public restroom (!) and many other weird attractions. Many people get married here in various strange kinds of settings. We just broused around the area and didn't go for the rides, they seemed very rusty, outdated and scary to try out and I wouldn't want to shoot off 150 meters to the air from a rusty Space Shot.

Foreigner Street ride

Gaudi-style entrance to the world's largest public restroom, the Porcelain Palace. It has over 1,000 toilets, some uniquely shaped!

Like Park Güell in Barcelona

Asian area in Foreigner Street

Hillside area with church. People get married here.

A restaurant at Foreigner Street

New York in Foreigner Street

The house of horrors also seemed like a bad idea on the very hot day when your heart already beats rapidly from the heat. It could've been a good place to have a heart attack that day. Otherwise, for fans of horror, one of those houses seemed really interesting with pictures and dolls from movies such as The Ring, The Grudge and some unknown Asian horror movies. I wasn't looking forward to experiencing the same horror as I did years back in Thailand. A guy dressed as the Leatherface from one of the most disturbing horror movies of all time, The Texas Chainsaw Massacre, scared me to death. He jumped on me and started chasing me in the horror labyrinth. Imagine someone doing that to you on a hot day! Instead of horror experiences we ate some ice cream, and as with all sweet stuff in China, it is nothing compared to western delicacies. It is the same thing with McDonalds´ ice cream and flurrys, they're quite tasteless in Asia. Asian desserts are often overly sweet and you mostly taste sugar in them. We don't eat much sweet stuff in Asia because of this.

House of horrors

Happiness is...a crashed bus and an oversized octopus?

Foreigner Street

Tree houses

After the Foreigners Street we took a short cable car ride across the Yangtze river. Chongqing is the only Chinese city that keeps public aerial tramways. The view was great to the city. Chinese build huge buildings in even the "smallest" cities, and when it comes to huge cities like Chongqing (population of 30 million), you see mostly skyscrapers so high you get dizzy looking up at them. The bridges are huge too and the river cruise ships, which have to accommodate a large amount of people. America is known for - and boasts with - having the worlds largest things, but they've got nothing against China. For a girl who comes from a small country such as Finland with less than six million people, where nearly everything is built on small scale, all these huge cities are amazing. Finland could also have more skyscrapers, which save landspace.

Cable car ride across Yangtze river

Cable car ride across Yangtze river

Today we didn't eat Chinese food either, but at a good Indian restaurant Cacaja, which you can also find in other Chinese cities. Their menus are also in English. We became quite Chinese on this trip when it came to eating habbits. The most important thing in every place we went to was to see that we eat properly, because you never knew where and what the next meal was going to be. They say that when Chinese meet each other, instead of asking how are you, they ask "have you eaten today". Nowadays it's mostly used by the older generation in China, but we pondered every day are we going to eat well today. A good article about the greeting "have you eaten today" and its history can be read here;
Why Do Chinese People Ask Have You Eaten

China would be much more tourist friendly if they had signs, menus etc in English too. You find some other western junk food like KFC and McDonald's from Jiefangbei Pedestrian Street too, which is where the expensive brand shops are at. With mostly the brand shops it doesn't take much time to check the street out. It's amazing how many brand shops are rising in China and every time we visited a mall these shops lacked of customers.

Jiefangbei Pedestrian Street

In the middle of the same street, near Times Square, lies the 27 meter tall People’s Liberation Monument. It was built in 1945 to commemorate the victory over the Japanese in WWII. Inside its wall is a memorial steel pipe with the monument blueprint, newspapers, stamps, notes, photos and books from the 1940s. A letter from the former US President Roosevelt to the people of Chongqing at the time of victory of World War II is also inside. A spiral staircase takes you to the top of the monument and a circular balcony above the clock has the capacity of 20 visitors. The monument doesn't look like much outside - and among the skyscrapers - and we didn't go in as at the time we didn't even know it's possible. And instead one might want to visit the tallest building in Chongqing, which would be Chongqing World Financial Center, rising to 339 m (1112 feet), with 73 floors. When finished in 2019, the Chongqing International Trade and Commerce Center will be the highest, with 99 floors and height of 468 m (1,535 ft). Chongqing has 26 buildings taller than 200 meters, all of them built in the last decade, and its skyline is ranked among the world's twenty tallest.

People’s Liberation Monument

Chaotianmen harbour and square is the place where you can see the two rivers Yangtze and Jialing meet. In the early summer, green Jialing River and brown yellow Yangtze River with the rolling whirlpools forms spectacular scenery of both colours meeting. We only saw brown yellow water on both rivers, so there wasn't much to see. On our walks we passed by temples in the city center, such as the Nengren temple and the Luohan temple, but didn't try to go in, as the whole center seemed to be under construction. There were construction areas everywhere. Chongqing is a trade center for businesses, and our hostel was in an area where you passed by loads of cargo boxes and wholesale shops. In the cargo area we even saw pet animals in boxes in this terrible heat, and the boxes were lying under the frying sun. A few hamsters had died in their small cage, probably from the heat. The animals were treated like objects. China can be tough to travel for an animal lover.

At Chaotianmen harbour you get views to Jialing and Yangtze rivers

River cruise ships

Mural in a Chongqing building

1.8
ONWARD TO ANSHUN

Our stay in Chongqing was short and sweaty, but we did enjoy the skyscraper scenery even if we didn't get to go to the countryside at all and see more. In the morning we went to the railway station where busses also leave to get bus tickets to Guiyang, from where we would continue to Anshun, a little town of two million people. We got tickets for the eleven o'clock bus and had to wait for two hours for the bus to leave. We spent most of the time at the nearby McDonald's, mostly just people watching. The bus stations in China have airport style luggage screenings, so it was a hassle with a heavy backpack and two other large bags lifting them from one place to another. It made our trip easier though, that we were able to leave our dive gear in Lembongan, Indonesia, so we didn't have to drag that bag along too. This day was a travel day, so one of the joys we could get out of it was watching the scenery go by during the seven hour bus ride. The travel days were plenty and I don't know how many hours we actually sat in a bus during the year. This is one of the downsides of backpacking and even more so when you prefer trains over busses and there is no train option available.

View to a cute pedestrian street from the railway station

Caiyuanba railway station scenery

Scenery on the road


Wednesday, March 7, 2018

On the sacred Buddhist mountain of Emei


峨眉山 Éméishān, 四川 Sìchuān

27.7.2013
Arrived to Baoguo and Mt. Emei (Emeishan, shan means mountain) today. The trip from Chengdu to Baoguo went very smoothly. We got the second taxi from our hotel to the bus station and after buying the bus tickets (the clerk spoke English) we thought the bus leaves at seven pm (as written on the tickets), but it left immediately. There was a truck accident on the road, but we still reached Leshan city (near Mt. Emei) in good time. We were supposed to change the bus here to get to our hotel, but luckily two American tourists were on the bus with a local friend, who told us that the bus goes near to our hotel.

The hotel we chose to stay in is called Teddy Bear Hotel (玩具熊酒店 Wánjù xióng jiǔdiàn) and it's well known, even abroad. We didn't pick the hotel based on its name, but because they've received good reviews at Tripadvisor by backpackers. They speak English, do pick-ups from the bus station, serve food, have loads of information and free maps, etc. They were very helpful with everything. Our room was clean with a TV, aircon, own bathroom and a PINK mosquito net over the bed. I was amused of the thought, that Kari had to sleep in a Princess curtain bed. We also had a teddy bear, which is in every room. The room cost twenty euros, which was a bit too expensive and luxury for us on a long trip, but we aimed to save in another place then. China has actually become more expensive since our last visit and sightseing prices are among the highest in the world nowadays.

Teddy Bear Hotel lobby is covered with traveller messages

Teddy Bear Hotel lobby

Teddy Bear Hotel has bears in each room

Near the hotel area is the Baoguo Temple and a waterfall (秀甲天下 Xiù jiǎ tiānxià) and restaurants, with local dishes including rabbits. A few rabbits were kept in small cages in front of the restaurants, all breathing stressfully and dealing with the hot temperature outside, which was 32 celcius degrees and at least 38 °C near the stoves. It was a sad sight. Finnish people eat rabbits too, but usually hunt those themselves and kill them immediately, which is better than keeping the animals in factories or in cages for a vague period of time.

Baoguo is one of the starting points for treks. Yingbin Square.

Baoguo, Yingbin Square.

Baoguo stone carvings of Samantabhadra

Emeishan map

28.7
GIANT BUDDHA OF LESHAN

Today we took the morning bus and headed to see the largest stone Buddha in the world, the Giant Buddha of Leshan (乐山大佛 lèshāndàfó), which lies 45 minutes away from Baoguo. From Leshan city we took a short taxi ride to the Buddha area. The ticket lines were crazy, everybody was pushing and queue jumping, so you had to stand your ground. The Chinese had a vacation, school kids too, so our timing wasn't the best, but Chinese often crowd places no matter the season. The ticket cost 90 ¥ in 2013.

It's crowded

Map of Leshan Giant Buddha scenic area

The 71 meter tall Buddha was carved out of cliff face during the Tang Dynasty (618–907AD) between 713 and 803 AD and faces Mt. Emei, with the Minjiang, Dadu and Qingyi rivers mixing below its feet. Both Leshan Giant Buddha Scenic Area and Mt. Emei Scenic Area have been listed as UNESCO World Heritage Sites since 1996.

A rather grim story lies behind the construction of the Buddha; Chinese monk named Hai Tong led the construction which started in 713, hoping that the Buddha would calm the turbulent waters that plagued the shipping vessels on the river. When funding for the project was threatened, he is said to have gouged out his own eyes to show his piety and sincerity. After his death the construction was stuck due to insufficient funding. About 70 years later a jiedushi sponsored the project and the construction was completed by Hai Tong's disciples in 803. (Jiedushi were regional military governors in China during the Tang dynasty and the Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms period). Eventually the stones removed from the cliff to the river altered the currents, making the waters safe for ships.

Minjiang, Dadu and Qingyi rivers

Located on both sides of the Buddha are staircases, the other one is for walking down to the feet of the Buddha and the other one for walking back up. When we reached the steps that lead down the place was swarming with Chinese. It took about 45 minutes to walk the stairs that normally would take about five minutes. While walking down you see the 71 meter Buddha from many angles and it is impressive. One of the features you first see is the head and coiled hair, which has 1,021 buns. The ears, each seven meters (about 23 feet) long, are made of wood and their surface decorated with mud. At the foot level you feel really small next to the giant toes, of which the smallest toe is about the size of a human.

Giant Buddha of Leshan from the top

Stone carvings on the path down to the Buddha

Staircase down to the Buddha

Giant Buddha seen from below. The construction took 90 years to complete.

Giant Buddha and its huge toes

It is also possible to view the Buddha by boat, which stops in front of the statue. This way you also see the sculptures on both sides of the Buddha on the cliff. The river sometimes dries up and then it's possible to walk quite close to the statue from the shore. The current on the river was very strong at the time of our visit.
The area also has other sights, such as the 9th century Lingbao Pagoda, the Lingyun Temple and the Wuyou Temple (on another island), which contains two important statues: the 9th century Dashi bronze Buddha and the 11th century Amithabha statue group, cast in iron and gilded. The Mahao Crag has over 500 Han Dynasty tombs of the 1st to 4th centuries, notable for their fine carvings and calligraphic inscriptions. Outside, at the city of Emeishan, is the Dafo Temple, dating from the early Qing Dynasty. The Buddha area is quite large and requires at least a day to go through, so we decided to save our feet for the mountain climb the next day and only saw a few of the nearest sights.

Statue of Monk Hai Tong

Main hall of Lingyun Temple

Lingyun Temple

Lingyun Temple

Lingbao Pagoda

Stone statue of Medicine Master Buddha on left

BAOGUO TEMPLE AND FUHU MONASTERY

Back at the Baoguo village we still visited the Baoguo temple (built during the Ming Dynasty, 1368 to 1644), Fuhu monastery (Grouching Tiger monastery) and Shanjue Temple. Visiting them took about two and a half hours. The walk to the Fuhu monastery goes through a lush forest, where now was a dry riverbed. Someone had set up a restaurant on the riverbed, where people were relaxing and even sleeping. I guess they were certain that the river wouldn't flood at this time of the year, even though some parts of China were now suffering from bad floods.

Relaxing down at the riverbed

Tiger Bath Bridge to Fuhu Monastery

Fuhu monastery/temple (伏虎寺 Fú hǔ sì) is the best-kept secret on Mt. Emei. Due to inconvenient location deep in the forest and the fairly demanding trekking, it hasn't been visited often and is well-preserved and largely unspoiled. Vegetarian meals are served at the temple and it is polite to finish the plate. Some of the monasteries in the area also partly work as hotels and are peaceful places to stay.

The monastery was originally built during the Tang Dynasty (618 - 907), but the present temple buildings date back to 1651. It is the largest temple on the mountain. The main building is the Precious Hall of the Great Hero. The two other largest structures are the Yuchu Building and Huayan Pagoda Pavilion. Standing 5.8 meters high (19 feet), the copper pagoda was built during the Yuan Dynasty (1271-1368). Its eight angles are symmetric and the tower itself is carved with Buddhist scriptures from the Sutra of the Master of Healthiness. The tower was moved here from Baoguo Temple.

Fuhu Monastery, the first hall; Maitreya Temple

Fuhu Monastery, the second hall

Fuhu Monastery, the third and main hall with an insence burner in front

Fuhu Monastery

Fuhu Monastery. The fourth, Luohan Hall, houses golden statues. The hall is also known as Rohan/Lohan/Arhat hall.

Fuhu Monastery, incarnation of Guanyin Buddha

Luohan Hall is dedicated to 500 Arhats (a saintly person)

Fuhu Monastery, Huayan pagoda

Crossing a bridge on our way to the Baoguo Temple

The Baoguo Temple (报国寺 Bàoguó sì) holds several significant religious artifacts; keys among them are a huge porcelain Buddha in the main hall and a 25 ton 3 meter high copper bell. In front of the temple gate is a pair of stone lions carved in the Ming Dynasty (1368-1644). There are four halls. Maitreya Hall is filled with colored clay figure of Buddha Maitreya. The main hall, Sakyamuni Hall, has delicate artifacts; the large golden Buddha Sakyamuni on his lotus-shaped throne, with figures of the eighteen disciples of the Buddha on the left and right wing-rooms. Hall of Seven Buddhas concentrates on the seven Buddhas, with the renowned Song Dynasty writer, calligrapher Huang Tingjian's "Hymns on Seven Buddhas" inscribed on four wooden plaques. Samantabhadra Hall houses Buddhist scriptures such as the valued painting works of Zheng Banqiao, Kang Youwei, Zhang Daqian, Xu Beihong and some other famous Chinese artists. A statue of Samantabhadra Riding on White Elephant, which lies on a bed of lotus flowers, is also inside.

Baoguo Temple

Baoguo Temple

Baoguo Temple

29.9
GOLDEN SUMMIT OF MT. EMEI

At 3,099 metres (10,167 ft) Mt. Emei is the highest of the Four Sacred Buddhist Mountains of China and the place where Buddhism was born on the Yangtze valley. The mountain is considered a bodhimanda (a place where enlightenment is present) for the bodhisattva (a being that has reached enlightenment for wanting to help other living beings) named Samantabhadra. The first Buddhist temple in China was built here in the 1st century CE. The site has many Buddhist monasteries of the Ming and Qing period, most of them located near the mountain top. The top eight temples at Emeishan scenic area include: Baoguo Temple, Fuhu Temple, Qingyin Pavilion, Wannian temple, Hongchun Buddhist Convent, Xianfeng Temple, Xixiang Temple and Huazang Temple.

Mt. Emei is also a site of special significance to conservation and to science for its high floral diversity. Its biodiversity is exceptionally rich: some 3,200 plant species in 242 families have been recorded, of which 31 are under national protection and more than 100 species are endemic. This is due to its transitional location at the edge of the Sichuan basin and the eastern Himalayan highlands. Within its elevation range of 2,600 m are a great variety of vegetation zones including subtropical evergreen broad-leaved forest, mixed evergreen and deciduous broad-leaved forest, mixed broad-leaved and conifer forests, and subalpine conifer forest. This exceptional flora is also rich in animal species with some 2,300 species recorded, including several threatened at a global scale.

For such an amazing place we sadly didn't have enough time to trek its many beautiful routes with many temples, caves, monasteries, pools and scenic spots. The routes would take days and even one route from Baoguo to the summit would be over thirty kilometers long. The routes aren't what you might imagine, there's only stairs and you don't need hiking boots at all! We still started our day early, at 5:30 am. We wanted to get going before the weather turned too hot and we would have enough time to climb what we had planned. Going up Mt. Emei cost about thirty euros. The price depends on the time of the visit and which routes and vehicles you are taking, and some of the temples have their own entrance fees. We took the 1,5 hour bus drive to the Leidongping bus station, where we still had to climb to the Golden Summit (金顶 Jīndǐng) for two hours. The same walk back took an hour and a half. A cable car can take you a bit further, but it wasn't working now, and besides, we would've walked anyway.

From Leidongping station the path is just stairs for two hours, but it's better than a slippery, muddy natural path, which it could turn into at these subtropical altitudes. We were climbing between the altitudes of 2,430 and 3,077 meters and it was heavy for both breathing and muscles. Everyone walking up was taking it slowly and having breaks. This reminded us of our climb to Mt. Kinabalu in Borneo (Malaysian side), which is a heavier climb to 4,100 meters. Little did we know that after Borneo and China we were going to climb even higher.

View while trekking up Emeishan

It started raining during our bus ride and it rained a bit while hiking up. A heavy fog surrounded us most of the time, so we couldn't admire any possible scenery. The Tibetan macaque monkeys have taken over a small area on the path. Because some tourists have treated them badly it is adviced to take a walking stick with you in case they attack and want to steal your belongings. Our hotel offered us those, but we decided to go without them. Some tourists were feeding the monkeys, which seemed pretty aggressive. We passed them quickly, knowing how unpredictable they can be.

Tibetan macaque, probably planning to steal something

Close to the summit a wider staircase appeared, with elephants lined on both sides leading us to the top and the statue of Samantabhadra (a bodhisattva known from the Mahayana Sutra literature). At 48 meters high the stupa (also known as Puxian Stupa) is the 22nd tallest statue in the world. Its unique head faces ten directions, one for each of the Bodhisattva’s "Ten Truths of Universal Worthiness", with elephants below its feet. The impressive stupa is surrounded by urns containing the ashes of Buddhists. On one side the bodhisattva holds a ruyi (object serving as a ceremonial sceptre in Chinese Buddhism or a talisman symbolizing power and good fortune in Chinese folklore), while on the other his hands form the Dhyana Mudra meditation gesture. Inside the stupa is a statue of Maitreya.

Cloudy and rainy at the top

Statue of Samantabhadra

Behind the statue are three magnificent palaces. The copper Huazang Temple (华藏寺 Huá cáng sì) was constructed during the Ming Dynasty (1368-1644) and was restored in the 1970's to its original condition. The Grand Hall of the Great Sage or Mahavira Hall (大雄宝殿 Dàxióng Bǎodiàn) is the main hall, housing statues of the Gautama Buddha and two disciples. The golden Puxian Hall (普贤殿 Pǔxián diàn), built in 1615, is located behind the main hall at the highest point, and is over 8 metres (26 ft) tall. The Silver Hall (Woyun Monastery, 银殿 Yín diàn) lies aside seperately.

Huazang Temple area, below; The Grand Hall of the Great Sage

Puxian Hall (Golden Temple)

Wanfo Peak is the highest peak on Mt. Emei, at 3,099 meters. Between this and the Golden Summit is the Qianfo Peak, at 3,045 meters. All of these peaks have something to see, but the Golden Summit is the most popular one with the golden Samantabhadra statue. Mt. Emei has plenty to see and seing everything involves at least three days of climbing. The route we would've wanted to trek is 19 km one way and back the same way. Mt. Emei also has a ski resort.

The fog and rain had now gotten even heavier, so the visibility was down to just a few meters. We unfortunately couldn't get any good pictures. Walking around the summit area can take about an hour and a half, but being cold and wet with no place to warm yourself in we only walked around for half an hour. Due to the heavy fog we couldn't witness how the clouds usually stay below the summit, fading everything around the summit and creating a surreal sea of clouds atmosphere. Another thing to marvel here is the sunrise, but the busses arrive to the top too late for that. If you want to see the sunrise you can stay at two hotels at the summit.

We took the bus back down to our hotel, where we had dinner. My dinner wasn't so good, but Kari liked his vegetarian version of mapo-tofu with eggplant (a Sichuan dish). We hadn't eaten too well again, although we'd been hiking a lot and used a lot of energy at the top of the mountain freezing in the cold. Mostly we'd been eating snacks and drinking juices. The next morning we were continuing our journey again by bus. Our Emei-adventure wasn't exactly what we had hoped for, but mother nature is unpredictable and you can't fight weathers.

 

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

Translate