Silk Street is a large department store selling all sorts of clothing at cheap cheap prices. The designer names brings the westerners in to pick up a fake Rolex watch or Gucchi bag. I went to have a look around and possibly get a suit made. As ever the stalls all sell the same thing so the stall keepers all fight it out to get your attention and your money. At first this can be charming. Unfortunately the Chinese and Chinese women take things too far. I was grabbed and pulled back into stalls, which I didn't take kindly too and was more than happy to give them a taste of the back of my hand than the inside of my wallet. I saw a number of Chinese women pulling huge strops (hissy fits if you are from America) when negotiations didn't go their way or westerners decided to pull out of a deal. In general I have seen a lot of Chinese women pull strops like toddlers. I have also seen lots of Chinese children pull strops. I can't help but wonder whether the 'one child' policy produces lots of spoilt children. I had one woman corner me in her shirt shop and get very angry simply because I came up with a low price (I'm sure it wasn't that low) and then she wouldn't let me leave. I pushed passed her and then she got my thumb in a lock. She apparently wanted to see the back of my hand. I don't understand why she would think I would want to buy anything from her. On the other hand I bought come tourist tat from a stall on a side street off of Wangfuling Dajie. The first stall came up with ridiculous prices and would not drop them so I walked off. The next stall the guy came up with ridiculous prices but dropped them and was friendly at the same time. We had the sort of fun bargaining where I thought I had a good deal (10% of his initial price) and he made a big profit.
Friday, May 30, 2008
China XI - Beijing
Wednesday, May 28, 2008
China X - 1,321,000,000 people
Tuesday, May 27, 2008
China IX - A to B in China
China is enormous. I spent 6 months in South East Asia. If you look on a map South-East Asia is merely a thumb nail against China. I am only in China for a month so I have had to cover alot more ground much more quickly. China is geared up for long distance travel. Unlike America China doesn't rely on cars or aircraft instead trains make up the backbone of long distance transport. It is estimated that at anyone moment there are 10 million Chinese on the nation's railway network.
A Chinese train station is like a European Airport. They are huge. When you enter the station your bags are x-rayed (though they don't search individuals). The next stop is the waiting room for your train. The waiting rooms are pretty big and yet they manage to get packed. Everyone is herded into different queues for their trains before the gate is opened and the crowd surges through. As with any crowd situation in China pushing and shoving is the norm. It doesn't matter what delay is up ahead someone behind you will be trying to push passed.
All the trains I have been on in China have been full. I've tried booking trains and not been able to get on them, even a few days in advance. I have travelled on hard seat double decker trains where they squeeze a large number of people in with relative comfort. The hard sleepers are carriages with bunk beds in three levels that face each other in pairs. In one carriage there are 60 beds. It is not a good place to swing a cut. The bottom bunks become a bench for eveyone while there are a couple of fold down seats in the aisle, but you do have to avoid getting your knees and elbows whacked by all and sundry who move pass.
The squat toilets onboard are pretty abysmal. I wouldn't fancy squatting over one with the slippery floor and the train juddering about. The smells on board can be strong from the number of bodies and the food that the Chinese eat. Dried fish snacks are very popular. While alot fo the facilities are very new the old habits of the Chinese diehard. In the scrum waiting for the gates to open for the overnight train from Guillin to Wuhan there were plenty of guys wretching and spitting on the shiny floor. In the brand new Wuchang train station (in Wuhan) I saw a woman pick up her baby and suspend the baby mid-air over a bin while it did its business. The walk to the toilets was obviously too far. Chinese children come ready equipped for such situations with chapless pants (in South-East Asia children often don't wear any clothes on their bottom halves).
Chinese trains do not have vendors going up and down the carriages like you find in Thailand. There are food and drinks carts that go up and down the train regularly (apart from on the T28 from Xi'an to Beijing). It does seem though that some of the attendants on board have taken it upon themselves to make some extra money. A female attendant on the train from Wuhan to Jiulong had a shopping basket full of tat that she attempted to sell to everyone.
Monday, May 26, 2008
China VIII - Brothels in Xi'an
Sunday, May 25, 2008
China VII - Did you feel it?
While I have been in China the two big news stories have been the Olympic Torch Relay in China and the Earthquake. The trouble in China is if you don't speak Mandarin it can be quite difficult to follow what is going on. It is not always possible to find the English language news channel and internet cafes are hard to come by (if the news websites haven't got a block on them). If you do get the English language news channel (CCTV9) then it doesn't necessarily fill you in with unbiased information. The coverage I do see is more like a disaster movie and is heavily concentrated on the heroic actions of the rescuers. There is no questioning of why certain buildings fell down. The only critical coverage I have seen has come from international news media outlets, such as the the Herald International newspaper, on the BBC news website, and on the NY Times website. Here is an article from the New York Times which you would never see in the Chinese media. The 3 days of mourning passed me by. I was climbing up and down a mountain for two of them and only found out about watching the news on the top. What I do find strange is how the earthquake is being spun as an opportunity for China to be one nation and face adversity together. I understand that is how most societies react but it seems that acting as one in China equates to crowds of people chanting (or that is at least how the media presents it). They have also taken to calling the earthquake 5.12 in echo of 9.11.
Saturday, May 24, 2008
China VI - Flame of Controversy
My experience of the torch relay in Shanghai underlined the country's authoritarianism. There were hundreds of police and army guards on the streets. The streets were closed off and people, whether they were going to work or to school were not allowed to pass. What made the situation particularly daft was that the pavements were quite clear of people and it would have been possible to walk along them but for some reason these were closed by policemen and badge waving officials. It appeared that the pavements had been reserved for school children and young people clad in uniform outfits to cheer the torch. Normal people who had turned out with flags and stickers stuck to themselves apparently did not represent the harmonious society that the authorities wanted to project. The groups of school children were marched off in pairs once the torch had passed. The massive security presence was not to stop protests because there was no one protesting. The police took no interest in me and seemed more intent on making the locals' lives as awkward as possible.
In itself the relay was uneventful and unexciting. A couple of commercial sponsors came through on trucks (Samsung and Coca-Cola) with scantily clad girls dancing. Next was a coach with the relay runners on board who were dropped off at no more than 25 metre intervals. This coach was closely followed by a coach full of army guards. After a while the actual torch appeared. The relay runner ran his alloted 25 metres and set alight to the torch of the next relay runner. The torch was followed by another coach of army guards.
Friday, May 23, 2008
China V - Shanghai
I was waiting for a train in Shanghai to Xi'an when I heard a loud commotion I thought there was a fight instead it turned out to be a woman talking on her phone. Everyone in China appears to have a mobile phone. The Chinese like to show everyone else that they have a mobile phone. When talking on the phone it is amazing how loudly they will shout. The Dom Jolly sketch would not draw laughs here because everyone would think it was standard practice. I was sitting have a coffee in a posh bar in Wuyuan. I was the only customer when a group of three men men arrived. They sat down on the opposite side of the room. At which point one of the three decided to make a phone call and began shouting down the phone like his life depended on it. While his friends sat nonchalantly by treating this all as normal.
Tuesday, May 20, 2008
China IV - Smelly dorm on a Mountain top
Huang Shan Mountain (Yellow Mountain), is actually a mountain range that covers more than 460 square miles. The mountain is famed for the sharp peaks and trees clinging to the top. They are mentioned in poems and can be seen in paintings. Unesco has added Huang Shan as a world heritage site because "of its stunning landscape and its contribution to Chinese art and culture". The Olympic Relay visited shortly ater I had been, click here to read an article about it on the BBC website.
An amazing sight walking up either set of steps is the locals carrying things up or down. For some reason they don't use the chair lifts to take everythng up and down. Men have bamboo poles that they dangle goods on each end. I even saw a generator being carried by four men down the 6.5km Eastern steps. You can even be carried up or down in a sedan chair.
When I made it back to the summit the crowds had started arriving. One of the things you discover in China is that the Chinese live for the weekend. The weekend arrives they jump on trains and go and visit their tourist sites. When you travel you forget what day of the week it is, in China it is all important to time where you are for the weekends. I visited Huang Shan mountain from Tunxi. While it was not the weekend that did not stop the crowds emerging. The locals do not seem to believe in being prepared to climb the mountain. I often saw Chinese women wearing short skirts and high heels!I met a Western couple who visited the mountain over a weekend and said it was awful. They spent most of their time fighting their way through the crowds. I had a bit of a crowd to fight through on the Western steps on my way down. Although once I got passed the top cable car entrance the crowds thinned out. The Western steps seemed to go on forever. Whenever I thought I had reached the end there was another corner to turn and another row of steps.
I would certainly recommend a trip to Huang Shan and its great to be there for sunset and sunrise, just watch out for the dorms. I caught the bus from Tunxi to Tangkou the major town at the bottom of the mountain. There is not a great deal in the town although I did find Mr Hu helpful, and he'll probably find you when you arrive. I booked my hostel on top of the mountain through the hostel I stayed in in Tunxi. I stayed in the YHA in Tunxi which was excellent. The staff were very friendly and helpful and the hostel's facilities were excellent.
Sunday, May 18, 2008
China III - Back to the Huizhou
Wednesday, May 14, 2008
China II - Yangshuo and Tour Group Rebellion
Yangshuo is pleasant but it does suffer from tourist town problems. There are for starters lots of people there as tourists and lots of people attempting to make money from the tourists. It isn't a bad place to be based and it is quite easy to escape the town and get into the karst scenery.
In a contrast to the karst scenery of Ninh Binh in northern Vietnam old buildings and villages have survived to a greater extent and they lend an atmosphere to the scenery. Unsurprisingly with the number of tourists in Yangshuo there are lots of tourists out and about in the countryside. The vast number of which stay in certain tourist traps. I went off cycling on my own and escaped the crowds. Without doubt the prettiest area was along the Yulong River. The river is lined by the karst cliffs and green rice paddies. I had a great lunch and a long chat with the owner of the Mountain and Water Farmer Restaurant in the old village of Jiu Xian. She had a book of English words that visitors added to. For some reason we got chatting about arteries and veins. I'm not sure she entirely understood my definitions of the two. Another great village was Xing Ping where I did a disappointing cruise along the Li River. However, the village itself was very interesting once you got into the back streets away from the river.
I arrived in the huge Guilin train station intent on catching a bus straight to Yangshuo. It was not as easy as I hoped. The Chinese passengers headed off in different directions. There were lots of buses milling about but I was struggling to work out which ones went to Yanghsuo whilst trying to avoid the shouting touts. After getting on a couple of buses and refusing the prices they tried to charge me I found a bus that would take me for 14Y. I headed off for the hour journey to Yangshuo with a guy behind me blowing his nose on the floor. I stayed at Fawlty Towers Guesthouse immediately opposite the entrance to the bus station. The staff were friendly and helpful. However, I was disappointed in the tour they sold me for the Li River.
Thursday, May 08, 2008
China I - Into China
Nanning is alot less chaotic than Hanoi. The streets are very wide. In the middle are 3 or two lanes for traffic going in either direction. On either side are bicycle and motorbike lanes. All the traffic obeys the traffic lights and no one touts their horns. It was quite a hazy day when I arrived and the towers in Nanning appeared out of the haze. I'm not sure if this is pollution or just the weather, but the haze did seem to get worse further into the city. The second day was much clearer but there was still a bit of a haze. To appreciate the size of Nanning I went up to the City Top viewing gallery in Royal Plaza (Royal Plaza has large statues of Elephants which you can't miss on the number 6 bus route). From up high you can see how big Nanning is and how much bigger it is getting.
I stayed at Ying Bin Hotel opposite the train station. I got a double room with ensuite hot shower, air-conditioning, TV, and a computer with internet for 120Y. Ying Bin Hotel is huge and has the feel of a hospital. There are two receptions, I went to the one on the corner with Cahoyang LU and there always seemed to be someone who spoke English. In the corridors there was a great sign which had a picture of lips and a finger over them with some mandarin chracters underneath was written "lightly". After I had checked in I wandered down Chaoyang Lu to look for somewhere to eat. The streets were pretty busy. During the day the streets are not busy but there is still lots going on. In the shade of the trees men sit around playing Chinese chess and what appears to be poker. There is also line dancing, which in the evening takes on a techno theme while alongside people are ballroom dancing. I went down a side street and came across a noodle shop. I wandered in and tried to order something to eat. The staff didn't speak English and I couldn't work out what was actually in the noodles. In the end I pointed at the picture on the wall and ordered a drink which came to less than a dollar. The noodles arrived in a very spicy broth with peanuts some greens and some wontons. It was very nice though very spicy. The staff took a keen interest in me. They were all teenagers apart from the cook. I tried to get them to teach me some Chinese. One of them was not impressed by my chopstick technique. I'm pretty good with chopsticks, I was picking peanuts out of the soup and can eat rice with them. He considered my technique all wrong and kept moving the chopsticks in my hand to his satisfaction. The next night I ate at Pizza Hut. Pizza Hut is quite a flash affair. Not only have they mastered the western pizza but they have also mastered Western serving standards. They seemingly forgot about my pizza and it wasn't until I reminded them that my pizza suddenly after everyone else had left the restaurant. The meal cost me $14, quite a difference to the bowl of noodles and not quite so satisfying. On the way back from Pizza Hut I was walking along Chaoyang Lu when I noticed groups of women hanging around suspiciously. I say suspiciously because while there were lots of people out on the streets these women were in groups but not talking to one just watching the crowd. When they noticed a man or a group of men walk passed they would walk along side them and chat to them. It seems that prostitution is really blatant in China. In my hotel room I had a telephone and throughout the evening it would ring. I'm not sure what they wanted but in the guidebook it says prostitutes will ring rooms directly. I took the phone off of the hook.
I got a bus from Hanoi to Nanning with Honggai Tourist for 300,000VND. I bought the ticket at Hong Ha Hotel (204 Tran Quang Khai). The bus company have a new office next to the front entrance to the hotel, but if no one is in there go to the hotel. The bus leaves from opposite the hotel, it is a green bus. There were only 6 people on the bus when I got it but it still departed at 9.30am on the dot. There are two buses one at 7.30am and 9.30am. Once you cross the border you are transferred to another bus to take you to Nanning. I arrived in Nanning at 5.30pm (China is 1 hour ahead of Vietnam). I changed the bus ticket 6 times because of the troubles with getting visas arranged and they never gave me a problem changing the ticket (or charged me a fee).