The "How the Heck Do We Get Out of Here?" Edition
With the end of the school year approaching (only four more weeks!!), everyone in Hangzhou is becoming more and more aware of how our time together on this adventure is running out. Some people have been here for a year or two, while others have been around for four or five years--China has become an important part of everyone's lives and it is hard to leave it and the adventure all behind. With time running out, many people have begun to look at their China Bucket Lists to try and complete what is left on it. With Other Adam and DH returning to America this summer without a return ticket to China, the Big Four felt the need to take advantage of the May holiday a few weeks ago. Packing our bags, buying our train tickets, and saying, "Adios!" to Hangzhou for a few days, we hopped on our 13 hour train ride (no sleeper train here, sitting up on nice hard seats all the way, baby!) on Tuesday, April 29th.
Originally, our seats had us all separated around the train car but we were able to switch seats with people (our only bartering tool was the fact that we all originally had window seats). We were able to get our own little corner of four seats with a table and we managed to entertain each other for almost the whole ride out west. We played card games and poker, attracting the attention of nearly everyone sitting around us, including the policemen and food vendors who would walk by and just stop and stare, trying to figure out what we were doing. No matter where the foreigners go, we attract attention.
We rolled into Changsha some time after 8am on Wednesday and the Adams and I were not too thrilled to be back in Changsha. If you can think back to National Holiday in October, I told the tale of a typhoon, the plane trying to land in Hangzhou and having to take off again because of the rain, and landing in Changsha at 3 o'clock in the morning (if you missed that exciting adventure, you can read about it here ). Changsha got points as soon as we arrived because it offered us a McDonald's breakfast before we bought overly priced tickets for the five hour bus ride to our final destination ZhangJiaJie. The journey was long, cramped, with no air conditioning, but I like to think that it was worth it... even if we traveled for two days there and back only to spend one day actually in ZhangJiaJie... Oops!
We were dropped off on the outside of the city and we had to walk to try and find our hotel. Along the way, we met another laowai named Jeff from Canada. He is on quite a journey from Japan and he is making his way (on foot) to Turkey. I wish we had gotten a photo with him--you definitely meet some characters on the road!
We arrived at our hotel and the moment we saw the beds, we passed out. The plan was to meet back up at around 7pm (it was around 2o'clock at that point) but we all slept to almost 10 o'clock (for anyone who has taken a long distance train without a bed, you will know how not great your sleep is that night). The beds in that hotel were glorious and I felt no shame in flopping down on the bed and drooling on my pillow (even if DH was carved into the headboard and stared down at me as I did it).
By the time we woke up, we realized that most of China was already in bed since it was well after 9:30. We quickly ran out to get a cab in search of street food.
Having traveled around China a bit, I have come to realize just how great Hangzhou (and especially Cangqian) street food is. Small pieces of meat. No niangao. Tiny selection. ZhangJiaJie street food has a lot of learn BUT they did have noodles with the delicious pickled vegetables from Guilin so that's what I lived off of for the two days we were in town. Despite the poor selection, okay beer and even better company made the night a success!
Despite the fact that we had just slept for over six hours, as soon as we got back to the hotel, we headed right back to bed because we were up bright and early the next morning to grab an early morning bus to the ZhangJiaJie national park.
For those of you who don't know (I didn't before Rachel came over to China), ZhangJiaJie was the inspiration to the Avatar movie (blue people, not the Last Airbender). The planet of Pandora and the floating mountains were taken from the ZhangJiaJie national park and as you're walking through the park (especially when you look DOWN on the mountains), you can see how inspiring they can be.
The best part is that this photo was on the official ZhangJiaJie website... False advertizing? |
On Thursday as we walked into the park, music was playing (just like Disney World!! Sadly, there were no blue people... They are missing out...) and the mountains were just towering above us. It's really incredible to think that the world has rock formations like this--the same world that has vast lakes, rainforests, deserts, and glaciers. Seeing sights like the mountains in ZhangJiaJie just makes me want to see it all... it doesn't calm the travel beast in me, it makes it hungrier and hungrier!
We stood in awe for a few minutes, snapping pictures, and drinking in the pure beauty of the park around us before we buckled down and went into beast mode--we had just paid 300元 and we were going to get our money's worth and see as much as we possibly could!
And so the climb began. Rachel had warned me about ZhangJiaJie. Her pure hatred for stairs should have been enough warning for me. There are more staircases than mountains in ZhangJiaJie and no one can convince me otherwise. There are old men who will carry you up the mountain if you pay them and after awhile, I didn't find that idea to be as funny as I originally had.
The smiles did not last too long... |
At spots like this, usually there are people standing by with traditional clothes and a camera for you to pose in front of the natural backdrops. I have yet to do this but I will probably succumb at some point. Adam and I (technically just I) felt the need to get a photo in front of the view (and Adam humored me). Lifting me up princess style, we gave the Chinese tourists quite a show--not only were we foreigners but we were lovey dovey foreigners.
The view from the top of the pagoda was worth the hike up the stairs in my eyes. Everywhere you turned, the world looked different. Everything was so green and the mountains were all so peculiar in different shapes and sizes. This was still such a small part of the park (the Huangshi Village scenic zone) and yet I felt like I could see so much. I love looking at mountains--there is such an age, grace, and elegance of them. They are ancient--millions of years old--from another world and yet here they stand in the middle of our modern age where nothing--except nature--is a mystery to us anymore.
We stopped to get medals to prove that we had hiked up the whole 1,100 meters (after the Himalayas, I like to laugh at that). We each got medals with our Chinese zodiac animal on it (except for Other Adam who chose the cow because he likes cows...) and our initials and dates carved into it.
After a quick break where I got my coveted Fanta (for 10元, the thieves), we decided that, after the three hour hike up, we were going to spend the 65元 for the cable car down the mountain. It was a bit terrifying going down the steep mountain and looking down and seeing just how far you would drop if the cable broke, but it was an absolute stunning view if you did not look down but out. We made our way down in about three minutes--three hours up and three minutes down...
Back down at the base of the mountain range, we decided to try and follow the confusing map and we made out way along the "Golden Whip Stream Scenic Zone."
Now, I love hiking. Ever since I was a little girl, my grandmother would take me and my cousins on "Wee Woomer Walks" where we would either go to Griffis Sculpture Park in Ashford Hollow or the Erie County Forest Preserve. I find nature to be extremely therapeutic. In China, the nature that I have come into contact with, it is not therapeutic... usually it just makes me sad. The hiking "trails" are usually roads (during Spring Festival, we hiked one of the best routes in the province and it was literally a street 60% of the time). Luckily in ZhangJiaJie, because it is a national park, there are only a few roads and those are not the hiking trails... However, the hiking trails are packed and it is impossible to go at your own pace, close your eyes, and listen to the birds (or monkeys). Litter is thrown everywhere, people are smoking, feeding the monkeys, vendors call out to you to try and sell things. Luckily, it was only along this trail that I really noticed it--the Chinese just don't know how to do nature.
That being said, one of the things that I love about nature in China is the monkeys. They are like squirrels out here--they are everywhere and I adore them. They are little scavengers and they pick through the garbage which makes me sad and many of the tourist will hand them food wrappers to eat and that just makes me mad but I could just sit and watch the monkeys for hours. They stole food from unsuspecting tourists and ran across the path, making people run after them with their cameras, hoping to get a good shot. Some of them were adorable (so many babies) and a few of them were actually BEAUTIFUL.
We continued to hike along the path making our way past "Talk about History at the Rock," ""Lovers From Afar," and the "Jumping Fish Pool" (the names were gold) and it was nice to see the three guys hangout and experience this amazing place together--probably one of the last big adventures they'll have together here in China. I was glad to be there and I had a ball but I think it was so much more important for them to spend the time together. Do I think that the adventure for them is over once DH and Other Adam return to America? Of course not! It will be a new adventure but the China Adventure is coming to an end quicker than we thought it would and I do feel a little bad.
We finally made our way to the end of the trail at the Camel Peak... and for once the name actually made sense--I could see the camel in the mountain! All the other names ("Ruin of Flyover," "Fairy Presenting Flowers," and Visitor from Space") did not live up to their names.
It was around 2 o'clock at this point, so we hopped on one of the buses to the Bailong Elevator to check out the YuanJiaJie scenic zone. And when they say elevator, they mean an elevator shooting you up the mountain.
I think YuanJiaJie was what Pandora was from because it was absolutely incredible. Tall and thin, short and fat, beautiful yellow and brown stone, bright green trees sprouting everywhere... these mountains have no rhyme or reason but--good lord--are they beautiful. Even though we only had a few more hours to see as much as we could, I kept finding myself standing still and just looking out at the mountains, not getting enough of them.
After about an hour, we tried to find our way back to the main gate but there were no signs and if there were any A). they were all in Chinese or B). they were wrong. We ended up wandering around completely lost and because of that, we ended up seeing so much more than we thought we would. We ended up stumbling onto what the Chinese like to call the "Greatest Natural Bridge" or the "Number One Bridge of the World." I admit, it was pretty cool, but I've seen better natural bridges (the one that used to be in Aruba!) so to call it the "greatest" might be a bit of a stretch, China...
You can walk across the bridge and onto a little island mountain out in the middle of nowhere. This is apparently called Lock Hill (which you can tell from either the sign that says the name or the thousands of locks that are scattered along trees, bushes, railings, and poles around the mountain.
Love Locks are popular in Europe, South America, and Asia. The idea is that you take a padlock with the initials of you and your lover on it and you lock it to a fence, a railing, a pole, a bridge, etc. and you throw away the key to show that your lives and your love are now locked together forever. Apparently, this overly adorable tradition comes from a tragic Serbian love story from World War I where a school mistress fell in love with an officer where they met at the Bridge of Love. When the war began, the officer went to fight and fell in love with a girl from Corfu, breaking off his engagement with the school teacher who later died of a broken heart. Because of this, young girls in the town would write their names on a lock with the name of their sweetheart and affix it to the bridge where the school mistress and the officer used to meet in order to protect their love. I had also associated love locks with Asia due to the Korean and Taiwanese dramas I used to watch in college and deep down, I always loved the idea of locking your life together with someone else.
When we arrived on Lock Hill, it took me a minute to realize that this was a place where couples brought their love locks and all of a sudden, my silly desire to have a love lock somewhere in this world came back with full force. But it was Adam, and not me, who offered to get us a love lock. We went to the small booth where they were selling different locks and we picked out a lock to have our names and the date carved into. With our love lock, we wandered around the hill searching for the perfect spot and because Adam always makes me make the decisions (because I hate deciding) and because I am bad at making decisions, it took way longer than it should have. But eventually, after wandering around Lock Hill, we found the perfect spot looking out over the mountains and eventually DH and Other Adam were able to put an end to the romantic action.
Writing out our names to have it carved into the lock |
Leaving Lock Hill and the Natural Bridge behind us, we spent about 20 minutes trying to find a way out of the trail and find a way back to the buses. We wandered around, got help from a Chinese girl who ended up being just as lost as we were, and we went in a literal circle, before we finally found the road that led us back to the buses that led us back to the elevator which led us back to another bus which took us to the exit. We ended the day about two hours later than we wanted and we missed the last bus back to the city but we had seen almost 2/3 of the park which is pretty good since it usually takes about two days to see everything. We were exhausted by the end of it all but, to me, the train ride, the bus ride, and lack of sleep had all been worth it!
That night was another early night--after street food and a card game, we all passed out, our bodies aching from the day (but a good kind of ache!!). It was another early to bed, early to rise, because by 10am, we were off to the five hour bus ride to take us back to Changsha. This time it was much nicer--air conditioning, not nearly as crowded, and we were able to sit with each other. We arrived in Changsha with a few hours to kill. We ate, went grocery shopping, and people watched for a bit before entering into the madness that is a Chinese train station during a holiday. A bit crowded and basically a sea of humanity but once again we were able to switch seats with people and the Big Four was on its way back to Hangzhou... though not at all glamorous! Ah travel... you bring out the best and worst in people...
This is what we do to entertain ourselves...
I used to love the line from Pride and Prejudice said by Elizabeth Bennet's little sister, Mary, "What are men compared to rocks and mountains?" And I have always agreed with it--give me a mountain or a forest over a boy any day... But now that I've got one (and a pretty good one at that), I've found that men and love and how it makes you feel can compare and compete with rocks and mountains.
The better question to ask is, "What is humankind compared to rocks and mountains?"
Until Next Time,
Amanda