One of the
adjustments to living in China has been changing my expectations for a holiday
schedule. By this I mean the realization that we are teaching classes on
Thanksgiving and Christmas, two days I am used to having 1 to 3 week breaks
scheduled around, having time to spend with friends and family, eating food,
playing games, and just generally relaxing.
However, as one
would expect, China has its own national holidays, one of which took place just
two weeks ago. The National Holiday begins on October 1st and is a
7-day holiday that includes various festivals, fireworks, concerts, and general
government organized celebrations. The Holiday itself is to celebrate the
founding of the People’s Republic of China which took place on October 1, 1949.
All of China, including Hong Kong and Macau, recognize this week-long holiday,
and most people do not have to work during this time.
Luckily for us,
teachers and students fall into the category of people who have the entire
National Holiday off. As such, Nathan, Becca (another American teacher here at
CCNU), and I decided to take advantage of this vacation time and plan a trip.
Nathan has a friend studying at a university in Chengdu, Sichuan province so we
did a little research on the area to see if it would be a worthwhile place to
visit. It did not take us long to discover that Chengdu is one of the few places
you can see pandas in China and so our decision was pretty much made for us. We
booked a few hostels and a train ticket and were on our way a week later.
Trains in China,
slow trains at least, have three different seat types: hard seats, hard
sleepers, and soft sleepers. Both kinds of sleepers were sold out by the time
we bought our tickets so we were left with the hard seats, which we weren’t too
upset about since they are the cheapest tickets. The seats were pretty cramped
but certainly provided more leg space than an airplane. None of us set too high
of expectations for the train ride and we knew that we were traveling over the
Holiday so it would be crowded. We had been told by other teachers to expect
people to be sitting and standing in the aisles and that we would probably have
to kick people out of our seats when we boarded. Our expectations fell even
further when, after we had been on the train no longer than five minutes, a
toddler squatted down and peed on the floor right next to us. This all got
cleaned up and the child was scolded by his parents, but we kept all our
belongings on our laps after that. Overall though, it was not a bad experience.
We left around 8pm Thursday night and we spent most of the 15 hour ride playing
cards and dozing on and off. For the first half we had some very friendly
Chinese people next to us, one of which spoke some English, so we chatted with her
and played with her friend’s baby (who was enchanted by Becca’s blonde hair).
By around noon the next morning we were in Chengdu and we set off to check into
our hostel and meet up with Nathan’s friend, Clay.
We spent the next
couple of days exploring Chengdu with Clay and some of the friends he had made
at his University. We went to a couple of markets where we were able to
practice our bartering skills. The markets were filled with jade jewelry and bronze Buddha sculptures. There is a large Tibetan population in Chengdu and so we
browsed shop after shop of Buddhist merchandise from shops selling clothing for
monks to workshops where huge religious sculptures were being carved from wood.
We also ate at a Tibetan restaurant which was delicious! Nathan and Becca had
yak dumplings (which are apparently very good) and I had some potato dumplings.
All the dumplings came with this delicious sauce which was almost like a salsa.
Very spicy and tomato-y. For our entree we all split what I can best describe
as a Tibetan calzone. The shell was made from a pizza like dough and the inside
was filled with grilled vegetables. We also ordered a pot of traditional yak
milk butter tea. It tasted pretty much how you would imagine—like butter in tea
form. I rather liked it before the meal, but it wasn’t the best drink to have
to accompany food.
Thankfully our
hostel was only about a 15 minute walk from Clay’s university, so we were able
to move freely between the two places without paying for cabs. Our first hostel
was very comfortable. The beds were what we have grown to expect from China—rock
hard—but the decor was inviting and the employees were very helpful. We saw a
sign near our rooms for the Sichuan face-changing opera and so one afternoon we
asked one of the receptionists about it. He helped us book tickets for that
night and so we ventured into a more downtown area of Chengdu to see the show.
The theatre itself was fairly small and there were small electronic screens on
either side of the stage with English translations. The show was not necessarily
what I would have thought to call an opera as there was really only one song
sung in the entire hour and a half. However, there was plenty of music and
dancing. The music was interesting because it was very clearly pulling on
traditional Chinese instrumentation and motifs, however there were many modern
elements added to it, most notably some club-like dance beats. The lights used
during the show were another really great use of modern technology. There were
several points where the lights created an almost holographic illusion. This
was used once for a sort of time-warp or blackhole image. There was a knife
thrower, funny jokes by the Chinese jester of the show, and some Cirque du
Soleil-esque acrobatics. And finally, for the last 15 or so minutes, we figured
out what the whole face-changing concept was all about. With traditional
Chinese military march music blaring in the background, four actors wearing
HUGE elaborate headresses, silk costumes, and carrying brightly colored silk
flags came running out into the audience. They would come over to different
audience members, shake your hand, stare at you for a moment, wave the flag
across their face and voila! When the flag passed over their face, their mask
was changed to a different design. They did this several times, and then more
actors came out with, if it is even possible to imagine, even bigger, more
elaborate costumes, to continue the face-changing magic. It was definitely
money well spent. And, as we were walking out afterwards, we were stopped by a
man from Singapore with a British accent who interviewed us for a China tourist
documentary he and his crew are filming.
This year the
Mid-Autumn Festival (also called the Moon Festival) fell during the National
Holiday. The Moon Festival celebrates the end of the fall harvest and falls on
the 15th day of the 8th month in the Chinese calendar. By
our Western calendar this is the end of September or beginning of October. It
is a very important holiday across China, Taiwan, and Vietnam and is traditionally
celebrated by carrying or hanging lanterns (symbolizing the moon) from
buildings with wishes or riddles inside of them, large family gatherings, and
eating moon cakes. Moon cakes are an interesting Chinese baked good. Typically
they have a chewy and sugary pastry dough crust and are filled with some kind
of bean or fruit paste with a salted duck egg yolk in the very center to
symbolize the moon. Mooncakes can also be made with a meat filling which, for
me, sounds like a surefire way to ruin a perfectly good pastry. Despite looking
a bit rubbery the cakes are quite pretty—they are usually no bigger than your
average American biscuit and are imprinted with the Chinese characters for “longevity”
or “harmony.” We spent our Moon Festival seeing pandas, but when we went to
Clay’s university later that day one of his Chinese friends, Serena, had bought
all of us mooncakes to try. Mine had some sort of fruit paste in the middle. It
was like an extremely dense, less sugary sweet, jelly donut.
Like I said, we
spent our Moon Festival at the Chengdu Research Base of Giant Panda Breeding.
It is hard to put into words how adorable the pandas were—they were simply
unreal and incredibly silly-looking. Nathan and I decided that they basically
look like humans in animal suits. All of them—in the entire park—were laying on
their backs, eating. Many had piles of bamboo just strewn across their bellies,
either as a stockpile for more eating or because they were too lazy to throw
the shoots they finished eating away from their body. There were also red
pandas which look kind of like a larger, fluffier raccoon. These guys were much
more active and roamed fairly freely around the park. We even came across one
on the tourist walkway, coming toward us from the opposite direction. The
Research Base also had baby pandas which we were lucky enough to see at a cute
stage in their life. I would advise any reader to not look up pictures of
newborn or even infant pandas for it will ruin any standard of cuteness you may
have in your head for baby animals. They are like naked mole-rats at that
stage. However, after a few months, they are little fluff balls pawing around
for food.
After our several
days of fun in Chengdu we embarked on the second part of our vacation. One of
Nathan’s department heads had told us of a beautiful National Park about ten
hours north of Chengdu in Jiuzhaigou, Sichuan. Wanting to see some nature, we
planned a trip. We learned two important things about traveling in China on the
bus ride to Jiuzhaigou.
1.) Chinese drivers are crazy. We had witnessed
their erratic driving in the context of Wuhan-driving, but driving through the
mountainous countryside was an entirely different experience. Passing on a two
lane road was an all too real game of chicken in which two vehicles (often
times two coach buses) would compete for a spot on the road, trying to pass in
the wrong lane even around corners and even when another car or bus was in that
other lane coming at us. I eventually had to stop watching the road because I
was certain we were going to get into an accident and end up in the rivers
below the mountains we were driving up and around.
2.) Traveling when all of the rest of China is
traveling is not the best idea if you are hoping for a peaceful trip where
everything goes according to plan. About an hour outside Jiuzhaigou we were
stopped by the police for two hours because there was too much traffic on the
road (we’re assuming this is linked to the problem laid out in point #1). After
these two hours had passed (thankfully this occurred during dinner time so we
were able to get out of the bus and get some food) we got back on the road and
not thirty minutes later were stopped again. This time we were not told why we
were stopped or for how long we would be. After about an hour and a half we
started up again. Just in time too because we were starting to think it might
be quicker to just get out and walk the rest of the way. Then, on the bus ride
back to Chengdu, we got caught in this massive traffic jam where we were
creeping along and intermittently stopped for random periods of time, sometimes
in tunnels under mountains or on bridges (a particularly frightening experience
considering how many bridges have collapsed in China in recent years). It took
us between 2 and 3 hours to make it out of this traffic jam, which was
stressful because unlike the jams on the way to Jiuzhaigou, we had no concept
of how close we were to Chengdu and when we looked out the windows of the bus
at the extent of the jam in front of us, it snaked on as far as we could see.
Turns out the jam was because there were a bunch of multi-lane roads merging
into a one-lane road, back into a multi-lane road, and then merging again into
a one-lane road into order to then merge onto the highway. You can imagine this
situation was not helped by nobody obeying any sort of traffic rules.
Jiuzhaigou itself
was beautiful though. We got to the National Park around 7:30am after our day
of travel the day before. They offered a bus to the top of the park where all
the “scenic” sights were, but we opted to walk it. But literally everyone else
(and there were hundreds if not thousands of Chinese people there) took buses
up. Which turned out to be nice for us because we were the only people on the
hiking path. We were stopped several times though before we made it out onto
the path and were asked if we were really sure we didn’t want to take the bus. The
hike was wonderful. The first area we walked through was wooded, but the path
followed a river most of the way up. The river had some of the bluest water I’ve
ever seen—an unreal cerulean that made the water look as though it were dyed or
had bright blue tarps laid out underneath it. We encountered waterfalls every
ten or twenty minutes and finally broke out into a grassland full of
wildflowers and surrounded by mountains. The sides of the mountains were
covered in pine trees, filling the air with a clean, woody scent. After all the
pollution of Wuhan, just breathing the air in Jiuzhaigou was possibly the best
part of the trip.
Unfortunately, my
computer charger broke this week so I cannot load my pictures until I get that
fixed (I deleted the pictures from my camera after I loaded them onto my laptop
and I am writing this blog entry on the tv/desktop computer provided in the
apartment). I’ll give a few more details of the sights when I am able to post
the pictures because I fear I may make the waterfalls and Tibetan villages and
mountain valleys seem plain compared to their actual wonder.
After a 15 hour
bus ride back to Chengdu and a 19 hour train ride back to Wuhan the next day,
we were all sufficiently exhausted and ready for a break from traveling. I feel
proud, though, that we were able to travel to these two places—buying bus and
train tickets, navigating taxis and hostel and hotels—in a foreign country and
knowing very little Chinese. It certainly boosted all of our confidence, I
think, and gave us an even broader perspective on Chinese culture.
What a phenomenal account of events and impressions!
ReplyDeleteIt might be a bit of good news to you that a new charger for your computer is on the way along with other goodies:) Love you, Mom
Yep Alan had moon cakes too. Nit a fan he says. He's never been for moon festival because of course it's a holiday. Have you been able to find any Catholic churches there?
ReplyDeleteThanks for posting! Let us know when you meet up with Clayton. Michele