Sunday, April 6, 2008

Tiger Leaping Gorge


1) Place statue of tiger near a gorge.
2) Give the place a catchy name like Tiger Leaping Gorge.
3) Charge admission.
4) Profit!

 

 
How many tourists unknowingly walk off the end of these stairs each year?

Which way do I go now?

Tibetan Culture

 
Tibetan houses all look exactly the same - 2 levels with massive wooden posts. They put rocks on the roof to keep the shingles in place. Interesting. Is it because rocks are free and nails aren't?

 
I wish I had one of those furry hats. I was completely unprepared to be in sub-zero temperatures. I wore every single piece of clothing I had with me. None of the buildings have insulation, so it's just as cold inside as it is outside. I would've frozen to death were it not for the electric heating pads they use to keep warm at night.

Saturday, April 5, 2008

The Air is Thin Up Here


I didn't realize how high we were. Zhongdian sits at 10,500ft. This picture was taken from the window of our car - not an airplane! For comparison:

Rogers Pass, BC: 4,400ft
Denver, Colorado: 5,280ft
Peak of Whistler/Blackcomb: 7,160ft
Lhasa, Tibet: 12,000ft
Everest: 29,000ft

 

We pulled over the side of the road to get a better look at this mountain peak. I wanted a more unobstructed view, so I decided to run up the side of this road embankment. Halfway up, I remembered that we're at over 10,000ft, and should probably take it easy, so I walked the rest of the way up. I probably could've used one of those oxygen cans at this point. It was a lot scarier on the way down - the ledge was only a foot wide and it would've been a nasty tumble onto the freeway had I fallen.

Shangri-La

Shangri-La is a fictional place described in the 1933 novel Lost Horizon, by author James Hilton. It is a place of utopia - an earthly paradise.


Well, this is Shangri-La, China!

Honestly, this is the biggest scam ever. The city of Zhongdian officially renamed itself Shangri-La in 2001. I don't know how many tourists have been roped in to this trick, but count me in as another sucker. There is really nothing worth seeing in Zhongdian - I refuse to call it Shangri-La. It is an insult to the beautiful hotel chain. If it were up to me, I'd name the city "Motel 6".


This is a picture I took in 2004 from the Shangri-La in Cebu, Philippines. Now, that's what I'm talking about!

Wednesday, April 2, 2008

Lijiang "Old" Town

 
After another full day of traveling by plane and bus, we are at Lijiang, Northwest Yunnan. The main attraction here is the Old Town and the colorful dresses of the traditional Naxi residents. I have a rather cynical outlook on what I see here.

 

The "Old Town" is supposedly hundreds of years old, and has survived a major earthquake here in 1996. But just by looking around, I can see that everything is newly built - just disguised in the "old style" architecture. It's totally just a tourist attraction - much like Disneyland! I confirmed this when talking to a local cab driver, who told me that most of the buildings in the Old Town were added in recent years.

Stick a fork in me - I'm done


It's ironic how I took the time to take a picture of this exact bowl of noodles, because it got me so sick that it put me out of commission for the next 4 days. Maybe if I look hard enough, I can find the bug in the soup? I seriously thought I was going to die - I got the shivers one night and had to take an hour-long hot shower to get my core temperature back up. The noodles weren't even that good!