Friday, October 23, 2009

Tibet - October 2009

Yes I know it's been a while. China banned the blogger website, along with Facebook and hundreds of others because they incite violence and facilitate protests. I will do this entry by simply commenting of photos. Btw, there are many more photos posted on our Facebook site now including the top 50 Chinglish signs and about 70 Tibet and about the same China photos (there are links on the right hand side of this page, as well as an updated map of where we have travelled at the bottom).

Out the front of the Potala Palace in Lhasa. Religion normally doesn't impress me, but you couldn't help but be captivated by the extent to which Tibetan Buddhists will express their devotion. Each day people of all ages will circumnavigate all the major temples in the city, spinning their prayer wheels, walking their dogs, talking with friends. Some pilgrims have walked or even crawled hundreds of kilometres to get to the Jokang Temple where they then spend the entire day in full sun, prostrating themselves in front of the door.

In the background are prayer wheels affixed to the walls which people can spin as they walk along. You must always spin it clockwise and also do your lap of the temple clockwise. The Tibetan people are so photogenic too, our travelling companion, Laura, who takes some excellent photos, has some really nice portraits of Tibetan people that I will have to copy off her!


This is a view from Everest Base Camp, with the big mountain in the background. We were at 5200m altitude here, so it was only another 3650 to the top! Easy! The stacks of rocks are put there by people who have recently lost a loved one and they represent the spirit rising up, or so we were told. It got down to -2 degrees at night here, all our water was frozen, and most of us had headaches from mild altitude sickness.


One of the remarkable roads we travelled on during our trip from Lhasa to Zhangmu on the Nepalese border. Most of the time we drove along the Friendship Highway which is a spectacular paved highway, but we did make several detours off it to see some of the out of the way sights. You can only access Tibet by signing up for a (expensive) tour, there is no independent travel in Tibet, due to the Chinese governments paranoia of what people might do in such a sacred place.

At one of the many mountain passes along the way. The landscape consisted of lots of moon like rubble with snow capped mountains in the background. As we descended towards Nepal, the scenery greened up considerably.

Some prayer flags infront of one of the many crystal blue creeks and rivers.

A Tibetan snow dog and his master, in the countryside south of Lhasa.


From the train, Xining to Lhasa. 26 hours and 1990km, this 4 billion US dollar trainline was a feat of engineering. There is much debate about whether the trainline is a good thing, on the positive side it facilitates transporting important goods from China into Tibet along with tourists and modernises Tibet. On the other hand it is like an umbillical cord connecting China to Tibet, stymieing the Free Tibet movement. We also hear that trains arrive in Lhasa jampacked full but return somewhat less full, as China is encouraging Han Chinese to move to Lhasa to help Chinese the place up. It also helps transporting ore back to Beijing easier too.
All this aside, it was definately a remarkable train journey, filled with amazing scenery, wildlife etc. We reached a max altitude of 5040m and they provided tubes which you could plug into the walls for oxygen as the atmosphere thinned.

A glacier with the obligatory prayer flags in front of it somewhere between Gyantse and Lhasa.


Here's the Potala Palace, the (supposed to be) Winter residence of the Dalai Lama. We went inside as well, many many rooms filled with tributes to Buddhism, ornate sculptures, boxes of scriptures, meditation rooms, recieving rooms etc etc. Of course China has built a giant statue out the front with something about how great it is that China is here, a big Chinese flagpole guarded by two soldiers, as well as the groups of armed soldiers parading all around the square too, renaming the road that runs out the front of the palace Beijing Road. They really know how to rub Tibet's nose in it.

Shall I go on... making it law that all shop signs have the Chinese translation in the biggest font, not the Tibetan translation; forcing them to use the Chinese currency, each note of which bears the face of Mao Tse-Tung, the man who orchestrated the Cultural Revolution which saw half of the Potala Palace and countless significant monastries in Tibet destroyed; searching all of our bags at the border, not looking for drugs, but flicking through every book, scrutinising the pictures looking for images of the Dalai Lama or the Tibetan Flag, which you could easily buy 100m up the road in Nepal. Ugh.

And here's a man who oils the prayer wheels so they can spin freely all day long.

As I said, there are many more photos put up on our Facebook page.

I promise we'll be more active with the blog!

Ben

The People's Republic (Sep-Oct 2009)

Well, China what can I say?

1.3 billion people - 9.54 million sq kilometres.

China blows your mind.

The first city we arrived in after crossing the Vietnamese border on 20 September was Nanning. An insignificant little city that no one has ever heard of - right? It had 2.5 million people! It is where Ben finally got his Sichuan Hotpot fix he had been craving ever since our last meal at Dainty Sichuan in Melbourne 4 months before.

In China Jo, Nick, Ben and myself met up with Monica a friend from Australia and recently of London on her way home and Chris a mate from high school who has been living in China for the past 2 years.

We met in Guilin as it is near Yangzhou a beautiful region and a dream destination for most Chinese people. It was great catching up and we spent a few days biking around the kast mountains and eating dumplings.
Chris left us to go back to work after a few days and the five of us went back to Guilin. Mon was staying in a nice hotel that conveniently had an Australian wine tasting on for 60 RMB ($10AU) it was all you can drink wine and canapes. Lets just say they may not allow Australians to go to their wine tastings in the future.

After 10 weeks of travelling together Jo and Nick and Ben and I went our separate ways. Jo and Nick to head north-east on their bikes towards Beijing and Ben and I north-west towards Sichuan province and on to Tibet. Bye guys it's been fun!

Chongqing in near Sichuan Province is by far the biggest city I have ever seen. Home of the Hotpot the city is considered one of the four furnaces Cities of China (for the weather not the Hotpot). The city has 15 million people with the municipality a whopping 32 million. They had an awesome Planning Museum but I won't bore you with the details.

We looked into the Yangtze Three Gorges trip as in a couple of months the hydroelectric dam will be full and the scenery diminished. However, after the spectacular scenery (and because of the cost) we decided to head to Chengdu the land of the Giant Panda.

Whilst in Chongqing we found out that our Tibet trip had to be postponed for two weeks because of the Moon Festival. The Chinese government decided to close the border to tourists (although the media denied this) for the duration of this 60th Anniversary celebration.

We decided therefore to chill in Chengdu for a couple of weeks to get our visas renewed and get to know the city. Whilst there we met some ex-pats that had been their for many years. Two of them Heather and Joshua and their daughter Etheria kindly invited us around to their house and recorded Ben playing the bongos for their band Proximity Butterfly's new album. It was nice to just spend a couple of days with some settled people in a house and eat outstanding home cooked food.

We did eventually drag ourselves away from leisure time to go and see the Pandas at their breeding centre. They would have to be the silliest animals I have ever seen.

We met our chilling out obligations when Laura and Danielle arrived (our travelling companions to Tibet). By playing lots of cards and preparing for our trip to Tibet. For the Moon Festival, Eddy who ran the hostel (Traffic Inn (Hostel)) arranged a moon cake eating competition (traditionally during the Moon Festival Chinese people living away from home are sent moon cakes from their home village) and candle boat making to float down the river. It was very sweet.



Thursday, October 22, 2009

Vietnam and Beyond

So we have been extremely slack on our blog and apologise very much for that.

We have just arrived in Kathmandu, Nepal after 10 days in Tibet. China bans Facebook and Blogs so we do have an excuse!

As you probably know we spent nearly 3 months travelling (partly by bicycle) in Vietnam, we hope to make a blog entry about this in the future but would like to concentrate on the more recent China and Tibet for now.

Nick and Jo who we were travelling with were much better at keeping their blog updated to be found at: www.crazyguyonabike.com/nickandjo
We have updated our photos on the right hand side and are working on a China and Tibet entry as we speak.

We will endeavour to be more up-to-date from now on - so please stay tuned.