Walking in markets is like reading short stories with quick vivid scenes that happen in a moment and then fall into calm. There is shouting and then quiet, arguing and then agreement. It has everything in a space where everyone comes to gather.
21 June 2014
the market I like best
Walking in markets is like reading short stories with quick vivid scenes that happen in a moment and then fall into calm. There is shouting and then quiet, arguing and then agreement. It has everything in a space where everyone comes to gather.
10 June 2014
Better late than never
It took us waaaay too long, but we finally went to Jiuzhai Gou
(九寨沟) the otherworldly natural park in Sichuan’s
Aba Prefecture where you can view exceptionally beautiful scenery along with busloads of
Chinese tourists from all over the country.
Having this many people around at all times can be a little
exhausting especially when they are enthralled with your son and keep trying
to touch him. But it also increases the chances that someone will hand you an herbal remedy that immediately resolves the “I’m about to throw up” sensation
that comes with riding a bus around mountain passes while seated backwards.
When I stood up in the bus aisle I must have looked ready to throw up because the guy sitting across the aisle, who was also riding
backwards, handed me a small container of ointment and pantomimed, “Go like
this” while rubbing his temples. I don't usually listen to strangers – and up
until that point I would have insisted it sure wasn’t going to happen in China
– but I gave the ointment a quick sniff and then did what he told me to do.
It smelled like eucalyptus or bay leaves
or something that makes you feel better and I magically stopped wanting to
throw up. Here’s to strangers!
After the bus made it’s way to the top of the mountain and
everyone got out, we stood around for a bit trying to figure out what we should
do next. It was raining and we had brought Xiao GuaiGuai’s stroller, mainly so
we could use the waterproof rain cover to keep him out of the rain while we roamed the park.
This was a good plan in theory except that what actually happened
was we carried his stroller up and down the valley along wooden paths and staircases - often putting the little guy to sleep because he was being rocked around so much. We must have looked fairly
crazy, Shiwen in the front, me in the back, carting a stroller down a mountain via a series of staircases. But
that’s how Chinese parks help visitors experience their beauty – via
staircase after staircase through the scenery.
Our plan was to get off the buses that go up and down the
main roads and instead walk the paths that connect the various scenic stops. This plan
would increase our intake of scenery and decrease our elbow-jostling with other
park visitors. This decision was reinforced when two middle-aged women starting
fighting at one of the bus stops and had to be pulled apart by the other members of
their parties. So tranquil.
The aggressive nature of transport was a theme we’d been experiencing since we arrived at the airport. Jiuzhai Gou uses a really small airport up
high in the mountains and after we landed we came out of the terminal into the
parking lot to find a set of cabs waiting for riders. The driver who was next
in line started to help us load into his car and the other drivers came to see
who we were. They were especially interested in Xiao GuaiGuai and his car seat,
neither of which form part of China's normal scenery. But this wasn’t the
aggressive element of the ride.
That came immediately after we’d pulled
out of the airport and the driver gave us the hard sell on changing our plans
and diverting to a different park. We did not change our plans, but by the time
we got to our hotel some 90 minutes later we had agreed to use this driver
over the next two days, including for a long ride to another natural park that
we wanted to see before heading back to Chengdu.
It made sense to make these plans but we learned that it didn't really matter with whom they were made since we never saw that driver again. Over
the next two days we had two different men show up as our drivers, each with a
different anecdote about why the original driver wasn’t available. My
favorite excuse was that he’d had to travel to Chengdu to “do some stuff” at
the last minute.
Jiuzhaigou is about 35 minutes from Chengdu by air (via
fairly expensive tickets) but it feels like a distant planet. The air is clear,
the sky is high and wide, and the colors are vivid and crisp. It’s everything
that Chengdu is not and you get used to it quickly, daydreaming what life might
be like if you could breathe air like this everyday and if people could go
outside without having to worry about their health.
The water that flows through the valley is turquoise and has
countless paths to the bottom of the mountains. It drifts and drops through
moss and over rocky falls. There is always that water. It forms lakes and
streams, waterfalls and pools, and it keeps moving and reflecting the sky and
the mountains along its edges.
There is something about the water that keeps trees from
dissolving and there are places where you see trunks through the clear depths.
Branches that stayed above the water line now host greenery like little rafts
tied to a pier.
The best places to see these waters are away from the
throngs. The paths that keep you off the buses will guide you
through the forests and along the rushing waters. Even if it’s raining (and it
was) it’s worth it to follow the wooden planks into some of the only peace and
quiet that can be found in this country.
There will still be other people, but some of them will be
like you, looking for quiet moments and beauty away from the buses. Others
will be fleeing from where you’re headed saying how they had to turn back, how
it’s too far... "Whatever you do," they warn "don’t keep going!" We took their
warnings as a hopeful sign that others may have turned back too, leaving the path
empty for those who would truly appreciate the trudge. For how else can you
describe hoisting a not-small child and his stroller up and down staircases out
in the woods?
It was the most beautiful place we have seen in southwestern
China and we were glad to be there. We also had decided very early in the day
that we’d be returning to the Tibetan restaurant where we ate the night before so
we could re-order the Tibetan version of Shepard’s pie (with yak) that we had
loved and try the sizzling mutton that had fragrantly passed our table on its
way to other diners. This was a powerful motivator as we traversed the wet and
cold park where, per usual practice, we were chided by various Chinese
passers-by for not dressing our child warmly enough.
They didn’t seem to care that we were toting him up and down
slick wooden staircases at a precarious angle. Nope, the problem was that he
was not wearing mittens. (Neither was anyone else in the park but who are we to
point out the obvious.) We tried to ignore the wardrobe commentary and instead
focused on not dropping the stroller down a long flight of wet stairs astride a
Chinese mountain.
The next day the rain stopped and we left our hotel for an
adventure with the second of our two new drivers. His main goal seemed to be
convincing us that the natural park where we wanted to go was too far away and
at too high an altitude for us to visit in the time we had.
His case about it being too high did gain a bit of traction
when at 4100 meters our mountain road entered the clouds and visibility dropped
to about 30 feet in front of the car. When I asked if these were dangerous conditions he’d assured
us that this was all right because sometimes you could barely see at all. Ah,
yes, barely seeing at all – that would indeed be worse than seeing only 30 feet in
front of you on a high mountain road. But not by much.
Before that point we had seen a fresh covering of snow as
well as copious amounts of yaks and goats, in addition to several wandering
horses. When we had stopped at a tiny restroom on top of a mountain we’d each
felt woozy getting out of the car. The man staffing the rest stop had asked our
driver if he was the driver coming with the supplies. He was not and when we
left him there, at the top of the mountain, in the snow and cold and low-oxygen
air, we thought we had an idea of how desolate it was as the man and
his rest stop faded into the distant cold as we drove higher into the sky.
When we finally got out of the clouds and arrived at
Huanglong (黄龙) Scenic Area we bought tickets that allowed
us to take a cable car up the mountain to a great path that cut through a
beautiful forest edged with moss and flowers, the tranquility of which was only occasionally disturbed by workers lugging 20 foot I-beams to an unseen construction
project in the distance. Not quite what you expect on the
mountain but it definitely makes you feel better about the sleeping toddler you’d
mistakenly thought was a heavy burden. Hard to complain when a
guy passes you with a metal beam hoisted on his shoulder.
This path was even more beautiful than the Jiuzhaigou paths,
perhaps because it was open to the mountains and there were snowy ranges in the
distance under a sunny blue sky. The lack of rain was also a plus. Overall it
reminded us of vistas we had seen during hikes in Europe, absent the rifugios
and Europeans you would encounter along those trips.
The pools that are the highlight of this park were suffering
from what seemed like low water levels but they were stunning regardless. Their
coloring was a contrast in yellow and bright blue and again showcased water in
a way we had never seen before. We walked the loop at the top but then hiked back
to the cable car rather than taking the path downhill.
Once we’d returned to the road at the foot of the cable car
we reunited with our driver and headed to the airport with time to spare. We
were in line at departures in less than an hour and headed back to Chengdu
nearly on time.
After we'd arrived in Chengdu and piled into a cab to head home we waited for the driver
to insist that we change our plans. Or compel us to make an adjustment of some
kind. But that conversation never came.
Instead, we just sat back and drove into the grey
urbanscape, wondering how two very different places can be so close together
in the scheme of the world but so far apart in every other way.
(Aside from the noodles. Seems you can always find a decent bowl of noodles in Sichuan.)
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