Friday, March 19, 2004

The Sights in Beijing


So what have we actually done so far in China?

The Great Wall


The highlight so far was the Great Wall at Simatai. It was another adventure of miscommunications and mishaps getting this trip even organized, but once we made it there, a 2+ hour drive from Beijing, it was incredible. It was a perfect blue-sky day, and we had the place almost entirely to ourselves, apart from the 4 local guides/postcard-salespeople who stuck to us the entire way and held us down when the wind threatened to blow us off the wall.

Mandrew at the wall:



The view from one of the many towers along the wall:



The great wall (and it is pretty great!):



Looking the other way:



Some steep stairs up:



Morna, Sian, John, Emily & Mandrew - with the wall stretching along the jagged ridge in the background:



The Summer Place


Although it would have been better to visit in Summer, the Summer Palace in Beijing was still pretty stunning. A huge park with interesting buildings, pagodas, bridges and a giant lake in the middle.

At the Summer Palace:



The long outdoor corridor at the summer palace:



One of the many cute bridges in the expansive gardens of the summer palace:



The Forbidden City & Tianamen Square


The Forbidden City was cool to see because it was totally off-limits to most people for 500 years, and because our audio-guide that we rented was recorded by Roger Moore, i.e. James Bond. Tianamen Square is basically a big concrete gathering area that is securely patrolled nowadays. Our first attempt to visit it failed because the national congress was in session ratifying the new constitution, and they didn't want anybody congregating there. I don't think anyone would've protested this one though, because it finally gives Chinese citizens the official right to own private property.

Tianamen Square:



Andrew in front of the Red gate in the Forbidden City:



The Beijing Pollution (with the Forbidden City in the background!):



Not really a tourist sight, but fun to watch - window cleaning in Beijing:

Tuesday, March 16, 2004

Horsebottoms and the lure of the Golden Arches


After 9 months on the road we have become reliant upon the "red laterns", a sure sign of safe vegetarian food at a chinese restaurant. Now after 5 days in China, we've discovered that the red latern is no longer a sign of safety, and instead we are drawn towards a new safe haven - the Golden Arches.

Shayne (mandy's cousin) who after living in China for the past 6 months, has coined the term "horsebottom", in fear of accidentally eating some at a chinese restaurant, where you never know what you're ordering or even eating most of the time. Today, we could no longer stand another horsebottom lunch and gave in (we were broken) - we had our first McDonalds in 2 years. We can't say it was good, but at least we knew what we were ordering (and think we know what we're eating - some reconstiuted something or other).

Monday, March 15, 2004

Happy times in the park


Though we've found the Chinese to be rather stoic and unfriendly people, Sunday afternoons in Jingshan Park (just north of the forbidden city in Beijing) is apparently "happy time", with old ladies line dancing, couples ballroom dancing, large groups of choruses and impromptu jam sessions with tradiotional chinese instruments. Everyone was all smiles including the lady we met screaming by herself to no tune at all!

Some of the musicians in the happy park:


Friday, March 12, 2004

Exercise in the park


Shayne led us to a park in central Shanghai and showed us excellent examples of the new exercise craze that has taken over Shanghai (at least for the eldery) - Backward Walking. You guessed it, dozens of old people walking backwards around the park. Maybe they have the same theory that goes with cars, and are trying to "roll back" their odometer to gain a few years?

Thursday, March 11, 2004

Shayne in Shanghai


After a hellish 3hr red-eye (hellish because you can't possibly get a full night's sleep in 3hrs.) We had the rare treat of being met at the airport by Denis (Mandy's cousin Shayne's husband). Shayne and family have done nothing in their power to dissuade us to leave their luxurious home in Shanghai - in fact we're thinking of spending the next 3 1/2 weeks right here! There really is no need to leave their house. The full house of 3 adorable kids (Julian, Camille & Sasha), 2 Thai Dogs, 3 Cats (1 thai, 1 tunisian & 1 greek) and a few house helpers - we just add to the crowd.

Mandy and cousin Denis on the Bund in Shanghai (the old finincial district behind us)



Mandrew on the Bund looking out to Pudong (the new financial district)



Shayne and Camille - the most brightly coloured family in Shanghai (actually in ALL of China!)



Julian playing in the back yard

Monday, March 08, 2004

Angkor Wat?


Going in we were already pretty sick of temples, but Angkor Wat proved to be a true world wonder. The number of tour buses and the size of the parking lots seemed daunting at first, but the crowds thinned out once we got inside the temples as there are so many of them and they are all enormous (we are not referring the american tourists ;))

Our favourite was Ta Phrom a smaller temple, which has been completely swallowed by the jungle over the past millenium. See pics below. Most were built between 900 - 1200 AD.

Angkor Wat



A stone carving in Angkor Wat (the largest and best condition of the Wats)



Andrew Climbing up the top staircase at Angkor Wat - seriously steep!



Mandy in front of the gate to Angkor Thom - note the huge statues lining the street, and the enormous faces on the gates.



One of the impressive trees covering Tha Phrom



Now in incognito, after his instant climb to fame from the cover of the Cambodia Lonely Planet:



Another tree in Tha Phrom



The cute faces at Bayon:



The impressive 2nd largest Wat - Bayon (see all the faces on the top):



Andrew doing the elephant walk ;)



Mandy climbing down another steep temple:



Another impressive Wat - not sure which wat's wat?



The tree and andrew (a speck at the bottom left corner of the tree)



Another fabulous tree:



An impressive view of ruins from the top of another wat



One of many almost fallen down walls/columns:



Andrew giving some english lessons to a monk (Mow):

Friday, March 05, 2004

Mining and Waterfalls


So we had another fabulous day with Bonar, our free lunch (I mean freelance) guide. We took a pretty hairy 35km road which was no wider than a singl track mountain bike trail to some gem mines and then on to a beautiful 7 tiered waterfall.

He hung a couple of hammocks for us, so we had a picnic lunch and then hung watching the goings on at the local waterfalls. Monks, villagers swimming, doing laundry, washing motor bikes etc. etc. It was really quite entertaining.

One of the wider parts of the trail - on a dodgy local bridge:



All protected from dust inhalation with a smart double sided face mask:



Mining for gems, and arduous and dangerous job. The main gem is cubic zirconium (otherwise known as fake diamonds)





Enjoying the hammock:



Monks swimming at the falls:



At the local market - Mandy has decided that this will be the new iron for us - easily transferable to any power source ;)


Thursday, March 04, 2004

Resting in Ratanakiri


We're still here in Ratanakiri. We ended up extending our stay here, because we didn't want to go back on the horrific 4hr road here again! So we're flying back to P.P. on friday and then straight to Siem Reap to go to the famous Angkor Wat.

It took 2 days to get here, we had a 3hr bus ride to Kompong Cham, spent one night there, then we took the 7.30am ferry heading north (up the mekong) and arrived in Stung Treng at 4pm (after 7 1/2 hrs of cramped ride). We then took a taxi - nice, a/c, toyota camry. Which was great until we picked up 5 other passengers and they turned the a/c off. We had 4 people in back, and 3 in front, on a dirt bumpy (I mean advanced mogel runs) road for 4hrs - most of which was in the dark!
After 1 hr, the driver lost control and we ploughed into the bushes on the side of the road. Luckily no one or the car was damaged and he continued driving like a bat out of hell - as if the accident had never happened!!

Needless to say, we arrived pretty weary at 9.30, and promised not to repeat that journey later in the week!

Our lovely resort lodge here has been a great time to relax. We checked out today b/c it's too expensive ($30/night), and have moved into our regular $10 average cleanish room (at least with a/c).

A couple of days ago we took a tour with Bona - the "freelance guide", whose business cards were incorrectly printed saying "free lunch guide" a fact that he was very unhappy with! We rode on the back of motorbikes and saw a cashew farm, a peppercorn farm, a few ethnic minority villages, and an interesting minority cemetary. It was a stinking hot and exhausting day, so we were happy to spend today at the local "crater" lake swimming in the cool clear waters.

Last night Mandy thrilled the locals being the star attraction at a local wedding (Bona our guide invited us). Finally her years of getting graceful arms with synchro have paid off, she is a star Khmer dancer! Many men were asking her to dance, and numerous people kept coming up saying "you are a very good Khmer dancer!". Of course it all went to her head, and she went home singing ABBA's "dancing queen" after a few too many warm beers and Khmer dances!

Here are some pics:

The choice of pineapple or fried SPIDERS! at a rest stop on the way to Kampong Cham:



A cashew nut and it's tasty fruit!



Typical road in Cambodia - red dust (although the hill is unusual):



An old minority man making a drum. (Note to self: In order to keep ears in tact do not wear elephant tusk earings.):



Our boat trip on the way to the cemetary and villages:



One of the cemetary tomb decorations:



Two girls from a Laos village in Cambodia:



Our luxourious room at Terre Rouge:



Enjoying the Volcanic Lake:



Enjoying a Khmer Wedding with our guide Bona (in blue):