Showing posts with label Yunnan Province. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Yunnan Province. Show all posts

Friday, June 19, 2009

You have our word....

Back when we were touring the Yunnan province with Elaine and Emily we stopped in the town of Jianshui and spent a little time wandering around. At one point we stumbled upon this old temple that was in the process of being torn down, and as we circled around it an older couple started watching us and Tina started up a conversation with them. We asked about the temple, how old it was, and other general stuffs - there was more mis-communication then communication, but we got most of it all figured out. When we were leaving we asked if we could take a photo of them and they wanted us to get a photo of us with them.

Sure, no problem. Then we got into another confusing conversation that we finally figured out was they wanted a copy of the photo. Of course, just give us your address and we will mail you a copy. Tina explained that we lived in Xiamen and that it would be a few weeks before we could send out a copy, but that we would sent it to them.
With that they were excited and the old man wrote down his address in my little notebook. Today at work I asked someone to take what he had written and put it into a text file so that I could look up the postal code and then print it on an envelope.

Seems easy, but what the man had written pretty much translates as:
You took our photo today, we would like a copy. We are in the house to the left of the main hospital.

Yeah, now we feel bad - we're not sure it that will get there if just put old man near hospital, Jianshui, China.

Wednesday, June 3, 2009

Elaine & Emily - Guest Blogging Post #5

May 31 – Up at 7am a quick, light breakfast of toast for Emily and Elaine; nothing for Tina and Mark.... Mark, Tina, and Emily were all feeling a little under the weather.

So we leave the cold damp mountains to head back down to the Hong He (Red River) and drive through the valley towards Jianshiu and finally back to Kunming. Along the way we stopped at a Mongolian village, it was more than 750 years old and still populated with some of the Mongolian people that ended up stranded there when the Chinese drove the Mongols out of their country and back up north.

Along the way back we stopped for lunch at truck stop – Mark and Elaine were only ones eating, but it was very good with corn cakes, a local item, which were very tasty, then continuing on to Kunming airport for our flight back to Xiamen……..

We arrived back in Xiamen 7pm, happy with the dry and warm weather that greeted us. After unloading at the apartment, we stopped by temptations for wine, and then on to the Bashi night market for great food and people watching.

June 1st - Again everyone is up first thing with a tight agenda; Tina’s great at packing it all in. We took a 90 cent taxi ride over to Xiamen University and walked around the campus. It was graduation so excited students in caps and gowns were everywhere.

Quickly followed with a quick tour of Nanputo Temple.

Then began the whirlwind of shopping and getting last minute gifts; we went Zhongshan Lu to kick-off the shopping extravaganza. We had lunch in the expat area as a little western food was needed to calm our stomach which has been a little iffy after Yunnan. We walked back through Electric City, a technology market. Then on to the tailor’s to pickup Elaine’s new wardrobe – she got some great shirts.

We ended the day by hitting Pearl World once more, then tea tasting – one of the highlights.Then an hour back massage with cupping; Amazingly, Elaine came through and now has 10 spots.

Mark was the most toxic.

Then shrimping which was fun; we caught 15 jumbo shrimp and began eating at 11pm.

Then back to the Wichmanns for packing, wine and bed at 2am.

We had a fabulous time. Tina and Mark run a 5 star B&B! On to Seoul where we plan to hijack this blog and share our stories without the Wichmanns.

Tuesday, June 2, 2009

Yunnan Province - Elaine & Emily Guest Blog #4

Elaine and Emily left this morning for a few days in Seoul, South Korea before heading back to their normal world in Chicago, but as we mentioned, they did leave us with a daily journal that we can use to update our blog. The following is more of what they left with us from our trip to the Yunnan Province:

May 30 – We awoke to fog but forged ahead with seeing the terraced rice fields. Our driver did a good job at getting us to clear areas where we could see the rice fields and take photos before the fog rolled in; it was amazing to watch as the fog spread over the fields.We were able to see some of the Duoyi Terrace and then drove on to a Yi minority village market. We walked around and observed all the activity; selling all varieties of fresh vegetables and meats, local people selling and buying raw tobacco and bartering for fresh poultry (one sold and alive in the bag was quite entertaining). We bought some baozi to eat as we walked the village streets.

We had lunch and returned to our hotel to rest and wait for the fog to clear. In the late afternoon, we continued the tour of rice fields and visited a Hani minority village. We had to park at the top of a hill and walked about a mile downhill into the village. These people live in “mushroom” houses and you’ll be able to see why from the photos. This was another very authentic experience…

Monday, June 1, 2009

Yunnan Province - Elaine & Emily Guest Blog #3

Wow… Sorry, we are not dead, just did not have internet access for the last three days since arriving in the Yunnan Province. It’s been amazing so far; this post will have lots of pictures so you can see where we’ve been.

On Wednesday, while still in Xiamen, we pampered ourselves again. The day started out with a Chinese hair wash, had a fabulous Chinese spicy lunch at The Two Sisters, then went for yet another “deluxe” foot massage at the Millennium. After our foot massages, we wound our way through the Bashi market alleys on our way back to Mark and Tina’s.

At around 7pm we caught a flight to Kunming, met up with our tour guide (named Wine), and drove an hour and a half to our hotel in the Stone Forrest. We collapsed upon arrival at the hotel since it around 12 midnight.

On Thursday we were up at 6am, had a traditional Chinese breakfast of rice noodles, spicy pork with green onions with sweet creamy coffee. The food was delicious, the coffee, not so much…

The best part of the morning was touring the stone forest. Wine told us that the entire park had been under water 40 million years ago. We had a bet going about how many laowais (westerners) we would see; Elaine was winning since she bet zero, and then we all lost horribly when we saw a busload of western students.
We hit the road around 1pm driving through farm country. We stopped in a little town for lunch. We sat outside with the women making pork dumplings and pumpkin biscuits. The food was phenomenal; we were the first laowais they had ever served so we felt pretty special and that we were getting an authentic experience.Then it was back on the road for another four hours. We made it to Jian Shui by late afternoon and toured the second largest Confucius temple in China, over 800 years old and 75,000 square meters – “a little bigger than our apartment,” according to Mark. We checked into our hotel, an ancient family compound with several outdoor courtyards. We got a sense for old China and enjoyed sipping wine in the courtyard after dinner.
In the morning, had a quick breakfast (coffee was much better), and hit the road. We went to Double Dragon Bridge, a stone bridge built in 1860. Emily almost walked off a ledge while taking pictures and backing up to get the best shot. What was most appealing was the farm country surrounding the bridge, with farmers working the rice, lotus flower and corn fields; and trucks loaded with stones driving through the river, which they said was also road.
We then headed to a 600 year old village built by the Zhang Chun Family. The family got wealthy off of Tin mining and built a compound for themselves and the whole village. Their wealth had clearly declined judging by the condition of the buildings. There were still people living there, seventy percent which belong to the Zhang Chun family. What was interesting about the village was that it was not “tourist clean” so we were able to get a real sense for how the people there live.We then drove on toward Xin Jie Lao-Cheng. Our favorite part of the drive was toward the end when we started to see the rice fields with men and water buffalo and women planting rice in their traditional dress. We stopped at Laohuzui Terrace (the tiger) rice fields along the way. The scenery was worth the long drive.
We drove uphill for what seemed like hours to our hotel in the clouds, Yun Ti Hotel. We went to dinner and then walked around the town square getting lots of “laowais” cries from the locals. The population here is mostly considered Chinese minority, we believe the “Yi” minority… Petite, dark with beautiful faces and smiles. The traditional wear is evident in the photos.

Sunday, May 31, 2009

Return to Blogging

This last weekend was the Dragon Boat Holiday in China with everyone having Thursday and Friday off work. We took advantage of that and dragged our guests to a corner of China that we have been wanting to see since shortly after we moved here...

Wednesday night we flew out of Xiamen for 4 days in the Yunnan Province, visiting a Stone Forest and then heading down to Hong He to view the terraced rice fields. It was a great trip into some of the less built up tourism points of China, and it surprisingly did leave us without internet access during our trip. We had our computer so our guests were forced to write blogs despite the fact that we couldn't post them, so starting tomorrow we they will talk about our trip and share the very best of the thousands of photos we snapped...