Sunday 21 October 2012

The forbidden post

The day before we were supposed to leave Hong Kong it was time to go back to the Chinese visa centre to find out if we were going to travel through China. We paid the fee of 200 HK$ each and got our passports back. A quick glance through the pages showed us a new glued in visa! China was now only a day away! For this night we had planned to visit "the peak", a place on a hill south of Hong Kong island, reachable by tram, from where one has superb views all over the city, harbour and surrounding hills. We wanted to go on this Monday because the one week Chinese holiday ended on Sunday and the over-2hrs-queue at the tram station from last week would hopefully be a lot shorter. It was. No queue. In no time we were on the hill but somehow trapped in this building and had to buy an extra ticket to go all the way up to the terrace and, wow, it was well worth the money! We got on the tram just before sunset and reached the top in total darkness and with thousands of colourful lights below us. What a great finish for this crazy but amazing city.

 

After checking out our opportunities to reach the mainland we decided to take the ferry from Hong Kong to Shenzen and from there on a bus straight into Yangshuo, our first stop in China. After all it would've been easier to take a train from Hong Kong to Shenzen, but we wanted to combine our departure with a harbour cruise, which ended up in thick smog. We didn't see shit. At the harbour in Shenzen we made our way to the brand new subway station to get a train to the bus terminal which lies in the city centre, about 20 kms away from where we arrived. We got there for slightly over 50 cents each.

At the bus terminal we found timetables for the buses, in Chinese letters only. The info office said that there's no bus to Yangshuo. Wrong terminal. We ended up following a guy who approached us on the street, first wary not to get ripped of he turned out to be a quite ok and we had ourselves tickets to Yangshuo in a overnight bus (way overprized as we found out later...) That bus didn't leave from the terminal, would've been too easy. We walked/ran behind a dude from the company through half Shenzen just to wait for the bus in a random, dark street. The bus, as it finally arrived, was better than most we had for more money in South America and it was almost empty! Anni got the back seat-row for herself and I slept on 3 seats across the aisle.

 
As we arrived in Yangshuo, it was still dark and we were tired, so without thinking we took the offer of a guy at the bus stop and followed him to his hotel, which turned out to be quite decent. Just he wasn't, offering free beer for breakfast (that wasn't the bad part) and not leaving us a free minute without talking about his bloody trips, that he wanted to sell us. The next day we bought ourselves a trip with a "bamboo" as they call it, a plastic raft that's supposed to look like bamboo. In around 3 hrs we went downstream the Li river to a town called Fuli, which was nice but packed with tourists. Then further on to a cave and a look out point. The whole time we had the camera ready and shot an immense amount of photos (I even had to delete older photos to get more space on my memory card). The area is one of the most beautiful we've ever seen, if not our new number one. And on the way back upstream everything again! Also very well worth the effort is the hill inside the town, a short climb up the stairs and you get rewarded with a breathtaking, 360 degrees view of Yangshuo and the karst peaks. We also found out that many websites are blocked by the government of China, much more than we thought, including this site where we post our blogs. Without any knowledge of how to get around these kind of "government precaution measures" it took us 10 minutes to download a VPN app for the iPad and here we blog again!

The last night we went to "Impression", a show directed by the same man who did the Beijing olympics opening ceremony. They use the Li river as stage and the surrounding karst peaks get lit up and act as a stunning background. 600 people are involved, including local fishermen. It was highly recommended to us by an older Norwegian couple who said we can't leave Yangshuo without having seen this show and that it's better than any opera they've seen. It is also called "Human's masterpiece cooperated with god".You can't miss that, can you? With high expactations we waited with around 2000 other, mostly Chinese visitors for the show to start. And from there on we started to notice certain differences between European and Chinese audiences. Europeans know how much money they paid for the ticket and it's absolutely quiet during the whole thing. Chinese talk. And laugh. And surf in the internet. And make phone calls. Throughout the whole show. This is pretty annoying when you're used to the European system and the whole story only gets told by light and music, so we moved to an empty sector and had our peace back. All the songs were in Chinese only but I think we still understood big parts of it and it was indeed fantastic! Just a bit too short in our opinion.
Then it was time for some relaxation. We chose the town of Xingping, of the planned 3 nights soon became 6 and we mostly just read books and planned trips ahead. Xingping is much smaller than Yangshuo but almost as touristy though the tourist herds that suddenly appear disappear after a couple of hours and the town is quiet again. Most people just live their normal life and tourists normally stay out of the small streets which makes it easy to escape the crowds. Short walks along the river with its wildlife, dragonflies, beautiful birds (and a water snake!) kept us awake (especially the run away from the attacking water buffalos that somehow seemed disturbed by Annis new pink shirt) and we climbed the peak next to our hostel twice, the second time because the visibility was much better this day. We saw how the setting sun turned all this peaks first in yellow, then red and purple in the end. Just breathtaking. We also ate the best pizzas we've ever had on this trip in the hostel, and in their cafe I started to fall in love with tofu. All of this and the very friendly locals made us feel a bit sad when we left on a bus to Guilin, the tourist capital from where we want to visit some stunning rice fields, but that's another story...

 

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