Monday, October 01, 2007
Back To Shanghai
Hangzhou
Thursday, September 27, 2007
Suzhou - Garden City
Monday, September 24, 2007
Shanghai
Thursday, September 20, 2007
Urumqi Museum
I left Turpan for Urumqi to catch a flight later on that evening to Shanghai, ending my western adventure. I think this part of my six week trip was one of the definite highlights, even though I didn't get to explore Kashgar and the Uighur heartland. Still, I know I'll be back one day so I guess I can wait. Xinjiang's capital Urumqi didn't really hold any attraction for me but while I was passing through I did find a little time to pop into the newly reopened Xinjiang Museum. This was a great place with some excellent exhibits. There were mummies from 800BC, four thousand year old woolly hats (my Dad has one just like it) and other items of clothing, dessicated dumplings from the Tang dynasty and all manner of random artefacts amongst the displays of fine craftsmanship.
They were really pushing the 'individual cultures living happily under the all-embracing umbrella of Chinese nationalism' angle and one of the introductory plaques really rammed this down your throat:
'The ancient western regions mainly refer to today's Xinjiang. Xinjiang has been an inalienable part of the territory of China. This is a region where multi nationalities live and many kinds of religions prevail. At the same time, here was also the hub of the Silk Road and the place where the world civilisations assembled. As far back as the time of the Stone Age, there were human footprints here. In the long historical development process, the people of all nationalities living in here have worked in unity and helped one another, worked together, created distinctive ancient civilisations with their own hands and intelligence.
After having scaled mountains and forded streams, walked all over grasslands and deserts, the archaeologists of Xinjiang have excavated and collected a large number of unearthed relics and articles that have been handed down from ancient times. We have selected a batch of fine works from them and run this exhibition of these precious relics and auxiliary exhibits from the stone age to Qing dynasty for the purpose to show the contributions the people of all nationalities in Xinjiang have made for safeguarding the reunification of the motherland, for enriching the motherland's cultural treasure-house, and to make the masses of audiences receive the education in patriotism.'
Yes, quite.
While the blatant nationalism wasn't exactly endearing, the 1400 year old sense of humour of Tang dynasty sculptors really was. Check out that camel's grin!
They were really pushing the 'individual cultures living happily under the all-embracing umbrella of Chinese nationalism' angle and one of the introductory plaques really rammed this down your throat:
'The ancient western regions mainly refer to today's Xinjiang. Xinjiang has been an inalienable part of the territory of China. This is a region where multi nationalities live and many kinds of religions prevail. At the same time, here was also the hub of the Silk Road and the place where the world civilisations assembled. As far back as the time of the Stone Age, there were human footprints here. In the long historical development process, the people of all nationalities living in here have worked in unity and helped one another, worked together, created distinctive ancient civilisations with their own hands and intelligence.
After having scaled mountains and forded streams, walked all over grasslands and deserts, the archaeologists of Xinjiang have excavated and collected a large number of unearthed relics and articles that have been handed down from ancient times. We have selected a batch of fine works from them and run this exhibition of these precious relics and auxiliary exhibits from the stone age to Qing dynasty for the purpose to show the contributions the people of all nationalities in Xinjiang have made for safeguarding the reunification of the motherland, for enriching the motherland's cultural treasure-house, and to make the masses of audiences receive the education in patriotism.'
Yes, quite.
While the blatant nationalism wasn't exactly endearing, the 1400 year old sense of humour of Tang dynasty sculptors really was. Check out that camel's grin!
More Turpan
Turpan
Turpan was my next stop after Hami, and it was another long and boring bus ride to get there. If I ever watch another Kung Fu movie after leaving China it'll be too soon. I have been consistently astonished by just how dire all these movies I've been subjected to have been. It's like 'Hi John, oh look, here come the Vietnamese'. Cue killing. After the obligatory and overly long sadistic prison scene it finishes with the little guy finding his girlfriend who was blown up at the beginning and whose apparent death he has been avenging willy nilly throughout the film. That or his father's. It's all dubbed so awfully too. It seems girls can barely breathe without moaning or gasping pathetically. In the rare cases where there were actually English subtitles it was even worse. Jackie Chan has had some really bad hairstyles...
I shudder just thinking about it.
But anyway, Turpan. Desert oasis, second lowest depression on Earth and hottest place in China. Coming here in the peak of summer was maybe not the greatest idea - the temperature peaked at 45 degrees C. - but it was a dry heat, and totally different to the heat and humidity in the south, where I'd be dripping wet and exhausted just walking down the road. Activity here seemed to be much more bearable, but going outside in the middle of the day was like standing in front of an open oven door. Sooner or later you just had to take shelter. This was a little inconvenient from a tourist's point of view as it led to a lot of downtime, but with long evenings you could still accomplish a lot.
I'd been met off the bus by a young guy working for a local tourist agency. We chatted for a while and although I turned down his tours due to the price, I did say I'd be interested in joining in other people to bring down the cost. So, the next day I arranged to meet him again and he introduced me to two other Brits, David and Steven, who'd just arrived by train from Europe and Kazakhstan and were on their way to Shanghai before taking the Trans-Siberian Express back home. They were nice guys and we had a great time travelling round the local sights.
Our first stop was Grape Valley, home to our driver, who drove right past the special tourist park and took us to his family restaurant, where we sat underneath the grape vines on a low, cushioned platform over a small stream drinking tea and eating fresh grapes and watermelon. It was fantastically relaxing. I loved it. Turpan is famous for it's fruits, and particularly the quality of it's grapes. However, because no-one here drinks alcohol, the grapes are not turned into wine and are instead dried by the side of the road to produce raisins. Here dozens of varieties were on sale and we got to sample a load. I had no idea that raisins could vary in colour and flavour so much, but I guess wine does, so why not raisins. There were some really expensive varieties on show, and some we tried tasted just like rose petals. Amazing.

Leaving Grape Valley we drove through the desert out to the Flaming Mountains, which supposedly appear to be bathed in tongues of fire. In the famous legend 'Journey to the West', the Monkey King had a magic fan to put out the flames here, but we had no such relief from the heat and couldn't stay long. The colours and patterns of the gullies kind of looked like flames I guess, but it was pretty enough anyhow so that was fine.


We continued to drive across the desert (always wanted one of those empty road shots) and passed one of the big reasons for China wanting to keep hold of this part of the country - oil. We then came to Tuyoq, an ancient village and centre of pilgrimage for local Muslims, which was a pretty interesting little place to explore.


A trip to the desert sand dunes was also on the agenda, but not until the (relatively) cooler evening. Until then we crashed at the driver's friend's house, with more tea and watermelon and a chance for a nap on his big seating platform. I want one of these in my house. Great fun. One thing I started to notice while driving through the local villages were all the beds standing outside. It turns out that in the summer months people sleep out under the stars as it's cooler. How ace is that?
So later on we drove out to the sand dunes. There is a paved road out to them, as they're pretty popular with tourists and locals alike, who like to bury themselves in the hot sand to relieve aches and pains etc. However, there must have been rather a lot of rain at some point recently as the road was completely washed away. The sand and cracked mud that now stood in between the two fragments of roadway made it very hard to imagine such a deluge, but displayed nature's force quite impressively.


As in Dunhuang, the desert was beautiful and once again we were there at the end of the day and could watch the colour changes shown above as the sun set. Having witnessed something similar in Dunhuang made it no less of a fantastic sight. I could watch it every day.
I shudder just thinking about it.
But anyway, Turpan. Desert oasis, second lowest depression on Earth and hottest place in China. Coming here in the peak of summer was maybe not the greatest idea - the temperature peaked at 45 degrees C. - but it was a dry heat, and totally different to the heat and humidity in the south, where I'd be dripping wet and exhausted just walking down the road. Activity here seemed to be much more bearable, but going outside in the middle of the day was like standing in front of an open oven door. Sooner or later you just had to take shelter. This was a little inconvenient from a tourist's point of view as it led to a lot of downtime, but with long evenings you could still accomplish a lot.
I'd been met off the bus by a young guy working for a local tourist agency. We chatted for a while and although I turned down his tours due to the price, I did say I'd be interested in joining in other people to bring down the cost. So, the next day I arranged to meet him again and he introduced me to two other Brits, David and Steven, who'd just arrived by train from Europe and Kazakhstan and were on their way to Shanghai before taking the Trans-Siberian Express back home. They were nice guys and we had a great time travelling round the local sights.
So later on we drove out to the sand dunes. There is a paved road out to them, as they're pretty popular with tourists and locals alike, who like to bury themselves in the hot sand to relieve aches and pains etc. However, there must have been rather a lot of rain at some point recently as the road was completely washed away. The sand and cracked mud that now stood in between the two fragments of roadway made it very hard to imagine such a deluge, but displayed nature's force quite impressively.
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