BootsnAll Travel Network



Articles Tagged ‘Gansu’

More articles about ‘Gansu’
« Home

Blue sky days, snowy peaks and the Great Wall

Monday, May 4th, 2009

3487178507_866958d572_m.jpgLeaving Dunhuang behind us, we travelled back east through the Hexi Corridor along the silk road to Jiayuguan, a place I’ve wanted to visit for several years. Jiayuguan’s 13th century Ming Dynasty fortress marks the end of the Great Wall of China, and some time ago I had resolved to see the Wall in as many different locations as possible, since I’m rather fascinated by it. Not only did we visit the fort, but also another stretch of wall that was quite beautiful in the rocky barrenness of the surroundings. We walked along the wall for about half an hour and were the only people there; by contrast, the following day for the May 1 holiday 150,000 people went to the Badaling section near Beijing. As for the fort itself, it was imposing and impressive, but our experience was merely OK, as it was cold and windy and there wasn’t any blue sky in sight, so the promised backdrop of snow-capped peaks was absent from view. Perhaps my high expectations going in played a role, too.

ProcessionIn contrast to this, we barely had any expectations for the remaining places after Jiayuguan – Zhengye, Mati Si and Wuwei. These were all afterthought destinations that we only added to our itinerary after gaining more time due to our expulsion from Gannan prefecture earlier in the week. But travel is what it is, and often the places you enjoy the most aren’t the ones you had been most looking forward to when you began. This was the case again in Gansu as these last days turned out to be the most enjoyable of our little excursion, with three consecutive blue-sky days, some surprisingly impressive sights and a bit of time spent at the foot of snow-capped mountains.

In Zhengye, we were fortunate to visit a Buddhist temple at a time when a monk was leading a group of robed followers in a chant inside the temple, followed by a procession around the temple complex outside. The Buddha statue itself inside the temple is the largest indoor reclining Buddha in China at over 30m long, and the unrestored wooden temple was a delight as well – in all, the whole place had a great medieval feel to it, and was one of the highlights of the trip.

3496628802_f609d00c5c_m.jpgFrom Zhengye, we went to Mati Si with the vague idea that there was some kind of Buddhist monastery there that might make up for our missing out on the Labrang Monastery in Xiahe. It wasn’t actually an active monastery but another ancient temple complex – still, it was extraordinarily carved into a vertical cliff face, complete with ancient staircases inside the cliff for access to the top caves. But what made Mati Si the single most enjoyable destination of Gansu was that it is nestled in the shadow of the Qilian Shan mountain range to the south that forms the border between Gansu and Qinghai provinces. While this wasn’t a patch on what we saw in Nepal last year, the sweeping panoramic views, the snow-roofed Chinese temples and the dripping icicles combined with the sunshine and blue sky to create an idyllic winter destination.

PeakSadly leaving Mati Si behind, we stopped in Wuwei long enough to admire the pagodas and towers, and visit a local produce market, before setting off for Lanzhou and the flight back to Guangzhou. Just at the point when we were congratulating ourselves on how well things had gone over the previous few days, we were quickly brought back to the reality of being foreigners traveling in China. After taking 12 buses in Gansu without incident, for the 13th and last ride we were refused tickets on account of us not having a special type of insurance that is technically required for foreigners in the province but which had not come up at any point in the previous 10 days. Of course, no one at the bus station can sell you this mandatory insurance, or knows where you can obtain it, or how much it costs – but somehow despite this they will not sell you a ticket without it. In the end, when we showed them our existing travel insurance, they let us on the bus. But it was a good reality check that, just because you can ask for a hotel room and order beef noodles in Chinese and get by in a province where virtually no one speaks English, China is still China, and you never know what roadblocks will appear around the corner.

But overall, the Gansu experiment was a great success. We were very disappointed with being forbidden to enter Gannan, but you can also access it from Sichuan province to the south, so perhaps if it opens up we can still visit it one day without having to retrace our steps through Gansu. But for now, we’re back in Guangzhou, and back to work for me. 

Buddha-hopping across Gansu

Wednesday, April 29th, 2009

From one end of the very elongated Gansu province to the other, it’s all been about Buddha caves for the past few days. Since Sunday we’ve been to three different ancient Buddhist complexes, each of which offer different types of experiences but ultimately the same outcome: leaving me in awe of the lengths these ancient craftsmen went to to glorify the religion.

We started at Maiji Shan, joining a few hundred Chinese tourists and one foreigner (the only one we saw in our six days in Eastern Gansu) at the site. What makes Maiji Shan extraordinary is that all the caves are built, higher and higher, into a near vertical cliff – all the way up to about 50m by my estimation. Most of the caves themselves are locked and only viewable through grates (which makes viewing difficult and photography impossible), but two groups of three enormous statues carved into the cliff more than make up for it and provide my definitive memory from the site. As you go up and up the modern staircases, so that you’re ultimately looking down on these enormous statues, you can’t help but be amazed at how this was achieved in the fourth century, and what drove the craftsmen to creating caves so high up that they couldn’t be enjoyed from the ground. In all, it was a memorable experience.

We visited a less famous site the following day, known as the Water Curtain Caves. We were extremely disappointed to see that the principle (and really, only) attraction there – a 31m high painted Buddha on a cliff face – was completely covered in scaffolding, so we could barely see it. Luckily we managed to sneak behind the scaffolding and look up at the gigantic depiction, a pretty humbling experience.

After an overnight train ride that took us far further west than we’ve ever been in China, we arrived in Dunhuang to see the most famous of all Buddhist caves in China. You’re not allowed to take cameras in, and you only get to see a rotating series of 10 of the caves (there are several hundred in all), but the artwork inside was quite spectacular, the most impressive of the four sites we’ve seen in Gansu by some distance. Overall perhaps the Yungang Caves that we saw last year were more awe-inspiring, but I thought Dunhuang was still worth the hype. Besides the glorious sculpture work and vivid painting, we also saw what is now – following the destruction of the Bamiyan Buddhas in Afghanistan by the Taliban – the world’s second-largest ancient Buddha statue at 36m high.

The other most interesting aspect of the past few days has been seeing rural China for, really, the first time. Old men in Mao suits, farmers in the fields by the sides of the road, traditional Chinese architecture still thriving in the numerous villages we’ve passed on buses – it all provides a nice contrast to the modern megacities of Beijing and Guangzhou that have defined so much of our China experience so far.

With only a few days left in Gansu, we’re going to see the fortress at the end of the Great Wall of China tomorrow and then try to see another Tibetan-style monastery. Meanwhile, photos are here.

Into the wilderness of Gansu

Saturday, April 25th, 2009

At least the Chinese police are nice to you when you stumble into a forbidden zone and they have to evict you from their prefecture. They bought us lunch and everything.

But perhaps I should back up a bit ... [Continue reading this entry]