6/25/09

知春里小学二年级




Last day at Zhichunli primary school with my third graders.
(I remember how happy I felt to start summer vacation when I was their age.)


污染天气
AIR POLLUTION

Thursday the 18th in Zhongguancun, a suburb of Beijing. There are dozens of skyscrapers in the distance, totally concealed in smog. One of the worst pollution days since winter.

Same day at dusk near the city center. It rained lightly; a strange, chemical smelling rain.

6/16/09

My first horse ride.

Drying sheets.

Ariel. Behind him are these wonderfully fake concrete yurts and Han women in Mongolian outfits.

A camel owned by the resort.

Sunset.

Prairie girls.

Redundancy.

Chao in the yurt dining hall.

Happy Ariel at 乌兰花, or "Black orchid" town, which was our transfer point to reach the grasslands.

Chao and I in a moto-rickshaw in Hohhot.

Hohhot at night. Note the Muslim style domed buildings.

Mongolian restaurant by Hohhot University.

Our guide with an "aobao," or prayer mound, in the grasslands.

Wild mushroom our guide found.

Chao in front of a Mongolian white stupa. Both Tibetan and Mongolian cultures share this kind of structure.
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内蒙古
Inner Mongolia


Ariel, Chao and I went to Inner Mongolia last weekend to see the grasslands, an endless stretch of rough green and shockingly blue skies. It was one of the most beautiful places I've seen. There is basically nothing at all for miles; no trees, no mountains, no water, just endless varieties of grass and more bizarre insects than I've seen anywhere. Giant crickets that look like hummingbirds when they fly, smooth marble slabs buried under dry earth, rabbit and snake holes. Most startling of all, for a city boy like myself, is the silence, which is almost strangely loud it's so quiet, and the dramatic temperature drop and strong winds at night.

We rode horses, ate a lot of lamb, and met a few Mongolians. One guide spoke excellent Mandarin, but was impatient to teach us a few Mongolian words. The language has very strong constant sounds and seems painful to speak, like the sounds are scraping your vocal cords. We passed by a village like one I'd never seen, made entirely out of rammed earth with beautiful, completely foreign boxy, colorful temples.

Hohhot was a surprisingly unique city. Mid-sized cities in modern China are mostly fashioned completely alike; the train station and long distance bus station are close to one another with most hotels around them, major streets are very wide with tremendous street lamps, skyscrapers are everywhere, giant monolithic Communist structures, the old part of the city is being flattened, etc. However, Hohhot had very Hui minority style structures with minarets and onion domes, all street names in Mongolian script, huge metal sculptures of horseback Mongolian warriors; all somewhat tacky, but at least it had a personality.

I believe average Chinese people view Mongolians in this dramatic, Plains Indian kind of way and enjoy putting on cowboy hats and heading to the grasslands to ride horses and drink sheep's yogurt. It's a lot like Americans' "wild west" fascination; an interest in this noble savage that has been conquered and can be safely approached. The comparison is obvious in city and place names, which are nearly all translated directly from Mongolian script into Mandarin characters, a rare thing in Chinese. Compare that to Mississippi, North Dakota, Miami and countless other American places that are named after tribes or use native languages for naming.

6/15/09

This is your last night.
-`-`-

四芽儿,你离开北京了。这几个年过得非常又开心。在旧金山开始新生活,交新朋友,找新工作,结识帅哥。。。恩。祝你好运!爱死你。

Silvia! Best of luck in San Francisco!

6/11/09

美景潭, or "Beautiful Scenery Lake," sans lake.

We're in a band. (Chao, Ariel, Patricia, Me)

A new toy.

Villager on horseback.

Wonderful, somehow Mexican-looking, village restaurant. There was an entire skinned collie dog near the outhouse out back.

Mung bean and pineapple ice lollies.

Hipsters in a village house with drapes that I want.


十渡
Shi2 du4

A couple of weekends ago, the crew went to shidu, a very touristy village area that happens to be surrounded by beautiful karst formations. The whole affair is reachable by Beijing public transport, which makes it a nice short trip.

The villagers are very used to tourists, but haven't figured out what to do with us yes. Lots of ripping off, price gouging, lying, etc., which gets tired fast. However, the area is undeniably gorgeous and I could actually breathe without feeling like I'm gasping and chocking on soot.
And so...

Most blog sites have been recently blocked in China, due to, I'm sure, a certain anniversary of a certain massacre. The block is much harder to get around now, as many websites that can make a secure proxy are also blocked. Anyway, I'm using a very clunky, slow program to finally post again.

Anyway, I'm going to post a few of the recent events of this last month. Lets start with...
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~^ A summery trip to the Beijing botanical gardens ^~


Emilie in the grass

Me, pretty much what I look like now.

Emilie, me and a soon to be devoured mangosteen

My people.

Northbound bus.