Monday, November 20, 2006

Inside Beijing Pt1

October 25-October 27, WED-FRI.

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Shamik and I and our boy Mao Zedong

Elisa and I arrived a day earlier than the others, on Wednesday, although to some degree, the day was a bust with regard to sightseeing. We touched base with Miss Chay in the evening at RBL, which sits on the location of an outhouse that used to supply the forbidden city with ice. The next day was also something of a bust... as I slept in really really late, and only managed to wander around Qianmen looking for a Peking duck restaurant... no luck there.



Areas of note in Beijing: Tiananmen square (天安門) is centrally located in Beijing, in fact the entire city is oriented about the Forbidden city. It houses the Monument of the People, Mao's Masoleum, and adjacent to it are the People's Congress, a mueseum, Qianmen, and the entrance to the Forbidden City. That being said, the area appears very different between night and day:


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1. In the morning, towards the Congress
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2. Zhengyangmen 正揚門 gate at dusk
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3. Qianmen 前門 archery tower near dusk.
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4. Kite Hawkers in the square at night

The traffic around the square has been dramatically altered, and tourists and locals alike are steered out (somewhat forcibly, as large police vans speed towards you and direct you with no uncertain terms towards the exits of the square) around 8 PM. I would surmise that it is to avoid situations like this:



One complaint of significant note:

Chinese from all over China line up in the morning to view Mao's pickled body in Mao's Masoleum, shuffling past it quickly in regimented lines. No photographs are allowed.

That is, unless you are a foreign VIP. The guys and I got in line with the peasants and proletariants to shuffle on through, and while we waited, we saw a group of white westerners quickly sent up towards the Masoleum, bypassing all queues. Moreover, by the time we got to the body itself, the line splits. Everyone heads left. Unless you are of course a VIP, in which case you can stand there all you want and zap photos.

While I'm not a big fan of Mao, the Cultural Revolution, Great Leap Forward and Communist Revolution in general all seem like very bad ideas to me, I must say that Mao likely insisted on class equality, and this reeks of modern imperialism to me. 2cents.

Forbidden City: Not many pics from here, I got lazy and started taking video, Eventually it'll all make its way to the nets.

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1. the View from Tiananmen Gate to the sqare
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2. With Amanda in front of the gate. There is a bullethole in one of those lions, no joke.
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3. Busting out the AZN in the Forbidden City. woohoo!

Wednesday, November 08, 2006

Outside of Beijing

Breaking the Beijing trip into chunks to make it a little more digestible:
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OCT 28th, Saturday
The crew booked a small tour van through Panda Tours, to take us to the Summer Palace and the Great wall at Si1Ma3Tai2 司馬臺

The Summer Palace 頤和園, is located to the northwest of Beijing, and is the palace of the Ming and Qing emperors for summer administration, when Beijing become unbearably hot, they would retreat to their enclave.

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The Place was georgeous, and we lucked out on the weather (it cleared up that day, it had been quite hazy/cloudy for the last few days were were in Beijing). It was absolutely crawling with tourists, but it was amazing to marvel and think about how this place must have been ~500-600 years ago. It one of the UNESCO world heritage sites... and it makes sense.

For more about it.. Wiki

The Great Wall:

It was a 3 hour drive to Simatai, winding through some of the windy roads on up to the area. It took quite a while, but it was worth it:
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We got there and started climbing up this incline:
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It was about comparable to a hike in the Gorge (columbia river gorge)
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A few more shots of the distant wall...

and shots in the opposite direction:
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If you're very discerning, you can see a zipline platform in this below picture, we took it to get across the valley quickly, it was kind of a rush. and only 35 RMB (4.50 USD!)
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For more, see Flickr.

Sunday, November 05, 2006

Saikung Seafoods





October 18th, Dinner in Saikung with the usual suspects. Food was good, and not too expensive. Score!

Wednesday, November 01, 2006

Kuala Lumpur Day 2

(Saturday, October 14th)

petronas towers fro the groundWe kicked the day off a little late, but we headed to the Petronas towers in the morning to get our skybridge tickets. There were a lot of people there. We were booked for 1:50. We decided we needed to do things to pass the time:
  • Batu Caves
  • KL Tower
  • Lunch


The caves were located outside of KL, and they were originally the sites of the local hindu temple. There were several indians there, as well as necessities for their community (showers, bathrooms, etc). The shrine exists at the top of several steps, as seen in the pictures, and contained bats and monkeys living in harmony. The critters were quite friendly and very active. The walk up was also somewhat tiring... but it could've been a lot worse.

monkey2the walk up to the batu cavesThe monkeys were friendly... but not very smart. For more (and video) check my xanga.

moving on.



KL Tower:
Slightly taller in absolute terms than the petronas due to the fact that it is situated on a hill, KL tower is actually a communication tower. Sadly, due to the burning of the day, all we could really see was haze...

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Then.. we went to lunch. back to the petronas.



Petronas Towers
The petronas towers have a skybridge linking them that is available to tourists as a little city skyline diversion. (See the abovemost picture) It does however, lead to some nice pictures of the city.
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We went to Petrosains... a muesuem, as well. It reminded me of OMSI. Petronas is Malaysia's national petroleum company. Petrol and nat.gas are ridiculously cheap. A full tank of petrol is ~25 ringetts (about 6 USD) and a full tank of nat gas is about 8 ringetts (2 USD)

We grabbed dinner and enjoyed a cultural show, although we arrived somewhat at the tail end (mistake) And went out at night clubbing in Asian heritage row (cynna, the loft KL, etc.). It was pretty slick. It was completely chinese dominated. The girls were prettier than the ones in Hong Kong.


close.