Thursday, 31 May 2012

Tai Shan


In April I actually had 2 visitors, though you’d never guess now that it’s June…

My second was Eleri Dawson, intrepid explorer and fearless mountaineer, ready and raring to tackle China head on.  Little did she know that she would be facing her greatest challenges yet:
Climbing 7000 steps up China’s holiest mountain…

Eating anything that looked remotely strange or interesting…

And helping me get a cone off my foot.

The first few days that Els was here I unfortunately had to take a few mid-term exams, but that didn’t stop us from seeing the sights.
Campus.

Zhongshan Lu.

The running track.

Anyone seen any views from Nan Putuo yet?

On Saturday morning, after wisely replacing sleep with tequila, we managed to catch our flight to Jinan and then jumped straight on a bus to Tai Shan.  The city is called Tai’an but this caused train station confusion later on so we’ll just stick with the mountain name.  At Tai Shan (which you couldn’t really see for the mist), we found our hostel in a little courtyard off the main pedestrian street.

Els made us visit the Dai Temple.
Then we got an early night before our big climb.

We decided to walk the entire route from the centre of the city, following in the steps of all the old emperors.  It was a little hard to know when the steps started but after a while it didn’t matter – they just kept on going.

And going.

And going.
(Apologies for the head tilt but my laptop refuses to blog these days and Nacho´s computer, Nachete, won´t let me rotate any photos…)

There were lots of little temples to see so it was all very culturally interesting, but after the first few thousands steps I just wanted the culture to go away.

The most famous stretch of the climb was impressively daunting.

And that wasn’t even the top.

After hours of painful climbing and even more painful posing for photos every other step, we finally reached the summit.


I set about finding the area where you could rent a tent that was supposed to exist and of course didn’t.  Luckily I happened to ask a guy about tent renting who did, in fact, rent tents.  After wandering around a bit in the direction that he pointed us, futilely searching for our tent, a guy turned up with a tent, stuck it on some rocks and that was that.  We were very excited to have made it to the top, rented a tent and sourced an ideal spot for watching the sunrise in the morning.

Then the guy came back, told us there was dangerous mist coming down, and we ended up moving to the nastiest hotel the mountain could offer.

I slept in all my clothes and lined the bed with my coats.  I don’t think either of us slept, for fear of being in some way contaminated by the room.
But it was all worth it in the morning when the mist lifted just enough for a beautiful sunrise.

We decided to descend by the ‘Donkey Trail’ route, which was amazing – in contrast to the thousands of people swarming round us on the ascent there was literally nobody on the whole path until we got near to the bottom.  It took us half the time (which was fortunate, since we managed to bring no water), had beautiful scenery and there were little waterfalls along the way.

We caught 2 buses back to the centre, grabbed breakfast and then decided to make our way back to Jinan.  We had all day, so instead of getting one bus direct to the airport we…took a bus to the wrong train station, took another bus to the right train station, took a super speedy train to Jinan (wrong train station), took another bus to the other Jinan train station, faffed around at the train station for an hour or so, took another bus to some kind of junction under a bridge in the middle of nowhere, asked a local about buses to the airport, had the whole community of Chinese people (living under the bridge) in uproar, were finally directed to the bus stop, and took a final bus through the Jinan countryside to the airport!  Or thereabouts – we had to walk a bit.

We were utterly exhausted from all the climbing, descending and bus riding and were a little concerned that our flight back to Xiamen might be delayed, since the one prior to ours was.  But instead of a delay we received a free upgrade to Business class and flew home in style!  Here we are, very happy about this.  


And feeling sorry for the previous Xiamen flight that still hadn’t left.  But not that sorry, because we were in Business class.

We had a few days together back in Xiamen (during which time we visited Gulangyu, experienced a flash thunderstorm and Eleri had her first foot massage!) before Els had to fly home.  I was sad to see her go, after all our adventures.  The weird and wonderful foods of China were sad to see her go as well.  But maybe her inevitable cravings for mantou and jidan, and the red parcel nut biscuits, will entice her to return; after all, legend has it that whoever climbs Tai Shan will live to be 100, and there are plenty more steps in China...