Welcome...



Welcome on this brand-new blog where you'll be able to share my thrilling Asian adventures!

Amongst other things, you'll find an overview of the preparation of my trip as well as a carnet de voyage which I will populate in Cybercoffees encountered on my trip...

Bises
Laurent

Chine :: 05/08/05 - 26/08/05

Samedi 6 août 2005

Here I go, the Chinese border town of Hekou is just a few kilometers away from my hotel and I'll be in China in no time.

First frustration in the morning: I paid the restaurant next door 17USD for a bus reservation amd when they brought back the ticket, I realised that the real price was just 90RMB (Chinese Yuan Renmibi) ie around 11-12 USD. I don't mind people taking some margin on this kind of service but 5USD for a bloody ticket is too F***ing much! Since they would not refund me anything and keep pretending that they had really paid 17USD for the ticket, I leave Lao Cai and Vietnam rather pissed off.

Also, I had to take the 10.50am bus instead of the 9.30am one and this is gonna make me arrive very late to my meeting in Kunming! Moreover to the late start, the 9.30am is a brand new fast bus while the one I got probably dates back to the Ming period.

I eventually reach Kunming at midnight but my taxi from the bus station drops me in the wrong place and I have to walk 30 minutes until I reach The Hump. I was supposed to meet Djou & Franny there at around 6pm (ok, I was a bit late) but they're not there and  they have not checked in... No email either in my inbox, and nobody on MSN Messenger!

Shit, I was quite looking forward to a bit of partying with them tonight but it seems like it's not gonna happen today yet :(

Par Laurent
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Lundi 8 août 2005

Le mystere Djou & Franny commence a s'eclaircir un peu. Ils m'avaient bien envoye un email le 06 mais sur une adresse qui est redirigee sur ma boite principale. Du coup, je ne l'ai recu que 15 heures plus tard...



Les deux loulous se sont en fait retrouves bloques a Shangai pour cause de typhon ! Ils sont donc arrives avec environ 36h de retard sur Kunming. On a meme failli laisser tomber notre visite du Yunnan pour se rabattre sur Guilin plus tot que prevu. Bref, on s'est enfin retrouves a The Hump pour une soiree moins folle que prevue dans la mesure ou tout le monde etait un peu creve ou malade. Pour ma part, je me coltine une tourista carabinee depuis hier soir et je me shoote du coup au Thyorfan et au Lacteol Fort.

J'avoue que j'apprehende un peu le trajet en bus pour Lijiang ce soir, surtout quand on voit la tronche de la plupart des chiottes en Chine !

Sinon, les premieres impressions sur la Chine sont assez cools. Le paysage entre Hekou et Kunming etait hyper beau, malgre les Chinois qui passent leur temps a se racler la gorge et a cracher par terre (oui oui dans le bus !).

Kunming est une ville geniale avec de grandes avenues bien cleans et de grands building, le tout melange avec des petites rues super roots ou la partie musulmane de la population vend des brochettes et du fromage de chevre grille.


Par Laurent
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Mardi 9 août 2005

As we are a bit rushed in terms of planning following the Typhoon in Shangai which delayed Djou & Franny's arrival in Kunming, we now have to visit Yunnan the express way.

As a matter of fact, having taken the nightbus from Kunming to Lijiang, we arrived today in Dali by the day bus after having spent 24 hours in Lijiang! It's a shame considering the fact that the region is amazing, even though the weather is awful (it's basically been pouring rain for the whole day...). Dali also is gonna be very quickly done since we are flying tomorrow from Xiaguan's airport (close-by) to Guangzhou (aka Canton) so as to be in Hong-Kong the day after tomorrow.

Healthwise, we've all been better: my tourista keeps going (a bit diminished though), Djou has a kind of flu and Franny starts not too feel very well either... Hopefully, we should all be fit for HK!














 
Par Laurent
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Mardi 16 août 2005

Apres notre petit tour express dans le Yunnan, nous nous sommes donc diriges en avion vers Guangzhou depuis Dali. C'est pas qu'on avait vraiment envie de passer sur Canton (c'est le nom occidental de Guangzhou) mais en gros c'etait plus simple que d'aller direct sur Hong Kong.

Au passage, je pense qu'il faut prendre un vol interieur chinois au moins une fois dans sa vie, ne serait-ce que pour le bordel ensuivant l'arrivee de l'avion au terminal de l'aeroport. Il s'agit la d'un magnifique exemple de manifestation de l'individualisme a la chinoise qui consiste a essayer de sortir le plus vite possible de l'appareil en poussant le maximum de gens !

Sur la route, l'urbanisme fait assez peur. Des immeubles de logement informes succedent aux usines et aux echangeurs autoroutiers. C'est pas joli-joli malgre les millions de bananiers qui s'intercalent dans tout ca. L'arrivee a HK produit le choc culturel assez previsible. On passe de l'anarchie chinoise a une societe policee de partout ou le moindre megot par terre peut vous valoir 5000 HK$ d'amende (soit environ 500 euros!).

La ville est mega impressionnante, toute en hauteur avec des gratte-ciels a n'en plus finir, le tout au milieu d'une jungle assez incroyable. On check-in dans notre appart-hotel hyper bien place et pas trop trop cher a Causeway Bay (merci le Lonely Planet !) apres un Mac Do des familles.

Bref, pas grand chose a faire sur Canton, surtout quand on y est que pour quelques heures. Pour ne pas etre en restesur Djou et moi-meme, Franny commence a se sentir patraque egalement et suppute l'arrivee imminente d'une ressucee de son angine blanche choppee a Montreal... On se leve assez tard le lendemain pour se diriger cash sur Hong-Kong !

Comme on etait un peu eclates par le voyage, on s'est fait une petite sieste rapidos avant de sortir diner sur Kowloon apres une traversee de la baie en ferry. La vue depuis le terminal de ferry sur Kowloon est impressionnante, promis je mettrai des photos un jour sur le blog !

Le lendemain, direction Stanley via Repulse Bay en bus. Comme on est des gros touristes, on prend le trajet long qui serpente a travers la montagne et pas le chemin facile par le Aberdeen tunnel (non vous n'etes pas en Ecosse, il fait bien trop chaud !). Depuis la-haut, on distingue un peu la geographie de Hong-Kong : a base de grands immeubles autour de la baie et de jungle ultra-dense ailleurs. C'est un mix assez incroyable... Apres un petit bol de noodle soup a Stanley, on repars en direction de l'appart se poser un peu pour mieux sortir et retrouver Didier un pote de Franny de l'epoque ou il etait au lycee francais a HK. On sort dans un endroit pas mal qui s'appele le Drop dans Lan Kwai Fong, le quartier des bars et des clubs sur l'ile meme. Franny commence a avoir de la fievre assez rapidement donc on ne  se couche pas trop trop tard...

Vous m'excuserez mais ma memoire commence a flancher legerement, j'ai l'impression que les faits ici ne vont pas etre retranscrits tres fidelement en terme de temporalite.
 
Bref, dimanche Djou et moi avons motive Franny pour aller au temple des 10.000 bouddhas qui en contient plutot 12.800 et qui se trouve dans les nouveaux territoires. On a pas manque avant ca de se caler le ventre avec une orgie de Dim Sum qui sont en fait plein de petits plats cuits a la vapeur que les Cantonais mangent regulierement. Le soir, on retrouve Rudy et Yvan deux autres potes de Franny avant de sortir dans les endroits les plus selects de HK (notamment le Dragon-I que je vous recommande chaudemment si vous voulez vous faire une soiree un peu posee et hyper classe...).



 
Le reveil est dur le lendemain mais il faut quand meme se bouger car Djou et moi devons aller sur Yangshuo alors que Franny doit prendre l'avion pour Shangai avant de repartir de la-bas pour Paris...
Hong-Kong fut court mais intense, j'y retournerai bien en stage l'an prochain tiens...
Par Laurent
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Dimanche 21 août 2005
Well, I know my blog has not been very up-to-date lately but Djou & I have been quite busy.

So the subject of this post is Guangzhou (aka Canton)... What to say? Probably, the best summary would be: should you ever visit China, just try to avoid Guangzhou!

The only thing quite nice over there is Shamian Island which used to be the area reserved for trading with foreigners (this is where the opium wars started basically). Nowadays, this island is devoted to luxury hotels and nice bars & restaurants. You can also spot many western couples with chinese babies who are obliged by law to stay in Guangzhou for a month if they want to adopt.



Apart from that, Guangzhou represents to us everything we don't like about China: it's overcrowded, polluted, dirty, noisy, ugly, dusty, people are soooooo misbehaved. Can you imagine what we felt, coming from Hong-Kong, when we had to wait half a day there in order to wait for our bus to Yangshuo? Fortunately, McDonalds was there for us! (Thank God...)

We depressed there for a couple of hours before heading towards a park close-by and the famous Guangzhou market where you're supposed to be able to spot pretty much every living animal for sale. Actually, the only part we saw of the market was the fish one, and it was quite interesting.

However, we were delighted to leave this awful city for marvellous Yangshuo!
 
Par Laurent
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Dimanche 21 août 2005
Malgre les 12h de bus de nuit (pas de couchettes !) suivant notre journee pourrie a Guangzhou, rien ne peut entamer la beaute de Yangshuo et de ses environs. Bon OK, on a quand meme moule toute la matinee dans notre hotel avant de sortir...

Le paysage alentour est tout simplement magnifique et n'est pas sans rappeler la baie d'Halong avec des centaines de pics karstiques recouverts de vegetation. Et en plus, l'ambiance la-bas est geniale (poseeeeeeee comme dirait un certain Lo...zo), il ya des bars trop sympas partout avec de la super bonne bouffe (rhaaaaa le canard aux patates de Lisa's Cafe !!) et sans les millions de touristes chinois de Lijiang.

Apres un super bon dejeuner, on part pour un boat trip sur la riviere Li qui serpente au milieu des pics karstiques. Le paysage est assez genial meme si on se fait agresser par des mamies qui veulent nous vendre des cailloux tout pourris... Elles ne comprennent meme pas le bu yao (j'en veux pas !) les bougresses, ou plutot elles font semblant de pas comprendre.

Pour ne rien gacher, on rencontre (encore !) Christine, ma copine americaine du Vietnam, dans la rue, et qui voyage actuellement avec Carole, une francaise qui baroude en Chine depuis quelques temps.

Le lendemain, nous partons Djou et moi pour une excursion a bicyclette en compagnie de Rose (Qing en Chinois) qui nous guide pour la journee. Le highlight du tour etant l'ascension du pic de la Lune depuis lequel on a une vue d'enfer sur les alentours. Vous me direz des nouvelles des photos...

On retrouve Christine et Carole pour la soiree durant laquelle nous rencontrons Fingl (Pringles pour les intimes), une NeoZ qui voyage seule dans la region. Au passage, on l'a rencontree dans un bar sur le toit d'une maison de Yangshuo et depuis lequel on a une vue canon sur tout le village et les pics alentours. L'endroit s'appelle Monkey Jane's, n'hesitez pas a y passer si vous trainez dans les environs (on y accede depuis la rue de l'Ouest, Xi Jie).

Autour d'une pijiu (ie binouse en Chinois), on decide de partir tous ensemble le lendemain voir les rizieres en terrasse autour de Longsheng qui se trouve a environ 3h30 en bus de Yangshuo. Le nom complet de l'endroit est: les rizieres en terrasses de la colonne vertebrale du dragon (ca rend beaucoup mieux en Chinois...et meme en Anglais: Dragon Backbone Rice Terraced Fields).

Longsheng est magnifique egalement et les 2h de marche sur places sont geniales. Toutefois, Christine et moi-meme remettons en question les 7h de bus (enfin, 7h de sommeil pour Djou la marmotte et 7h de Chinois pour Laurent l'autiste Assimil') pour se rendre la-bas dans la mesure ou ca ressemble pas mal a Sapa dans le Nord du Vietnam et ou nous avons tous les deux ete...

De retour a Yangshuo, on se fait une super soiree au bar 98 a Yangshuo tous ensemble. Et vive la pijiu de 650mL a 5 kuai (soit 0.5 euros) ! Le lendemain, on est tous triste de repartir : nous a Beijing, Christine a Xi'An (bon courage pour les 30h de train en assis dur...) et Carole a Chengdu.


















 
Par Laurent
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Lundi 29 août 2005
Finally, here we are in Beijing with Djou for the final part of my trip.

On the 20th, we caught a China Airlines flight from Guilin near Yangshuo towards Beijing. Arriving at around 1am in town, only one place agreed to rent us a room that night... I strongly discourage you to go to this same hostel having slept one night there. It is located on the fourth basement level under a big mall  10 minutes East of Tian An Men square and it is definitely not nice staying there! Although relatively cheap for Beijing (120 kuais a night), the room we got was just big enough for our two single beds and we struggled to fit our luggage in as well... Moreover, it was humid, dark and the shared bathrooms were disgusting.

So we decided to move somewhere else first thing the next morning which did not prove very easy since everything appeared to be fully booked for the next days. We eventually found a 260 kuais a night double room at the Far East International Youth Hostel which turned out to be awesome! If you are on a tight budget, the 60 kuais dorm beds are also apparently very nice. The location of the hostel itself is great, in a hutong (ie typical small street in Beijing) 15 minutes walk South-West of Tian An Men.

The rest of our first day in Beijing was then spent strolling from the South of Tian An Men square to the North of the Forbidden City. We also climbed the hill of Jingshan Gongyuan to enjoy the view over the Forbidden City before stopping for a cocktail in a v nice bar just off Beihai Park. After a Beijing-style roasted duck in the Chaoyang area, we headed towards Sanlitun Jie which holds a strip of bars but we did not feel really at ease there in the middle of people proposing us Ladies' Bars and other bad boy stuff... As a matter of fact, the Beihai area is a lot more nice for bar-hopping from our perspective.

Looking forward to an early visit of the Forbidden City, so as to avoid the crowd of tourists, we finally woke up quite late and got there at around 11am (!), when everyone in Beijing seems to be in there! I guess the experience would be a lot different being alone but amongst thousands of chinese tourists it's not the nicest place to visit in Beijing. Basically, you have to fight your way through if you want to get a glimpse of the thrones in the different imperial pavillions. The way out was a lot more enjoyable since we took the small alleys off the major attractions. One good point though, we managed to get the student entrance price which is 20 kuais against 60 for the normal price!

After a quick Mongolian hotpot in our hutong, we unleashed the shopping spirit at the Pearl Market near Temple of Heaven Park. Djou did not resist the appeal of doing the Vuitton joke we had planned for months already: when a girl at a stall jumped at us saying "You want Louis Vuitton bags?", he flashed his Louis Vuitton card (where he had been working) to the girl saying: "Selling counterfeit stuff is strictly forbidden!". It was quite funny to see how pannicked she got... For the evening we decided to try another restaurant suggested by the Lonely Planet but decided it would be our last one since it turned out to be quite expensive and not so interesting food-wise. After another quick drink on Beihai, we headed back home to find Godefroit we had met in Kunming sipping Tsingtaos in front of our hostel. We ended up drinking with him and some other people for quite a while and went to bed at around 3.30am...

Not surprisingly, we woke up quite late the next morning and after some prep-up time took the tube and a bus to the Summer Palace in the North-West where the Chinese emperors used to settle down during the summer season. Even though it is quite crowded, as soon as you climb up the hill you can find some peace and really enjoy this wonderful park and its big Kunming Lake. By the way, should you want to rent a boat there, take an electric motored one and not the pedal boat... Same price but a lot more comfort and a lot less hassle! (For some reason, our pedal boat appeared to be the slowest on the lake. It must have been broken somehow...)
For dinner, we had a dumplings feast  in a small restaurant in our hutong which cost us something like 3 euros for two, drinks included! I love China.

And the next day was Great Wall day! Having signed up for transportation with our hostel towards the Jinshanling and Simatai site, we woke up at 5.45am and got on a 3 hours ride. It was definitely worth it: the 10km-5 hours walk form Jinshanling to Simatai was just great and we were the only group of tourists walking there that day. Even the weather was awesome! However, since something has to go wrong I had left my camera at the hotel and Djou's battery was dead so that we managed to get only 3 pictures of the Great Wall... That gives us a reason to come back there later!
Back in Beijing, another dumplings feast in an even cheaper place where we also enjoyed some marvelous roasted aubergines!

There it came, our last day in Beijing, which also meant we had to spend our last kuais and do some shopping indeed! After a quick hop at Pearl Market again and a short stroll in Temple of Heaven Park, we stormed Silk Street Market which actually is a building since the original Silk Street was razed by the Chinese authorities. (This is were Dominique de Villepin had looked for counterfeit French brands last Spring). Djou and I had had enough time at this point to perfect our bargainning speech (speaking Chinese a bit doesn't harm) so that we managed to get decent prices for everything we bought there that day. According to our story, we are two students living in Shanghai and returning there soon so that we know the real prices... I think we now miss not bargainning every single thing back in France.

Last dinner in Beijing = last dumplings orgy!! 15 kuais for 40 dumplings is definitely too cheap if you are running a diet... Also, last 2 kuais Tsingtao bottles, this is so sad!

On the way to the airport, I am quite pleased to realise that I managed to have a minimalistic conversation with my taxi driver, but it's definitely gonna take me some work to really get to talk.




















 
Par Laurent
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