Yunnan
China's South West
07.12.2008
After two weeks of “off-the-beaten-track” travel on the Sichuan-Tibet Highway, I was ready to rejoin the tourist track once more. I wanted western food. I wanted beer. I wanted coffee. I wanted to speak English wherever I went. And most of all, I wanted to lay around all day without a care in the world…Yunnan province, China’s tourist Mecca, seemed the perfect place.
I never saw any of the tourist sights in Lijiang, my first stop in Yunnan, except for one, the famous “old town”. Then again, it was kind of hard not to visit that one, as almost every youth hostel and guesthouse in town was located inside it. Originally built more than 600 years ago, the old town stretches for kilometers in every direction, a twisting maze of cobbled streets, goldfish-filled cannels crossed by quaint little bridges, and more tea shops than one could possible desire. It is indeed a beautiful setting for my daily migration from the hotel room to the convenience store, and despite my intention not to see a single tourist sight I spend more than a few hours wandering through these lovely streets.


The only problem with Yunnan is the weather – it is too good! The sky is a brilliant blue each day, with barely a single cloud to be seen, and the afternoons are the perfect temperature for being outside, which is a shame for tired tourists who just want to spend the whole day inside. Every day, the sheer beauty of the weather forces me outside, to wander the old town or even take a bicycle out to one of the outlying villages, which is well worth the effort. The scenery on the way is as good as the weather, with the towering Jade Dragon Snow Mountain lying serenely in the distance, and the endless green fields and blue skies are a sight good enough to make even the weariest traveler glad that he got out of bed.


While in Lijiang, I decide to embark on one last adventure; hiking the length of the nearby Tiger Leaping Gorge, one of China’s most famous treks. I pack my bags with sunscreen, litres of water, and a huge amount of snickers bars, my absolute favourite hiking snack in the world. I have a map, I have a mobile phone and a first aid kit for emergencies. When I arrive at the gorge after a two hour bus trip from Lijiang, I have absolutely everything I might need…except I have forgot my money.
DAMN DAMN DAMN DAMN DAMN! I have a grand total of 110 yuan, but the 50 yuan entrance fee quickly brings that amount down to 60 yuan. One nights accommodation will cost 20 yuan, the bus back to the start of the trek will cost 20 yuan, and the bus back to Lijiang will cost 20 yuan…in short, I have absolutely no money left for the luxuries of the trek, like food and water. There is no ATM in town, not even at the bank for some reason. Margo, a lovely woman who runs a café at the beginning of the trek, suggests I go on anyway, sure that I will find someway to manage it along the way. I know if I go back to Lijiang to get my money, I will never come back here to try it again. It is now or never. I set off along the dusty path, penniless, with the mountains in the distance beckoning me toward them. Soon I forget my troubles, and lose myself completely in the stunning scenery of the gorge...



Of course, Margo knew exactly what would happen. From the moment I let news of my situation slip to another backpacker at one of the stops along the way, the news escapes into the general community, and I am surrounded by people offering to lend me the money. I accept gratefully, and continue my trek on a full stomach thanks to their hospitality.
By this point, I definitely need it, as the trek is far more demanding, and far less touristy, than I had assumed. The high point of the trek is a lofty 2600m altitude, reached by climbing a full vertical kilometre in one day up the winding mountain path, and I am completely exhausted before I am even halfway. By the time I haul my lifeless body to the top though, it is completely worth it; the vista is amazing, from the raging Yangtze river snaking through the canyon some 1000m below, to the soaring, snow-capped mountains reaching impossibly high into the sky above, and the sight of an unbroken wall reaching from so far below to so far above is like nothing I have ever seen before. I stand at Tiger-Leaping Stone at sunset, looking out over the gorge, and all is quiet, except for the puffing of my breath.


After the sun sinks behind the gorge, an even more beautiful sight begins to manifest. With the sun gone and the moon not yet out to play, the night now belongs to the stars, who put on the most dazzling display I have ever seen in my life. At high altitude, with no moon, no clouds, and no pollution, not to mention almost no moisture, it is like nothing I have ever seen before; thousands, millions of stars crammed into every possible piece of sky, shining and shimmering majestically. The galaxies and planets float above, blocked only by the sillhoutte of the sleeping mountains; all of a sudden, I feel very small. The next day the stars disappear, there is just as impressive a sight to wake up to; the strangest clouds I have ever soon are hovering over the mountains. We eat breakfast slowly, as backpackers always do, and by the time we are ready to go the clods have dispersed, leaving the sky perfectly, endlessly blue once more.



As we walk, the terrain around the track is endlessly changing. We pass through a bamboo forest populated by mountain goats, wander through villages, find surreal white-sand cove and climb our way over boulders and obstacles along the way. I had assumed that the trail for Tiger Leaping Gorge, given that it is a big tourist attraction now, would be quite modernised and tame, like the endless stone staircase of Tai Shan, but this is not the case. The trail is nothing more than a tiny dirt track, maintained only by the steady flow of horses along it, with no amenities whatsoever to protect hikers from the elements. The first element that we have problems with is the wind, as we arrive at an exposed edge over the cliff-face. Earlier in the trek, we had heard what sounded like thunder, inexplicable on a clear and sunny day, but now we realized what it was. This was the noise of the colossal gusts of wind sweeping through the canyon, with such force that they create a thunder-clap, and it seems we are now in the middle of one. Holding our sunglasses and hats firmly, we proceed around the exposed bend, at one stage having to take cover under a rock like a platoon of soldiers under fire, before summoning up the courage to make a dash around the corner to safety. Later, we are attacked once again, this time by water, in the form of a colossal waterfall which has decided to include a section of the trail in its path down to the river below. Fortunately we make it to the other side with nothing more than wet shoes, and take the opportunity to fill up our water bottles and cover ourselves in the sweet, cool mineral water flowing past us, a treat on this warm, sunny day.



Eventually we begin to descend, and before we know it we are at the treks end, after two sweaty days of trekking. Funnily enough, it is the end of the trek where the scenery is the most spectacular, as the gorge itself opens up and is visible from the track at last. The scale of the vista is mind-boggling; from the mountain peaks, kilometres high, the rock face drops sharply all the way to the level of us mere mortals, pausing for an instant before delving endlessly further to meet the river below. Against this sheet of unbroken rock, kilometres high, everything else looks tiny, and us backpackers feel like ants lost in a world of giants.



This landscape of giants is a fitting farewell, for this will be my last adventure in China. Soon, I am headed to Kunming, to meet my travelling companion Alex once again, to prepare for a much longer journey.
Alex and I pack our bags, say our goodbyes to the friendly locals here in Kunming, and board a sleeper bus which will take not only to the border of China, but well past it, into neighbouring Laos and all the wonders of Southeast Asia, all in a mere 28 hours. The bed is too short and the movies they play are terrible, but the sheer novelty of having a bed on the highway makes it all worthwhile. On the way, I have plenty of time that night to reminisce about all my wanderings in China...From Beijing in the North to Hong Kong in the South, from Shanghai in the East to Litang in the West; From Mao’s portrait over Tiananmen Square to the window seat of the Victoria Tram, from the glitter of The Bund to the empty plains of the Tibetan Plateau; from Peking Duck to Dim-Sum, from Fried Rice to Grilled Yak; and most importantly, from new friend to new friend, as both travellers and locals showered me with kindness and generosity wherever I went. When I am finished saying my silent thankyou's, I look from the road behind to the road ahead, and wonder just what adventures await me in the future. As we leave the bus, I find a broken stone on the ground, the last marker of the highway, announcing that we are 3038km away from the China’s capital, at the end of the road at last. I cross over the border into Laos, and start again at kilometer zero. One journey finishes, another begins…



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