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China

August 12, 2006

Hot Time, Summer in Beijing

Main_6 At long last, my overdue tales from China have arrived! Beijing, to be more specific. Thanks for your patience.

Brendan and I had heard that the Chinese capital was ridiculously expensive, so we tried to find some sort of online bargain ahead of time. Luckily, people are actually using Craigslist in China (come on, rest of world!) and we found a post for a short-term rental situation that seemed promising. So we emailed the guy, he responded to us right away, and we had ourselves a deal.

The guy turned out to be an New Yorker named Tony who rents out a spare bedroom to international travelers in his hutong apartment. In Chinese, "hutong" literally means "alleyway", but people know "the hutong" as an actual series of rambling neighborhoods within the city where thousands of people live. Hutongs have an unmistakable worse-for-the-wear-but-undeniably-charming quality to their layout and architecture, and upon seeing our new pad, B and I knew we were in the right place. And not just because little Max, the former stray street dog, was our new frightfully cute housemate.

After arriving from the train station on our first day (and enjoying the longest, hottest shower of my life), Tony took us on a little hutong tour, pointing out his favorite barber shop, restaurant, market, etc. so we'd at least have some good references for the next week. He works in Beijing teaching English, and over the last couple years has managed to get an impressive grip on the Mandarin Chinese language and culture. We quickly realized that having him as a resource was beyond valuable. For example, as tourists we'd have never known that this neon symbol means "kebab stand".

The hutong reminds me of a big 24/7 block party. It can be hard to differentiate between private dwellings and merchants' shops. People are just straight up chilling out in the street, all day and night. Compared with the majority of Beijing, which is a sprawling cosmopolitan city, it's a true oasis.

Turns out that Tony's favorite neighborhood restaurant serves quite possibly the best Chinese food in the entire world, where you can eat and drink yourself to discomfort for under $5. Seriously. We ate dinner there almost every night.

No trip to China would be complete without a visit to the Great Wall, so one morning B and I were up at the crack of dawn to catch a bus out to the ruins at Simatai. We chose Simatai over over Great Wall destinations that were closer to the city because we'd heard it had less foot traffic and more adventurous climbing. We certainly weren't alone up there, but the stairs were as strenuous as advertised. You want a great workout in an unreal atmosphere? Go climb the Great Wall. I really can't describe how lucky I felt to be there.

Back in Beijing we did some touristy things, like visit Tienaman Square, stroll through Beijing's Forbidden City, and hang out for an afternoon at the old Summer Palace in the northwest part of town. Covering the obvious sights in a new place always feels a little forced to me, although I can now honestly say that I've seen Chairman Mao's eerily glowing embalmed body on display in his mausoleum with my own eyes (free admission, but the lines are fierce and no cameras allowed).

By the way, Chinese people love umbrellas, rain or shine. Not only do umbrellas provide some shade from the unbearable summer sun, but apparently white skin is considered beautiful so avoiding a tan is of the utmost importance. If only I had grown up in China, I wouldn't be the skin cancer candidate I am today from endless summers spent slathered in baby oil.

The best parts of Beijing are off the tourist map, guaranteed.

Tony took us to a foot massage parlor where 80 indulgent minutes of reflexology set us back about $10.

We browsed through a enormously gigantic market stuffed with goods that gave new meaning to the term "Made in China", where Brendan found himself a new hat, and I picked up some cute shoes ($3 and $4, respectively).

I attempted to get a trim at a trendy salon and had to actually get up out of the chair after the trendy stylist cut off five unsolicited inches of my hair and appeared to have no intention of stopping there (I know he was going for a trendy look, but the language barrier was just too much).

And naturally, we made friends with the local drinkers at the neighborhood kebab stand and imbibed ourselves silly on more than one occasion. Alcohol: the universal language. The aforementioned local drinkers even convinced me to eat mutton off a stick, followed by chicken tendon. Brendan ate sheep's testicles (but you didn't hear that from me).

Like I said in a previous post, if B and I would have known how much fun Beijing was going to be, we'd have planned for two weeks instead of just one. Thanks for being a great host, Tony, and I promise not to drink twelve vodka/Red Bulls next time.

Exactly a week after arriving in Beijing, Brendan and I loaded up the backpacks, dragged ourselves to the airport, and boarded a plane in route to Saigon, Vietnam, by way of Guangzhou. Obviously we made it, and we'll be here until 7:30 tomorrow morning when we push northeast toward Da Lat. I'll catch you up on the insanity that is Vietnam in the next post. Seriously. This place is a madhouse.

Toodles!
-sarah

August 01, 2006

Planes, Trains, and... Well, Just Trains

Main_5 In my previous post, I explained the history behind my love for trains, and how absoulutely giddy I was to board a six-day railway journey on the Trans-Siberian Express.

I was young and naive at the time. Let us begin.

Brendan and I had hoped to buy ourselves a two-person sleeping compartment in first-class for a little comfort and privacy. But since you can't buy train tickets until 45 days before departure and tour group companies get first dibs, all the first-class compartments were sold out and we were stuck in second-class, which only offers four-person compartments. Not that I'm anti-social or anything, but you can imagine how long six days would have been with the wrong bedfellows. So we bought all four beds to have the compartment to ourselves. It actually ended up being about $100 more than two beds in first-class, but better safe than sorry, and we actually gained a bit more elbow room.

We boarded our train Tuesday evening in Moscow, found our compartment, got settled, and crashed. Sleeping was a cinch.. nothing like being gently rocked to sleep by rail!

Wednesday morning came soon enough, and I went looking for the shower. We had located toilet/sink water closets on either side of our carriage, but couldn't figure out where people went to clean themselves. When I asked one of the conductors, he shrugged at me like I was nuts.

Wait, so no showers?

No showers on a six-day train?

Seriously, no showers?

Um...

What?

I strive to be as low-maintenance as possible during my everyday life, and obviously I've had to make some pretty big concessions on this trip already. But I've never even camped for more than a day or two at a time without at least a jump in the river. How does one not shower for six days? How does one survive?

One survives just fine, it turns out. A Russian cup-o-soup and a large, warm Chinese beer can do wonders for a broken heart. You heard it here, folks.

Brendan and I did a lot of reading for the first few days. I'd elaborate if I could, but that's truly all we did. Our senses were a little fried after three major cities in a row, so it was a relief to be forced to relax and admire the Siberian countryside through the window (gorgeous!). Once in a while we'd reach a stop and everyone would get off the train for a ten-minute leg stretch and to load up on goodies. Some stops had better goodies than others, but thankfully no shortage of Russian cup-o-soup (our chopsticks were tragically lost early on).

At some point, the Trans-Siberian Express splits into two routes. Travelers can either keep going due east until they reach the eastern edge of Siberia, or veer to the southeast toward China via Mongolia. The latter is actually called the Trans-Mongolian Express, and that's what we chose.

On the fourth day (Friday), we crossed the border into Mongolia. The huge plus was a new Mongolian-themed dining car (with a sweet tiki bar and free vodka shots!). The huge minus was the border crossing experience itself, which meant we were stopped and quarantined in our bunks for about five hours. You'd think a few more large, warm Chinese beers would help dull the boredom, right? So did we. But here's the problem. When the train is at a station- any station- the bathrooms are locked to keep passengers from flushing their business onto the tracks. Obviously we hadn't really thought that one through. It was painful.

Mongolia must be the only country where a majority of its residents still live in tents (or yurts, as they're referred to these days). We spotted a few guys on horseback galloping alongside the train. It's like the Wild West in the middle of the Gobi Desert.

By the fifth day (Saturday), we felt like we had quite a bit more ground to cover based on our train schedule. When I asked one of the conductors what time we were due to arrive in Beijing on Sunday afternoon, he shrugged at me like I was nuts.

We arrive in Beijing on Monday, dummy.

Oh.

Seven days without a shower?

Um...

I locked myself in the bathroom and washed my hair in the sink in protest. The Korean lady waiting for the toilet was not amused.

On the sixth day (Sunday), we crossed the border into China. The experience was a lot like Mongolia's with an added bonus: since Chinese train tracks are a different size than Russian/Mongolian train tracks, each train carriage must be jacked up about ten feet into the air while a band of Chinese mechanics replaces every single set of wheels before the journey can continue. It's a holdover from the days where either China or Russia didn't want the other country invading them via railway. I forget which country. I forget a lot of things these days.

Anyway, that whole process took about eight hours. The bathrooms were locked. To pass the time I picked a fight with B, who wanted none of it and passed out on Tylenol PM instead.

On the seventh and final day (Monday), we actually got our first glimpse of the Great Wall under a blanket of fog. That incredible view was like getting a Christmas bonus after a grueling fourth quarter. Job well done, Morans. Welcome to China.

So... we made it to Beijing! It's been a little over 24 hours and I'm already in love with the restaurant down the street.

Until next time, I remain,
Sarah "I Survived the Trans-Siberian Express and All You Got Was This Lousy Story" Moran