Monday 23 April 2007

mum's the word

after leaving hong kong (cœur blessé), a sobered ondrej flew to shanghai to meet his maker. mum and i teamed up for a three week power-tour of china's finest.


i'll try and put more pictures in this entry, and let them do the talking. it's fascinating to see china again for the first time through mum's eyes and realise just how many things i've come to view as completely ordinary - how many things i'd stopped seeing. who would have thought two years ago that my mind would neutralise deep throat spitting, yelling at the top of your voice to the person standing next to you (even pondered the irony in the name of the children's game 'chinese whispers'?) or public toilet floors so covered in piss and shit that you actually have to skate in and out?
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mum had a great taste of the real china on our first day when we stumbled upon the back exit of a chinese tea garden in the shanghai old town. surrounding us, a chinese tour group made up exclusively of old, red-hatted, blue-jacketed, five-foot-nothing village women decided they couldn't be bothered going around the front of the tea house to pay entry, and linked hands to charge through the exit, the guard, and half a dozen other people blocking their way. i rode the wave of oldies through the gates, but mum got caught in a rip and was tossed to the side. one foot wrong in that crowd and you'd be quite literally trampled under mao-slipper.

.from shanghai we popped into a water town ('when you see its beautiful canals and ancient buildings, how can you not but fall into a reverie?' asked one advertisement), before heading to hangzhou to check out the legendary west lake..

. .there are 36 'west lakes' in china, but hangzhou's is the one from which all the others got their name - the original. originality in china?! (i hear you cry in disbelief) nay! well, it's true. a 3km x 3km body of water filled with man-made islands, surrounded by drooping weeping willows on a backdrop of pagoda-topped mountains. despite the hype, the lake was stunning, strolling its shores and islands really was peaceful (i couldn't help but fall into a reverie) and even the surrounding tourist shopping precincts were (and i never thought i'd say this of china): tasteful. at night a series of water jets on the east bank squirted water in arcs over coloured lights to the rhythm of some unknown 80's western music. sounds trashy? wasn't a dry eye in the house.
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.mum and i hauled our ever-fatter arses up to suzhou to bliss out in the UNESCO world heritage listed gardens (reverie) and sample various types of transport and food (in that order). some of the gardens date back more than 1000 years, and make amazing use of light and space, which i've been unable to adequately capture in my photos. mum and i were positively transported to another level.
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and so ended the first leg of mum + bondy's tour de chine. tune in next time to find out why being shot in your sleep is better than an 18-hour train ride across central china. until then: zai jian.
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pics 1 - mum and i on the bund across from the oriental pearl tower in the must-have nothing shot.
2 - a drop of character
3 - relaxing in the park
4 - mum takes a break in (5) a shanghai garden
6 + 7 - zhouzhuang the water town. beware the reverie.
8 - some of the gardens surrounding west lake

9 - what i'm going to look like if i don't curb these obsessive eating habits.
10 - china's version of pisa - the leaning pagoda at tiger hill, suzhou
11 - simple - just join the line and buy a ticket.
12, 15, 16, 17 - gardens in suzhou
13 - ondrej sitting in the 'with whom shall i sit pavilion'.
14 - loved the sign

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Ondro,
as we know a picture is better than thousand words, but there are some exceptions. Pictures from Zhouzhuang should have some words to say how cold there was and that to stay still for a photograph (without shiwering) was quite difficult. Have fun in China
mum

Paul Brockmann said...

OK, well I'm just going to plop this down somewhere in the middle of all the posts I've not been keeping up with (sorry!) since my last few months in Sri Lanka. Man, you've been a busier boy than I have this year! And your photos are SO wonderful: you actually make me a bit homesick for China! (Not sure that's a sentiment I ever expected to feel, but your pics of Xi'an in particular were wonderful -- I saw it more in winter, last December, than when the leaves were green; and you know how the coal smoke and cold make some of those northern Chinese towns so depressing in the winter, I have to admit...) Anyway: great, great posts; I'm going to have to go back and re-read some of them because I'm going diving tomorrow and can't take as much time right now as I'd like, but thanks so much for keeping it all much better up to date than I'm keeping mine right now. And at some point I shall go check out your new French version...where DO you find all the time, mon cheri?

xox

pb