The bike carried us to his home, which has been recently
converted into somewhat of a hotel. Not
a legal hotel by any means, but certainly a place with many lockable rooms,
clean beds, and a bit of shampoo and conditioner in the bathroom. The price was right and after a full day of
travels we were happy to each have our own warm and clean bed. The owner also called a friend to take us to
Dajiuhu in the morning. A passenger van
arrived around 6:30 AM and we were whisked away to another site where more
tourists waited for a ride. The van had
only 5 extra seats, but he managed to squeeze in a 6th person. The people were a mixture from Wuhan and
Beijing. They were busy discussing how
much easier it would have been to have traveled with an agency.
Although we had no intention to travel to the Dragon Rack
geological park, the park was unavoidable if we wanted to visit Dajiuhu. Before entering we purchased two passes to
Dragon, (or peasant) Rack and Dajiuhu National parks. The credit card-esque ticket had a
superimposed image of the famous Sichuan snub-nosed monkeys in front of the geological
park. After admitting us all into the
park, our passenger van was stopped by the police. The driver was known to have carried in
tourists before, but on this day he was fined for not being a licensed tourist
bus and was forced to take us back to where we bought the tickets. Luckily he did not charge us for driving to the
ticket site and he waited in the long line for us to get bus tours with a
licensed company.
On the licensed bus we watched videos on repeat showing
imagines of the park and the playful monkeys.
I kept a lookout for wildlife, but with the thousands of tourists during
the national holiday, the wildlife was limited to a few common birds and many
common insects. After three hours of
travel our first stop was Dajiuhu. We
had one hour to enjoy the national wetland park and to climb up to a lookout
tower and see the many natural lakes of the area. Next we had almost an hour to climb around
the rock structures of Dragon Rack and read about their not-so-obvious
resemblance to various images, such as “girl looking into mirror” or “meeting
gate of the immortals”.
The trip had a few more stopovers in lookout points of
interest. The golden monkey falls was
fairly spectacular. The final stop of
the trip took us to see a few of the famous Sichuan snub-nosed monkeys play
around in cages. Thankfully the cages
had enough space for the monkeys to move and swing, and a guard to keep people
from throwing stuff into their cages.
When we got back we were starved. After finding place to stay for the night we
stopped at the first restaurant we could find.
The tables were full, but a table of University students recognized me
from the bus ride into the town and invited us to sit with them. We shared a feast of several dishes and a hot
pot before pouring ourselves into bed.
Our goal of the morning was to get to Dangyang, the town of a teacher
from the school. She had invited us to
spend the days of the national holiday with her and her former classmates. In order to get there, we would need to first
get back to Yichang. The direct tickets
were sold out for the day so we took a short trip to a town about an hour away
and then found seats in a bus to Yichang.
We arrived in Dangyang before the late afternoon and Lucy picked us up
from the bus station.
Everything about Lucy is lovable. She and her classmates have done well in life
and they enjoy getting together during the break times. In the three days we were there we had a
banquet every day. The children were
just as happy as the adults to have a foreign guest. They were extremely hospitable and invited us
to play/watch/learn mahjong. I proved to
be too much of a slowpoke to keep up with the pros. I’ve never seen marked stones fly around so
quickly.
In addition to the food, fun, and mahjong, we visited a
small village museum, a large man-made dam, (built in 1957 by over 100,000
workers with only mud, stones, and other natural materials), a large Buddhist
temple, and the 4th largest reservoir in this country. A friend of Lucy’s gave us a ride back to
the city for a few days of rest before returning to work. I’m looking forward to starting workweek and
introducing a way to honor a person’s birthday in the Montessori classroom this
Wednesday.
No comments:
Post a Comment