X-Apparently-To: rtw_travel@yahoo.com via web20105.mail.yahoo.com; 11 Sep 2001 06:11:13 -0700 (PDT) X-Track: 1: 40 Received: from ns.usisp.com (EHLO www.areasecure.com) (216.87.210.251) by mta415.mail.yahoo.com with SMTP; 11 Sep 2001 06:11:13 -0700 (PDT) Received: (from mail@localhost) by www.areasecure.com (8.9.3/8.9.3) id IAA12853 for trip_site85-list; Tue, 11 Sep 2001 08:50:39 -0400 Resent-Date: Tue, 11 Sep 2001 08:50:39 -0400 Resent-Message-Id: <200109111250.IAA12853@www.areasecure.com> X-Authentication-Warning: www.areasecure.com: mail set sender to owner-trip@www.canadiancarlsons.com using -f Received: from softwerks55.softw.com ([216.70.167.99]) by www.areasecure.com (8.9.3/8.9.3) with ESMTP id IAA12830 for ; Tue, 11 Sep 2001 08:50:38 -0400 Received: from vaiolaptop (G2000 [61.166.117.85]) by softwerks55.softw.com with SMTP (Microsoft Exchange Internet Mail Service Version 5.5.2650.21) id R8HZV2FX; Tue, 11 Sep 2001 06:00:53 -0700 Message-ID: <000301c13ac1$99d421c0$0800a8c0@vaiolaptop> Reply-To: "David Carlson" From: "David Carlson" To: Subject: Trip Report #3 - Dali, Yunnan, China Date: Tue, 11 Sep 2001 04:09:53 -0400 MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1" Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit X-Priority: 3 X-MSMail-Priority: Normal X-Mailer: Microsoft Outlook Express 5.50.4807.1700 X-MimeOLE: Produced By Microsoft MimeOLE V5.50.4807.1700 Sender: owner-trip@www.canadiancarlsons.com Precedence: bulk Resent-From: trip@www.canadiancarlsons.com Resent-Cc: recipient list not shown: ; September 9, 2001 Dali, Yunnan, China We've reached China. The kids have had tremendous difficulty with the concept that life could be different from what they know. What do you mean you can't leave the country when you want? What do you mean the Government owns everything and decides what you're going to do.. Communism is a foreign ideology to them and Mark in particular is not very open minded about it. We spent 6 days wandering around Beijing taking in all the sights. well okay some of them. Saw the Forbidden City, Tiananmen Square, Tientan, Beihai Park, Summer Palace, and the Great Wall of China. Had a fabulous Peking (ok Beijing now) duck in Li Qun's Peking Duck Restaurant.. Both getting to the restaurant through the Hutong area (very small narrow streets with tiny houses) and enjoying the food were most memorable. Also spent an evening watching the Beijing acrobats, they were a younger group than the ones we saw at Roy Thompson a year or so ago but just as good. We had a driver for two and a half days, recommended by a couple in Hong Kong, who was very worthwhile. We'll pass on his name if anybody is coming to Beijing. I am writing this after having spent 2 weeks in China. I now realize how different all the places in China are and also how different the people are. In Beijing I felt oppression, perhaps my imagination was running away with me a bit, but there was definitely a different atmosphere in Beijing compared to other parts of China we have now visited. People looked over their shoulder, the military was far more present and people talked, albeit quietly, about how terrible the government was. People seemed dour, very few smiles except when they saw our children. Our children became celebrities in various places, the Forbidden City in particular where they must have had their pictures taken by at least a dozen different people. We were asked by several people whether there was planned parenthood in Jianada (Canada). Our response was of course no, but it made us chuckle as for some of us it takes a while to figure out what causes babies! In China couples are limited to one child with the odd exception for farmers who have a girl and occasionally are granted permission to try for a son who can help with farm work. We spent 3 nights in a horrible hotel by the Train Station in Xi'an. Heather cried herself to sleep on the second night, she was convinced bugs were eating her but after both David and I each got up to shake out her sheets and re-make her bed we didn't have lots of sympathy. However, we did promise the kids we'd try to get at least cleaner accommodation in the future. A travel agent at the airport booked the rooms and we paid not very much - but it was a lot for what we got. Oh well. we're learning . all sorts of things. Apart from the accommodation which we spent as little time in as possible, we enjoyed the Terracotta warriors and Huaqing Chi (natural hot springs created during the Tang dynasty for the emperors and their concubines). The Terracotta warriors really were incredible and the fact that they suspect that there are many more underground warriors guarding the Emperor's tomb is amazing. A well deserved Eighth Wonder of the world. The bronze chariots were also quite incredible. Laundry .. well. getting clean clothes is not as easy as I originally thought it was going to be. I'm starting a book on laundry in different places; Chloe's writing a book on toilets. Having done quite a bit of traveling before children, I know about toilets but they are definitely something of a novelty to the kids... they prefer clean western toilets. I don't dare tell them at this point that we will probably be experiencing a lot worse and that the bushes will be much better. The hotel in Beijing (which was very nice) charged an arm and a leg for laundering service for each individual item. We went down the street to a place recommended by our driver and they wanted 300 Yuen! That's $60 bucks for 2 loads of laundry!! We hadn't run out of clean clothes yet so decided to give laundry a pass and would see whether it was cheaper to wash clothes in Xi'an. On the first day we arrived in Xi'an I asked the tourist office where I could do laundry and she directed us to a room at the back of our hotel. They too wanted to count all the pieces but in the end examined a few things in the bags and then said 200 Yuen. The two bags were now a little larger than when we took them to the place in Beijing. Still thought $40 bucks was a lot, after sign language and some assistance from the doorman who spoke quite good English, I negotiated to have our laundry done for 100 Yuen ($20.) Apparently coin self serve laundry mats don't exist in China. We may be resorting to wearing our underpants inside out! We spent a night in Kunmin in a most enjoyable neighbourhood. Very lively modern city with lots of greenery and little sign of any military. Getting money out of ATM machines has been hit and miss, some Bank of China machines work, others don't. Had to cash travelers cheques in Xi'an as the internet seemed to be down everywhere. The ATM at the main branch of Bank of China in Kunmin accepted my card and doled out the maximum I was allowed, but then promptly rejected David's card. We found a second machine around the corner, and after waiting for a woman to carry out many transactions as she appeared to be limited in the amount she could withdraw each time, David was successful at getting out the maximum of 2000 Yuen. We wanted to stock up on money as we were headed to Dali and didn't know whether we would have access to either ATM's or banks that would cash traveller's cheques. Our one night in Kunmin was just a stopover, we took an express 5 hour bus to Dali first thing the following morning. However we think we'll spend a couple of nights at the same hotel in Kunmin after doing a tour of the countryside and visiting Dali and Lijiang in the province of Yunnan. We have been getting two rooms, side by side, in most places we have stayed. David and I share a twin, David's sure we've done this before, I'm not so sure or have selective memory. However rather than listen to the girls fight at night, D and I have decided that after 20 years there's no surprises, including our sleeping patterns, so we're managing just fine in a twin bed. Truth be known, we're both sleeping very well. We've reached Dali, the kids are doing school work with David in the court yard while I sit upstairs in our room writing this newsletter. In 45 minutes we head out for dinner at a restaurant that serves a traditional Bai dinner (8 course meal) on Sunday nights. We are about to spend our second night in a rather crummy hotel booked by a travel agent while in Xi'an. Luckily we only booked for 2 nights so have scouted out other spots and found a much nicer guest house for 2/3 of the price. It's only 4 months old, spotlessly clean and to top it off D. and I can spend the next 3 nights sleeping in a room all by ourselves! The kids will be in the room next to us which has three beds. We've enjoyed our day wondering around Dali. It's much cooler than anywhere else we've been to on our trip, which is a welcome relief. The Lonely Planet book says Dali is a perfect place to tune out for a while and take a vacation from traveling, we intend to do just that. Need to get the kids through some school work. Our website is fairly up to date with more details on our travels and pictures.. http://www.canadiancarlsons.com Not sure when you will receive this newsletter as we don't have Internet connection in Dali. Love from us all,