Showing posts with label Lanzhou. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lanzhou. Show all posts

Thursday, 21 November 2024

Silk Road - Lanzhou

Since Lanzhou is the start off point of our Silk Road tour, the first day is an obligatory tour of the city.  The most important thing on the itinerary is a guided tour of the Gansu Provincial Museum which houses artefacts from across the centuries and gave us a good introduction to the historical background of the Silk Road.  We were then taken to lunch at a specialty Lanzhou noodle place where we were treated to a live demonstration of how the noodles were made.  The best treat was the lamb rack - it was so good we actually asked for a second helping!  

After lunch, we were given complimentary foot massages at a special foot massage parlour.  Foot massage is an important health treatment in Chinese medicine as it frees up the energy flow to the different organs in the body.  It certainly felt great and relaxing.  I chatted with the massager and she even gave me permission to take a photo of her. These ladies work long hours into the small hours because apparently customers would come in at the end of a long day after business engagements.  

The Zhongshan Bridge in Lanzhou is the first permanent bridge built over the Yellow River in Lanzhou.  The steel truss bridge originally named "First Bridge" was renamed Zhonghsan in honour Dr. Sun Yat-sen.  There were lots of tourists and locals on the bridge and in the adjacent gardens.  A great place for people watching - I didn't expect to be able to do street photography in Lanzhou!  

There are many water wheels along the Yellow River in Lanzhou and we stopped at the water wheel garden to see two of these wheels and also watched a demonstration of how the sheepskin is inflated for the rafts which we rode on the day before in the Stone Forest.  Then it's on to dinner with another 10 course meal.  This will be the pattern for the next 12 days - our meals always include fish, different meats, soup and a variety of vegetables and of course dessert.  Our guide had specified "low fat low salt" to the kitchen at every stop and this was followed to the best of their ability in most cases.  Our guide made a point of letting us try different local beers at every stop.  We got a glimpse of Lanzhou at night on the way back to the hotel to get ready for the long day ahead of us on the road to Zhangye, our next stop.  


The Gansu Provincial Museum with its famous Flying Horse


Flying Horse Sculpture from Eastern Han Dynasty (2nd century AD)

This carved unicorn from Han Dynasty (202BC) is my favourite piece




Silk Road Map in the museum

Many riders have this cover in different materials 



Breakfast street food carts are everywhere

These streetfood carts are towed by motor cycles to their working locations everyday.


Shops selling interesting goods - like safes...

Lanzhou noodles made with different flour for differen purposes












Most delicious lamb rack


At the entrance to the foot massage palace, a statue of Shennong  (Divine Farmer) mythological Chinese ruler who has become a deity in folklore - credited with various inventions including the hoe, plow, the Chinese farmer's almanac, and the use of herbal medicine.




Beautiful riverfront park



Popular place for tourists


Zhongshan Bridge - first permanent bridge across the Yellow River








View of Lanzhou from the bridge




The sculpture representing the Yellow River as the "Mother River"




Double waterwheels in the Waterwheel Garden



Blowing up the sheepskin that is being used to float the rafts on the river as a historical mode of transportation (see previous post on Stone Forest)







A shopping street for cultural goods





Delicious dessert made with edible lily and papaya

On the way back to the hotel we got a glimpse of Lanzhou at night from the river


Tuesday, 19 November 2024

Silk Road - Lanzhou Yellow River Stone Forest

 The Silk Road has been on my agenda for many years but reports from earlier travellers of a long, strenuous journey with not much good food helped to push it off my travel plans until this year when a friend suggested what seemed like a doable tour this September.  Of course things have changed over the years.  We ended up with a remarkably memorable trip, filled with historical contexts, although still strenuous because of long distances but definitely we travelled in comfort with lots of delicious food and exceptional lodgings.   The tradeoff is, many of the places we visited are no longer exotic horse and wagon country but sophisticated big cities filled with highway access ramps and SUVs.  It's a good thing then that it is scenery and not culture that is the focus of this Northern Xinjiang tour.  

The tour started in Lanzhou and not Xian as many Silk Road tours did, but since I've been to Xian twenty odd years ago, I'd rather keep the old memories of this ancient city rather than have them spoilt by new ones of a modern city.  

We arrived a day earlier so we can do a private tour of the Yellow River Stone Forest, a two hour drive from Lanzhou.  The red loess of the Yellow River basin surrounded us wherever we turned.  It certainly reminded me of the American Southwest, the red earth in Sedona and the hoodoos in Bryce Canyon.  From the Visitor Centre, we were taken on electric buses through the 22 hairpin bends of the road that showed us the Stone Forest from different angles on the road.   

In the riverside village of Old Longwan, where we had lunch at a local home, we were able to see the Yellow River and its yellow waters in all its meandering glory.  The ride on the inflated sheepskin raft, which I had dreaded when I first saw it as part of the tour (think - non-swimmer!), turned out to be an amazing experience bringing us ever so closer to the "mother river" - all caution tossed to the wind!  The raft was an ancient form of transportation and it took us closer to the Stone Forest entrance.

We then took a ride on a shuttle bus into the Stone Forest trail.  We got off half way into the canyon so we can experience the "forest".  The big disappointment was we were not able to get a panoramic view of the stone forest itself from a viewing platform that was formerly accessible by cable car, but this was no longer available.  It would be too long and difficult a hike for us and we needed another two hours to get back to Lanzhou.  

Note: There is another "Stone Forest" in China - Shilin in Yunnan Province, these are limestone and therefore completel different.

It took a whole day for us to get to Lanzhou from Hong Kong.  This is the nightview from our  hotel room,


Our first bowl of the famous Lanzhou noodles at breakfast the following morning
 - handmade in-house.  This would be the first of many of course!

On the way to the Stone Forest - a glimpse of the city


One of the first things I noticed - extensive erosion control on the slopes on both sides of the highway.  Loess is one of the softest soil on earth.



This reminded me of the drive from Sedona to Page in Arizona.


Baiyin City as we approached the Stone Forest



Panorama of the Stone Forest National Geological Park, the Visitor Centre and the Old Longwan village




Views near the top of the road




The Yellow River meandering through its basin - you can see one of the hairpin bends on the road


Corn fields just outside the village at the foot of the Stone Forest

The village decorated to welcome visitors



The dining room of the village house where we ate lunch



This is the village store although we didn't see any villagers around


The village waterfront


One of many waterwheels we would see along the Yellow River


The raft we would be sitting on - made of inflated sheepskin

The three of us sat back to back behind the paddler


The raft had to be carried up the steps!  Photo credit:  Steed  陳天騎







Our view from the middle of the river


Couldn't believe my luck, encountering a lifer in the middle of the river - a pair of Eastern spot-billed ducks



Near the entrance of the trail through the Stone Forest


Trail inside the Stone Forest


We were actually walking through a canyon with these huge formations on both sides of the trail




These hoodoos reminded me of the ones in Bryce Canyon in Arizona.  There are many interpretations of the "faces", "figures" and "animals" that the rocks resembled, a lot of mythical beasts and characters - great place for an active imagination!

An evil conjurer with a long-beard...?







An orangutan?


The hoodoo at the top had been named
"Monkey King on his pilgrimage to get the western scriptures"


These panoramas give us a sense of the scale of the land we just visited. It's a remarkable area, no wonder people get emotional about the Yellow River.