Posts Tagged: travel


11
Jul 09

Out to the Great Wall one last time

perfect place for a handstand

I decided that before I disappeared off to the south of China for my travels with Siqi, I would make a final visit to the Great Wall and go for another trek from Jinshanling (金山岭) to Simatai (司马台). Conveniently, Ajun, our friend from Hong Kong had not yet been out to the wilder parts of the Great Wall and decided to come along with me and Siqi too.

the three musketeers

Once again, we took the train to Gubeikou (古北口) in Hebei province and stayed at our favourite homestay there where we were warmly welcomed (the food was delicious). We got an early start to a slightly misty day and took a minibus out to Jinshanling where we bought our tickets.

As the day went on, the sun got hotter and hotter and finally burnt through the cloud leaving us with beautiful views along the “spine” that makes up the Great Wall of China. Luckily, there are plenty of locals en-route who had hiked up there during the early hours with big crates full of ice cold refreshments – which you had to barter for. We eventually made it to Simatai but this time did not have enough time to do the full climb up to the top, instead taking the zipwire down to where the cable car is and catching a bus back to Beijing.

middle of nowhere

Despite this being my third visit out to Gubeikou and that particular section of the wall, I’m showing no signs of getting fed up of it – in fact, I’m already looking forward to my next trip! This little excursion is very practical for anybody living in Beijing – it takes three or four hours to get to Gubeikou, there is plenty of time to walk and take photos on the Great Wall and the accommodation is very affordable. Here’s a quick (rough) budget:

  • Train out to Gubeikou – 15 yuan
  • One night’s accommodation with evening meal – 30 yuan
  • Minibus to the great wall – 45 yuan for the bus
  • Jinshanling Great Wall Ticket (no discount) – 50 yuan
  • Drinks on the wall – 5 Yuan for bottled ice tea
  • Simatai Great Wall Ticket – 40 yuan adult, 20 yuan student
  • Zipline – 40 yuan
  • Transport back to Beijing – 20 yuan (no travel card), 11 yuan (travel card), 8 yuan (student travel card)

All in all, for students, you could be looking at paying less than 250 yuan for a weekend away in the chinese countryside!

entertainment for the road
kitchen and water pump
time to eat
toothbrush monster
brain tofu
my favourite cat
still a kid really
monkey boy
scared
stretch
hiding from the sun
bumpy road
time for a rest
not walking any further
holding up the arch
fortified wall
hold on tight
rough road
steep climb up
on a mission
yuanyang window
not going anywhere
very steep
perfect place for a handstand
stop taking pictures dammit
long way down
scared stiff
up above the world so high
what's on the other side
come a long way
arabian ajun
lush greenery
smiley face
two grannies on the wall
weaving through the workers
refurbishing the wall
dandelion clock 1
rocky road on
overgrown section of the wall
before the wall
across to simatai
you've gotta pay to cross
the three musketeers
simatai great wall
ropeway
yippee
middle of nowhere
girls on the ropeway 25
tangled up
boat to the town
simatai

9
Jul 09

Trip to Longqing Gorge (龙庆峡)

Last week me and Siqi hopped on another long distance bus and headed south of Beijing to a beautiful place called Longqing Gorge.

the gorge

From China Vista:

The Longqing Gorge Natural Scenic Area is located 10 kilometers northeast of the county seat of Yanqing. Known as “Lesser Lijiang river outside the Great wall” and “The Small Three gorges of China,” it is one of Beijing’s top 16 tourist sites. Longqing Gorge covers an area of 119 square kilometers. The main scenic spots include the largest dam in Northern China-a concrete dam more than 70 meters high. Here tourists can see waterfalls in summer and icefalls in winter.

Whilst there wasn’t quite enough water about for there to be any waterfalls where the dam is, the gorge itself was beautiful despite the general Chinese tourist tack near the start (such as the whopping great yellow dragon with escalators inside at the entrance). The water is a lovely deep alpine blue colour and there are steep mountains and cliffs on either side of the channel.

big dragon

We took a boat trip upstream and were dropped off at the foot of a mountain which we climbed up to get a brilliant birds eye view down on the gorge. Unfortunately we were a bit pushed for time as we had to make sure we didn’t miss the bus – otherwise it would have been nice to hire a rowing boat for an hour or two and venture further upstream (maybe go for a swim too). You can also do bungee jumping here and or go for a ride on a cable car – but it’s expensive and you actually get a better view (and fewer annoying tour groups) from walking up the other mountain yourself!

If you’re in Beijing and are looking to get out to the surrounding countryside for a breath of fresh air, Longqing Gorge is certainly somewhere worth considering.

way up
gorge entrance
by the water
dragon escalator
big dragon
me by the dam
dragons mouth
tunnel
feed the fishies
cablecar
on the boat
siqi sunbathing
cruising along
fine day
aerial circus
by the waters edge
overlooking the gorge
hurry up
pavillion with a view
the gorge
siqi at the top
deep gorge
back to base
chilling out
waiting for the shuttle