Monday, October 25, 2004 (Chengdu - China)
A late night makes an early morning that much
more difficult. Back to see the Pandas again was much more enjoyable without the
crowds. Another close encounter but this time without the hoards of screaming
tourists. Getting back to town the cheap way. Having fun getting lost and
finding some real DVD bargains. Another relaxing massage but we're not sure what
happened to my back. A poignant thought for the day.
Day 231 (41). This morning was a real struggle.
Because we were later getting back from Leshan than we had originally
anticipated last night, I didn’t get to sleep until rather late. As it
was, I was unable to finish my daily log and only managed to get through the
rough notes before fully giving way to tiredness and finally nodding off.
I’ve just finished writing up yesterday and am only now starting with
today’s events.
We knew we wanted to go back to
visit the Panda Research Centre to get another chance to visit the Pandas but
without the ball and chain of a group of other people to have to follow and,
hopefully, with better weather and lighting for the photography. We were really
hoping that it would be clear skies when we awoke and, fortunately, it was from
what we could tell through the dawn light. However, even though the sky was
completely devoid of any cloud cover, there was a persistent mist hanging in the
air. Similar to Beijing, its pale and opaque nature meant that it didn’t
really look like pollution but I don’t know what else it could have been.
Hoping that it would lift as morning fully broke, we made the decision to hope
for the best and to go after
all.Even though the guy at the
reception desk last night told us that a taxi to get there was going to be
around ¥50 ($6) to ¥60 ($7,30), we decided it was a worthwhile
trade-off and hailed an already waiting driver right outside of the hotel. The
thirty minute ride to the centre only cost us ¥32 ($3,90) on the meter so
we think the receptionist was actually trying to dissuade us from our evil plan
to deprive the hostel from another ¥70 ($8,50) per person booking.
Ha!
I don’t know if it was because we were slightly later in getting under way
but there did seem to be fewer people in the park than the other day. After
buying our ¥30 ($3,65) entrance tickets each, we went directly to the
building where we had previously been able to meet a Giant Panda bear in person.
Fortune was indeed smiling on us, today, as there was absolutely no other
tourists or tour groups there. After attracting the attention of one of the
handlers and making our intentions known, he whipped out the shoe protectors,
gown and gloves and I exchanged ¥400 ($50) for them. This time, I would get
to hold the Giant Panda cub and took my place on the bench. The handler came
waddling out with the huge juvenile hanging between his arms, slapped him
squarely onto my lap and fed him a slice of apple. It really is like holding a
cuddly bear with the only different being that this is a real one with moving
head and arms. He would grasp my hands and arms with one or more of his paws to
stabilise himself so that he could grab and eat more apple slices. I could feel
his nails curling round my fingers, almost like a baby might grasp your fingers
when you put a finger into its hand. Indeed the overall experience was not too
dissimilar from feeding an infant on your lap with a bottle. The posture is very
much the same and the difficultly in keeping him still and upright is very much
the same too. I remember when I once babysat Yasmin, one of my many nieces, and
had to get up in the night to feed her. Her arms and legs would fly all over the
place as she sat on my one knee with me using one hand to keep her steady and
another to try to keep the bottle into her mouth. That’s exactly how it
felt with the Giant Panda cub this morning. The tendency to anthropomorphise
this cuddly little bundle of joy was so very uncontrollably strong. It is very
hard to believe that after just eighteen to twenty-four months, even the
experienced handlers don’t go into the enclosures or get very near the
bears for fear of being attacked.
You’d hardly believe it.It was
extremely gratifying to get to meet the Giant Panda cub, up close and in person
- particularly so in the absence of the crazy, zoo-like at atmosphere of eighty
or more yelling tourists all gawking at us like the last time. We left the bear
and his handler extremely contented and with the feeling of having been able to
do something very special. With so few Giant Panda bears left, there
aren’t many people that can claim to have actually held one. I certainly
hope and trust that the ¥800 ($100) in donations that we paid over the
course of the two visits will be wisely appropriated and that these endearing
animals will survive the very real threat of extinction in the long
run.We explored the rest of the park
at our leisure this time and we were both able to appreciate everything that
much more fully for it. We got to spend much more time observing the animals,
appreciating and understanding their behaviour patterns better after watching
them for longer. We even started to get to know some of their individual
personalities after a while. None of this is possible when you are with a group
of people and have a finite amount of time to grab whatever pictures you can
before move on with the rest of the group. There were a few tour groups around
and they were very loud as usual. The only upside to this was that we could hear
them a mile off and were able to avoid them like the plague.
We also made it back to the Red Panda pens again and once again indulged
ourselves with another encounter each. The handlers there both recognised me
from leaving my backpack behind last time and were all grins and laughs when we
arrived. Coincidentally, we bumped into the same driver that took us that last
time too. He was walking around with yet another group of half a dozen Western
tourists and he too seemed to get a kick out of seeing us again. We also got to
sit through the English language video presentation as a bonus. Once again, we
completely filled a one Gigabyte memory card and half filled another between the
two digital cameras.After we had
seen all there was to see and fully enjoyed ourselves in the process, we made
our way to the exit and thought about what to do about getting back to town. It
seemed for a while that our options were extremely limited. I had hoped to just
grab another taxi but with no more people arriving at the centre for the day, it
didn’t look like a stay taxi was going to pass by. There was a minibus and
a tout that wanted first ¥50 ($6), quickly haggled down to ¥35
($4,25), but steadfastly refused to entertain any further haggling so I turned
him down, repeatedly I might add, on principle along. We sat there for about ten
minutes before another Western couple emerged from the park and stepped straight
in. We sat and watched them drive off. I wondered if we had just missed our one
and possibly only opportunity to get back to Chengdu just for the sake of a few
pennies. Sandy wondered this too but voiced it out aloud in a somewhat
‘what the hell did you go and do that for’ tone of voice. We sat
there for another ten minutes pondering the enormity of the situation when a
public bus suddenly emerged into view.
We stopped it and I asked the driver if her was going into town. Fortunately, he
was and for just ¥1 ($0,12) each, we stepped in. I basked in my own glow of
warm satisfaction as I waved happily to the minibus tout that stood there
watching her ¥35 fare drive off. She waved and smiled back and I think she
saw the lighter side to it too. After all, there are tourists coming out of
those gates all the time and most will think, as we initially did, that there
are no other options but to get into the minibus and hand over the asking
price.The bus took the smaller roads
and passed through some quaint Chinese villages. Indeed, we got to see a side of
how the locals live that we probably otherwise wouldn’t have. The bus
eventually pulled into what looked like a bus depot but it wasn’t anywhere
that we recognised. In fact, couldn’t even say for certain that we were
even in Chengdu. For some reason this didn’t really bother either of us. I
was quite enjoying the whole experience, in fact. If the worst came to the
worst, we had plenty of money with us and could always try to find a taxi to
take us back to town but for now, we were quite happy to be completely lost and
trying to make our own way around, travelling as the locals do. It’s only
since the last couple of days that I’ve finally felt like I’m
starting to approach understanding China.
Up to this point, I’ve felt like an outsider with a barrier of separation
between myself and the country around me. I’m now starting to feel this
barrier breaking down and am quite enjoying
it.With a little bit of effort, a
positive attitude and a bit of help from a few people we dared to ask for help,
we finally figured out that there needed to take another bus to another location
and then another bus from there to get us to where we wanted to be. Still
carefree, we found the next bus and set off on our continued adventure. Just as
this second bus approached the bus stop we had planned on changing buses again,
we spotted a KFC and thought we’d indulge again. Shameful, I know but we
were both in a good mood and felt like treating ourselves. We had to pass
through a subway tunnel to get to the other side of the main road and to our
surprise, there were dozens of market stalls lining the tunnels. After eating
our fill, we explored this little subterranean shopping paradise and found,
amongst other things, several little outlets selling a wide range of the very
latest DVD release all for around just ¥6 ($0,70) or ¥7 ($0,85) each.
They surely must be rip-offs but at that price, we could hardly pass up the
opportunity and bought ten titles, mostly new releases we’ve not yet seen,
for about half the cost of one DVD back home. We made sure that they were all
region-1 encoded so that we could play them on the laptop and even if we had to
throw them away after viewing, it would still be a bargain. We later tried them
on the laptop and they are perfect reproductions if they are
knocked-off.We made the final leg of
our journey by taxi, as we were by now both tired and simply wanting to get back
and rest for a while. I spent another couple of hours in the nearby Internet
café and fired off another round of updates to the regular groups of
friends and family around the globe. I received an e-mail from someone with a
World Nomads e-mail address asking me if a link that pointed to my blog page was
actually mine. Our traveller’s insurance policy is with World Nomads. It
makes me wonder just who is looking over our shoulder. Perhaps I shouldn’t
have written that last bit about the knocked-off DVDs for fear of the feds
listening in and swooping down on us at the next boarder crossing. Oh well, the
cat’s out of the bag now.
Just a couple of doors away if a small shop with a line of massage tables and a
very cheap pricelist posted. Each time we pass them by on the street, a woman
out front tries to hand us a business card. Getting approached like this is a
daily, nay hourly, occurrence and you cannot but try to ignore them much of the
time. We thought we’d both treat ourselves to a bit of a rub down today,
as this is our last day in Chengdu, so we wandered in and signed up for the full
works. This consisted first of an hour’s worth of foot massage and was
followed by a full body work-over. Towards the end of that second hour, the
masseuse asked if we wanted the additional treatments. By now, I was so relaxed,
I told him to go right ahead. I was face down at that moment and so didn’t
get to see exactly what was going on by all manor of weird instruments were
suddenly brought to bare on my back as he poked and prodded me with treatments
such as cupping, scraping and some other strange things I’ve never heard
of. At one point, he put what felt like lots of sucking devices all over my
back. It was a very strange sensation and felt quite nice but it wasn’t
until we got back to the hostel and I took my T-shirt off that Sandy pointed out
numerous cup sized red welts all over my back. I look like a vampire has had a
field day all over me.I’ll
finish with one last thought for tonight. In the blink of an eye, something
happened today that has affected me more than any one event on this trip so far.
As I was lying on the massage table, I happened to glance over towards the door
and saw the old woman that was handing out business cards to passers by outside
the massage shop, and a Western couple happened to walk past right at that
moment. The old woman stood up and made to hand them a business card but the
couple have obviously been travelling for a while already and pretty much
ignored her as they continued past, almost pushing the old woman out of the way
as they did so. This is not unlike the sort of thing we’ve done countless
times before ourselves. As this very brief scene played our in front of me,
however, I got to see the after effect of this little interaction –
something that I never otherwise get to see. I saw the genuine disappointment on
the face of the old lady as she lost yet another customer. The Western couple
may not even have acknowledged this woman’s existence but I saw the look
in her eye. She watched the passing couple for a brief moment as they continued
to walk on and when it became painfully clear that they were not going to stop
and consider the offer or take the card even, she turned and slowly sat down
again, no doubt thinking that perhaps the next couple to walk by might just take
a card or even decide to come in for a treatment. It was a very sad and
extremely poignant sight. I suddenly felt quite ashamed of myself when I
considered all the people that I may have casually pushed to one side in a
fleeting moment of irritation at being pestered or annoyed once again by someone
simply trying to make a living as I walked along the street. We paid just
¥120 ($15) for a total of four hours or competent and professional
massaging between the two of us this evening. That is an insignificant nothing
to us, indeed we keep saying we should do this more often, yet it may mean a
substantial source of income for this family of practitioners. I find it quite
remarkable to think that these people make a living from people just like me
that may or may not give a second thought to passing them by on the street and
would think nothing of ignoring them or even pushing their outstretched hand to
one side to try to get past. Today, I saw the hope fade in this woman’s
eye as she tried to find another customer to help draw in the income to make
ends meet. I saw the disappointment and anguish in her face when she failed to
do so for what must have been the umpteenth time today. When I walk by and
ignore these people trying to sell me something so many times a day, I
don’t see that hope; I just see another annoying irritation that I try to
pass quickly. This extremely brief moment in time has affected me a lot more
than I care to admit and has given me a lot to think about. They say that
travelling opens and broadens the mind. Perhaps this guilt that I now feel; this
sudden realisation of the wider picture; perhaps this is the start of that mind
broadening process. I have much to think about.
Posted: Mon - October 25, 2004 at 10:59 PM
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Published On: Mar 04, 2005 08:49 PM
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