A Silk Road Trip, or I Gobbed in the Gobi, China,1992, by
Philip Spires
In August 1992, myself and my wife, Caroline, arranged a
trip to post-Tiananmen China. It was in the days when the London China
Travel office was on Cambridge Circus, opposite the Palace Theatre on
Charing Cross Road. It took me at least twenty books, a late-night
Japanese television series and several months to plan and arrange the
trip from what was then our base in Balham, south London. In those days,
you could arrange the visit via China Travel and then, as long as the
itinerary was lodged in advance, you could travel absolutely
independently. Everything was pre-paid, but on setting off, we had no
tickets or confirmed reservations apart from our air tickets in and out of
Beijing. As ever, I kept a journal of the trip, which ran to more than
fifty pages. A few years later, I condensed the experience to two sides
of A4, ignoring rules of grammar and syntax, and produced the following
ramble, a perhaps poetic impression of nearly a month of travel.
Ex-London while the Sun dissected Michael Jackson's nose
and praised Boardman's
hooterless gold-medal bicycle. Air China to Beijing, where
taxis cost more than Lonely Planet
predicts. A Chinese character itinerary from one Tim Han of
China Travel whilst fellow
workers drool over televised lithe Afro-American sprinters
at the Olympics. Then to the no-longer
Forbidden City. Piles of local tourists to negotiate.
Four hours of Xinjiang Airlines to Urumqi. Signs in Chinese
and Russian plus Uigur
written in Arab script (a recent innovation). Land lines
across Inner Mongolia. Why and how
so straight? Urumqi multiple-peaked. Piles of coal, scruffy
high rise, snow-capped Bogda Shen
at street-end. Pavement fortune tellers, traders. Food
stalls. Women washing sheeps' stomachs
in a stream, tripe kebabs. Uigur town now Han Chinese,
populated by Shanghai overspill, over
2000 miles from ‘home’. The second long march.
Uigur breakfast. Hot sheep's milk, Chinese tea, flat tomato
bread, sugared tomato and
cucumber, pickled cabbage, thin congee, sheep's milk
butter, two giant sugar lumps. Uigur market. Fruits amid a forest of
hanging lamb. Chinese market. Live vegetables and meats.
Tank over-spilling with energetic eels (unit price).
Self-knotting spaghetti.
Woman losing her gold watch at an illegal 'find the lady'.
Policeman looking on. Tears
when the loss hits home. Renmin Park for noodles and
rocket-fuel chili sauce. Bag slashers
with finger-ring knives on a crowded bus. Care needed.
Car to Turfan. Fertile valleys. Barren mountains.
Occasional snow. Road ploughed.
Kazak yurts. Semi-sunken shade-making rammed-earth Uigur
villages, invisible at a distance
save for chimney smoke. Steep downhill gorge, spectacular
river, rocks, white water and slate-grey
hills. Into Turfan depression, snow-capped distance surrounding grey stone
pit 100 miles
across. 42 degrees at its base, 200 metres below sea level.
Car ahead leaving tracks on molten
road. A hefty gob from the driver irrigates. Gobi means
stones. Plenty here. And then green.
An oasis. A giant mirage?
Turfan. Latticed vines for street-shade. Hanging raisin
grapes. 15 yuan fine for casual
picking. Hotel tea in galvanised buckets. Turkish-style
dancing and music. Genghiz-sacked
rammed-earth cities of Goachang and Jiaohe. Painted tombs
and brick minarets. Flaming
mountains. Karez underground irrigation system. 3000
kilometres of channels. 1500 years old,
gravity-fed from mountains at the depression-edge. Uigur
culture's greatest feat, and in full
working order.
Bus to Daheyan. Two hours over bumpy stones to
depression-edge. Dump of a railway
town. Coal heaps, box buildings, waste land. Two women at
war on station forecourt.
Ramming victim's head onto the ground. Blood. Onlookers.
Inaction. A tense town of resentful
postees.
500 miles to Liuyuan in Gansu. Featureless flat grey shale
stone. Spectacularly unique.
Snow mountains to the north. Utterly empty, save for
smoking coal towns. 40 above in
summer, 30 below in winter. Overnight by train. Dawn
reveals same massive scene, now in
brown.
Arrive Liuyuan. Daheyan writ similar. 120 miles south
across the desert (black at
first!), past remnant ramparts of Han Dynasty Greater-Great
Wall. Camels and dunes of
Taklimakan, world's largest sand desert. Near Dunhuang
oasis blossoms again. Sand and scree
suddenly crop and tree. Feitian Hotel, with complimentary
toiletries labelled Sham Poo and Foam Poo. Lunch. Fourteen dishes. Duck,
foo-yong, cucumber, cabbage, oyster mushroom
chicken, coriander pork, steamed buns, steamed bread, rice,
beef broth and noodles, pork and
green beans, pork and sweet chili, chicken and squash,
plain noodles, water melon. Then to get the essential torch for the caves.
Houses huddled together. Wood stores for winter piled
on top. View across the roofs like a scrap heap. Ground
level claustrophobic stoneware maze.
Cave day. Mogao Buddhist caves - closed from 12 to 2, full
day needed for perhaps
the most stunning sight on earth. 400 'caves' (some
cathedral size) in a sandstone gorge, between 400 AD to 1100 AD. Utterly
dry, always dark, perfectly preserved. Everything
painted. Tang period complex and colourful. A world of
scenes by torchlight. Buddhas
reclining, sitting, standing, posing. Thirty metre seated
figure with thousands of unsmoked
cigarettes and coins on his lap as offerings. Shock of
Qing-renovated cave with Taoist figures. Ghoulish features, contorted, and
a face in the groin. 40 caves seen in the day, archaeologist as
a personal guide. Stunning. Fourteen dishes for dinner.
Desert bus back to Liuyuan. Always a fight for seats. Three
dusty hours. Train to
Lanzhou. 800 miles along Gansu-Qinghai mountainous border.
More black desert, then yellow
earth. Jaiyaguan fort at the limit of the Ming empire.
Overnight by train. Country changed.
Mountain pass, green rolling hills and stepped fields.
Wheat harvest in. Straw dollies like
children at assembly. Houses still of rammed earth. Lanzhou
a thriving industrial city. Thirty
hours of travel. Walk by Yellow River.
Fish in hotel restaurant tank all dead. Lanzhou bus
expensive. 50 fen per trip. Radios
and knitting banned. Han dynasty flying horse and bronze
warriors. Steamed carp with rape on
menu. The fish comes first. Train to Xian through yellow
loess country. Deep furrows and
gorges. All flat land cropped. 500 miles overnight.
Terra cotta warriors facing east to guard Qin Shihuang's
tomb. Made in pieces.
Assembled in situ. Partly excavated section where piles of
dismembered limbs emerge from the
earth. New terra cotta warriors for sale from the factory
behind the museum. Exact replicas of
originals. Wheeze at the thought of the whole thing as a
sham for the tourist trade.
Xian, like all Chinese cities, a square. Roads straight,
intersecting always at right
angles. Ancient centre walled, Ming rebuilt. Old mosque
exquisite. Xianyang nearby, with
Seventh century Qian tombs, museum with another 3000 Han
terra cottas like a football
crowd. Train to Beijing. 800 miles, 26 hours. Houses often
caves in valley side. Later
immense flat land, maize everywhere.
Temple of Heaven, Tiantan, and then Beijing Opera. Pause
for beer at wayside stall.
Served by moonlighting trainee stockbroker! Breakfast
pickle amazing, like four year old
camembert out of a shotgun. Takes the head off. Great Wall.
Mucho touristico, but still
stunning. Like climbing a giant ladder in places. "I
climbed the Great Wall" T-shirts, prices
lower the further you climb. Must be the air. Ming tombs
dismissed by guide-book. Wrong.
Amazing barrel vaulted rooms nine stories underground. Jade
doors, carved thrones, marble,
marble, marvel. Reminiscent of renaissance Italy.
Everlasting bricks etched with names of their makers. Souvenir jade boat
for 55000 pounds.
White drapes over erotic statues in Tibetan Lama Temple.
Same bestial content in wall
paintings. 24 metre gold Buddha through the incense-blur.
No smoking signs everywhere.
Mao's Maosoleum an emperor's tomb. Lines for queues painted
across the square. Feet
pointing north towards Tiananmen Gate, upside-down feng
shui. He is shiny, waxy and painted about the face. Moving lines
file past on either side. No pausing. Outside, stalls with
Mao T-shirts, Mao key rings, cuddly
toys, post cards, magic lantern shows. Mao Zedong candy
floss by the armful. Then Great
Hall of the People. Dining room for 5000. Now fast food for
tourists. Great Hall chop sticks,
cigarettes, T-shirts. Great Hall of the People cuddly toys.
2500 miles. Three and a half weeks. 5 destinations. 50
caves. 6000 terra cotta warriors. 1 each Great
Wall, Forbidden City, Beijing Opera, Mao Zedong. Hundreds
of tombs, temples, pagodas,
parks, bendi-buses and bicycles. 3 silk shirts on the Silk
Road. One amazing trip.
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...and here are some more reviews by Philip Spires
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