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October 24th, 2011

Meet with WildChina at PURE Life Experiences 2011 or the Global Eco Conference

By: Mei | Categories: Culture, News You Can Use

Dear Friends,

Our team is preparing to travel outside Beijing soon, and we would love to meet you while we are out and about! If your schedule allows, join us for a coffee, lunch or a brief meeting to learn more about our China programs.

We invite you to meet us at…

 

 

 

Veronique & Zhao Bei at PURE: veronique.dantras@wildchina.com. For meetings with Mei: info@wildchina.com

We look forward to meeting you soon!

Warm regards,

The WildChina Team

 

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October 21st, 2011

WildChina Expert Spotlight: Questions for Matthew Niederhauser, Photojournalist

By: Mei | Categories: Culture, News You Can Use

Since WildChina’s inception in 2000, we have watched and experienced China’s rapid growth firsthand. Intrigued to further explore urban development and the affects on Chinese culture - particularly on youth, WildChina is excited to announce the launch of High Speed China, an educational photography trip led by American photojournalist and WildChina expert Matthew Niederhauser.

Earlier this week, WildChina sat down with Niederhauser to learn more about this journey for university and MFA students and faculty.

WildChina Travel: How do you hope the experience on High Speed China will impact your future trip participants?

Matthew Niederhauser: Giving a broader introduction to the structure of urban development across China and its impact on emerging youth subcultures. There is a new social dynamic coming out of the massive urban migration that China is currently experiencing.

WCT: Can you elaborate on the unique features of the cities that travelers will visit?

MN: Guangzhou is really important because it just built Zhujiang New City, which is one of the best examples of a planned urban environment in China. Wuhan is a great example of flat-out urban sprawl with massive industrial centers fringed by megablock housing. It shows where many second and third tier cities are heading.

Beijing, of course, is just one of the most unique places on the planet with its amazing amalgamation of hutong housing and new-fangled architectural styles. People look to Beijing as an archetype for urban development: what’s occurring in Beijing is probably going to serve as the model for cities across the interior.

 

South China Mall in Dongguan

WCT: Why is a journey like this so important now?

MN: As much as people like to tout the era of a new modern China, the country is actually just in an initial phase of development. All of the first tier cities represent a very small fraction of the whole population. These urban centers that we visit are setting a new precedent for how people live right now. Their lifestyle choices will impact the rest of the planet over the next twenty years.

WCT: The intersection with youth culture is a major component of your work. Where does that enter the picture?

MN: I interact with a new generation of kids who are willing to improvise and break the mold. That is what’s most important for China right now – kids who think outside the government-controlled education system and come up with creative solutions to problems facing the country.

 

Crowd at the 2010 Zhenjiang MIDI Festival

WCT: What are you currently working on?

MN: I’m going to be publishing a new book called Visions of Modernity, which is an accumulation of my work in Beijing. It takes the city as an archetype of urban development and shows how it might not be sustainable to have twenty more such places across the interior of China. I’m also working on a project about Chinese hip-hop and freestyle rapping.

WCT: What made you interested in collaborating with WildChina?

MN: I am looking to dig deeper into my projects on urban development and youth culture in China while establishing an educational context for my travels. WildChina offers a perfect opportunity for such a venture. I enjoy teaching in the first place, so it would be amazing to give people a firsthand look into these crazy parts of the country that are often overlooked by a normal tourist in China. Overall it’s a better chance to relate my experiences to others interested in the unique socioeconomic situation of this country.

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All photos taken by Matthew Niederhauser.

Please click here for specific details about the journey. For more information about educational journeys, contact us at education@wildchina.com.

 

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October 19th, 2011

A winter holiday in China: National Parks, Jinghong, and Guizhou travel

By: Mei | Categories: Culture, News You Can Use

Looking for an unforgettable way to spend the winter holidays?  China may not be the most traditional answer, but it’s definitely an exciting one!  The colder months mark a time in the travel season where there are less tourists and scenery and festivals that are not available during other parts of the year.  Here are a few travel suggestions from our expert travel consultants:

China’s national parks. Be it Jiuzhaigou National Park in Sichuan province or the jagged peaks of Yellow Mountain at Huangshan National Park, these reserves are sure to be breathtaking.  To see snow-blanketed valleys and the misty, gargantuan mounds that inspired Chinese artists and poets for centuries, check out a sample itinerary here.

Guizhou. In this remote province of southwestern China, ethnic minorities will be busy preparing for festivals such as the Miao and Dong minority New Year.  Join in on the boisterous celebrations featuring traditional song, dance, richly embroidered costumes & old rituals like those described by Gloria (a WildChina travel consultant) in her recent trip to the area here. Also, check out this trip which highlights Guizhou travel.

Jinghong, Yunnan. Tropical and warm during the next few months, Jinghong is the capital city of Xishuangbanna, Yunnan, a province in southwestern China.  When WildChina travel consultant Jenny visited, she said that she spent most of her time in the ethnic minority villages of the Dai and Aini people.  Here, the communities are tranquil, and the people are dressed in in traditional clothing, not because they are putting on a costume but because it is still routine to do so.


Hiking through the lush, tea terraces from village to village is one way to experience the local lives of the Dai and Aini people, but another way is to take advantage of their warm hospitality and choose to do a homestay.  In Jenny’s words, the architecture and accommodations are basic but the experience was ‘cozy and unforgettable’.  The home she stayed in was two stories, as most homes are in that area. The first floor served as a garage for farmers’ carts and equipment, and the upstairs served as the living quarters.  Over a seemingly outdated wooden stove, the host family cooked a delicious meal of Dai food, which is a unique Chinese cuisine that is marked by fresh, tropical ingredients and a Southeast Asian influence.

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For more suggestions about China travel during the winter months, please contact us at info@wildchina.com.

Photos by WildChina travelers & Anhui News


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October 18th, 2011

Explorer Grant Open for Submissions

By: Mei | Categories: Culture, News You Can Use

Find a new route on the Tibetan Plateau. Trace the origin of the Yangtze and Yellow River. Assess the newfound growth years after the Sichuan earthquake. The vision perseveres in whatever the journey may be.

Several people embody these qualities and take action: Li Bo, Director at Friends of Nature, China’s first environmental NGO; Edward Wong, one of the Beijing correspondents for The New York Times; Yu Hui, National Geographic China editor.

The WildChina Explorer Grant is a grant of up to USD 3,000 that is awarded to adventurers seeking to push the boundaries of responsible, off-the-beaten-path travel in China. All submissions for the 2012 WildChina Explorer Grant are due by November 15, 2011.

WildChina selects our explorers winners based on the following criteria:

• Focus on bringing to light a long lost route, a culturally significant issue, promoting aid in a remote community or a trip dealing with discovery or rediscovery
• Passion and excitement for exploration
• Past/current involvement with exploration in China
• Risk management plan
• Incorporation of Leave No Trace (LNT) principles
• Low carbon travel
• Participant skill levels commensurate with proposed itinerary

For more information, please e-mail us at expedition@wildchina.com or visit http://www.wildchina.com/wildchina-explorer-grant to download the application.

 

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October 17th, 2011

Traveler’s Voice: It’s not rudeness; it’s simply cultural norms

By: Mei | Categories: Culture, News You Can Use

A couple months ago, you heard from WildChina travelers Jan Heininger and Jamie Reuter saying that they were thrilled with [their] tour company, but not seduced by China.  Their journey in October of 2010 took them through Beijing, Tibet, Yunnan Province. Guangxi Province, and finally to Hong Kong. Here is the second part of a series of articles detailing their experience.  Stop 1 – Beijing…

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We flew to Beijing via Toronto on Air Canada.  Our plane was equipped with lie-flat, business class seats.  OK food.  Great lounge with free dinner in Toronto.  The tickets were half the price of other airlines.  Definitely recommend Air Canada for anyone travelling to China or other points in the Far East.  12 hour flight with 12 hour time change meant we didn’t have to reset our watches which was sort of weird.  It took both Jan and me several days to get past the time shift.  12 hours is tough (though Jan thinks it’s easier than 8 hours).

Oddly, we arrived a full day early.  We had figured: depart on Thursday (10/14), cross international dateline and arrive Saturday.  So our hotel and ground arrangements all were set up to begin on Saturday.  I’m still not quite sure how or why we went wrong, but we actually arrived on Friday.  So there we were in the Beijing airport: no Chinese money, no one to meet us, and few people with any English to help us sort out what to do.  After an hour-long comedy of errors (cell phone with locking key-pad and no instruction booklet, low volume on cell phone, receiving text message instructions in Chinese characters, etc.), we finally convinced our tour company that we were actually in town and received their instructions.  We were asked to take a mass-transit “airport express” train into town because it would take too long for our actual guide, Andy, to come pick us up.  We didn’t really understand this at the time but our subsequent experience with traffic jams demonstrated the wisdom of this suggestion.  Eventually, we managed to get our luggage, get money, find the train, buy tickets, get off at the right stop (the last one) and meet up with our guide who then took us to our hotel.  By this time, we had finally sorted out that the timing screw-up was actually our fault, and not an error by our tour company.

Our hotel in Beijing was the Opposite House (don’t ask about the meaning behind the name; I don’t know it), an ultramodern, minimalist-design hotel in the embassy district.  Very, very nice—the kind of lovely boutique we prefer.  In fact, tourists (both Chinese and western) routinely came in to photograph the interior spaces.  Good bed, wooden sinks and bath (a little odd), good shower, great service, and a very good breakfast.  The breakfasts were fairly uniform (and excellent) across all of our hotels.  By a large, they were based on large and diverse buffets with egg stations, bacon, cheeses, breads, rolls and muffins, cereal, yoghurt, etc.  In addition, they had a whole range of stuff for oriental breakfasts.  If you’ve never seen this, it includes broth, noodles, and a wide variety of meats, vegetables, fish, seaweed, sprouts, tofu, etc that are combined in a big bowl as a sort of breakfast soup to be eaten with chopsticks.  The broth itself is simply “slurped” down.  We looked at it.  We tried it and poked around a little.  But basically we stuck with the western fare for breakfast.  We excused ourselves by saying that two good Chinese meals a day was enough and who wants seaweed for breakfast?  There were no really good breads or hard rolls anywhere in China until we got to Hong Kong.  Maybe it has to do with the types of wheat they grow or something?

Once settled in Beijing, we did all the usual things.  We went to Tiananmen Square (covered with tourists).  We toured the Forbidden City.  We had Peking Duck (greasy).  In the rain (on our third day) we visited the Temple of Heaven and the Summer Palace.  We drove past a couple of Olympic sites (the Water Cube and the Bird’s Nest Stadium).  We took a pedi-cab tour of a hutong, a traditional Beijing neighborhood jammed in between all of the various high rise apartment buildings.  The hutongs are sort of like old, single story, traditional ghettos that are slowly being consumed by new high-rise construction.  But the Chinese who live in them love their traditional way of life, though they have no private baths or toilets.  The pre-Olympic destruction of several hutongs caused such a fury that it seems that the local “Central Committee” is trying them out as tourist attractions to see if showing them off can provide a positive financial return.

 

Our favorite things were the Ceramics Museum within the Forbidden City, and the Great Wall.  The museum was a quiet, deserted haven away from all the crowds with very good signage in both Chinese and English.  The Great Wall looked exactly like all the pictures you’ve seen of it.  But actually experiencing it was special.  We visited the Mutianyu section, which is a partially restored but far less touristy section of the Wall.  Jan and I took a long (2.5 hour) hike along its top.  The Wall actually just follows the crest of a mountain ridge.  The path along the top of the Wall can be extremely steep in places.  We both ended up with sore thighs and calves from climbing up and down some really steep and long stretches of steps, but loved the experience.

The food in Beijing was very so-so.  They seem to use a lot of oil so the food was very greasy and not all that flavorful.  Even when we went to a restaurant that specialized in Peking Duck, we were pretty underwhelmed.  We were not terribly adventuresome in our choices, so we probably missed a lot of what a real “foodie” would find interesting and good about Beijing food.
One of the oddities of being in China was the Chinese tourists’ fascination with us.  It started in the Tiananmen Square where this nice couple asked if they could have their picture taken with us with the Forbidden City in the background.  According to our guide, this was due to the inherent weirdness of westerners in general, and a tall, bearded westerner like Jamie in particular.  While this first incident was unique in that it included Jan, 10 or 12 times during the trip some couple or group of giggling girls or whomever wanted Jamie to pose with them for a photo – more or less to prove to their friends back home that they had seen, and even touched, a foreigner—but mostly because Jamie was so tall and looked even taller with his Australian Tilley hat.  Another tall American that we met on the trip had similar experiences.  After a while, the whole thing became a bother and bit irritating.  It was, in some small way, like having paparazzi chase after you.  It eventually made me feel like a creature in a zoo that people gawked at.  Weird.  And yet, despite such experiences and our reaction to the hordes and hordes of Chinese tourists, we found the Chinese, as individuals, to be friendly and welcoming.

We spent hours in traffic going to and from the Great Wall, and trying to get around inside the city.  Drivers are crazy there.  They push and shove in traffic using cars, trucks and buses pretty much the same way they push and shove in queues.  As one guide told us, there is no concept of personal distance in China (unlike in Japan where they create their own).  It’s not rudeness; it’s simply cultural norms. However, they always beep their horn when passing (they are taught to do this).  And when passing, they pull back into the right lane when the front seats have barely passed the front of the car being overtaken.  Several times, I was sure that we would clip the front of a car being passed but we never did.  Crossing a street on foot was also a challenge.  Initially I thought that cars were aiming at us on purpose.  Later, I realized that there just wasn’t any concept of pedestrians having the right of way.  A car making right hand turns just keeps going.  It was up to the pedestrians to get out of their way.  Given that the city was laid out in huge squares, Beijing was not a walkable city anyway.

Beijing was clearly an example of the “new China.”  Designer stores were everywhere.  Many young people clearly had lots of money and were stylishly dressed.  There was a long line outside an Apple Store near our hotel, as people waited to buy iPhones at five times the US price.  High rise condominiums and office buildings were everywhere.  Some brand new, some older and clearly showing their age.  Construction cranes were everywhere.  Our guides quipped that China’s national bird was the crane (i.e., steel crane, not feathered; get it??).  But the old neighborhood (hutong) near our hotel didn’t have a sewer or clean, public water.  Beijing was clearly a city of contrasts, with rapid change being driven by the “new” China economy.

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Stay tuned for more tales from Ms. Heininger & Mr. Reuter’s journey.  For more information about adventures in Beijing, see a sample itinerary here or contact us at info@wildchina.com.

All photos by Ms. Heninger & Mr. Reuter. To see all of their photos, visit WildChina’s flickr page here.


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October 13th, 2011

The Grand Choirs of the Dong People Festival

By: Mei | Categories: Culture, News You Can Use

Guizhou Province, Southwest China
November 28th – 30th, 2011

While the Dong are most famous for their architecture and unique style of dress, few outsiders realize how much music is the social and cultural heart of the Dong people. After seeing the tiered drum towers, wind and rain bridges, and talking to local Dong girls in beautiful costumes, you may think you know the essence of Dong culture, but until your ears are treated to the sound of their Grand Choirs (侗族大歌), you have yet to truly experience the beauty and cultural wealth of the Dong.

While on a WildChina music-themed tour, we were lucky enough to hear the best of these Grand Choirs, which was surprisingly comprised of local villagers who simply gathered at the end of the working day.  Not a single member in our group remained stoic once the unbelievably beautiful voices of young boys and girls rose and fell like magic.  Some pieces they performed were pure song, while others were accompanied by dances and cute re-enacted love stories.

“The body is supported by rice, but the spirit is supported by song” is a Dong saying that means “rice” and “song” are regarded as equally important in Dong culture and to their sense of self. They sing to express feelings, to relay passion, and to color their world.  To the Dong, songs are a treasure capable of refining the mind and one’s emotions. In traditional Dong villages, only the wise and the knowledgeable—usually the most respected village elder—can compose new songs to pass down to descendants. Inseparable from the Dong’s daily life, their folk songs are the true historical record of the Dong Nationality.

The most amazing part of these Grand Choirs is that the songs and music are passed on orally from generation to generation and so the children coming up require no rehearsal when it comes time for them to join in a sing.  Their ability to complement each other in perfect harmony appears instinctual and one feels honored to be in their presence.  It is an artistic form of lead singing with a chorus comprised of high and bass counterpoint singing.  It’s origins are polyphonic—an extremely rare style in classic Chinese and foreign folk music.

We reluctantly left the Dong villages still hearing the choir music flitting sweetly in our minds.  When would we ever have another opportunity to experience such authentic and emotional music?  The ever-welcoming Dong have the answer: come join us at our Grand Choirs Festival in Congjiang from November 28th-30th, where the best songs are to be found!

–Gloria Guo, WildChina Travel Consultant

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October 8th, 2011

Abujee Trek in Northern Yunnan

By: Mei | Categories: Culture, News You Can Use

WildChina recently took students from an international school on a multi-day trek in a remote region outside of Zhongdian (popularly known as Shangri-La). It was challenging hiking at altitudes upward of 4000 meters, but the students were resilient and enjoyed the rewards, including a high alpine lake that’s sacred to the Tibetans and Yi people.

WildChina expert Jeff Fuchs helped lead the journey. Fuchs shared valuable insights on the local culture and surroundings. Tibetan guide Sonam kept the group comfortable, especially when he broke into song. The horse team did well – even a two-week-old colt kept up!

 

The second campsite is just barely visible in the lower right. At 3900 meters, the area still seems low in comparison to the towering dolomite peaks.

 

WildChina team of Jeff Fuchs, Max Stein, David Fundingsland and Sonam Geleg at the end of the trek

 

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For more information about educational journeys to Yunnan, contact us at education@wildchina.com.


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