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The absolute latest updates in China travel information.

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August 9th, 2011

Typhoon Muifa bypasses Shanghai

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

Reuters:  ”Typhoon Muifa weaked as it approached China’s coast on Sunday…veering north.”

ShanghaiDaily: Over the weekend, the Shanghai area still experienced strong gusts of wind and heavy rains.  Power lines and trees were pulled down, over 200 flights were canceled, and residents were evacuated, but overall, the damage was not serious as forecasters had predicted.

All WildChina travelers are safe and have made appropriate adjustments to their journeys.

 

 

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For more information, visit Tropical Storm Risk. For any other questions on China travel, please contact us at info@wildchina.com.

Photo by Carlos Barria of Reuters


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August 1st, 2011

WildChina pends journeys along the Southern Silk Road

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

Due to recent disturbances in Kashgar and Khotan of Xinjiang province, WildChina does not recommend trips to the area at this time.

No WildChina travelers are in this area at this time. As always, WildChina keeps the safety of our clients our top priority, and we will continue to monitor the situation and keep you updated with the latest information here on the WildChina blog.

If you have any questions or concerns, please contact us at info@wildchina.com.

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Photo by Alice Verey, friend of WildChina

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July 21st, 2011

Tibet Expressway Opens

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

Travel to Tibet just got more convenient: the government has just finished a 38km highway linking Gonggar airport and Lhasa. At the ribbon-cutting on the 17th, government officials including Xi Jinping officially opened the 4 lane expressway that will allow visitors to Lhasa to cut about 30 minutes of travel time. When Tibet is reopened to visitors next month, WildChina hopes that this will make getting off the beaten path with us just a little easier!

 

Traditional travel in Tibet will not disappear, but the expressway is a modernizing step for Tibet.

 

Sources: Xinhua and the China Daily

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July 20th, 2011

Ecotourism: Greening Your Next Vacation

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

The following is an excerpt taken from the Spring 2011 issue of WEALTH Magazine.

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Before solidifying your next vacation plans, consider the latest trend in eco-awareness — ecotourism.  We’ve spotlighted three green luxury travel destinations.

Every day, more people introduce another element of eco-awareness into their daily lives — recycling instead of discarding, opting for reusable grocery bags in lieu of paper or plastic ones, and choosing eco-friendly vehicles over gas guzzlers.  As you plan your next getaway, consider the latest trend for reducing your footprint on the planet — ecotourism.

According to The International Ecotourism Society (TIES), “Ecotourism is responsible travel to natural areas that conserves the environment and improves the well-being of local people.” Put simply, it’s an opportunity to experience areas around the world in their natural form without putting an environmental strain on them.

Converting your vacation into an eco-friendly travel experience will likely inspire more sustainable efforts in your everyday life.  ”Not only do you have a feeling of satisfaction that you haven’t contributed to global warming, but you feel inspired and motivated to bring something back with you besides memories, pictures and videos,” says John Clifford, president of luxury travel consultancy InternationalTravelManagement.com based in San Diego.  ”That’s the magic of travel — it’s very rewarding to people.”

What’s more, with eco-friendly travel, parents can expose their children to far more than they could through typical ski trips, beach excursions or European tours.  It’s a great opportunity to discover and adopt new habits that promote a more eco-friendly lifestyle at home.

“These practices, many of which are fairly simple, can inspire visitors to take them home and apply them to their own lives,” Clifford says.  ”Whether it’s inspiring a family to grow their own vegetables in their yard, sponsor a nearby beach cleanup or park reforestation, or something similar — as long as the family comes back home with the impetus to ‘do something’ — the ecotourism and sustainable travel has made an impact on the family.”

While it’s possible to turn a trip to any destination into an eco-friendly vacation, several locations across the globe have made it a priority to promote ecotourism.  Consider any of these three spots that offer a one-of-a-kind luxurious experience, all while safeguarding the environment.

China’s Yunnan Province

 


Most travelers immediately consider the bustling cities of Beijing or Hong Kong for their China vacation destinations of choice. But for those seeking an eco-focused experience, the Yunnan Province in Southwestern China is a lesser-known alternative.

Ecotourism has taken off in this region of China. Travelers can experience the region’s many natural wonders, says Mei Zhang, founder of WildChina, a sustainable travel company based in Beijing. One such wonder is the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) World Heritage site of the Three Parallel Rivers (Yangtze, Mekong and Salween rivers). In addition, over the last 10 years, Zhang says, there has been a surge in tourism facility construction projects – most pledging to have minimal impact on the environment.

ACCOMMODATIONS: For sustainable lodging, Zhang recommends the Linden Centre near Dali City. The estate – built by a local warlord in the years before the Communist Revolution – has been renovated with modern amenities yet maintains much of the original architecture of a traditional courtyard mansion. The hotel is meant to be a model of “architectural renovation, cultural conservation and a primary partner in the sustainable development of the local economy.”

 

Yard at night

 

While it provides certain contemporary services, such as Wi-Fi, the hotel purposefully doesn’t include televisions in the rooms. Instead, guests are encouraged to interact with one another, hotel staff and villagers in such activities as accompanying one of the hotel chefs on a vegetable market visit.

For those who wish to gain the full experience of a Tibetan monastery, Zhang recommends the Songstam Hotel in Shangri-La. A true treasure of the community, the hotel was built by local craftsmen from local wood and stone, Zhang says. It features Tibetan rugs and antiques, and an almost completely Tibetan staff. The hotel also offers energy-efficient, wood-burning stoves in every room.

ACTIVITIES: Pudacuo National Park in Shangri-La provides the perfect opportunity to hike through a biologically sensitive area with a rich plant kingdom and many endangered species of animals, offering firsthand learning opportunities for younger children.

Shangri-La also is home to Songzanlin Monastery, the largest Tibetan Buddhist monastery in Yunnan. Monks live a frugal, rural lifestyle, eating meals together and choosing to walk or ride bikes rather than burn automobile gasoline. “You can visit the praying halls or join villagers for their local celebrations,” says Zhang, who says visitors’ behaviors naturally change when they’re in this eco-friendly area. “Visitors here walk into everyday life. When you get to these sacred places and everything’s so natural and beautiful, and you see the monks practicing, people are so inspired by their surroundings that they keep quiet and stay out of the way to respect the cultural heritage.”

Yunnan ,Zhongdian, Songzanlin Monestary, monk, The Beijing Center (Fan Na, Jan 2009)

 

 

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To read about other green luxury travel destinations Costa Rica and Peru’s Cusco and Machu Picchu in the full article, please click here.

To learn more about WildChina’s journeys to Yunnan, check out South of the Clouds & The Ancient Tea & Horse Caravan Road: An Expedition with Jeff Fuchs. The latter journey is a immersive, small group journey which departs September 12, 2011. For inquiries, please e-mail us at info@wildchina.com.

 


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July 11th, 2011

UNESCO and World Bank Expand Partnership

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

Out of 936 UNESCO World Heritage Sites, a whopping 41 are located in China (the third-highest number of UNESCO properties out of all other nations, behind only Spain and Italy).

For this reason, the conservation of these properties is of extreme importance. Thankfully, the newly signed set of concrete joint initiatives from the Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) between the World Bank and UNESCO celebrates China’s inscribed properties.  According to the World Bank, “the overall objective of the MoU is to provide a framework for technical cooperation between UNESCO and the World Bank in the following areas: Historic Cities Preservation and Rehabilitation, The Promotion of Cultural Diversity, The Conservation of Natural Heritage Sites, and The Economics of Culture.”

 

Mogao Caves

 

China’s 41 Heritage Sites are listed below.

  1. Ancient Building Complex in the Wudang Mountains
  2. Ancient City of Pingyao
  3. Ancient Villages in Southern Anhui – Xidi and Hongcun
  4. Capital Cities and Tombs of the Ancient Koguryo Kingdom
  5. China Danxia
  6. Classical Gardens of Suzhou
  7. Dazu Rock Carvings
  8. Fujian Tulou
  9. Historic Centre of Macao
  10. Historic Ensemble of the Potala Palace, Lhasa
  11. Historic Monuments of Dengfeng in “The Centre of Heaven and Earth”
  12. Huanglong Scenic and Historic Interest Area
  13. Imperial Palaces of the Ming and Qing Dynasties in Beijing and Shenyang
  14. Imperial Tombs of the Ming and Qing Dynasties
  15. Jiuzhaigou Valley Scenic and Historic Interest Area
  16. Kaiping Diaolou and Villages
  17. Longmen Grottoes
  18. Lushan National Park
  19. Mausoleum of the First Qin Emperor
  20. Mogao Caves
  21. Mount Emei Scenic Area, including Leshan Giant Buddha Scenic Area
  22. Mount Huangshan
  23. Mount Qingcheng and the Dujiangyan Irrigation System
  24. Mount Sanqingshan National Park
  25. Mount Taishan
  26. Mount Wutai
  27. Mount Wuyi
  28. Mountain Resort and its Outlying Temples, Chengde
  29. Old Town of Lijiang
  30. Peking Man Site at Zhoukoudian
  31. Sichuan Giant Panda SanctuariesWolong, Mt Siguniang and Jiajin Mountains
  32. South China Karst
  33. Summer Palace, an Imperial Garden in Beijing
  34. Temple and Cemetery of Confucius and the Kong Family Mansion in Qufu
  35. Temple of Heaven: an Imperial Sacrificial Altar in Beijing
  36. The Great Wall
  37. Three Parallel Rivers of Yunnan Protected Areas
  38. West Lake Cultural Landscape of Hangzhou
  39. Wulingyuan Scenic and Historic Interest Area
  40. Yin Xu
  41. Yungang Grottoes

Potala Palace

 

Visit UNESCO’s interactive world map by clicking here.

To see a full list of World Heritage sites, please click here.

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WildChina proudly visits many of these sites on our journeys. Follow the links above to learn more about how you can visit a UNESCO World Heritage Site on your WildChina journey or email us at info@wildchina.com. Departures in Fall of 2011 include a journey to see Yosemite’s Sister Parks in China in September and a photography expedition along the Silk Road in October.

Photo by WildChina.

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July 8th, 2011

New Train Connects China’s Wild West

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

Traveling China’s ancient Silk Road in Xinjiang just became much easier thanks to the opening of a new passenger train that connects Hotan (in Southern Xinjiang), Kashgar (located near the borders of Kyrgyzstan & Tajikistan), and Urumqi (the capital of the region). Covering railway spanning 2,073 km, the journey from Hotan to Urumqi takes approximately 35 hours. The rail is expected to expand tourism, agriculture, and mining in the region.

Explore the Xinjiang’s natural and cultural beauty this October. Join WildChina and leading British photography, Sean Gallagher, in our Xinjiang Photography Expedition Trip as we traverse the sandy regions, snow covered mountains, and discover the colorful Uigher costumes of China’s wild west.  Sean will lead his group through the old town of Kashgar and century old bazaars where you’ll see the area’s unique Uighur culture and geographical diversity using your photographer’s eye. The journey starts and ends in Urumqi.

 

To begin planning your journey to Xinjiang, please submit an inquiry here or e-mail us at info@wildchina.com.

Source: Travel + Leisure

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July 1st, 2011

Tibet will soon reopen to foreign tourists

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

ANNOUNCEMENT: Travel bans to Tibet are expected to be lifted by the end of July.

Bans in 2011 have been said to be implemented on account of two major anniversaries – the 60th anniversary of the signing of the Seventeen Point Agreement for the Peaceful Liberation of Tibet on May 23, 1951, as well as the 90th anniversary of the founding of the Chinese Communist Party on July 1, 1921.

The destination will open its doors to visitors just as the rainy season begins to fade. To begin planning your journey to Tibet, please submit an inquiry here or e-mail us at info@wildchina.com.

 

Buddhist art in Lhasa

 

 

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June 22nd, 2011

Restoring Life to Mountain Retreat Where Mao Napped

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

The following is an article written by Edward Wong, a journalist for The New York Times based in Beijing, China.

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Mark Kitto, who negotiated a 10-year lease with the military, was the first foreigner in 50 years to move back to Moganshan.

MOGANSHAN, China — The first to build and occupy European-style stone villas atop this bamboo-cloaked mountain were the foreign missionaries. Then came Big-Ear Du and other Shanghai gangsters looking for a getaway (or maybe hideaway). Later still, the big guns rolled in: Chiang Kai-shek and Mao Zedong.

Foreign missionaries were the first to occupy Moganshan’s villas in the 19th century.

“I think Moganshan is a miniature of the first half of China’s 20th-century history,” said Wu Chengtao, a forestry official who lives at the base of the mountain here in southeast China. “It’s a great window through which you can look at the history.”

These days, the clock is turning back on Moganshan. Foreigners are returning to the retreat, 2,300 feet above the East China plain, where they can escape the summer heat of nearby Shanghai and Hangzhou. They spend nights in the old villas and frolic by day in verdant hillsides that were once the setting for tennis tournaments, swimming pool parties and rounds of gin and tonics at sunset. That life of leisure ended in 1949, when the Chinese Communists won the civil war.

More than 100 villas survive, about one-fifth of them owned by a unit of the People’s Liberation Army based in Hangzhou, the capital of Zhejiang Province.

A Welshman, Mark Kitto, was the first foreigner in a half century to move back into a villa here. In 2003 he negotiated a 10-year lease with the military, and three years later moved in with his wife and children. Mr. Kitto, a former magazine publisher in Shanghai, renovated the villa with his wife, Joanna, a native of Guangzhou, and wrote about his move in a memoir, “China Cuckoo” (“Chasing China” in the United States).

Today, he is at the center of the revival of interest in the mountain among foreigners.

“This was the real thing, solid and three-dimensional, as if transported stone by stone from the Alps or Provence or even north Wales, where I grew up,” Mr. Kitto wrote in his book of the first time he saw the village, in 1999.

One morning, Mr. Kitto, 44, dressed in a tweed vest and breeches, led visitors through a lush bamboo forest, as farmers hacked away at tree trunks, cows grazed and women picked tea leaves at plantations near the ridgeline.

“Nothing changes on top of the mountain,” Mr. Kitto said.

But that is not quite true, thanks to Mr. Kitto. He and his wife opened a restaurant, Moganshan Lodge, when they moved here, and Joanna Kitto has helped renovate three villas to rent to guests. The village has a few other hotels. About 300,000 people, the vast majority of them Chinese, visit the mountain each year — a relatively low figure given its proximity to Shanghai and Hangzhou.

Mr. Kitto said there could be more visitors, but the mountain remains under the control of the provincial, rather than county, government, which has stymied renovation and rental of the villas. “If the local government had control of Moganshan, this would be the Chamonix of China,” he said, referring to a popular mountain resort in France .

Provincial officials were about to hand over control to the county government, Mr. Kitto said, when someone asked Xi Jinping, China’s vice president and presumptive successor to President Hu Jintao, what he thought of the place, which he had visited years ago. “Moganshan is good,” was the simple reply, which officials interpreted as a signal to preserve provincial control, Mr. Kitto said.

Most foreigners hear about the mountain by word of mouth. A few years ago, 14 people spent a “murder mystery” weekend at one of the renovated villas, said a participant, Jamie Wrightson, who shared a two-year lease on a farmhouse here. One weekend in May, a group of 16 men, mostly Americans, came in for a bachelor party that left a room in House No. 2 as fetid as the village pigsties.

Missionaries first came to Moganshan in the late 19th century, looking for an alternative to Lushan, a popular retreat in Jiangxi Province, Mr. Kitto wrote in his book. By the spring of 1898, there was a rush for property on the mountain. Treaties forced on China during the Opium Wars gave missionary societies the right to own property outside the trading enclaves governed by foreigners in certain port cities.

According to Mr. Kitto’s research, the first foreigner to buy land on Moganshan was the Rev. F. W. Farnham of Shanghai, who bought 75 acres on a tea plantation for 50 Mexican dollars, the currency used at the time.

Soon, the residents set up the Moganshan Summer Resort Association. All but one of the inaugural members was a minister. They enjoyed hiking, swimming, playing tennis, having afternoon tea, dancing to music played on gramophones. Americans dominated, followed by the British.

In 1924, 13 years after the collapse of the Qing Dynasty, the Republic of China reclaimed the mountain. Well-off Chinese began coming here. In 1929, there were 242 villas on the mountain, only 78 of them owned by foreigners, according to a paper by a graduate student at Zhejiang University.

Among the Chinese who built villas were Du Yuesheng, known as Big-Ear Du, and his right-hand man, Zhang Xiaolin. They ran the infamous Green Gang in Shanghai, which, among other activities, sold opium. Both of their villas still stand. Mr. Zhang kept tigers and peacocks, and was met by a police welcoming committee that set off fireworks in his honor, Mr. Kitto said.

“Village myth says he fed one mistress to his Moganshan pet tiger and locked up another in a grotto for playing around with one of his bodyguards while he was away on business in Shanghai,” Mr. Kitto wrote.

Chiang Kai-shek came three times to the mountain: to spend a few days here on his honeymoon with Soong Mei-ling; to secretly meet with Zhou Enlai, the Communist leader, to discuss cooperating in the war against the Japanese; and to try to work out a new gold standard.

Ownership of Moganshan once again changed hands in 1949.

Fives years later, Mao visited and had “a nap at noon,” said Mr. Wu, the forestry official. One elderly woman told Mr. Kitto that officials locked up all the villagers in House No. 62 for the entire day, until Mao left. “No one saw Mao,” she said, “and he saw no one either.”

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To read this article on The New York Times website, please click here. For more information about journeys to Moganshan and the area surrounding the Grand Canal, please e-mail info@wildchina.com or call us at 1.888.902.8808.

Photo by Shiho Fukada for The New York Times

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June 15th, 2011

Beijing to Shanghai high-speed train opens July 1

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

The high-speed train between Beijing and Shanghai will be opened on July first, linking the 1,318 kilometer distance between two of China’s largest metropolises.

 

 

Ticket prices have just recently been announced by the Ministry of Railways, and here they are as follows:

Travelers will have two sets of options.  They can take either the faster train, which runs at 300km/h and completes the journey in 4 hours and 48 minutes, or the ‘slower’ train, which runs at 250km/h and completes the journey in approximately 8 hours. All will depart from Beijing South Station and arrive at the Shanghai Hongqiao Station.

Tickets for the faster 300km/h train will cost CNY 555 for a second class seat, CNY 935 for a first class seat, and CNY 1,750 for a business class seat. Tickets on the slower, 250km/h train are priced at CNY 650 for first class and CNY 410 for second class.  Reservation fees are an additional CNY 25, but at the current moment, WildChina has not received information about advanced booking procedures.

Stay tuned here at the WildChina blog for the latest updates.

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Prices listed here are subject to change.  To inquire about journeys to Beijing and Shanghai, please e-mail info@wildchina.com.

Photo & news by Xinhua and Business Traveller.

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June 8th, 2011

Construction of China’s longest undersea tunnel complete

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

The following post was sourced from the People’s Daily Online.

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Workers conduct maintenance work as the Jiaozhou Bay undersea tunnel project nears completion at Jiaozhou Bay, Qingdao City of east China's Shandong Province on May 31, 2011.

 

Recently, the Jiaozhou Bay undersea tunnel, located in Qingdao City of east China’s Shandong Province, completed major construction, and progress on affiliated projects, such as installing equipment and electronic cables, is being accelerated. Inspection and approval is being carried out gradually.

 

The Jiaozhou Bay undersea tunnel is the longest undersea tunnel in China and the third longest underwater tunnel in the world. It has a total length of 7,800 meters, of which the undersea section of the tunnel is 3,950 meters long. The project has a total investment of 3.3 billion yuan.

 

In June 30, 2011, the undersea tunnel will be open to traffic.

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Shandong Province is home to Tai Shan, one of the four Holy mountains around China and Confucius’ ancestral home, the Kong family mansion. For more information about travel to this province, please email info@wildchina.com.

Photo by Li Ziheng, Xinhua

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