china has come and gone, and now malaysia has too. our blog is suffering. promise we'll be up to date by the end of the week!
XI'AN
who would have thought that a little city surrounded by walls would hold the most spectacular thing either of us have ever seen, the terracotta warriors (or as our tour guide pronounced them, "orriors"). a farmer stumbled upon them in 1974, come to find that they date back to 210BC! over 9,000 life-like and life-size soldiers, chariots and horses are believed to be buried in the pits- all to guard the soul of the first Qin emperor of China. everyone involved in the project was buried alive to keep the secret. it worked! pretty amazing. we finished the trip by riding bikes along the city walls with tunes blasting from the ipod. americans.
CHENGDU
we survived a 16 hour train ride in our hard sleeper (translation: squished like sardines in used sheets with the entire chinese population... of men) and arrived in chengdu! we were taken in by the dallas family, an american family who we met in tokyo. as if being spoiled with a real house, laundry machines, a chinese hair salon, a driver, maid and cook... we were part of a family! little gemma and angus stole our hearts and became our chinese translators, at ages 3 and 6. angus renamed nicole, and somehow "abella" stuck. we said hi to the pandas, visited beautiful temples and met some friends over sangria at The Bookworm. on our last day, we took a 2 hour ride with our new family to a little village affected by the Sichuan 7.9 earthquake from this past may. aswe got closer to the faultline, we were devastated by the damage and make-shift tents built upon the rubble that the families have been living in for the past 5 months, and for possibly 5 more years. we visited a small school and played with the local children, and slowly the entire community poured in, even the old women with deformed bodies and scoliosis from working the rice paddies their entire lives. it was quite an experience.
just as jenny sent us off with homemade apple pie in austria, kim sent us off with homemade pumpkin bread in china... and it lasted a whole 2 days.
HANGZHOU
when in hangzhou, spend the day biking around the picturesque lakes on cobblestone paths and bridges surrounded by willow trees- for a grand total of 12 cents. while you're at it, do as the locals do at the street eats strip and try everything from baked crab on a stick to beggar's chicken (make sure the head and claws are still attached) to fried rice inside a pineapple, finishing it off right with dragon's mustache, the local pastry. hangzhou was a peaceful haven very much needed, the most beautiful place to get lost at and enjoy some tea at a pavillion on the lake surrounded by lillypads.
SHANGHAI
we were met in metropolitan shanghai by a familiar face- nicole's good friend hamson. he took us to the top of building for wine and out for street eats with his friends, showed us where to find ridiculously cheap DVDs, and introduced us the most amazing food we've had on our trip so far- Yang's Dumplings (yes, we ate them for lunch AND dinner our last day). we snuck up to the top of the Radisson for an amazing 360degree view of the city (note to self: you get away with so much more when you speak Spanish in Asia) and got a 2 hour massage at midnight, for 5 bucks. and when the day was said and done, we couldn't wait to get back to our pepto-bismol colored room with golden drapes and a snoopy stuffed animal dressed in chanel boxers. welcome to china.
Tuesday, October 28, 2008
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3 comments:
Angus was just asking about you two last night. He asked "Mommy, where is Brittany?" I said, "I am not sure maybe Thailand, maybe Vietnam." Angus asked "Where is Abella?" You both have stole my son's heart! I think he will never forget your visit to Chengdu!
i love your narratives girls!!! thanks for catching me up. love you and miss you both.
I get more and more jealous every time I read your adventures... savor your time - not that you need me to tell you that. :)
Love you guys. And I think I could go for a dragon's whisker. Yes, please.
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