Thursday, December 4, 2008

The Suzhou Experience


The Suzhou travel from shanghai is irresistible. Suzhou is an ancient city with a history stretching over 2,500 years. Efforts have been made over time to retain the uniqueness of the city and it remains a good show of its long and intriguing history. The city has a mild climate that makes it a nice place to be all year long. The city is in the Yangtze Delta, west of Shanghai. It has one of the largest fresh water lakes in China and several scenic spots. The Suzhou travel from shanghai might also be inspired by the fact that the city is the cradle of Wu Culture. This means that the city is important in Chinese cultural history.

As one of the famous tourist cities, Suzhou has improved greatly in terms of facilities and services. There is however no international airport in the area making the journey a little more tricky. Hongqiao Airport is 86 kilometers away from the city. You can however simply walk to the Shanghai Hongqiao Railway Station, and take a bullet train to get to Suzhou a journey that hardly lasts 30 minutes. Alternatively, you can also go to the Hongqiao West Traffic Center that offers bus services to the city.  The city of Suzhou has world class hotels with excellent services. There are also economical options for those that need them. Either way, do not miss out on the wide variety of tasty local dishes. Authentic local cuisines and snacks can easily be found alongside Guanqian Street. On this street the people are kind and the service is simply great. When night falls, the city is quiet and peaceful. You can enjoy it while sipping a cup of tea in any teahouse. Therefore Suzhou travel from Shanghai is a great experience that anyone visiting Shanghai must not miss.

Attractions To Look at
Suzhou enjoys huge fame internationally for the elegant gardens. The small private gardens and delicate layouts, the decorations scatter all over the city. Most beautiful & popular ones comprise of Humble Administrator's Garden, Garden of the Master of Nets, Lion Grove, Lingering Garden or more. While in Suzhou, the travelers might consider visiting other sights except city's garden architecture - Suzhou Silk Museum, Hanshan Temple and Panmen Gate, are the good selections.

Accommodations
Being the famous tourist cities of China, Suzhou is very proud of the hotels, the luxurious accommodations as well as budget hostels that are scattering all over the place around this city. It’s generally simple to find one. Please get advised not all hotels will accommodate the foreign visitors. Try and stay in the nice one and avoid any trouble that might ruin your tour.

Food

Suzhou can be the paradise for gourmets and Suzhou cuisine features sweetness in the taste with seasonal and fresh vegetables as the raw materials. Vegetable & fish dishes of this region are famous and famous restaurants includes Deyuelou restaurant, Songhelou restaurant, Wanjiadenghuo restaurant, Nankai restaurant, and many more to look at. 

Sunday, October 26, 2008

What to Remember When Wrestling an Inner Mongolian Horseman

The man I wrestled that day in Inner Mongolia was about a foot shorter than me, at least a hundred pounds lighter, and seemed only slightly weaker than the horse I'd just seen him ride around the vast expanse of the Mongolian Steppe. The interesting thing about him was that just as the match began he looked up into my face which was so high above him that I was blocking out the noon sun, and smiled. There seemed to be something that I wasn't getting, some little piece of knowledge that had escaped me. We were surrounded on all sides, by Han Chinese tourists, Han Chinese wrestlers, Han tour guides, Han cooks, Han dancers, and Han musicians all pretending that they were Mongolian. In fact, the little man I grabbed onto that day was the only person of Mongolian descent I would ever meet in Inner Mongolia over the next two weeks. The people shouted for the man to stand up for his country, meaning China, which seemed to amuse him.

The thing I had not grasped about Inner Mongolian Wrestlers is that they wrestle for wrestling sake and live their lives for much the same reason. Winning and losing do not come into the equation once the match starts, and only the wild-haired strength that comes from being raised on horse milk and sheep meat is present. As I tugged at his armor and he tugged at mine (mine was about ten sizes too small) I started to get the point of the Mongolian heart, which is to battle for battle's sake, to win through strength or lose through strength, but always the strength remains. As I went flying onto my back and the crowd cheered for my Mongolian friend, I realized once and for all that you just can't beat a Mongolian horseman at wrestling if you think about where you are what you're doing any more than a horse thinks about all that vastness in the grass.
Inner Mongolia, like tourist attractions the world over, is a mixture of the real and the imagined. At the provincial museum in Baotou I happened to catch an exhibit of photographs of the old Mongolian tribes that once roamed the steppe, along with pictures of the very last wolf hunter that Inner Mongolia ever knew. What exists now is a mixture of the choking nature of tourism and the very real elements of a culture which is in its last decades.

The grass is real. You can stand on the prairie and look out at a horizon ending in a sea of green. If the year's rain fall has been low (and it increasingly is), large drifts of amber the size of aircraft carriers can be seen from any nearby ovoo. In fact, the grasslands will teach you the meaning of things vast and big. After losing yourself in the grasslands you can visit the Xiangshawan, or “Singing Sands” of the Gobi desert. If you should ever find yourself lucky enough to be there, walk out onto the nearest large dune, sit down, be still, and place the palms of your hands flat on the sand. Should the wind be just right you will actually hear the dune make a kind of low moan. At least I did. The horsemen are real, even though for the most part Han Chinese have taken over the role of their Mongolian neighbors when it comes to the horse treks, Mongolian traditional music, and yurt hotels that you meet throughout the region.

Many often refer to China's treatment of Inner Mongolia and Tibet as a kind of Chinese colonialism. Yet while the description might fit in geopolitical circles, it doesn't wash when it comes to the vast expanse of history between the two regions. It's hard for me to believe that the Inner Mongolians consider their present government to be a foreign occupier when it was they who produced the greatest and most vicious leader the world had ever known, a man so consumed with power that he subjected most of the known world to the philosophies of the Mongols.

For centuries the Mongols had tried to gain control of China but never quite succeeded because of that damned pesky wall. The Mongols were considered barbarians by the Song and Jin Dynasties which in their later years had lost their military spirit, turning attentions to art, an action which produced an awful lot of pottery and poetry but not many fortifications or military advances.
Then in 1162 a boy was born somewhere in modern day Mongolia who would eventually grow up to unite the tribes of Mongolia, slaughter anyone who got in his way, and bring the finery of the Song to its knees. Ghengis Kahn not only brought the separate tribes of Mongolia together, thereby making it one nation rather than a scattering of nomadic people, but he also created a cult of personality around the Mongol people which exists to this day.

In 1208 Ghengis Kahn attacked from the north, swept most of China into his empire, and proceeded along the path of Alexander the Great and Julius Caesar towards the farthest reaches of the earth trying to own it all. In the process, he taught Chinese culture the value of strength. Ghengis Kahn is still worshipped today in Inner Mongolia as the region's one and only leader who managed to make a name for himself. And what a name it is.