This is Alex again, I am going to divide this final blog in to 2 parts since apparently I made my last entry too long! (sorry
Part 1: We left
There were a lot of westerners in Dali and they looked more like they belonged at
From Dali we took another bus to Lijiang and this one kept stopping at random places and letting people off/picking them up. The old part of Lijiang was cool as well, full of winding cobblestone streets and old buildings. However, yet again, Chinese tourism at its best, the place was packed with shops selling the same thing and had a lot more Chinese tour groups there then Dali. This means that Sarah and I felt like zoo animals whenever we were around them because they all stare and try to take our picture. One day we got a ride to Baisha, which was supposed to be a cool town north of Lejiang. It was pretty cool, just another little old town, but still touristy and people trying to sell us stuff all the time. Sarah wanted to see some frescos we had read about in the book, so we went to see those in Baisha – they were probably really pretty once but had been pretty much destroyed during the Cultural Revolution.
We decided to walk home from Baisha by wandering around through the countryside in the general direction of Lijiang. I think that has been my favorite part of
The pictures do not have anything to do with what Alex wrote, I just like them so here is a short explanation of each: (1) famous three pagodas in Dali, (2) Alex walking/wandering outside Dali, (3) our hostel called "Tibet Lodge" or something like that on one of the busiest streets in Dali, very good people watching, (4) Alex and I in front of the famed ancient water wheel in Lijiang, (5) Naxi script, one of the last pictographic scripts left in use today, (6) batik (a special kind of one-color dyed cloth) being made in Lijiang.
2 comments:
I would love to see pictures of the farming if you have any....sounds like you had a great traveling experience (always multi-modal) -- I am going to have to look on a map to see where you went.
cheryl
Did you notice that the pagodas in Dali actually lean? Just like the tower of Pisa. I'm sure if the Chinese really realized this they'd probably make it a major tourist attraction!
"Welcome to see the Leaning Pagodas of Dali!"
(Chinglish intended. :))
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