May
28
2010
0

Photo: Cheers!

In our evening in Xuelin (雪林鄉), we were treated to dinner by a group of teachers from the local elementary school. Two were ethnic Wa (佤族) while the other was Dai (傣族). As part of their local Wa drinking customs, one person toasts another by standing up and singing a rhythmic song while the others clap and sing along if they know the words. Then the "toaster" downs his glass, fills it up again and passes it on to the "toastee" (me), who then chooses another person to serenade and toast. Rinse, repeat. For our part, we sang whatever songs to which we could remember the lyrics, including "I Would Walk 500 Miles," "It's a Small World," "I Will Survive" and the Portrait of an LBX classic, "Sixteen Tons."

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May
28
2010
0

The Daily Tweet 2010-05-28

  • Sending Devi off to Dali-Kunming-Shanghai. Now it will be just Evan and Andy… #
  • In the home of 滇红 black tea. Stopping short today and we will definitely be doing some tea tasting! #
  • New pics from Andy http://is.gd/csKCo #

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Written by Andy in: Andy | Tags:
May
28
2010
2

Jours 226~227: À la frontière sino-laotienne, derniers jours d’une aventure en équipe

Jour 226 (06/05/10)

Jiangcheng(江城)-Mannai(曼乃)

Province du Yunnan(云南省)

- 88km -

Encore une fois nous partons aujourd’hui assez tôt, car nous avons beaucoup de route à faire. D’autant que le lbx cycliste de l’autre jour m’a dit qu’il y avait une bonne partie du parcours en plein travaux et que la progression serait très difficile. Et en effet… Très vite , nous tombons sur une route… indescriptiblement merdique! Terre, boue, cailloux, poussière, camions… Tout cela dans des montées et des descentes, sur environ 60km! Je crois bien que c’est la pire route que l’on ait prise jusqu’à présent… D’autant qu’on ne comprend pas pourquoi les travaux ne sont pas fait petit à petit: on détruit 1 km et on goudronne, puis on détruit un peu plus loin et on goudronne, etc, par petits tronçons. Pourquoi avoir rendu la route quasi-impraticable sur des dizaines de kilomètres? Ça me dépasse… Heureusement qu’il ne pleut pas!

Question: comment cet arbre s'est-il retrouvé là?

(more…)

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May
27
2010
3

Photo: Don’t Fall!

A mother holds her son up on a wall in Xuelin (雪林鄉). Our rides through these forested mountains on the Burma border have been plagued by ominous clouds and on-and-off rain, an unwelcome departure from the predictability of the once-daily monsoons we've had since a few days after entering the province.

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May
27
2010
0

The Daily Tweet 2010-05-27

  • We managed to find a bottle of Johnny Walker Black at a bar and some mint at a Muslim restaurant. We have some mint juleps (of a sort)! #
  • Having some great Dai food for Devi's last night with us: grilled fish, peas, curry potatoes, fried bananas and tofu. #

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May
26
2010
0

Photo: Taking in the Evening Scene

An elderly Wa (佤族) woman watches the evening goings-on in Xuelin (雪林鄉). A wedding was being held in the house across the street. We passed by three times and lingered but failed to garner an invitation.

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May
26
2010
0

Jours 223~225: Rencontre avec un cycliste chinois sur la route vers Jiangcheng

Jour 223 (03/05/10)

Guilong(规龙)-Qingtou(箐头)

Province du Yunnan(云南省)

- 95km -

Tôt le matin déjà, nous entendons de la musique tourner à fond, sans doute dans le but de nous réveiller. Mais trop crevés, nous ne sortons pas de la chambre. Ce n’est qu’à 9h passées, avec une bonne gueule de bois, que nous rangeons nos affaires. À part le père, personne n’est à la maison. Celui-ci, d’ailleurs, nous accueille avec un peu de froideur. Pas de « Vous avez bien dormi? » ni de « Vous prenez un petit dèj? ». Il se contente d’ouvrir la porte d’entrée de la cour afin que nous puissions sortir nos vélos, et nous dit seulement:

  • 你们要走了?” (« Vous partez? »)

Le grand lit de Petit Li

(more…)

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May
26
2010
0

The Daily Tweet 2010-05-26

  • If a scorpion falls from the ceiling an into your tea on your birthday is that a fortuitous sign or not? #
  • Trying to make it 120km to a county seat today to celebrate Andy's birthday, hopefully with some yangjiu 洋酒 to be made into mint juleps! #
  • On a national highway for the first time in a while. Doesn't stop us from going uphill intensely though. #
  • Andy sets new speed record for his birthday — 73.0kph. The whisky idea might be a bust though. Not much in town! #

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Written by Andy in: Andy | Tags:
May
25
2010
2

Day 240: Lancang to Fubang 瀾滄到富邦之旅

By Andy

Note: With Alexis having moved on to do his own thing, there’s now no one keeping a diary of daily events, in English, French or any other language. I’m going to attempt to pick up some of that task, but being as unreasonably wordy as I am and only having so many hours in the day, I’m going to have to limit it to some of my more memorable riding days. This is one such day.

We set out from Lancang late in the morning as has been our habit lately after two days of rest and a woefully low-budget celebration of Devi and my four years together. In the dreary city of Lancang we’re unable to find even a restaurant with four walls. Fortunately, my mom has sent over a bottle of Cuvaison 2006 Cabernet Sauvignon for my birthday, and after finding a couple wine glasses at the local supermarket, we manage to make a memorable evening out of it at a Sichuan restaurant down the street from our hotel.

We hear from numerous people that the road from Lancang to Lincang is torn up and under construction for the entire 267km. The willingness of the government here to inconvenience people on that sort of scale continues to amaze us. I just try to imagine heading onto the road from Harrisburg to Philadelphia back home and seeing a sign that says, “Construction next 100 miles.” But in China, there’s no sign, no detour markers, and the road is under construction for 165 miles. Having gone nearly insane a few weeks previously on a similar, 60km stretch of under-construction national road through the mountains a couple weeks previously, we decide to take a radical route through the mountains, even though the thought of the switchbacks on Google Maps make our stomachs curl.

The road starts out pleasantly enough as we move out of the rather miserable county seat of Lancang and past about a dozen fish farms selling tilapia fry (there are also shops in town selling expensive fishing gear for those who want to go dangle a line in one of the small ponds). We hit the first construction just as the sky begins to turn an ominous dark gray and the wind picks up worrying notch, and we seek shelter under a gas station that has been converted into a rebar-welding depot for the construction work. After 15 minutes or so there’s still no rain in sight, and we continue on our merry way.

It turns out the road is not nearly as bad as we imagine, as most of the construction of the new highway is being done high above on the mountain while we crank along on the old two-lane road far below. I start thinking, “If it’s going to be like this the whole way, we might as well just keep going and skip the crazy mountain route.” But not wanting to jinx things I keep my mouth shut. (more…)

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May
25
2010
0

Photo: Evening Walk

Two ethnic Wa sisters walk down the streets of Xuelin (雪林鄉).

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