Sep
24
2009
1

The Best Laid Plans

No matter how many bike trips we take and how many times we realize that through a combination of our own limitations and the fact that China is completely unpredictable, we always assume that we will be able to plan ahead and be ready for whatever comes at us. Here, in list format, is a list of just a few great plans that we men (mice?) have recently managed to send awry:

- Depart beginning September – Evan inadvertently steals Andy’s passport, trip start delayed to September 23

- Take a trial run to the Great Wall before departure – Air France leaves Alexis’s bike in Paris an extra 24 hours, destroying our time gap

- Drink that expensive bottle of Champagne Alexis brought from France before we leave to consecrate the journey – We put it in the fridge and forgot it there in our rush to leave early on day 1

- Leave early on day 1 – Right before we hit Tian’anmen, Andy remembers he left his gloves and iPhone charger at his friend’s house; returns solo to fetch them leaving Alexis and me at a hutong restaurant next to Xidan and pushes our departure from Beijing to around noon

- We all wake up at 8am on day 2 to make the most of the cool morning – I write this post at 9:30 between two sleeping baldies

Thankfully we at least made it to Hebei Province yesterday (yes, we crossed a deep 4km into it before settling down) as we had promised everybody who asked us where our first stop would be. However, the point here is that as long as we keep humble expectations of our own abilities and overestimate China’s proclivity for throwing us curves, we ought to do fine – at least in terms of expectations. Now that we’ve all slept over 10 hours, maybe we can actually plan to go out and find some LBXes – knock on wood.

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Sep
23
2009
5

Day 1

Early Morning DepartureDay one of our journey started off with some typical setbacks (typical for Evan and I). After a very nice breakfast hosted by our friends Cathy and Muzi, we set out from the Dongzhimen area in Beijing for Tiananmen, and soon realized we had forgotten a few things: the champagne we said we were going to drink that morning, Evan’s bike gloves, my bike gloves and my iPhone charger. The latter we failed to notice until we were already at Xidan, and as it is extremely important to the trip (our internet comes from the iPhone), I added another 20km to my distance today going back to get it and my gloves. We legitimately hit the road at around 11:30, heading south out of the city on the G106 national highway as planned.

Recently, I personally have been a bit worried about our physical condition. Evan has done the most biking recently, with trips up and down the California coast and a few weeks spent in Taiwan. I have taken only a handful of long-ish rides over the past three months, while Alexis has never gone on a long bike ride before. In the three weeks we were in Beijing waiting for my visa and passports, we didn’t even get out on one decent ride. Our bikes are all fully loaded with gear and are extremely heavy. One of these days it’d be nice to come across a hotel or a family with a scale, so we could figure out how much we are each carryinAndy and Evan in Tiananmeng. Nevertheless, once we got up to speed, we cruised along on the flat and well-paved road out of Beijing. Our goal for the day was only to get to Hebei province, which is where we told everyone we’d end up. Failing to make it out of Beijing would be far too embarrassing. Beijing is massive. Our total ride today was 70km to a town called Gu’an in Hebei province, but the town itself is only about four kilometers into Hebei.

After a late lunch near the China Watermelon Museum (strangely, I have been there once before, five years previously) in Daxing, a suburb of Beijing, we pulled into Gu’an at around 4:30. Coming into Gu’an was like passing through a demolition zone. Actually, it wasn’t like passing through a demolition zone — it was a demolition zone. It seemed like everything for two or three kilometers on our way into the town was a massive pile of bricks and rubble. The Chinese government lists Gu’an as a “development zone,” and when they say something like that anywhere near a major city like Beijing or Shanghai, they mean it. After we made it through the rubble, we quickly found a cheap hotel to stay in. For the first two weeks while we get acclimated to what we’re doing, I imagine we will be staying in a number of hotels before we try out more camping and hopefully staying with people we meet. But the price is right — we’re each paying a little less than $1.50 to share a 3 person room…and we got to shower.

Gu'an Key MakerI spent a little time walking around town with my camera while Alexis and Evan showered. I am always amazed at how quickly Chinese people change from basically ignoring foreigners in Beijing or Shanghai (because we’re everywhere and nothing special anymore) to exclaiming “Look, a foreigner!” or yelling “HALLO!” from a passing car. When we finally get away from the urban centers on the east coast, maybe people will even start complimenting me on my Chinese again!

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Sep
23
2009
4

Setting Off

After nearly a year of thinking of this project and bike trip, it is finally time to start. We begin our day today with a pancake, egg and French toast breakfast cooked by Muzi, which will probably be our last Western meal until Shanghai. Alexis has also brought back a nice bottle of Champagne from France, of which we will each enjoy a glass in a minute since we forgot about it last night. Our route today will take us down Chang’an Jie and through Tiananmen, where we will attempt to take pictures in front of Mao’s portrait and the SWAT guys standing around with automatic weapons. From there, we will head south down G106 and into Hebei province where we will find a place to rest around four or five in the afternoon. I don’t think anyone got a particularly good night of sleep last night, so a small hotel may be necessary. But the game is on! We’ll be updating frequently on our Twitter account, and those little updates will show up in the bar on the right side of this page as well, although the time stamps usually seem to be pretty far off. Wish us luck!

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Sep
21
2009
3

Reassertion of Statement of Purpose

Before I can possibly hope to explain why we’re undertaking this monstrous bicycle trip around China, I have to explain to you some background on what led up to this moment. Years ago as a bright-eyed college student, extraordinarily naïve about how the world worked and interested in linguistic challenge, I signed up for intensive Chinese classes, which turned into a Chinese major when I found out I could live in Beijing (what could be cooler?) for a whole year. So I came to Peking University and fell in love intellectually with the complexities of the language, the culture, and what you might call “the way things work” which at the time was to me what the Chinese call a 不解之谜 (an unsolvable mystery), or an endeavor that required intense analysis and energy at all times just to stay afloat – effectively the opposite of the boredom and malaise that accompanied my youth spent in American suburbia. After my return to school for senior year and a few months spent home twiddling my thumbs, the only option that made any sense was to fling myself back into the rodeo that is life in Beijing. And so I adventured and learned for years, including a year-and-a-half corporate job in Shanghai. At this point I couldn’t honestly say I’ve got China “licked” or that there’s no more mystery left, but something fundamentally changed within me over the last year. (more…)

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Sep
17
2009
1

The Frustration of Waiting

We’ve been without an update here for a while, and it’s time for at least a little explanation. We’ve committed ourselves to taking this little project on the road for a year long bicycle ride around China. Both Evan and I are unemployed and homeless as a result, and have been for what is beginning to seem like a very long time. Both of us have made trips back to our homes in Pennsylvania and Louisiana and dropped a large pile of cash on new bikes and a bunch of other gear. Evan spent a few weeks riding a Dahon up and down the California coast where he also attended a paragliding camp and is now certified to catch updrafts over the cliffs of the California coast and other beautiful places around the world. He and another friend also went on a bike trip in Taiwan, intending to circumnavigate the island, but having to adjust plans plans when a monstrous typhoon wiped out the roads on the southern part of the island.

Now we are both back in Beijing and in a holding pattern. You see, when Evan was helping me move out of my apartment in July, he noticed my passport sitting in a drawer and, recognizing its vast importance, put it in his bag for his version of “safe keeping.” A couple days later, I realized that my passport was missing and after tearing apart everything I still owned, we declared the thing lost. I spent the last week of my working time in Beijing running around getting the requisite documents together and spending another pile of money for an emergency passport and to get my visa transferred into the emergency passport before leaving for America five days later. I arrived in the States and signed into my email account to find an apologetic email from Evan, who had unknowingly handed my passport to the lady at the check-in counter at the airport while on his way to Taiwan. Well, what’s done is done, but our original expected departure of early September has come and gone as we wait for my new passport, for my visa to be transferred into said new passport and for my visa to be renewed. Our hope was to leave by the 19th, but that dream too has now faded.

But the whole ordeal is not without its positive side. Another member has been added to our cycling team, pushing us closer to our half-serious dream of a Forrest Gump-style following as we make our trip around China and attempt to grow beards. Evan’s French friend Alexis recently left his job at CCTV’s French channel (okay he was asked to leave) and intends to join us for the entire journey. Our delayed departure will allow us to all leave together from Beijing rather than having him meet us somewhere out on the road. Alexis will be contributing a French-language travelogue to the site, which we’re pretty excited about.

But for now we wait.

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Written by Andy in: All, Andy | Tags: , , , ,
May
20
2009
0

Photo: And a Good Day to You, Sir

goodtoseeyou_500

Just happy to be trimming trees with a tiny saw.

 

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May
14
2009
2

Photo: The Wanderer

wanderer_500

A (presumably) homeless man crosses the street at Caihong Bridge in Beijing. As is the case in numerous other developing countries (think: Slumdog Millionaire), many of China's supposedly homeless actually work for organized begging rings -- an incredibly sad situation in itself, but even more so because it brands all beggars as cheats, which surely must make it difficult for those actually in need to find a helping hand.

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May
07
2009
2

Photo: Friend of the Family

Friend of the Family

Evan is in Beijing for 10 days and we took a bike ride last weekend to Sancha Village below the Great Wall. The family we stayed with consists of a husband and wife, who rent out a couple rooms in their house and cook meals, and their elementary school-aged son, who they send to live in the city with a relative during the week to attend school. They also take care of this mentally disabled man, who is friendly and endearing, but doesn't say much. I asked him if I could take his photo, and he closed his eyes and gave me a smile. He is lucky, though. So many of China's disabled citizens have no one to take care of and love them, and many of them wake up to the sight of the underside of an expressway rather than to fresh air, sun and green mountains.

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May
04
2009
0

Photo: Metal Heads

Metal Heads

I'm posting this in the spirit of the music festivals that usually occur around this time of year in China. This picture was actually taken at Midi two years ago. Unfortunately, Midi this year was moved outside of Shanghai and the Modern Sky Strawberry Music Festival took its place. I have some pictures from that, but haven't had time to edit them yet. Besides, all the metal heads seemed to be down south at the Midi festival, so Beijing had a much mellower crowd this time around. Volumes have been written about the history of rock in China. I will just say that rock music used to be a somewhat subversive genre in terms of lyrics and the people who followed it (think Cui Jian performing under the Goddess of Democracy in Tiananmen Square, 1989), but now it is much more commercialized and the lyrics are rarely politically charged. Still, this guy is not exactly a poster child for the CCP.

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Apr
20
2009
0

Photo: Faded Springtime

fadedspring_500

Spring is here, the flowers are blooming, and LBXes and everyone else are heading to Beijing's parks to enjoy the pleasant weather before it becomes unbearably hot. Of course, parents are still bundling their kids up like it's mid-winter. Taken in Ritan (Temple of the Sun) Park.

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