Mar
01
2010
0

Jours 147~149: arrivée dans le Guangdong sous un ciel couvert

Jour 147 (15/02/10)

Luxi(芦溪)-Hukeng(湖坑)

Province du Fujian(福建省)

- 38km -

Aujourd’hui, nous allons mieux. Il est temps de partir. Nous quittons donc l’hôtel, entourés par les trois filles du patron, qui se battent pour poser en photo avec nous.

Comme hier, aucun restaurant n’est ouvert. Nous nous contentons donc de quelques pains achetés dans cette pâtisserie occidentale à la chinoise, et repartons. La première demi-heure de notre parcours est semée d’embûches: boue, trous, flaques, cailloux, mais nous avons tout de même la chance de tomber par la suite sur une petite route asphaltée. Seulement, les dieux des montagnes du Fujian, n’entendant pas nous laisser rouler sous des conditions aussi idéales, ont décidé de convoquer la pluie et de dresser devant nous des pentes abruptes. Encore une fois, c’est le parcours du combattant, d’autant que nous nous perdons plusieurs fois, à cause de la signalétique quasi-inexistante.

A peine sortis de Luxi, un nouveau tulou...

(more…)

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Feb
25
2010
0

Jours 144~146: Réveillon en tulou, et effet pervers du hongjiu

Jour 144 (12/02/10)

Luxi(芦溪)

Province du Fujian(福建省)

Etant donné la journée crevante d’hier, nous faisons aujourd’hui la grasse matinée. Lorsque nous sortons, les filles du patron de l’hôtel insistent pour nous accompagner, de peur que l’on ne trouve rien: ni où manger, ni quoi voir. Nous réussissons, non sans mal, à nous en débarrasser, pour aller prendre quelques baozi sur une étal du marché encore très animé, puis partons vers le tulou le plus proche.

Marché de Luxi (1)

Marché de Luxi (2)

(more…)

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Feb
20
2010
5

Pinghe: Where Pomelos Saved the Tulou (福建平和縣:蜜柚如何救了土樓之地)

By Evan

Time to make up a little lost time. After our time in Anxi, we spent some really glorious days meandering around Xiamen, which I swear is China’s most charming city — that I’ve visited — bar none. If we were urbanists and not LBXists, as it were, I’d spend an entire post writing about how we got lost in the old city’s dense, pulsing alleyways the way men lose their souls in a beautiful woman’s long hair. Alas, our quest is for LBXes, and after only three days Alexis returned from his visa run to Hong Kong, obliging us to part from that beautiful city. [Andy's pics of Xiamen here]

On our first day out of Xiamen, torrential rain stopped us short in Zhangzhou (漳州), a rat hole of a city, where successive sicknesses encumbered us for two days. At least it was in Zhangzhou that I got to see my Saints roll to a Super Bowl victory via a friend’s NFL.com subscription (thanks to Weiwei and Travis!). Three days later than expected, we rolled out of town toward the northwest and the land of the tulou (土樓), or as they ought to be called in English, round earthen castles.

Inside the tulou of Xiazhai. Photo by Andy

That day out of Zhangzhou, I lost three tubes to lesions in the same spot on my back wheel (one before even riding on the $@*# thing) before realizing that my rear Schwalbe Marathon XR, “the ultimate expedition tire,” had been ruptured severely. I threw it away and put on my spare, but seriously, I want my $55 back. Needless to say, that cost us loads of time, and we got only as far as the small town of Xiazhai (霞寨鎮), where the following day I was sick to the stomach… again. As I lay in bed listening to the same five Spring Festival songs on endless repeat at max volume (there will be brutal violence next time I hear the gongxi gongxi gongxi ni [恭喜恭喜恭喜你!] song), Alexis wandered out and found a surprise: a tulou right in Xiazhai, way ahead of schedule. (more…)

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Feb
19
2010
0

Jours 141~143: Premiers tulou et infortune d’Evan

Jour 141 (09/02/10)

Zhangzhou(漳州)-Xiazhai(霞寨)

Province du Fujian(福建省)

- 65km -

Cette fois-ci, c’est bon! Nous nous levons à 7h, le ciel est clément et aucun de nous n’est malade. Nous quittons la charmante Mademoiselle Cai (蔡小姐) qui travaille à l’hôtel, allons prendre un café au Mc Do, et reprenons enfin la route.

"Payer ses impôts conformément à la loi est un honneur"

(more…)

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Feb
18
2010
0

Jours 138~140: Zhangzhou malgré nous

Jour 138 (06/02/10)

Xiamen(厦门)-Zhangzhou(漳州)

Province du Fujian(福建省)

- 65km -

Après un petit dèj de baozi et un petit café, nous sommes enfin prêts à partir. Dans une ruelle, un vieux lbx me demande ma nationalité:

  • 你是哪国人?” (« Tu es de quel pays? »)
  • 法国人!” (« Je suis français! »)
  • (entendant cela, un autre lbx, lève le pouce) “法国好!法国戴高乐将军很棒!” (« La France, c’est bien! Le Général de Gaulle était génial! »)
  • (flatté) “对,很棒!谢谢!” (« Oui, il était génial! Merci! »)
  • 他们也是?” (« Eux aussi sont français? »)
  • (je réponds d’un ton ironique, que le lbx ne perçoit pas) “不,他们是美国的!美国人不好!” (« Non, ils sont américains! Les Américains sont pas bien! »)
  • 美国人也有好的!” (« Des Américains, y’en a aussi des bien! »)
  • (encore plus ironique) “可是他们卖武器给台湾!” (« Mais ils vendent des armes à Taïwan! »)
  • 哦!这个不好!不好!” (« Ahh! Ça, c’est pas bien! C’est pas bien! »)

(more…)

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Feb
16
2010
0

Photo: Shengwu Tulou

A woman prays at a small shrine in the courtyard of Luxi Town's Shengwu Tulou (绳武楼), the larger and more recent of the town's two remaining tulou (roughly 120 years old). The building used to house 24 families, but now only two remain. The others have used money sent back from relatives working in China's cities to build their own homes and move out. But since the building is considered to be of historical and cultural value, the families are not allowed to sell their tulou homes, which are now used only as storage spaces. Each tulou includes a central well for communal use.

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Feb
15
2010
0

Photo: Zhibi Tulou

A teenager on a scooter passes in front of the Zhibi Tulou (植碧楼), the older and smaller of the two remaining tulou in Fujian's Luxi Town (芦溪镇). On our way out of town today we finally passed through one of the UNESCO World Heritage Tulou areas. While the concentration of the unique buildings was impressive, the Disneyland-like atmosphere of the area left us feeling extremely grateful for being able to see the tulou in their unrestored form in Luxi.

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Feb
15
2010
0

Photo: The Tulou of Zhongteng Village

A man works in the fields outside of Zhongteng Village (钟腾村) in Fujian. Zhongteng has three tulou (土楼) -- large, castle-like, earthen structures housing dozens of families around an inner courtyard. The one on the left is called Facing the Sun Building (朝阳楼) and the one on the right Horizontal Building (水平楼). A third, not pictured, sits further to the right. Generally, only the poorest residents of a village live in the tulou as everyone moves out as soon as their children off working in China's cities send home enough money for them to build "Western" houses (read: cement and brick boxes).

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Feb
14
2010
1

Photo: Chase

Two little girls play chase among the tulou (土楼) of Zhongteng Village in Fujian.

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Feb
12
2010
0

Photo: Man in the Tulou Gate

A man stands in the entrance to a tulou (土楼) in Xiazhai, Fujian. Tulou are large, almost castle-like structures with a thick, circular, earthen wall around the outside and homes around the inside and a courtyard and well in the middle. The unique structures serve as both a means of defense in rough times and as a place to keep a large family together in one place. The tulou in some areas have been recognized as UNESCO World Heritage Sites. Those have been restored and of course have a hefty entrance charge slapped on them. We've been told the one we considered going to costs 120 yuan ($18) to get into.

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