From our hostel we headed out for a walk just
Saturday morning was an early one, as we left the hostel at 7am to catch an 8am bus from Changsha to Zhangjiajie. The bus station was an absolute zoo, and as the only westerners in the place (and the only people wearing shorts) we attracted a good deal of attention.
The bus was hot, the sticky kind of hot where you want nothing more in the world than to change your shirt. We eventually made our way out of dusty Changsha and into the countryside,
Zhangjiajie is a small town, cluttered around a river in a small valley. It’s not very pretty, but the central area is filled with shops and restaurants and is in a constant state of activity. Upon arriving around noon on Saturday, we checked into our hostel, which was reached by walking through a sketchy alleyway and then taking a dark elevator to the 4th floor of what appeared to be a dirty office building. The hostel office was located in an attractive lodge-style hut that looked like it had been built on the roof of the office building as an afterthought. The roof/office offered some cool views of the city, and our rooms were spacious and bright, although there were some various sheet-cleanliness-related issues.
We immediately took a cab to the bottom station of the Zhangzhajie Cable Car, the world’s longest. The car departs from the center of the city, exits the valley, traverses a series of rice paddies and small villages, and then ascends 1,279 meters to the top of Tianmen Mountain. It
may or may not have been mentioned in this blog that I am pretty afraid of heights (my last cable car experience, at Eisreisenwelt, Austria, ended with me dry heaving in the upper station). Just as I had gotten myself sufficiently pumped up and confident enough to get onto the cable car (pounding my chest and muttering phrases like Man up, Ryan, quit being such a freaking wuss), Warren, our resident Chinese-language expert, informed us that the cable car was closed on account of a French guy attempting to traverse the 7,455 meter, nearly vertical wire on foot. We were shown a poster that was advertising the daring attempt, and the guy looked like a villain from a Disney movie, which made us that much angrier at his idiotic tightrope attempt (think Captain Hook, wearing tight pants and a stupid grin).Having been forced to call an audible, we took a 45-minute cab ride outside the city to Zhangjiajie National Forest. It’s a tourist attraction that’s starting to garner attention in the west, for one strange reason: the movie Avatar. I haven’t seen it, but apparently the Avatar world features floating, column-like mountains referred to as the Hallelujah Mountains; the artistic renderings in the movie were based on the park in
That night we ate at a great local restaurant that was probably too classy for our disgusting, sweaty state. Afterwards, we bought sticks of sugarcane, which we had noticed some locals
Later that night we sang awkward karaoke in a small local bar (they had 12 English songs), and seemed to rid the place of the small number of patrons that had been there before. We also visited a night market that offered all kinds of strange foods. While I stuck to a tasty stir fry-like concoction, we all tried some of Cathy’s stingray and Warren’s oddly prepared eggplant.
Sunday, we had unfinished business to take care of, and headed back to the cable car station. We were happy to learn that the French jerk had failed in his attempt to walk up the rope (he quit after about 100 meters because he got some oil-like substance on his foot. Sucker). The cable car ride was smooth and moved quickly, although it is apparently the world’s longest, at about 48
After a cheap ramen lunch, we took the cable car down to the middle station. After drying the sweat off my hands and applying some deodorant, we got on a medium-sized bus and ascended ¾ of the way back up to the top, on a road called Heaven Approaching Road. Quite possibly my dad’s worst nightmare, the winding road clung to the side of a series of cliffs, all several thousand feet high and with minimal guardrails. I looked at old pictures on my camera and spoke of nonsensical things with Andrew and Cathy in an effort to distract myself from the ridiculous scenes taking place outside the windows.
After 15 of the longest minutes of my life, we arrived at the destination, the remarkable Tianmen Cave and the Heaven Reaching Ladder. The cave is a literal gap in the massive mountain, a
naturally occurring hole that reaches through to the other side. Leading the way up to the cave was a set of alarmingly steep stairs, 999 in all. Had the 999 steps begun at ground level, I probably would have been nervous. Considering that the bottom of the steps was already several thousand feet off the ground below, I was somewhat horrified. I did, however, reach the top, and was amazed at how people like Jose and Warren can be thousands of feet in the air and still want to climb rocks to get higher views. I just don’t get that.After the harrowing three-part descent that followed (stairs, bus, cable car), we found ourselves back in Zhangjiajie for another dinner of local delicacies. The city streets were once again filled with activity after dark. Our final hours in Zhangjiajie consisted of watching old women do choreographed aerobic dance routines to traditional Chinese songs, attempting to take group pictures with the timer-feature on our cameras, and engaging in a nasty round of bumper cars at an outdoor festival (the fact that the only combatants were six loud Americans attracted a very interested and boisterous crowd that oohed and aahed with each collision).
We survived a tiny local airport that looked and sounded more like a cafeteria in a large high school than any place from which to fly, and after a bumpy 2-hour flight arrived back in Beijing.
awesome trip!
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