Sichuan – Amy and the Great World https://www.amyandthegreatworld.com Tue, 08 Jul 2014 21:09:05 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=5.3.18 An American Holiday in Sichuan {China} https://www.amyandthegreatworld.com/2014/07/american-holiday-sichuan-china/ https://www.amyandthegreatworld.com/2014/07/american-holiday-sichuan-china/#comments Tue, 08 Jul 2014 21:09:05 +0000 http://amyandthegreatworld.wordpress.com/?p=113 I’ve been having some technical issues with comments, so sorry if I haven’t been able to respond to one you may have left yet! I will soon as Disqus seems to be working now. Thanks for bearing with me! I love every comment I receive and do my best to respond to each and every one–andRead More

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I’ve been having some technical issues with comments, so sorry if I haven’t been able to respond to one you may have left yet! I will soon as Disqus seems to be working now. Thanks for bearing with me! I love every comment I receive and do my best to respond to each and every one–and I will, but perhaps in not as timely of a fashion as usual! Sorry for the inconvenience, but thanks for reading anyway!!

As you know, last weekend was Independence Day here in the States and a three-day weekend for everyone. For us, we packed up our car completely full–with things tied to the roof!–and made the long drive up to my parents’ home in Bozeman, Montana. We were selling our car there the next day, so we ended up hitting the road sooner than planned. We did arrive in time for some fireworks, but mostly we were too exhausted to celebrate much.

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I normally don’t go all-out for the Fourth of July–I am much more an all-out-for-Christmas-girl, and in fact, it’s been awhile since I was able to go crazy for the Fourth.

Two years ago, Colorado was on fire, so there were no fireworks of any kind–not even sparklers!

For the Fourth of July last year, I was in China.

While it may have been easy to find fireworks if I had been in a larger city (or if I had tried…), I was busy with my internship for my graduate program, deep in rural Sichuan province.

The Sichuan province is in central China, famous for its natural beauty, pandas, and it’s close proximity to the wilds of Tibet (is well as its devastating earthquakes, which is why our internship was based there). After the smog of Beijing, I loved the fresh air and the green humidity of the Sichuan province, as well as the rural rice farms and friendly natives.

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While we (me and my fellow classmates also completing their internship) didn’t celebrate traditionally, our Chinese teammates helped us buy the ingredients for an “American” meal (beef, potatoes for fries, corn, watermelon) as well as Pabst Blue Ribbon. I guess, in China, there is nothing more American than good old Pabst Blue Ribbon. (And maybe that’s true here in the States, as well…).

We were even given the day off to make our giant feast. It took a large part of the day to find the ingredients–especially the oil for the fries! We ended up using an oil I hadn’t seen before, but I’m thinking maybe it was saffron oil?

We also had to make all of this in two pots, one pan, and with one hot plate.

First of all, I had never made fries in oil before (oven-baked all the way!) so it took awhile to figure out when to add the potatoes to the oil, if it was hot enough, how much oil to add, etc.

We then formed the burgers by combining onions, beef we ground up with our hands, and as many spices we could find as possible. Mostly salt and pepper…beware of Sichuan pepper!

Everything was actually a delicious success–except the corn never cooked correctly–and that PBR never tasted as good.

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Linking up with Bonnie, Sammy, Van and Kaelene!

Travel Tuesday

 

Have you spent holidays unique to your country/culture abroad? Have you celebrated anyway?

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Bifengxia Panda Base, Sichuan {China} https://www.amyandthegreatworld.com/2014/05/bifengxia-panda-base-sichuan-china/ https://www.amyandthegreatworld.com/2014/05/bifengxia-panda-base-sichuan-china/#comments Tue, 06 May 2014 20:37:04 +0000 http://amyandthegreatworld.wordpress.com/?p=58 Since the panda kindergarten I mentioned was a hit yesterday, I realized it was about time I actually wrote about this magical place I visited last summer. We visited the Bifengxia Panda Base near Ya’an in rural Sichuan province while I was working with earthquake survivors as part of my international internship experience. It’s a littleRead More

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Since the panda kindergarten I mentioned was a hit yesterday, I realized it was about time I actually wrote about this magical place I visited last summer.

We visited the Bifengxia Panda Base near Ya’an in rural Sichuan province while I was working with earthquake survivors as part of my international internship experience. It’s a little hard to reach–you’ll need to fly in Chengdu and take a bus from there.

(There is also another panda base, a bigger, more famous one, much closer to Chengdu. While I didn’t go there, it might be easier to get to!)

When you arrive at the main visitor’s center, you have two route choices to reach the panda sanctuary–hiking through a ravine, or riding a bus through a tiger habitat. Only in China. We were with our volunteer team, and the consensus was the hike. They were showing videos of the buses riding through the tiger habitat, and as the bus riders were feeding tigers meat from the windows to get them to come closer, I agreed with the hike.

I’m glad we chose that way, because it was gorgeous. Imagine getting lost in the mountains of China, as seen in the movies, and you’ll get an idea of what this hike was like. We rode an elevator to the bottom of the ravine (I really never figured out why, but it was a long hike back up) and hiked up to the pandas from there. It was a long hike, through the jungle, near rivers and waterfalls, filled with gorgeous flowers and weird signs in Chinese.

Along the ravine, I noticed strange rocks hanging from the cliffs and asked one of our Chinese colleagues what they were. Imagine my surprise when they were actually hanging coffins. The inner history nerd in me lit up like a Christmas tree.

The end of the hike was a little slippery and steep, but it was next to a waterfall (which you eventually cross) and finally, we made it up to the mountain to the pandas, which I’d been waiting to see my whole life.

Of course, China being China, the sanctuary wasn’t open quite yet, so we ate some snacks and waited. Upon arrival into the sanctuary, we still had to walk a lot, although you did have the option of riding in little golf-cart type vehicles. Luckily, we saw a few grown-up pandas along the way, which helped the time pass quickly, but we all know my true goal: the panda kindergartenI mean, really? You had me at panda kindergarten.

We reached the kindergarten and immediately saw the little ones sleeping in the trees. Commence photo taking! I took a million, and a few videos (because baby pandas) and ended up buying a small stuffed panda as a souvenir.

Just past the panda kindergarten, there is a panda nursery, where the really tiny pandas were mostly in incubators. Not as cute as the toddlers, because they kind of look like black-and-white spotted rats, but still, baby pandas!

Bifengxia Panda Base is actually a panda breeding and research center as well. While China’s millions of dollars spent on the conservation of their most popular symbol has been highly criticized, and unfortunately, there are few left in the wild, I was so grateful that there are still pandas to see. I expect that the Sichuan province will continue to try to save the pandas, as pandas are native to that area.

Even in China, pandas are somewhat of a mysterious creature: One of the Chinese volunteers from a different province in China told me all of her friends back home were under the impression that pandas are just wandering the streets in Sichuan, and all ask her to bring them one as a pet!

I definitely would have liked to bring home a little baby panda.

DSCN0854^I can never resist overloading my camera with images of flowers. You’ll see.

DSCN0859^No boring benches to rest from the hike here. Only gracefully covered ones.

DSCN0867^Leopard print flower? So chic.

DSCN0887^J getting her zen on.DSCN0872

DSCN0900^K in the stream. More zen!

DSCN0904^This was hilarious at the time. I don’t get it now.

IMG_1276^I know you all want to see a selfie.

IMG_1286^How could I not take a picture on this bridge??

IMG_1282^The gorgeous ravine (and the elevator down).

IMG_1279 IMG_1278 DSCN0861^This is sadly the best photo I was able to get of the hanging coffins–they were very far across a river. Can you see them? They look like little wooden boxes.

IMG_1287^A beauty at a pedestrian beauty spot.

DSCN0970^And FINALLY what we’ve all been waiting for! Toddler pandas! This little guy was in so many cute poses I just couldn’t help myself.

DSCN0983 DSCN0973 DSCN0961^Ridiculously snuggly.

DSCN0915 IMG_1303^this little guy was being taken to “school” according to this panda keeper, but didn’t want to go!

IMG_1295^I can’t even handle their cuteness.

Do you have any unique animals you’ve always wanted to see?

Linking up with Travel Tuesday!

Travel Tuesday

 

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