Re: Beijing to Kunming : A Commute to Work
Day 21: Environmental Protection Station, Qinghai to Qumalai, Qinghai
In the morning I retraced another 20 km to Budongquan and the graded road. The only gas station in Budongquan had been shut down, so I turned on to 300 kilometer dirt road minus 90 km of gas in the tank:
http://i.imgur.com/WLM3J.jpg
Behind were snow capped mountains:
http://i.imgur.com/PUhak.jpg
Ahead were the plains:
http://i.imgur.com/hPGeX.jpg
There were antelope running away from me all morning:
http://i.imgur.com/A9WNG.jpg
And yaks around every corner:
http://i.imgur.com/1k56R.jpg
The road was bumpy, rocky, and at times, covered in six inches of dust:
http://i.imgur.com/mGTok.jpg
After over 100 kilometers of wilderness, I hit the first town, Qumahe:
http://i.imgur.com/6AUSZ.jpg
The first time I saw these, I thought they were satellite dishes. On closer inspection though, it appears to be a hot water heater!
http://i.imgur.com/9Xwr3.jpg
The road wasn't completely empty:
http://i.imgur.com/yLcRX.jpg
And a common theme for the day was taking dust baths as trucks rode past.
Here:
http://i.imgur.com/123PM.jpg
It:
http://i.imgur.com/KOyte.jpg
Comes!
http://i.imgur.com/svT9O.jpg
After that picture I curled into a ball and just let the dust wash over me in pure resignation.
There were no gas stations per se, but there were enterprising individuals who filled a hole in the market by opening their own:
http://i.imgur.com/5PNxi.jpg
I weighed risking running out of gas with risking putting these entrepreneurs' gas in my tank... and opted for the later. They only had 90 octane and when I asked where the gas was from, they said "Golmud." They might as well said "from the ground!"
And then I hit this abandoned, demolished town.
Serve the People:
http://i.imgur.com/4ulc3.jpg
It was really eerie:
http://i.imgur.com/zH63a.jpg
Just after this town an approaching SUV pulled over and waved for me to stop. There were three Tibetans in it, and they asked in broken Mandarin if this was the road to Lhasa. I told them to drive 200 km and turn left. *That* was the road to Lhasa. They thanked me, I scratched my head, and we went our separate ways.
All day, my GPS had helpfully identified this road as "road," so I assumed this little road was nameless, but she eventually revealed her name to me:
http://i.imgur.com/I12cy.jpg
Village hoops:
http://i.imgur.com/92gdb.jpg
As the road went east it began to hit mountains. On one ascent, the road was, like everything else in China, tiled!
http://i.imgur.com/HDOGA.jpg
I bounced my way over the tiles and finally reached the last peak before Qumalai at 4558 meters:
http://i.imgur.com/w8JVJ.jpg
And then began the final descent:
http://i.imgur.com/bJYYP.jpg
And at last, 300 kilometers later, pavement!!
http://i.imgur.com/ghY7k.jpg
I rode straight into the first gas station I saw and said "I'm looking for a hotel with a shower" - I hadn't seen a shower since Golmud, in what seemed like an eternity ago. The attendant pointed me down the street, and within an hour I was washing away a week's worth of dust, mud, snow, hail, and rain. It felt great!
Re: Beijing to Kunming : A Commute to Work
Day 22: Qumalai, Qinghai to Yushu, Qinghai
The next morning I set course for Yushu but was slowed by morning rush hour:
http://i.imgur.com/XC6sc.jpg
A lot of herders in these areas live in tents. This tent city was larger than most:
http://i.imgur.com/ZzeX9.jpg
The road followed a river full of these little trees:
http://i.imgur.com/yaISV.jpg
Soon, I reached Zhiduo, the other city on the road to Yushu. The city, like the surrounding area, is predominately Tibetan:
http://i.imgur.com/GrIHz.jpg
The road was mountainous, and prayer flags continued to mark mountain peaks:
http://i.imgur.com/ac3Bb.jpg
As they drive past these peaks, truck drivers often toss stacks of these out the window:
http://i.imgur.com/wqUox.jpg
The roads are always just one turn away from turning back to dirt:
http://i.imgur.com/4a7rB.jpg
And there was still snow on the ground in some places:
http://i.imgur.com/N7VLW.jpg
Coming around a corner, I saw what I thought was another tent city of herders:
http://i.imgur.com/K5kOH.jpg
Riding past the tents, I entered a construction area. It looked like they were building a new city from scratch. There were bricks, heavy equipment, and workers everywhere:
http://i.imgur.com/iyLtC.jpg
I couldn't quite understand what I was seeing, and it was close to lunch time, so I stopped at a local restaurant to try and figure out what was going on. I asked the waitress, and she said: "Earthquake." And then it clicked. In April of last year, Yushu was hit by an earthquake that killed more than 2,500 people. I was still roughly 70 km from Yushu, but this town had been completely wiped out. I rode back through the town, understanding now what I was witnessing. In the tents lived the people who had lost their homes and the workers who had come to rebuild them:
http://i.imgur.com/XhZ7q.jpg
The blue tents that I had seen were sent for disaster relief, and looking more closely had "The People's Government Disaster Relief" written on them in Chinese characters. Over a year later, the tents had become a small city:
http://i.imgur.com/u0qxu.jpg
While the new city was being built:
http://i.imgur.com/ltDX7.jpg
A bit shaken at the scale of destruction in this area, I continued on towards to Yushu, and continued to see the blue tents amidst broken villages:
http://i.imgur.com/82jAY.jpg
Along the road, I passed a couple young Tibetans who waved for me to stop. I pulled over and they told me their motorcycle had broken down and didn't have any tools. I pulled out my toolset and they went to work:
http://i.imgur.com/mKq26.jpg
It turned out that the spark plug had died, I had a spare, which they popped in and went on their way. It was a bit of a role reversal after being so dependent upon others' kindness throughout this trip. They had broken down in front of a newly built village (that was still largely empty...):
http://i.imgur.com/1MrOu.jpg
I was closing in on Yushu when the road suddenly dead ended into a sea of dust and tents. It looked like a refugee camp:
http://i.imgur.com/DnmCR.jpg
The road I was following was gone so I stopped to ask how to get to the city center. I approached four men and they asked if I was there to travel. I said yes, and told them I had heard Yushu was a good place. One of the men replied that Yushu used to be a good place, now it was a place of suffering. He pointed me towards an alternative dirt road that led up around the tents and towards the city center:
http://i.imgur.com/t9AQm.jpg
I rode into the center of the city, only to discover that it too had been largely destroyed:
http://i.imgur.com/HGviA.jpg
The statue that marks the center of the city still stands:
http://i.imgur.com/mY9QY.jpg
The shock of seeing all this was lessened once I started talking to the people living there. Their resiliance was remarkable, and on closer inspection, they were making the most of the situation. Many tents had become stores, I found shoe stores, restaurants, cell phone stores, grocery markets, and even an Internet Cafe:
http://i.imgur.com/lwIJU.jpg
I began riding around looking for a place to stay and quickly learned that some people had converted tents into hotels, although ultimately I opted to stay in the one of the few standing hotels in the city:
http://i.imgur.com/nxMBd.jpg
The manager of the hotel was a young Tibetan man. He had spent five years in India studying at the DL's school, and had only come back a couple years ago. He was in the hotel the morning of the earthquake and told me about running outside and seeing the destruction. His relatives' villages had been destroyed and he now lived in the hotel. He was optimistic about rebuilding, even though the common expectation I heard was three more years. Winters are apparently too harsh to build, slowing the process down.
After checking into the hotel, I went back out to walk around the city, and couldn't shake the idea that it felt like a combination of a refugee camp and construction site..
Re: Beijing to Kunming : A Commute to Work
Unfriggin' believable, Pat. This ride report just gets better and better and better. Your narrative is brilliant, particularly your dawning awareness of the circumstances you were entering, and your descriptions of the resilience of the local residents in rebuilding their lives. What a story. You should be thinking about a book...
You think the building in this image also damaged in the Yushu quake? For MCM readers who don't read Chinese, the five characters above the doorway read are Mao's famed aphorism, Wei Renmin Fuwu, or Serve the People, as Pat noted in his narrative. The image is as jarring as it is excellent. Stunning.
http://i.imgur.com/4ulc3.jpg
As usual, you've ended on yet another note of high suspense. Can't want for the next installment!
thanks and cheers!
Re: Beijing to Kunming : A Commute to Work
Thanks of the very interesting report and good pics.
By the way, you can avoid the dust cloud by driving offroad to the left xD
Re: Beijing to Kunming : A Commute to Work
Pat - I am enjoying your ride report SO much!! I swear, I just got back to work but wish I was out there. I loved the bit about giving the extra plug to the stranded Tibetans, I know exactly what you mean about role reversal....so many strangers helped me out at one time or another. My greatest wish is to repay them and just all the nice people I met. Crazy photos of Yushu....unbelievable. Thanks for the continued (AMAZING) stories on your journey - stay safe and look forward to reading more!
Re: Beijing to Kunming : A Commute to Work
Quote:
Originally Posted by
moilami
Thanks of the very interesting report and good pics.
By the way, you can avoid the dust cloud by driving offroad to the left xD
NEVER ever try this !!! F***s private property from "minority group" will cause trouble --- $$$ & life risk :naughty:
Re: Beijing to Kunming : A Commute to Work
Quote:
Originally Posted by
humanbeing
NEVER ever try this !!! F***s private property from "minority group" will cause trouble --- $$$ & life risk :naughty:
That is if they can catch you :lol8:
Re: Beijing to Kunming : A Commute to Work
Oh my god!!! A lots of good abanded places to play war game!!!Or sniper training!!!! Nice photo shot Pat!!!!:clap:
Re: Beijing to Kunming : A Commute to Work
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Pat
This is such a great picture! Out in the middle of nowhere (except for the Yak fans), shiny new hoops. The Yao Ming-effect has reached everywhere.
Next year, there will be tennis courts everywhere.
Re: Beijing to Kunming : A Commute to Work
Another fantastic post, keep it up as you've developed a pretty avid following and we look forward to your latest.