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  1. #1 Around China in 100 Days 
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    It's about time I started a ride report about what we've been up to so far.

    It's been an intense four weeks and we've had issues getting internet access so I haven't even been able to keep my own blog up to date.

    Lulu and I arrived in Beijing last night and we've enjoyed one of the few rest days we've had, at least I know I have. After getting a serious dose of Chinese culture and history, and chilling out in a bar very similar to some back in New Zealand (the Bed Bar for those who know it) and getting my instant western culture fix, I'm well and truly on my way to getting my energy levels back.

    So far, over the some 5200kms we've done, we've been averaging just over 220 kms per day on the bikes, with about 8 rest days over the 30 or so driving days. We're still a little behind schedule, so we've decided not to head to Haerbin, and to head into Inner Mongolia through Chengde instead. The Lifans have held up well so far, especially Lulu's bike which has been subjected to a couple of minor crashes.

    I've been surprised at how well my bike handles on less-than-ideal roads. I was worried that the bumps it has gone through might dislodge some vital part of the motorcycle and we would be stranded in the middle of nowhere. I hope I continue to be surprised when I get into Inner Mongolia and Xinjiang.

    We have both had our ups and downs on and off the bikes, and we are both slowly starting to find common ground regarding what we want this journey to be. It's a learning experience, and the sensory overload can be a bit much at times, but it's always worth it
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  2. #2 Re: Around China in 100 Days 
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    Chongqing to Zunyi, Guizhou – Day 2


    We started our journey on a drizzly Chongqing day, with more fog than usual, on NanbinLu in Nanping. After only sleeping three hours the night before, Vivian and I got lost trying to get to the start point but were found by a JH600 rider from the local motorcycle club, who took us to a square of pavement where a small billboard had been erected with a big map of our route and some of the riders from the motorcycle club waiting to take a few pictures and start our trip with us.

    starting line.jpg


    The going was a bit slow at first, the roads being wet and the traffic crowded. As we got out of the city the roads opened up a bit and we could enjoy some of the countryside. We were heading for Tongzi, about 200 kilometers south of Chongqing on the G210, but as we kept riding we realised that, at the speed we were going, we would get there very late at night. The group that escorted us out of Chongqing slowly thinned as they started to head back and soon we were three. Lulu got a nail in her rear tyre, so we had to find a repairman to take it off an replace it.

    mountain roads.jpg

    post guizhou expressway.jpg

    We stopped at Anwen, still in Chongqing municipality, at around 11pm and quickly found some food and a place to sleep. I was very grateful to have Chinese speakers with me. I like to practice my minimal Chinese sometimes, but after a hard days riding my ability to try to be understood dramatically decreases, making me want to curl up and go to sleep in the closest corner even more.


    We resolved to get up at 6.30am the next morning and be on the road by 8.30 so we could avoid driving at night. This became 7.30 and then 8. By the time we had finished breakfast and packed our bikes it was 10. Lulu had more confidence today so the going was faster until we had to stop several times to tighten the bolts on the rear wheel of Lulu’s bike which had been taken off the night before. We spent most of the day on sweeping roads on the mist covered hills of northern Guizhou, which were beautiful but quite cold. In most of the provinces in China, it’s illegal for a motorcycle to travel on the expressways, but Guizhou is one of the few exceptions so we headed to the nearest onramp to see if we could put some more road behind us. Bad idea. The vehicles that use the expressways can travel well over 150 km/h (the speed limit is more near 120 km/h), so it can be dangerous for a motorcyclist traveling at around 50km/h. Add 4 kilometer, 2 lane tunnels, and you have a slightly stressful time for a novice motorcyclist. We decided to use the national road instead.


    Luguan living room parking.jpg



    Rawsome scenery.jpg


    Our target for today was Zunyi, and we made it! It’s a little late, but we’ve sorted a room at a Lu Guan (旅馆), a budget inn owned by a small family. Lulu went for the 20 yuan option with no hot water available, and I’ve gone deluxe; the same kind of room but I pay 50% extra for a hot shower. For me, there’s no such thing as a cold shower after a hard days ride, but then I’m not as tough as Lulu.
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  3. #3 Re: Around China in 100 Days 
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    Zunyi-Kaili, Guizhou – Day 4


    We went the wrong way and missed Guiyang completely. My trusty GPS only had the option of English OR Chinese characters, which means that I can’t read place names on the interface. I thought I would be able to get around this by using paper maps and GoogleMaps to plan my waypoints and load them in. Obviously I thought wrong.


    lost in guizhou 2.jpg

    Instead of picking up the vehicle registration from the Lifan office in Guiyang, we asked them to send it to Kaili, where we were going to any way so we thought we could save some time.

    We sped up alot when we realised Lulu’s speedometer was reading 10km/h more than she was doing, so we were making good time before we hit some really bad roadworks. We managed to get Lulu’s bike across the bridge being worked on before they totally ripped it up, leaving me stranded on the other side. I waited there for a while until I realised that I would be waiting for a very long time if I wanted to cross this bridge. I turned around, past a long line of cars and trucks to find another way around. I was lucky enough to venture up a small road which turned into a highway under contruction in pretty bad condition so I had a bit of fun in the dirt and gravel.

    kids in kaili 2.jpg

    We got the bikes serviced at the shop in Kaili. I would have liked to explore Kaili a bit more. There are many minority villages around this area with the chance to learn a little about another culture, but we are two days behind plan now so we can’t stop yet. Looking forward to a rest in Yangshuo, Guangxi in a couple of days.
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  4. #4 Re: Around China in 100 Days 
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    Kaili to Rongjiang – Day 5


    We drove south from Kaili through valley filled with Miao villages. Their clothing and the architecture of their buildings is distinctly different from the Han Chinese villages that we have passed so far, and it was good to see a different part to China. Most of the women either wear cloth caps or colourful flowers in their hair, and vivid traditional clothes which stood out on the roads as we passed. Apart from the villages the riversides were terraced in paddy fields and the valley slopes covered in forest.

    valley 3.jpg


    lulu 3.jpg

    The road was great until we started climbing a mountain which topped out at 1400m. We had climbed into low cloud and it was so thick that we could only see 15 metres in front of our wheels. The roads had started to get potholes and there were high winds, so the going was slow, especially when we had bus horns blaring in our ears from one side and abyssal white nothing on the other.

    miao 3.jpg

    We climbed down into more stunning green valleys on more potholed roads, trudging along at a steady pace until after dusk. Then the road turned into gravel and mud, in the dark, so we slowed down even more. I was surprised at how well Lulu was managing but even so, we got into our destination town of Ronjiang several hours after we planned.
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  5. #5 Re: Around China in 100 Days 
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    Rongjiang to Sanjiang – Day 6

    Heading out of Rongjiang and onto a new national road, we expected the roads to get better. Wrong again. More corrugated roads start a breakfastless morning (we also thought we could find breakfast on the way). So it was another slow day in Guizhou, but as we got closer to Guangxi the going started to get better and we started to average around 30 km/h.
    We stopped for lunch in a Dong village, who are another of the official minorities in China. While I’m used to eating with chopsticks in Chongqing, we ate sticky rice and pork chops with our hands.


    pagoda 4.jpg

    Heading into Guangxi the weather started to worsen and light rain started to fall. After two hours, things started getting rather wet and cold and, again, darkness started to creep into the sky. Before we started our trip we agreed that we shouldn’t drive at night in the countryside because it’s dangerous, with bikes and animals on the roadsides, but we have been constantly caught between towns with accomodation, so there we’ve had no other option.

    So we got into Sanjiang late, exhausted again, and wet.
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  6. #6 Re: Around China in 100 Days 
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    Sanjiang to Guilin – Day 7

    The day started off quite dry, always a good sign when your not fully waterproof driving a motorcycle. Disorganised and in a hurry, we missed the turnoff to the Chengyang wind and rain bridge on the Linxi river, and looks pretty cool in photos. We did manage to make it to the entrance to the Dragon’s Backbone rice terraces (龙的脊梁梯田) near Longsheng. Lulu stayed at the gate because it costs 60RMB to get a ticket and I drove about 10 kilometres through a beautiful valley and up the mountainside until I came to another gate. This was the gate where tourists alight from their vehicles and hand over their tickets to the ticket people to get through to the village which was another 2 kilometres or so up a long slope. As a westerner, with lots of bags to carry around, I was approached by a Yao villager who offered to take my bags for me for 20 RMB. I was shocked that a lady half my size would offer to take bags up a big hills that I have trouble carrying around on flat ground. I said “No thank you, I don’t have time”, because I didn’t. It would have taken several hours to get up and take a good look around.

    bike valley 5.jpg

    dragon bone 5.jpg

    yao 5.jpg

    All the way, fine drizzle seeped into my golves and boots and started to make me very cold, so I thought it would be a good idea to take my gloves off because surely it would be better than soaking wet gloves. Shivering and shaking a couple of hours later I realised my assumption was wrong. So while I was putting on extra layers of clothing Lulu rode ahead, thinking I would catch up, but she stopped in a small town to buy some waterproof boots and a didn’t see her bike as I drove past, so we got separated. I waited for an hour in the cold, wet, dark waiting for her to catch up, worrying about whether she would crash on the wet tarmac.

    Just outside Guilin we stopped at the first guest house we saw.
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  7. #7 Re: Around China in 100 Days 
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    Guilin to Yangshuo – Day 8


    It was supposed to be our rest day, but we didn’t manage to get to Yangshuo the night before, so we rode the 50 kilometres in the afternoon after a big sleep in. We met Amin on the main road and he drove Lulu’s bike to his house, nestled between vertical karst walls covered in green foliage.

    yangshuo 6.jpg

    We had dinner with his family, which was a couple of hours long with plenty of good food and beer and trying to speak Chinese which got loads of laughs. We were joined by his friend Ahua and the eating and drinking continued. He offered to take me out to his place to get some jingju (small mandarin type fruit), so I hopped on the back of Amin’s bike and we rode through Yangshuo, with lights illuminating the karst peaks.

    dinner 6.jpg

    Lulu and I had separate rooms that night so it was good to get a little space.
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  8. #8 Re: Around China in 100 Days 
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    Yangshuo to Huaiji – Day 9


    We drove through Yangshuo, surrounded by the surreal humps of rock that make it a famous tourist destination.

    yangshuo7.jpg


    The roads of Eastern Guangxi are excellent. Very little roadworks and beautiful scenery made it an easy drive. But no matter how pleasant it was, we weren’t even close to our target of Guangzhou so we had to stop in a small road outside Huaiji, western Guangdong.

    Lulu 7.jpg
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  9. #9 Re: Around China in 100 Days 
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    Huaiji to Foshan – Day 10


    Lulu crashed right after lunch. The road was wet and she was leaning over to check her motorcycle because it was making a strange sound, so the bike slipped over and slid almost into a concrete ditch by the roadside. The left footpeg and the handlebars were bent, but she was okay, which was the most important thing.



    repairs8.jpg

    After a couple of hours of repairs, checking the bike and more repairs, we got going again. I still didn’t have waterproof gloves and the driving wind made my hands numb and the rest of me quite cold, tired and not in the best of spirits.

    Lulu had been busy blogging about our trip and we met up with a guy named “Big Eyes” from the Guangzhou motorcycle club about 60 kilometres outside of Guangzhou who guided us into Foshan. It got dark and and we slowed down alot on the slippery roads with the high beams from cars coming in the opposite direction making it hard to see through the droplets on my visor. We got to the restaurant where others from the Guangzhou motorcycle club were waiting to welcome us three hours later, wet, cold and exhausted, but happy to see them. After a good meal of Cantonese snacks (I love Cantonese food) we left to find a place to stay. One of the guys, Dawei, booked us a room in a hotel close to his home, so that it would be easy for him to meet us the next morning to help us get the bikes sorted the next day.
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  10. #10 Re: Around China in 100 Days 
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    Foshan – Day 11


    The traumatic day before meant I felt as though I deserved a decent sleep-in but Dawei, one of the motofans that we met the night before, and who paid for a room at our hotel for a night, came to offer us breakfast at 10am. It took a while to get up and get ready which meant it was brunch time when we got to the restaurant. He also took us to a local repair shop so that we could fix the niggling problems with our bikes.


    repairs9.jpg

    dawei9.jpg

    We were invited to the local Motofans club headquarters to meet some of the guys who had ridden to Foshan from Hong Kong (a four hour ride). It was really cool to meet the guys (even though I didn’t really know what anyone was saying half the time) and play some pool. They even had some motorcycle supplies stored in the attic, so we made sure that we could be fully waterproof to avoid the nightmare of “cold and wet on the bike”.
    Along with the hospitality that they had already shown us, they also installed some hot grips on my motorcycle, and gave Lulu a pack for her motorcycle (because she didn’t drive there).


    motorfans9.jpg


    motorfansnight9.jpg

    So we finished off an incredible (not-so-rest) day with Cantonese food at a nearby restaurant at 1am in the morning. While I appreciated their generosity so much, I couldn’t help but feel my eyes drooping and we soon headed off to the hotel, an hour’s drive away
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