The Itinerary - Day 16 - Chongqing, The Panda Zoo, Guilin, & Yangshuo

06 October 2013, Sunday

Today is going to be a busy day after 4 days on the cruise ship steaming up the Yangtze River.  We disembark from the ship at Chongqing with a stop at the Panda Zoo, followed by a city tour.  We then fly from Chongqing to Guilin and take a bus to Yangshuo.  If we were travelling by bus, here's what our route would look like - about 1,000 km or 600 miles.

Map - Chongqing Guilin Yangshuo

You can see that we're slowly making our way down to Macau and Hong Kong.  However, I'm getting ahead of myself.  Our first stop is in Chongqing. 

Chongqing
Chongqing (formerly romanised as Chungking) is the fastest-growing urban centre on the planet.  Its population is already bigger than that of Peru or Iraq, with half a million more people arriving every year in search of a better life.  It is one of China's municipalities that reports directly to the national government rather than to a provincial government.  (The other three are Beijing, Shanghai and Tianjin, and the only such municipality not located on the coast.)  Besides the Han who form the majority of its total population of 28.8 million, numerous ethnic groups reside in Chongqing including Yi, Tibetan, Miao, Qiang, You and Tujia.

Since its founding 3,000 years ago around 450 BC, Chongqing has been called Jiangzhou, Yuzhou, and Gongzhou before getting its present name nearly 800 years ago.  Since the Qin Dynasty (221 BC-206 BC), many dynasties have set up administrative institutions that have endowed the city with brilliant cultures.  Perched beside the Yangtze, the "Golden River," Chongqing symbolizes Yangtze River civilizations and is the cradle of Bayu culture.  Today, it serves as the economic centre of the upstream Yangtze basin, being a major manufacturing centre and transportation hub.  With a population of 29 million, it is the largest of the 13 emerging megacities in China.

Chongqing was temporarily the capital of the Republic of China during World War II, after Nanjing was occupied by the Japanese. The capital was subsequently relocated back to Nanjing after the Japanese surrendered in 1945.  Neighbouring provinces are Hubei (east), Hunan (east), Guizhou (south), Sichuan (west), Shaanxi (north).  Located on the edge of the Yungui Plateau and surrounded by small green capped mountains, Chongqing City is intersected by the Jialing River and the upper reaches of the Yangtze.  Also known as the "Mountain City, Chongqing is surrounded by the Daba Shan mountains in the north, Wu Shan in the east, Wuling Shan in the southeast, and Dalou Mountain to the south.  Chongqing is known for its hot and humid weather, smog, and pollution.  


However, in recent months, Chonqing's reputation for organized crime and corruption has overshadowed its history and cultural significance in recent times with the name of Bo Xilai making newspaper headlines throughout the world.

Downtown Chongqing

But I digress. 

The city is the starting (or ending) point for the Yangtze River Cruise which explores the stunning scenery of the Three Gorges.  Other attractions include the Dazu Rock Carvings (valuable works of art carved during the Ninth Century), Gold Buddhist Mountain (a rich repository of diverse animals and plants) and Fishing Town (one of three ancient battlefields in China).  Ancient Ci Qi Kou village lures tourists to linger in its streets to buy handicraft souvenirs.  General Joseph W. Stilwell Museum, Three Gorges Museum, People's Assembly Hall and Wulong Karst are also worth a visit.  Chongqing is famous for its hot Sichuan cuisine and world-famous hotpot dishes. Street vendors as well as restaurants feature exciting spicy delicacies for the adventurers.

We're going to be taking a tour of the city.  What sights we'll be seeing....... well that remains to be seen.  But one place we will be visiting is the famous Panda Zoo.

The Chongqing (Panda) Zoo
Built in 1953, Chongqing Zoo occupies an area of 45 hectares, ranking as the largest urban zoo in China.  It is famous for various animals including more than 230 kinds of rare wild ones.  The highlight of zoo is the Panda House which covers about 2 hectares.  The zoo serves as both a reserve and a base for the breeding of giant pandas, lesser pandas, South China tigers, and other endangered species.  During recent years, the zoo has expanded and added a new Antelope Room, Elephants Room, Giraffes Room, Panda Room, Orangutans Room, and Avian Room to further protect endangered species.   The Tea Garden provides a place to relax and rest your feet after taking in the sights.

The Panda Room in Chongqing Zoo is a must-see site for visitors with over 1 billion visitors annually.  In order to preserve this valuable species, the Panda House is designed to emulate the natural environment and  living habits of giant panda.  Here, we can get close to watch the giant pandas and their offspring.

Chongqing Panda Zoo

Although the giant panda is a kind of bear, they are shy when in public.  Sometimes it's hard to see the giant panda, while, at other times, they may leisurely walk around in their rooms.  The best chance of seeing pandas is during feeding -- between 8:30 and 10:30am.  If the pandas aren't out, we can always ask the zoo warden if he'll feed them.


From the Chongqing Zoo, we next board a bus and travel down to the town of Yangshuo, famous for rock climbing and the Li River

Yangshuo
In the 1980s, many foreign backpackers were drawn here by the introduction of the country in the "Lonely Planet" travel guide, a book that boasts that the authors have visited every place in the book.  Yangshuo is now a relatively large tourist town that different from most typical Chinese towns.  It is relatively free from air and noise pollution, very clean by Chinese standards and doesn't usually suffer from massive traffic chaos.  It has wonderful restaurants and shops, an almost unlimited number of hotels and hostels, and is fairly developed. Yangshuo is well-known amongst travellers in Southern China, and is a major stop on the trail of many independent travellers. 

Yangshuo, As Seen From The Top Of The "TV" Hill

The main reason people stop in the town is to explore the local countryside by bike, try their hand on the world-class rock-climbing sites or take a bamboo raft down the river and view the famous scenes in the process.  Aside from the fact we'll be staying in Yangshuo for the evening, we'll be seeing the "Impression Sanjie Liu" ("Human's Masterpiece Performed With The Cooperation with the God") sound-and-light show.

Liu Sanjie" Sound-And-Light Opera
This is the world largest natural theater which utilizes the waters of the Li River as its stage with the twelve mist-shrouded hills and the heavens as its backdrop.  Mist, rain, moonlight, the hills, and their inverted reflections in the river become the ever-changing natural background.  The "auditorium" is housed on the natural islands of the river with the audience standing on the designed terraces surrounded by green plants. The sound equipment here can't be seen as it is "hidden" by the natural environment.  The valleys, the hills, the cool breeze, and the gurgling streams all contribute to the 3-dimensional sound effect. 
Liu Sanjie Sound-And-Light Opera

Day by day, the weather offers different scenes with the four seasons changing the performance according to the climate.  The performance is a new concept in opera using nature as an integral part of performance.  Hence the name - "Human's Masterpiece Performed With The Cooperation with the God").  It should be quite the performance.  

Hotel - Yangshuo Jasper International Hotel
Yangshuo Jasper International Hotel

Tomorrow, we get to spend the whole day in Yangshuo exploring the Li River, taking a boat trip on the Li River exploring the countryside.

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