I remember now that some people demanded to see some pictures. Well, here are some!
This is possibly the most interesting shot you can get of the Palace Museum. It's what used to be the Forbidden City, where the Emperor stayed, but right now it's hiding under corrugated iron and green nylon, undergoing a metamorphosis that will leave it sparkling for the Olympics. A lot of the tourist sights were like this, in particular the Summer Palace.
We went to the theatre to see some acrobatics, but the pictures didn't turn out too well.
Our first tentative steps onto the Great Wall, where we spent a couple of days. The first day was fine because we were at a high altitude and it was cloudy, so it was cooler than normal.
Just to prove I really was there, here is me standing in front of a green screen. I mean, the Great Wall. Somewhere to my right, a guide was stubbing his cigarette out on the ancient brickwork…
On the second day of trekking, I reached this point and gave the fuc
k up.
Sundays in China are spent at the park, where everyone has fun. There are people jumprope skipping, playing badminton and cards and hackey sack (or the Mongolian equivalent, with metal disks and feathers), painting calligraphy on the floor with water, and clustering into groups to sing publicly. Plus there were these people. If I went to an English park and did this, I'd get beaten up. Everyone enjoyed this day a lot.
You can get really close to the Terracotta Army.
In Guangxi Normal College, this is the Reading Cave. Supposedly, it is an optimal location to study peacefully. Preparing to descend, I couldn't help thing the name “Pit of Doom” would be more apt. Sure enough, once you're down there it's pitch black.
Contrary to popular belief, the Chinese do not go around gobbling up cats and dogs. This is a rumour started by the first Western visitors who noticed that there was a whopping great lack of cats and dogs on the street, and inferred from there. In truth, cats and dogs just aren't popular pets. This is a stray. It's tiny, emaciated, and very, very cute.
Cats and dogs are eaten in China, but by very few people, mostly in the south. They're not even delicacies, just something to eat guilt-free from time to time.
We didn't eat here.