If
you
ever
have
the
opportunity
to visit
China,
be sure
to spend at least one full day in Ping Yao. This city is an
exceptional
tourist attraction.
We
were
there
during the
festival
period,
so
there were
more
people
than average.
Nevertheless,
the
experience
was
like stepping back
500 years in time. The rickshaws have been replaced with small cart type vehicles.
The city is a recognized World Heritage Site. I noticed
more
modern
infrastructure
and
more
automobiles
within the
confines
of the
walls.
The
last
time
I visited Ping
Yao there
were
few
vehicles
to be found.
This
time
I noticed
that
cars
were
parked
everywhere.
The
city
did,
however,
put
up barriers
to keep
the
cars
at a distance
from the
pedestrians.
The
Lonely Planet
writes
that
they
feel
that
it
is the
best-preserved ancient
walled city
in China.
Sadly
I noticed
many
streets
lined
with abandoned
storefronts and
workshops
that were
boarded
up
and.
I hope that these areas will
not be left to
decay.
We arrived in the morning.
The
main
gate
was
clogged
with the
small
carts
going
in and
out carrying
tourists.
We
were
told
to bring
just
the
necessities
as we
would be staying
for
only
one evening
and
that
there was
little
room
for
baggage
on the
carts.
Wendy grouped
us in a gaggle and
then
went
to hire
our carriages.
It was a very
exhilarating time.
The
tourists
were
competing
with each
other
trying
to hire
transport.
Others were
trying
to push
to the
front
of the
crowds
at the
street
food
vendors.
Some were just standing around talking. Most
of the
men
had
cigarettes
hanging
from their mouths.
Buses stopped and unloaded their
passengers. The atmosphere was a real cacophony of
life. I closed
my eyes
and
pictured
it
when
cars
and
buses
did
not
exist.
Wendy brought
me back
to reality
when
she
beckoned
us to climb
aboard our carriage.
We
were
soon
passing
under the
arched portal
and
proceeding
in great
haste
alongside the
city
wall
towards our Auberge.
Our hotel.
We were fortunate. Wendy had reserved lodgings directly in the center of the action. There were thousands of people passing the entrance of our inn. However, once we were in the interior courtyard, the noise seemed to fade. Our hotel was a courtyard edifice that must have bee 500 years old. It was beautiful. Wendy took care of the administration. Once we retrieved our passports and dropped our bags in our rooms, we set about visiting the city.
View from the hotel roof. |
The
main
attraction
of Ping
Yao, for
most
visitors,
is the
wall.
There is a fee
to climb
and
walk
it,
but
it
is worth
the
price.
I personally
went
look
at the
doorways to the
residents.
They
say
that
there are around 4000 residencies within the
walls.
I am sure each home has a
unique door entrance.
Nan Dajie street
The market
street of
importance
is called
Nan Dajie. This
street
is filled
with all
sorts
of shops,
restaurants
and
bars.
Some
even
have
Wi-Fi, so
you
can sit
with a cool
beer
and
write
all
your friends
back
home
and
tell
them that
you
are living
in the
past.
Food
is another
great
commodity
that
one finds
along this
street.
Our hotel
prepared
our meals,
and
we
were
served
in a dining room
made
with wooden
beams
that must have
been
hundreds
of years
old.
They were enormously rounded.
We had to climb stairs
to get to the dining
room. These
same
stairs allowed
us to go
higher
to the
roof.
The view was spectacular.
Our hotel
food
was
OK, but I
preferred
the
street
food.
Ping Yao has it's own food tradition. One of the
dishes
found
everywhere
is the
Ping
Yao noodle dish.
The
noodles are shaped
like the
honey
comb,
and
each
one is filled
with delicious
flavours. I personally
enjoyed
walking
about until I found
a street
food
vendor
preparing
the
orders
on request.
The
dish
concocted
was
a bowl
of sliced noodles, meat
and
vegetables.
The
spices
filled
the
air
during the
cooking
process,
causing
my eyes
to water
when
the
fumes wafted
in my direction.
The
foodstuffs were
served
hot
in a thin,
new
plastic
bag,
supported
by a plastic
bowl.
The support
bowl
was just
rinsed in
a pail of
water.
The plastic bag guaranteed a
bit of hygiene.
press the start to see the video.
We had a bit of rain. There was just
enough
to keep
the
dust
down
and
to bring
out the
umbrellas.
The night life in Ping Yao was awesome. They
have
bars
and
clubs
scattered
along the
main
drags.
They
were
packed
with the
young
new
spenders that
we
see
in China
today.
Some
comments
about the
liquor
served
made
me think
twice
about ordering
a beverage
under a high
quality
label.
It
seems
that
some
believed
that
the
drinks
were
watered
down
or
were
knock-off brands.
It
is difficult
to ascertain
if
you
only
ask
for
an expensive
beverage
once
in a while. The night
life progressed
on well into
the evening.
There were people
walking,
people
shopping,
people
dancing
in the
streets.
It was a real experience.
Yukari and
I initiated
one last
dash
during the
evening
to do
some
last
minute
purchases
and
to delight
in one more
look
around.
I was
exhausted
when
we
came
back
to the
hotel,
so
I had
no
difficulty
falling
asleep.
The
morning
wakeup call
was
the
loudness of other
hotel
guests
shouting across the
balconies.
We
took
our morning
meal
and
gathered
into the
golf
carts
and
proceeded
to retrace
one's steps
to the
bus
parking lot.
This
was
not easy
as we
became
gridlocked at the
exit
gate.
People
were
trying
to get
in, and
people
were
trying
to get
out. No
one
was
moving. In the
end,
a few
of us dismounted
the
cart, grabbed
our bags
and
jostled
through the
crowds
and
breached the
wall
of people
and
vehicles
to break
free
from the
congestion.
We
climbed
aboard our bus, and we
were
off
to our next
destination.
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