Back
in Beijing after 9 days in Tibet. The haze over Beijing has
not let up. If anything, the visibility is worse and the
humidity is higher. Quite a change from the dry air and
clear skies of Tibet. After having seen the Himalayas,
Incense Burner Peak here looks like a little dirt mound -
not worthy of being called a mountain. That is if I could
even see Incense Burner Peak. The haze has gotten worse in
the last couple of hours. I think it might rain.
The itinerary for the Tibet trip listed for the final day
of the tour "Return to your sweet hometown." The
neighborhood around Xiangshan has finally become familiar
and being back here does feel a little like being home. The
one-eyed woman who sells bottled water on the street near
the guesthouse
gate smiled and waved at me this morning, glad to see me
back. The women who work in the restaurant were happy to see
me too and remembered that I like to drink Sprite in the
afternoon. Just wait 'til Zsolt finds out Sprite is way more
expensive than beer.
It's nice to be back in our sweet hometown and it sure is
easier to breathe here than way the hell up at 19,000+ feet.
It's also nice to be able to get email again and post a few
observations to the web for the folks back home. There was
Internet access available in Lhasa, but I was mainly way out
in the countryside where there was nothing but yaks and
sheep. The nomads do have trucks - which look weird parked
next to their tents - but they did not seem to have access
to the net. Come to think of it, I don't think they had cell
phones either, although around here it seems that all
Chinese citizens are issued cellphones at birth. Maybe they
just haven't distributed them to the nomads yet. Internet
and cellphones are pretty pervasive but there are still
places where you can be out of touch with the wired
world.
I
have laundry hung up to dry in the pomegranate yard of the
herbarium so maybe I better take it down before I walk home
to my little hovel. Actually, I'm in a slightly better hovel
as I have moved in with Carol in her hovel because the
toilet in mine blew a gasket when the water came back on. It
seemed easier to just share with her since I'm only going to
be here a couple more days. The yard where my laundry hangs
is next to the storeroom where the specimens from the last
China expedition are stored, and where Carol and Rosalie
have been working. My work area looks out over the same
yard, which is planted with pomegranate trees although I'd
have to lean out the window quite a ways to see them.
The garden wall is topped with barbed wire so it gives
the view of a distant
pagoda a definite Cold War feel. On an overcast day, it's
surreal. The other side of the garden is bordered by a
windowed corridor connecting the main building to the
building with the laundry facilities in it. Through the
windows in the corridor you can see into the rose garden on
the other side. The rose garden is completely surrounded by
buildings, kind of a little gleaming inner courtyard.
When I finish checking email and writing up the day's
events here I'll walk back downstairs and through the lobby
to the windowed corridor. There's a door there that opens
into the pomegranate yard where my laundry is.
I took about 40 photos in the permanent herbarium
collection today, down from my high of 110 in one day before
vacation. Mostly I spent this morning trying to communicate
to the guardians who keep riffraff out of the collection
that I needed an extension cord. I do not know the Chinese
word for extension cord so mimed plugging something in and
reaching far but somehow they thought that meant I wanted a
pot of glue. I drew a perfect picture of exactly the kind of
extension cord they use here and showed it to the guardian.
She still didn't get it. One of the scientists came by and
she showed her the picture. Light dawned. The scientist told
her what I wanted and she went and found me one. Remind me
next time to get a phrase book that includes "extension
cord".
Even
the Guy in the Blue Shirt couldn't help me with the
extension cord, but he was enormously helpful when I first
got back to work and found another botanist using "my" space
convenient to the outlets, with my boxes of stuff stowed
underneath. When Guy in the Blue Shirt saw me, his face lit
up and he said "Good morning" apparently the only English he
knows besides "Hello", then he walked over to the guy who
was in my spot and said something long and complicated in
Chinese and pointed to me and then my stuff under the desk.
The other guy moved to another desk! The Guy in the Blue
Shirt knew I had gone to Tibet because he overheard me
talking about it with Zsolt and Sa-Ren, so he asked me
"Tibet?" in a tone that indicated he wanted to know how it
was. I showed him on the map where I'd been and tried to
indicate using my less than adequate Chinese that I had
liked it very much. I've been working next to this guy for
weeks and he always greets me cheerily in the morning. I
really wish I could talk to him. He looks to be in his 70's
or so, old enough to have been on the Long March with
Chairman Mao. I don't even know his name. I saw him reading
a Russian scientific journal one day so with high hopes I
had Rosalie ask him if he spoke Russian so she could
translate. Alas, he can read Russian but not speak it.
So
after work and fetching the laundry, I walk back through the
garden to Moon Gate Village. We call the guest house Moon
Gate Village because each little courtyard of rooms is
entered via a Moon Gate. I have yet to figure out what the
name of the place really is. It's probably something prosaic
like IBCAS Guest House. For that matter the restaurant is
probably called IBCAS Restaurant. The restaurant is right
next to the guest house. The back of the restaurant is
inside the gate/wall of the guest house's courtyard and the
botanical garden. I tried to draw a diagram of the
neighborhood in my notebook, but I'll have to do it with
words here because I really don't draw well. If you're
standing where the one-eyed woman sells soda and bottled
water in front of the gates to Moon Gate Village:
To the left is the usual restaurant,
an office/shop having something to do with IBCAS,
entrance to the botanical garden (the scientific one),
motorcycle repair shop, side street leading to piles
of trash.
To the right is a strip mall kind of thing with
three restaurants, the third of which is the
"alternative restaurant" as we call it. Then there's
the main street, across which is the entrance to the
Botanical Garden (the touristic one) where the camel
guy plies his trade.
The other side of the street, starting opposite the
motorcycle shop:
Crazy lady restaurant (so called
because the woman who runs the place tried to lure us
in when we walked by at night, then insisted on
escorting us back to Moon Gate Village)
School
Convenience store where I bought the feminine
supplies and batteries that lasted about 3 minutes
Side street/alley leading to Xiangshan Park
The other convenience store
The other motorcycle shop
Bakery with crullers
more restaurants (? - don't quite remember)
the main street
I'm
sure I've forgotten some of the details. I remember
wondering how such a tiny neighborhood supported so many
restaurants, not to mention two motorcycle repair shops. The
motorcycle repair guys would work into the night and be out
on the sidewalk welding something underneath a motorcycle in
the dark so their faces glowed red in the light of the
welding torch. I remember the restaurant dog turned out to
be as big as his bark when I finally got a glimpse of him.
And there was a cat that hung out in the courtyard between
the guest house and the restaurant. It would not come near
people and was only active at night. It looked white and
ghostly and meowed vociferously late into the night. Any
time a car or taxi parked in the courtyard the ghost cat
appeared from nowhere and scampered under the car but if it
heard or saw people coming it sprinted from under the car
and disappeared.
And I still don't know where that guy keeps his camel at
night.
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