How the Cookie Crumbles

Life and scribbles on the far side of SIXTY-FIVE

Beijing: Ming Tombs, Day 4, Part 2

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After the Great Wall, a mid-day meal awaited in a local restaurant.

Lunch:

  • Spring rolls (exactly 8)
  • Fish balls with red and green peppers
  • Fried chicken
  • Eggplant with tomato and green peppers
  • Rice
  • Cauliflower and broccoli
  • Soup
  • Cut up orange wedges for dessert
  • Tea
  • The usual one small free glass of beer, pop or water
The Spirit Way, original road and  entrance to the tombs. There are 13 tombs of which only one has been excavated  (Ding Ling)

The Spirit Way, original road and entrance to the tombs. There are 13 tombs of which only one has been excavated (Ding Ling)

Ming Tombs: where buried 13 emperors of the Ming Dynasty (1368-1644).

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sfynyPLm4Q0    (3.04 min)

If you would like a more in-depth version:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W1BqspVU2HA  (8:43 min)

Emperor Yongle with money offerings at his feet. This money is collected and used to maintain the building

Emperor Yongle with money offerings at his feet. This money is collected and used to maintain the building

 

Laundry: 

  • Hung on rope strung the length of apartment balconies
  • Clothes  hung on hangers: socks, T-shirts, sweaters, trousers, shirts, blouses
  • Did not notice any underwear or bedding

 

 On the way to dinner:

Robert and the driver appeared to converse more than usual. Robert’s cell rang. He talked at length. The call completed, he started another. Both he and the driver seemed tied to their phones for an unusual amount of time. Of course I didn’t understand a word, yet it crossed my mind something might be up. I can pull a rabbit out of any hat, real or imaginary.

Our bus pulled over to the curb and Robert declared he had to leave. The driver would take us to the restaurant we were told. He gave no explanation, but it wasn’t hard to see he was upset. Sue and I looked at each other. We couldn’t see any of the rest of the group seated in the high-backed seats in front and behind us.

IMG_0241

Heavy traffic surrounded us. After Robert hopped off, we drove on for a short distance still in the inside lane. Vehicles crawled bumper to bumper. Another bus slowed next to ours. Sue and I sat on the left of the aisle watching through the window. I squeezed my eyes shut as a bicyclist, with no room to spare, whizzed by between our two buses. I almost had a heart attack.

The other bus moved on. We remained stock-still in the curb lane. Traffic rolled past us. I thought the young fellow on the bike might have caused an accident. Traffic shifted and changed beside us; yet our bus waited immobile. Why? By now, the whole group craned necks and raised eyebrows around the seats at each other. I felt we noticed together, a car parked in front of the bus. Another five minutes or so dragged past. What could be happening? A man in a construction vest walked up to the car’s driver window brandishing his arms. I had no idea the car had an occupant. No translation was required. Move now he indicated. Nothing changed. A 20-something Chinese guy in black pants and a white shirt appeared at the side of the bus. The door flew open and he jumped in. The door slammed shut and I don’t recall any words exchanged with the driver. The parked car inched forward. Our bus did as well.

IMG_0243

In minutes, we turned into a driveway and a man, who might have been Security or Police, stepped in front of the bus. He waved his arms and shouted through the windshield and looked as if he wanted to push the bus back. What was going on? Words passed between the man outside and our driver or between the driver and the new passenger who hadn’t taken a seat. Too much going on to follow. The uniform vanished. The bus door opened again and the young man jumped out signalling for us to follow. I felt like a lamb on the way to heaven’s gate or maybe hell’s? All were silent, heads bowed, as we passed through an alley and a maze of cars and another lot into a restaurant. I flashed my Travel Tour ID towards an approaching waitress. She led us to Table 6ith our tour group name. I thought I’d been so smart. The|Chinese were smarter.

Once seated, one of our group noticed the young man worked as a waiter there. The picture became clear. This had been an orchestrated event. Before Robert rushed off, either he or the driver had pre-arranged for our escort. The driver had stalled until the black pants and white shirt found us. The driver couldn’t leave the bus to walk us to our destination. I don’t even know if he spoke English. What teamwork!

By the time dinner finished, and we fidgeted wondering about our return to the hotel, Robert showed up as if nothing had happened. He looked much better than when he’d dashed off. His voice, I noticed, was still a little odd. At least to me, his reason for the sudden disappearance suspect.

“I had to see about my next tour,” he said.

 IMG_0249

Dinner:

  • Soup with fresh chopped tomatoes
  • Rice
  • Shrimp with egg and green peppers
  • Corn with lima beans and carrots
  • Sweet and sour chicken balls
  • French fries (surprise)
  • Chicken with fungus and green peppers
  • Green leaf vegetable like spinach but not
  • Chopped mushrooms and green peppers
  • Eggplant, light spice

We returned to the hotel around 8:30 p.m. I picked up my laptop from the room and returned to the lobby for free WiFi access. I had trouble and asked the guy at reception for help. He looked at the list available and pointed to one, even though the words weren’t in Chinese. “Maybe, this one?” His choice didn’t work. He shrugged. I went off on my own, but soon became frustrated and worn out. I wanted nothing more than bed. I gave up on e-mail.

Finally day's end

Finally day’s end

Next on July 11th, Beijing, Day 5, Part 1: Pearl Stores and Summer Palace

For all related posts, click on China tab at the top of the page.

 

Author: Let's CUT the Crap!

I'm getting a little LONG in the tooth and have things to say about---ouch---AGEing. I believe it's certainly a state of mind but sometimes it's nice to hear that you're NORMAL. I enjoy reading by the truckload. I'm a grandma but I don't feel OLD although I'm not so young anymore. My plan is to stick it out as long as I can on this lovely planet and only will leave it kicking and screaming!

99 thoughts on “Beijing: Ming Tombs, Day 4, Part 2

  1. The afternoon didn’t sound like as much fun as visiting The Great Wall. Looking forward to the Summer Palace and rickshaws. 🙂

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    • When we visited the tombs, we had hardly any people traffic. It was so darn quiet I was afraid to speak in case we awoke the dead. Not really because no-one knows where they are buried. Only one tomb has been excavated. I confess, I found it less exciting.

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  2. That was quite the drama just for a restaurant meal. Ah, to be a Chinese fly on the wall. That way you might have understood the whole story. Of course, this way, we can imagine all sorts of mysteries for Robert. 🙂

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    • Indeed. It had been something shattering or unnerving. We even wondered if something had happened to his wife or son. We;ll never know but the experience especially when we finally moved was awful. Terrible when you don’t understand the language and follow like sheep.

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  3. The food looks incredible! And what a story…remind me to learn the language before I go in case anybody waves madly in front of the bus like that!

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    • Ha ha ha ha. We were insulated with a guide all the time and didn’t need to learn a word. As we traveled south from Beijing, more and more people spoken better and better English.

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  4. Oh you really had me on the edge of my seat with that description Tess! I thought you might all be on the way to being arrested. Thank heavens it was just a stall tactic.

    Liked by 1 person

  5. The food looks good to me. The man on the bike ‘tween the buses sounds like the real excitement for the day. 🙂

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  6. It’s all an adventure to me. I have travel outside of the county so very little. Canada, Costa Rica, Mexico and France. I would love to see Asia, or/and India. I would be scared not knowing the language with all of that commotion going on that I couldn’t understand. Makes me think about the immigrants who come to this country unfamiliar with language or customs.

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  7. You’re not selling China to me just yet I have to say!

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  8. I dont think I would get on too well with the food,, but this diary is great.. when in Orlando, I kept a daily diary for my time there.. and this is a great idea. 😉

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  9. What a bizarre day Tess, very entertaining for us 🙂

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  10. All very James Bond xxx

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  11. All very inscrutable – a bit like the Mings!

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  12. Another interesting day actually, drama and the dead. The tombs are something I have always wanted to see.

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    • This visit wasn’t as interesting except for a lot of facts. The artifacts were interesting to see but we didn’t actually SEE a tomb. They had a bunch of buildings we couldn’t even enter. It was so quiet compared to the Great Wall. We were pretty much the only group there at the time except for a few stragglers.

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  13. You’re getting to see a lot! Think you could become accustomed to the traffic?

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  14. Wow, very creepy! You write so well – it makes for captivating reading. I too am not convinced about visiting China, but I am enjoying my vitual tour!

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    • Thank you for tagging along. I’m pleased you’re enjoying my little tour. This occurance was the highlight of the day because the tombs weren’t that exciting…less so than the Great Wall.

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  15. I have to agree with some of the others. I’m not sold on going but if I had, I think I would have enjoyed the adventure. Right now I’m happy enough to be living vicariously through you. 🙂 Thank you!

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  16. Holy cow–that ride sounds like it was a little hairy! “Don’t arrest me I’m Canadian!”

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  17. I would have enjoyed the tombs. I could have done without the traffic excitement. 😛

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    • Hi Red. I wasn’t that enthused by the tombs. Lots of interesting history and buildings on a huge property. So unfair while the poor scrabbled for something to eat. Of course, wealthy rulers aren’t / weren’t unique only to China. ❤

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  18. Very strange occurance, yes? the menus always intrigue but what makes me go huh? is the one drink. I mean, what, is there a water or soda shortage? or is it, what can we serve that will be cheap and give us a profit? I’m a drinker….I’d have a royal tantrum if I didn’t get all the water or tea or soda I wanted. You are a patient person.

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    • There was always a pot of hot tea on the table. The lack of liquids didn’t affect me because I don’t drink while I eat. I always made sure I got my little glass of beer though. 🙂

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      • Good for you. I’m a big drinker while it eat – keeps me from filling up too much on other stuff, plus some of the meds make me so dry mouthed. Pity you didn’t bring back one of those life sized terra cotta warriors. Talk about a garden decoration or interesting thing to greet people at the door!

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      • My traveling partner, Sue, lives in a gated community. One of her neighbors had been to China a year ago and had one standing on her front porch for the longest time.

        Na, I didn’t want one. Anyway, I’d spent all my money on the trip. 😛

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  19. Tess, I’m happy to see that I’m not the only person that wants more to drink. The menus are always interesting. What combinations they put together. I would have been most anxious stuck on the bus.

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  20. That does sound a bit scary not knowing what was going on like that, I can imagine your mind might be racing about the possibilities! Some of the pictures of the street scenes look a bit grey and depressing! Like others have said, it’s not making me think “Ooh, I must visit China!” but I’m definitely enjoying your account of it. The veg that was similar to spinach might have been lettuce, I had a Chinese friend at school and I remember her mother used to throw lettuce leaves into boiling water for a few seconds and serve them as a side vegetable, or stir-fry them with other veg – I used to love eating round at her house, it was always yummy!

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    • I had Chinese visitors in my home for about three weeks, two teachers and a minister of education. They wanted to cook one night and took my romaine out of the fridge and cooked that.

      I have no idea what the green vegetable was. By the way they called it ‘green vegetable’. Rapini and collards crossed my mind but they weren’t correct either. I tried it once but can’t remember what I thought of the taste.

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  21. Fascinating. It’s clear the Chinese expect lots more blind following than Americans. An American tour guide would have deeply explained what was going to happen, provided thorough directions and taken dozens of questions. With the same result. There’s something to be said for trust, isn’t there.

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  22. A little like it must have been touring Moscow in the 70s, I imagine.

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  23. That’s both cryptic and descriptive.

    My experience of China has been that you need to carry the name and address of your Hotel written in Mandarin with you. Otherwise you are apt to get lost and hassled as not one cab driver would understand English. Otherwise a great place to shop and eat.

    Shakti

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    • We tried to pickup business cards at the reception desk from every hotel we stayed at. Some didn’t have any. Anyway, we were with a tour group so had little to worry about.
      Thank you for reading and commenting.

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  24. Phew, what a day this was Tess, full of adventure! Glad you were safe though, must have wondered what the outcome would be but it made sense that they were looking after you with Robert having to disappear like that. Strange though…hmmmm…a real rabbit out of the hat that one! The food all looks and sounds yummy though. The Ming Tombs must have been interesting I would have thought…were they?

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  25. Tess, I have friends who have visited China. It got a mixed bag of reviews but all agreed it was at the very least fascinating. I would worry about breathing as I have asthma but would be interested to see it at least once. How exciting you got to make the trip. I shall live vicariously through you.

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    • Hi Susan. Never once in 23 days we were in China did we experience smog. This vacation was a fluke but I am glad I had the opportunity.
      You’re welcome to come touring with me and am pleased you’re the least bit interested. Thanks for commenting as well.

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  26. Great storytelling Tess. For a moment I thought you were writing some of your flash fiction. 🙂

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  27. Golly! What dramas! Food and sleep saved the day though! 🙂

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  28. Wow! The pictures are beautiful 🙂

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  29. Seems like you were manipulated the entire trip, everyone trying to line their pockets, I guess, with American cash.
    The limited water would make this a no-go for me. Where you able to buy water to take with you? A very different culture for sure.
    I’d love to see China but I would not like to be on a tour – not this one, anyway. Thank you for sharing this adventure.

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    • We bought water everywhere. Our tour bus driver also carried a supply of bottled water. Usually it cost about $2 for 3 bottles, some smaller and others bigger depending where we were. different locations, different tour guides and drivers (local to area).

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  30. WOW,,,I never would have thought all that drama was done to get you into a restaurant! Imagine! I think I would be totally overwhelmed in China — so many people and so much movement! I would be exhausted! I can barely survive Milwaukee! I live in the countryside. You were on a great adventure for sure!

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  31. Except for scale the apartment blocks could be almost anywhere – not sure I’m an enthusiast of this particular cultural convergence.
    Thanks for the video links. I makes me realise how woefully ignorant I am of Chinese history and culture.

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    • I had no interest in China until this trip. I learned a lot but then you do no matter what country you go to visit, I suppose.
      I cannot understand all those empty building accumulating dust and no income. Some have been empty for years. Who does that?

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  32. Hi Tess,
    I can see a lot going on here that would make me nervous. Mostly being kept in the dark. Wifi that doesn’t work is always frustrating too. I’m glad it all worked out, but you had me on the edge of my seat for a while.

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