While the tour I'm on gives us a lot of flexibility and allows us to spend our free time however we want, they do include some sightseeing and activities in each place. In Beijing, this included a morning trip to the park which houses Beijing's Temple of Heaven. We spent the first hour wandering around the huge park and watching the locals engage in endless varieties of tai chi. The park was really tranquil and even just watching the tai chi was incredibly relaxing. I can understand why it's such a way of life here.
After we got our fill of tai chi, we entered the Temple of Heaven complex itself. Full of ornately decorated ancient buildings, it was unlike anything I've seen (mind you, I've never been to Asia at all). The center piece of the Temple of Heaven is the Hall of Prayer for Good Harvests. One of the most fascinating facts about this building was that it was constructed without the use of a single nail or piece of metal of any kind.
After exploring the grounds of the rest of the Temple, we took taxis to one of the large housing blocks, of which there are many in Beijing, to have tea at the apartment of a master kite maker. He was a 66 year old Chinese man who has been honing his craft for 40 years and has been written about in numerous books and even has work displayed in the National Museum. Our guide translated for us as he showed us dozens of examples of his kites, all original, and let us explore his work space. It was one of the cooler things I've done on any of my trips and something I never whould have been able to arrange on my own. If they weren't so fragile and if I weren't still traveling for more than two weeks, I absolutely would have bought a kite.
This was where our included sightseeing ended, but we opted next to visit Tian'an Men Square and the Forbidden City, the two most popular sights in the very center of Beijing. I have never seen a city square the size of Tian'an Men Square. We were quite the anomaly walking around among all of the Chinese visitors, and multiple times I was asked to stop and pose for pictures with random Chinese women. It was quite a surreal experience.
Across a massive street from the square is the Forbidden City, with its iconic main gate featuring a prominent picture of Mao.
The Forbidden City complex is huge. There are endless buildings with overly poetic names, all ornately decorated in patterns of red, blue, yellow and green and flanked by statues of lions and other animals.
There were a lot of tourists here (mostly Chinese), although not quite as many as I expected. Just walking through the whole complex without going in all of the exhibitions took hours.
After making our way back to our hotel, we had a time to have a quick beer (89 cents) and rest our tired feet before heading out to one of Beijing's night markets to get dinner. The Wangfujing night market is a fascinating place. It is made up of a line of about 50 vendors selling food out of stalls lit by red Chinese lanterns. There you can find some really bizarre foods, from scorpions to snakes to various varieties of insect. We opted for more traditional foods like dumplings and vegetables but spent about half an hour being alternately amazed and repulsed by some of the fare.
We ended our whirlwind day in Beijing by attending a traditional acrobatics show before returning to our hotel completely exhausted. The last thing to do before falling asleep was repacking luggage before hitting the train the next morning.
Wednesday marked the first leg of the train journey, from Beijing to Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia. The entire trip took about 28 hours, including hours of confusing border-crossing formalities in the middle of the night.
Once we got out of the haze of Beijing we started seeing some amazing scenery, including snow-dusted hills and packs of camels in the Gobi Desert.
We spent the night in Ulaanbaatar and today we head out into the Mongolian countryside to spend two nights at a traditional Mongolian camp and sleep in a felt ger (yurt). I'm probably most excited about this part of the trip because it's so unlike anything I've done before or possibly will ever do again.
And now I'm off to bundle up for the below-freezing temperatures...