|
|
|
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
![]() ![]()
![]()
![]()
|
![]() |
SEPTEMBER 18, 2000 VOL. 156 NO. 11
The folks at the Yunnan Tourism Administration will tell you their city is famous for its temperate climate (it's called the City of Eternal Spring) and flowers (it hosted a huge horticultural exposition last year). Otherwise the recently modernized provincial capital"modern" in China generally means wide boulevards lined with uninspiring concrete monolithsis usually promoted as a gateway to other tourist spots in Yunnan. Last year, the province welcomed 36 million domestic visitors and 1 million international ones. This could explain why "tourist attraction" is defined by Chinese, not Western, criteria. Instead of wandering the charming backstreets of Kunming, foreign visitors are encouraged to visit the Stone Forest, an outcropping of natural limestone karsts located 120 km away. This land-based version of Halong Bay attracts many more people than its aqueous Vietnamese counterpart, and you have to venture far from the madding crowd to appreciate the "beauty" promised in the brochures.
For an authentic zoo experience, try the Kunming Zoo instead. Arrive before 9 a.m. and you can join the locals in energetic calisthenics performed to the boom-boxed strains of By the Rivers of Babylon. Or, for $1.80, rent a costume and have your photo taken as an ethnic-minority warrior. In the quaint playground, a swimming pool filled with multicolored plastic balls boasts a small statue of a plump, naked man-child wearing spectacles who looks suspiciously like a cross between Mannekin Pis and Chairman Mao. Alas, the zoo animals themselves are a mangy lot, uncomfortably housed in small, unkempt cages. Two blocks down Yuantong Road from the zoo is the under-publicized Yuantong Temple, an oasis of 9th-century serenity amid all the bland new construction. The three temples (one in the middle of a tiny lake), the lush flora, and the Buddha statues are almost as fascinating as the signage: please don't make confused noises when chanting and please take care of environmental sanitation. Even the tourist association acknowledges the charms of the flower and bird market on Tongdao Street, one of several tree-lined alleys crammed with pet supplies, fishing gear and a bizarre array of antiques and junk. Fortunately, the local government has decided to preserve a few blocks of the neighborhood's two-story wooden houses, some dating back to the 18th century. The future is less secure for Shuncheng Street, a two-block bastion of authentic Muslim culture where a new department store sits at one end and a massive construction site looms at the other. If you'd like to wander past ancient brick houses festooned with drying hams, eat spicy French fries for about 12, visit a Chinese mosque (or buy a plastic mosque-shaped alarm clock), you'd better hurry up. Kunming doesn't exactly pulsate with nightlife. Bowling is a favorite local pastime, and the city has some 30 alleys (the Holiday Inn's boasts 16 lanes). Or try an invigorating 30-minute streetside massage for a paltry $1.20. Blind masseurs dressed in white labcoats and caps ply their trade on many downtown street corners. From taxi drivers and store clerks to customers in back-alley restaurants, the inhabitants of Kunming are surprisingly friendlyon hand with smiles and sign-languaged assistance. Apparently, foreign visitors are still enough of a novelty that some locals practically have to be coerced into accepting tips for good service. Now that's a secret worth betraying! Write to TIME at mail@web.timeasia.com ASIANOW Travel Home
Quick Scroll: More stories from TIME, Asiaweek and CNN |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Back to the top |
© 2000 Time Inc. All Rights Reserved. Terms under which this service is provided to you. Read our privacy guidelines. |