I got to the hostel, a really nice hostel. I met some other people there who were also a part of the Panda Project. We were all invited to a welcome-dinner that night, but I was told by the other volonteers (not anyone who was in charge or anything, wich I though was a bit weird) that it was cancelled. So me and my new room mates went out for dinner. We went to see if we could find anything Chinese, however, we could only find weird stuff. So we ended up at this really fancy thai restaurant right next to the hostel, with amazing and cheap food.
After that we took a taxi to a night market. That place was really cozy, with lanterns and a little lake.
The next day we met up with our coordinator for brunch. We all had noodle soup, you could choose between chicken(not spicy), beef(super spicy) or vegetable. I chose chicken and I got mine first. I was really hungry so I ate all of mine before most other even got their food. I thought it was delicious! There was bones and stuff in it, but didn't think about it, I just ate around it, spitting it out. I was later told there was brain in it... Dammit... But I'm so glad I didn't notice until after I was finished!
We did some sightseeing, and in the People's Park we saw a lot of cool things. In one place we could see a lot of notes hanging around, and mostly old people reading them. This was some sort of match making ads, where parents would write something about their son or daughter and match them with another piece of paper, and send them on a blind date.
| A blind date for you son perhaps? |
We also came across a group of people just dancing and having fun to loud music. This was really nice to see, I wish we could have this sort of thing in Sweden, but we are too shy for that...
We came back to the hostel later on and most of us decided a beer would be nice. It really was, altough I enjoyed the company more than the watery beer. Maybe that's why they call it snow beer?
A few days later we took a couple of buses that took us to Ya'an and the Panda Base.
We were told that we would be able to hold a baby panda, and it would cost 1500 RMB for 20 seconds, or 3000 for 3 minutes. Really expensive, and why is it not included? But I thought, when am I ever going to hold a baby panda if not now? And when I'm at it I might as well do the whole three minutes.
But this is the thing I am sooooo disappointed about. All of a sudden it was only possible to do the 20 second thing, and so I paid 1500. Still they told us we could HOLD the panda for 20 seconds. But then when it all was paid and we got ready to see the baby panda, dressing up in plastic gowns and glovs, they told us we weren't allowed to hold the panda. We could sit next to it and pet it, and we got 15 seconds. That is 1000 bloody RMB per SECOND!!! For sitting next to a panda?! They had me fooled...
| Not worth it. |
The project itself was pretty fun, and really opened my eyes for how great volunteering is, however, I will never go with Goxplore again. So many things were described totally wrong in the letter we got. I talked to others at the project who had been volunteering before, and they said it usually is way better. And I was absolutely not the only one feeling disappointed.
| Tong Tong |
Our day started with breakfast at 8am. Then at 8.40 cleaning and a quick feeding. We were cleaning up poop and old bamboo, and giving them fresh. Three times a day we just prepared food and fed them. Preparing the food included weighing and cutting the special panda cake, that looked and smelled just like normal bread. Two times a day they got an apple and a carrot.
Some nights we had Chinese lessons, or calligraphy or paper cutting. We made our own dumplings two times during my three weeks.
| Our awesome uniforms. |
| Is it readable? |
| The head of Leshan Giant Buddha. |
| Way too much food. But tasty! |
The next day I woke up with the worst stomach ever! Our plan was to walk up the Emei montain to a place where there were a lot of monkeys. With me being so ill, it took nearly five hours... That was NOT the best day of my life. When we finally got there, at first we couldn't find any monkeys. But we kept on going and after a while we saw loads of them. But then we got so scared we just wanted to go away! They adviced us to use a bamboo stick for own protection, wich I at first thought was silly. But I am glad for the stick I had, it came in handy a lot. The monkeys were really mean, and stealing stuff. When you turned your back they would run and jump on your back to try and get some food. I was jumped but didn't have any food. However my reaction was to bend over, and so my backpack fell down and kinda pushed the monkey off my shoulders. We saw one person who had been bitten and was bleeding. We also saw a monkey bleeding, wich in a way made me feel sorry for them at the same time as I really think they are mean creatures...
| Stealing monkey. |
We walked down and got to a parking lot, where we took a bus as far up the mountain as possible. It was getting dark so we decided to stay the night at a hostel/hotel. The next morning we got up unbelievably early. We walked up stairs again, and as I was still really ill, this was hell. I couldn't keep up with the other girls, so we met at the cable car terminal. After queuing for what felt like a life time we took the cable car to, well, almost the top. After that, more walking up stairs waited. We came to see the sunrise on top of the Emei mountain, and the other girls were worried we would miss it, so they ran off, while I was quite happy to just make it alive, however long time it took. But guess what? I made it in time for the sunrise! It was really cool to see the sun rise through the clouds. And I am so proud of myself for doing it, I can't believe I managed to get there while being so ill! Yay me! And, although I don't know if it was just me, but isn't the air a bit thinner up there too?
| The sun, squeezing through the clouds. |
There was a zoo just behind the Panda Base, and you would think it would be great to see tigers and bears and birds...
But it wasn't. I've never in my life seen such malnourished and badly treated animals. The enclosures were too small, without any grass in sight. They were in weird angles so the animals couldn't even stand up straight, and it made it really hard to run or walk. Everything was out of concrete.
If you know just a little bit about elephants, you know they are very smart and have emotions. You would also know to never keep an elephant by it self. They did just that. Nothing to entertain itself with, no friend and no space.
The ostriches were all picking their feathers, wich they do when they are stressed, wich indicates how miserable they are. Some of them were even bleeding.
There was one lonely fox in one of the enclosures, you could tell he wasn't mentally healthy. He was running in this circle round and round, and by the look of the trail he left, he'd be running in the same circle for months. At least. With nothing better to do.
They had snakes too. It's been a few weeks since I was there, so there is a risk they are dead by now. That's how bad it was. A snake, maybe a meter long was cramped into a mini box, maybe 15x7x5 centimeters. It just about fit inside. No space to move at all. And there were heaps of them. All in small boxes.
Some of the big cats looked so skinny it scared me. In the park you can buy meat on a stick to feed the tigers and lions with. You just stick it through the fence. Seems like a cool idea, but if you think about it, how can they control what the animals eat? How can you know they get the right nutrition? Do they rely on the costumers to feed the animals, and is that why they look so slim? Why doesn't anybody do something about this? Why doesn't anybody care? Everyone can see the animals are mistreated! This is really pissing me off!
| ... and what happened to his face? |
And, because I don't want to end this update with being pissed off, can someone tell me if this makes any sense translated to Chinese?! I bought this t-shirt because I thought it was hilarious!
| There is something that doesconnect very fundamentally to the human psyche, in a way. FROG NUMBER |
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