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Beijing Bicycle |
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Stone Dragon, by Nicholas
Hogg |
By Nicholas Hogg -
Beijing is huge, especially if the bike you've rented is as heavy as
a lump of solid iron, and the air you're breathing is thick with
fumes belched from diesel guzzling trucks and beaten up taxis. Yet,
this is the ideal way to get around in China's teeming capital.
Forget sitting in a traffic jam with the meter ticking over, or
dueling elbows on the overcrowded buses, pedal power is the choice
of this nation and any tourist ready to forget their right of way
and highway code.
Clunking through the only two available gears, I set off from my
hotel in the Sanlintun district and headed for the general direction
of Tiananmen Square. Although the rush hour throng had thinned out a
little, there was still a swirling mass of bikes, buses and trucks
jostling for every inch of road available. Luckily, the first avenue
I had chosen to rediscover my cycle courier skills on had a separate
bike only lane, with just the occasional speeding taxi zipping
through like a getaway car.
The pace varied from tiny old men on three wheeled jalopies, to
racing schoolboys weaving through the smallest gaps. I rode along
between the sounds of squeaking wheels, honking horns, ringing bells
and shouts of hello, not really having time to take in the pulsing
street life around me, but thrilled to be in the flurry of a Beijing
commute. I soon found out that red lights were more advice than
command, and that crossing at intersections was best done in the
safety of numbers – scarily similar to the way a herd of wildebeest
charge a flooded river before they become crocodile food. Just as I
was about to check my map again, the road in front opened up onto
the vast concrete space of Tiananmen Square. Few people will forget
the heroic defiance of the lone protestor who stood before the
rumbling tanks during the 1989 demonstrations, and it was this image
that came to mind first as I rode into the summer glare of Beijing's
historical and infamous landmark.
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Mao and Gaurd, by Nicholas
Hogg |
Although it is a busy tourist spot for both Chinese and foreign
visitors, the presence of the Red Guard is not just for photo
opportunities. On my arrival, a small group of protesters attempted
to stop the traffic by unfurling a banner across the road.
Statuesque sentries sprung into action and dragged them like rag
dolls into vans that vanished as quickly as they had appeared. Only
a few weeks before my arrival, authorities arrested Australian
members of the banned spiritual movement, Falun Gong, during a
peaceful sit-down demonstration. Needless to say, I had no problem
obeying the command of a young guard when asked to dismount my bike
and walk.
All this was watched by the ubiquitous face of chairman Mao, looming
above the scene from the framing gates of the Forbidden City. The
giant mural looks out over the square, providing the perfect
backdrop for any tourist photos. As I took my camera out of my bag,
a young Chinese boy no older than three or four stood stern faced
and proud, every part the patriot, as his parents snapped away.
While strolling the spacious courtyards, palaces and gardens of
the Forbidden City, where twenty-four emperors of the Ming and Qing
dynasties had ruled from for almost five centuries, I was
accompanied by headset commentary from none other than 007 himself,
Roger Moore. Dated from the fifteenth century – according to Roger –
The Temple of Heaven is a group of buildings constructed to carry
out special ceremonies for the emperor. The main building is the
Hall of Prayer for Good Harvests. The round temple is set on a
square platform,believed to represent heaven and earth. South of
this building, enclosed in a round stonewall, is the Temple of the
Gods. They say if you stand close enough to the wall and whisper
something, the words will circle back toyou.
Turning off 007, I left the beautiful russet walls of The Forbidden
City to stand in line to see a corpse. Hundreds wait for the glimpse
of a waxen Mao laid out in a glass case. The bizarre event of filing
past a dead dictator is of course concluded with a wander around the
Chairman's shop of tacky souvenirs and piling up a basket with Mao
watches, pens, mugs and cigarette lighters.
Escaping the traffic and summer heat, like the Imperial family had
been doing for centuries before, I rode over to the lake and gardens
of the Beihai Gongyuan, resting my saddlesore rear in a shady spot
by the white Tibetan pagoda that looks out over the park from a
small hill. A few ice creams and a paddleboat later, with the late
afternoon sun a little less fierce, I wheeled through the old
neighborhoods of Hutongs to find markets, mahjong players, and other
symbols of more traditional Chinese street life amongst the
crumbling, back to back, one-story brick houses.
Despite the construction of towering hotels and gleaming department
stores, globalization and a Beijing booming with capitalism and
preparations for the 2008 Olympics, a bike ride through the dusk lit
back streets was a journey to a time when the world moved a little
more slowly, and the greatest highway danger to a cycling tourist
was a collision with a chicken.
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