Olympic torch relay station completion of Mount Qomolangma

Go to Tibet!

Go to Tibet with the 2nd issue of Ni Hao from China!

Know the new railway, Tibetan life, arts and tradition!

Go to Tibet! 2nd issue of Ni Hao from China

 

 

 

Source:Chinadaily.com

Qinghai Tibet railway videos



1) Beautiful Tibet Railway clip from Taiwan TV recording. Chinese subtitle, Tibetan singing.


2) A series of video clips in Cantonese, Chinese subtitle, plus picture/wallpaper download. (Oriental Daily)


3) Travelogue by a Dutch tourist in Tibet (the trip started in HK, ended in Beijing)

see Sander Nijdam's travelogue (in Dutch, but picture is language independent).

4) Related links: ESWN, Tim Johnson (don't miss the comments below), Ming Pao op-ed on Tibet Railway vs Yangtze Dam, Environmental Measures in QTR (includes interesting anecdotes about how to build a bridge to avoid blocking the antelop passage, and how to convince the antelopes to pass under the bridge).

5) (Update) Read Times reporter Jane Macartney's travel diary at her blog (updated daily!). (Via Shanghai)

 

Source:http://sun-bin.blogspot.com/2006/07/qinghai-tibet-railway-videos.html

Yaks love the Qinghai Tibet Railway -- and geography

The Railway under construction in 2005


First, the yaks love the new railway! (more yak on rail pictures here)

Weighing 1000kg a yak could derail a train. This offers a second explanation to why the rail needs to be guarded.

---
Geography



The highest point of the Railway is near Tanggula Pass. at 5072m (16,600ft) above sea level, i.e.,

  • taller than Mont Blanc (4808m), Europe, the highest point in Europe is, technically Mt Elbrus (5642m) at Caucasus, Russia, about 10% higher than our Tangula Pass
  • taller than Mt Massif (4897), highest of Antartica
  • only 827m shorter than Mt Kilimanjaro (5895m), Africa
  • Almost twice that of Mt Baitou/Changbai, between China and Korea (DPRK)
  • 30% above Mt Fuji (3776m), 20% above Mt Jade (3952) of Taiwan Province, China (PRC), or Mt Kinabalu (4093m) at Sabah, Borner, Malaysia
  • Higher than Mt Whitney (4421) at Sierra Nevada, or any point in the 48 US States, or the second highest point in Alaska Mt Sanford (16,237 ft) -- just 20% shorter than Mt McKinley (20,320 ft) in Denali, Alaska
But that is only where the railway actually goes through, Tanggula Pass is at 6070m. The peak around the pass is called Gladindong(6621m), and Purog Kangri (6929) of Tanggula Shan, which divided Tibet from Qinghai.

Just south of the Tanggula Pass Station (5068m) is the highest point of the railway (5072m).

20km of the railway is above 5000m. 780 km from 4500 to 5000m.

The railways rises to above around 5000m, near the 1338m long Fenghuo Shan Tunnel and continue to be around that altitude beyond the pass. About 550km in length of this section is on permafrost, i.e. so high that the temperature is always signigicantly below freezing point.

Stations, tunnels and bridges on railway


Related links:
1) Wiki's station list, and stations with vista points.
2) Chinapage
3) Schaefer's "The Railway to Tibet"
4) BBC' new report on inauguration July 1st (video)
5) Timesonline: Passages for endangered chiru, and "Video monitoring shows that more than 800 antelope have already passed under the railway"

6) Comminganarchy has discussion on merit of train travel in the comment section

---
These pictures were taken in June between Andu and Tanggula Pass stations

Tibet Antelope (Chiru) (see also early post)

Tibetan donkey
Source:http://sun-bin.blogspot.com/2006/07/yaks-love-qinghai-tibet-railway-ii-and.html

Chase flowers

(lifestyle.com)
Updated: 2007-03-21 09:40

 

Spring is time of flowers. Last year's warm winter leads to the early blossom of flowers. Blooming flowers never wait, they blossom and then wither. To catch the transient beauty, you need a timetable. The following is a list of nice places appreciating blooming flowers. Let's enjoy spring.

Wuyuan

Located in Jiangxi Province, Wuyuan is a typical town in China's southeast area, with trees and water around. Decorated by kinds of flowers, Wuyuan's spring is as beautiful as a picture.

Mid-March is the best time to appreciate flowers in Wuyuan. The best-known flowers in Wuyuan are rape plant flowers. They are so common that you may not notice them when you pass by. But in Wuyuan, you'll see acres of them, the yellow wave will refresh you. Besides, there are there are pear flowers, peach flowers, Michelia floribunda (Shilixiang) and azaleas.

Three Gorges

Tourists are welcome by seas of flowers if they visit Three Gorges in March and April. The whole area is awakened by dazzling rape plant flowers and peach flowers. Rape plant flowers blossom in mid-March, then azaleas blossom in late March, and it's the orange blossoms in Yichang at the beginning of April.

Taohuacun (peach flowers village), as the name shows, is a good place to appreciate peach flowers. It is located near Yichang city, at the entrance of Xiling Gorge, the most east part of Three Gorges.

Bailizhou, an island located at the heart of Yangtze River, boasts five million pear trees.

Nyingchi

Nvingchi, a small county located in southeast Tibet, is always crowned for its delicate scenery. It's filled with peach blossoms, forest farms and snow mountains.

In Nyingchi, peach flowers bloom at the late March or early April. Different from the delicate peach flowers in east China, Nyingchi's wild peach flowers have more vivid color at the base of distant snow mountains.

There is another place to enjoy peach flowers five kilometres away Nyingchi county, Ga La Peach Flowers Village. Visitors to Nyingchi may see blooming azaleas in June.

Lijiang

Located in Yunnan Province, Southwest China, Lijiang offers blooming azaleas every spring. From early May, azaleas bloom gradually on mountains. Azales at lower part of mountains bloom early while those at higher part later. In June, the flowery mountains turn up.

Laojunshan Mountain is a good place in Lijiang to enjoy blooming azaleas.

Picture perfect

By Lin Qi
Updated: 2007-03-26 07:06

 

 

Wen Li, a music teacher from Shenzhen of Guangdong Province, never expected that photography would play a significant role in her life, until she won the special prize at the National Photo Competition held by the China Photographers' Association in 2005.

And she never expected that her award-winning photo would link her with a Tibetan girl.

Shot during a trip to Sichuan Province, her winning photo titled Huo (meaning puzzlement in Chinese) of a Tibetan girl in close-up wowed both professionals and the masses. They were even more surprised to learn that she knew little about photography when she took that picture.

But Wen did not get carried away with the excitement of the reward. She flew to Chengdu, capital of Sichuan, the day after the award ceremony in Beijing on January 16. She wanted to find the girl in the photo, and to "give the award of 5,000 yuan ($640) back to her".

The National Photo Competition's award-winning picture of six-year-old Tibetan Nordron Wangmo.

Chance meet

Wen traveled with friends to Sichuan's Aba Tibet and Qiang Autonomous Prefecture in July of 2004.

Since it was her first visit to the plateau, she bought a digital camera the day before setting off. She spent merely half an hour learning how to handle the camera from a workmate. And she kept reading the instructions during the trip.

On the way to Hongyuan County, the team saw several local children walking horses and playing on a vast grassland. They stopped to take photos as they tried to talk to the children.

The place was named Hongyuan by late Premier Zhou Enlai, which literally means the grassland that the Red Army passed by during the Long March in the 1930s.

When they were about to leave, Wen caught sight of a child walking toward them on the horizon on the other side of the grassland.

She could only picture a profile at first. As the child came nearer, she recognized that it was a Tibetan girl, her hair floating in the air. "She had dirt and mud on her face. The clothes she wore were clearly donations," she recollected. "She seemed so tiny, helpless and lonely on the vast barren land," she said. "She wore a bewildered, cautious but interested look. Her big, bright eyes reflected the typical restrained will of a Tibetan."

Wen failed to communicate with the girl, but she took five pictures of her.

She published all her photos at a local photographers' club after returning to Shenzhen. Among them, the ones with the girl in close-up were highly praised by many photographers and strongly recommended for the National Photo Competition.

"I became enthusiastic for photography after that trip and kept practising with other amateurs. But I was not prepared for such a competitive activity, because the organizers were offering an award of 5,000 yuan, considered high for a photo competition," she said.

The committee received 30,000 entries falling into three categories emotion, scenery and nature. Her photo was ranked first by both the jury and netizens, and was the only to win the special prize.

Long journey

Amateur photographer and music teacher Wen Li with her subject Nordron Wangmo (3rd from left) and four other children whose education she now sponsors.
Photos courtesy of Wen Li

Wen called Yang Fang, an official of Hongyuan County, as soon as she was informed of having won the prize in early January. She asked Yang to help her find the girl, which sounded like a mission impossible to Yang. They knew nothing about the girl, including her name, her age, the village she lived in or the school she attended.

But Yang promised to try her best. She and her colleagues published dozens of copies of the photo and distributed them to villagers. All responses proved to be wrong calls. Wen Li decided to look for the girl herself, despite the harsh climate of Hongyuan.

"I had never been to the grassland in winter. Every one disagreed with my plan. Yet, it was a strong impulse to share the joy of winning with the girl that put me there. And most importantly, I felt she should have the money. I felt, it would definitely change her life," said Wen, who was impressed by the grassland schools during her last trip to Hongyuan.

She said on a good day, students of varying ages and grade levels would have classes at an appointed place. But a lot of children did not have access to a good education.

Her quest for the girl proved to be much more dangerous than she had thought, when her car struggled every inch on the snowy and windy grassland. The snow was so thick and heavy that even the experienced local driver couldn't distinguish the road from the grassland. The car got stuck several times.

"I was exhausted in the freezing cold. I felt I would pass out from the altitude sickness," she said.

They came upon a wooden cottage on a hill slope and found a Tibetan woman living there with her three children.

After Wen had some food and milk tea and warmed herself up, she showed the photo to the woman, who looked astonished at the girl on it.

"She said it was her niece, Nordron Wangmo. It turned out it was her sixth birthday the day I took the photo."

The woman went on to say that the girl had moved to the neighboring pasture with her parents. She was to move back to town in March to attend a pre-school class. However, said the aunt, the girl was likely to drop out because of poverty.

Wen returned in spring and finally met the girl. "She recognized me at once. She was quiet, and always held my hand tightly wherever I went."

Wen then set up a foundation for the girl. She also helps another four local students and maintains contact with them by letters.

"It is the girl and the plateau that led me into the world of photography. We've helped each other to realize a dream we dared not imagine before."

 

(China Daily 03/26/2007 page8)