CITYLIFE / Travel |
Shenzhen in holiday moodBy Jane Ram (Beijing Today)Updated: 2007-02-06 09:31 Color takes on a whole new meaning when you stroll through
Shenzhen's annual Spring Festival street market. From a distance it looks like
streams of red, orange, gold and yellow flowing together and forming a dazzling
river of flowers and fruit.
"Shenzhen" and "holiday" might seem incompatible words, but the economic miracle city abutting the Hong Kong SAR is full of surprisAt this time of year Shenzhen shifts gears: the full throttle pursuit of money eases off for a short spell while everyone prepares to celebrate Spring Festival. Staying for festival Years ago, I discovered the city sets up many small and large flower and plant markets just before Lunar New Year. Locals told me where the largest market was, and I enjoyed it so much it's become a yearly destination. Everyone knows this is a city of immigrants. As Spring Festival approaches, most Shenzhen residents think only of going back home for a family reunion, but that leaves several million people who can't make the trip for one reason or another: maybe their parents prefer to come south for milder weather, or perhaps they can't get time off for a trip. Whatever the reason, on February 15, Shenzhen will return to "festive mode."ˇIImmigration is almost empty, traffic is light and the whole place looks different as everyone puts on bright holiday colors instead of the usual dark business suits of the rest of the year. Babies in arms, grandparents in wheelchairs, courting couples and schoolchildren out with their friends: this is an enjoyable excursion for everyone. Flowers
Business is quiet the first day, which closes in the early hours of February 18. In the meantime, most people here browse and chatter rather than buy. Some are clearly trying to decide whether they have the patience to wait until the prices start tumbling in the last hour or two of sales. Others are taking their time over selecting the perfect purchase. Citrus fruits are the dominant color and smell in the annual feast for the eyes. They range from knee-high potted kumquats to giant pomelos that might require a small crane to position. Dahlias and roses the size of cabbages come in every shade from the palest pink and lavender to deep crimson. Red Anthuriums are massed together alongside exotic bromeliads in yellow, orange and blood red. Cut branches, and sometimes whole trees of flowering peach, plum and pear are lined up to anchor in big vases, and the growers have fussed for months to get these to bloom on the right day. They go so far as to strip off every leaf to encourage the shoots to put out extra buds to cover the bare twigs. Every few years, a new craze emerges. Not so long ago, the first "nipple fruit" caused a sensation, but now they are commonace.
Occasionally they have been left on their gangly stems, but at the market, the fruits have mostly been pegged together with slivers of bamboo to form long-lasting golden pyramids of varied heights. Many of my Hong Kong gardening friends enjoy the fair as an opportunity to seek out unusual plants. Peonies are taken for granted in Northern China, but they can't survive the hot and umid southern summers. Nevertheless, as a short-lived seasonal treat, few blooms are as beautiful as these. In their own way, camellias are equally beautiful, with their exquisite single or multiple flowers like something created by a skilled pastry chef. Vendors come from near and far, many bringing unusual orchids with them.
Sadly, most are taken from the wild, stripping large areas of Yunnan and other
provinces of their unique flora.
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