CITYLIFE / Travel |
Tradition meets modernity(That's beijing)Updated: 2007-05-28 10:48 Everything happening to China today is happening in Yangshuo, and it seems far removed from the provincial and rural life of a generation ago. This small, sprawling community is experiencing an influx of new residents as well as tourists, drawn by job growth, the brisk trade in home building, and the growing number of hotels, trade stores and boutique shops. It could be any rapidly developing Chinese city, in miniature, but Yangshuo is different - it has retained its sedentary appeal. And where overcrowding in other cities can be frustrating, here it's only a slight inconvenience as you head out of town on your bicycle.
Arriving by night in a sleeper bus from the relatively flat eastern provinces, unusual shapes outside the window rise ominously against the skyline - dense shadows where the senses tell you no shadows ought to be. At first light the view from the hotel window is slightly surreal: a bustling town dwarfed by the nearby hills. But the initially disoriented visitor easily gains his bearings in the town. Yangshuo is small by Chinese standards, with a resident population of just 150,000. But the town has always drawn visitors, thanks to the odd rock formations of the surrounding countryside. These limestone pinnacles were created over 300 million years ago, when the whole region emerged from the seabed, exposing the rock to intense erosion from wind and rain. During a holiday week, the crowds along West Street - the main
pedestrian thoroughfare curving through the center of town - can get quite
dense. Tour groups mill behind waving flags while backpack-laden university
students search for rooms, undeterred by the many guesthouses with "no vacancy"
signs. Once outside the town though, past the concrete shells of new apartment
blocks and away from the gridlock of tour buses, the charm of the place becomes
apparent.
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