Friday, October 31, 2008

Foreign Teachers' Cultural Trip (September 6)

Since our arrival here more than a year ago, we have heard talk of the university offering us a chance to experience Chinese culture by taking us to places that are famous in the area. We finally got the chance to go on such a trip. The van picked us all up (except Tom who was sick) at around 0800 and we were off to visit cultural sights as follows: Ebony Wood Museum, Buddhist Temples as part of the Giant Buddha of Leshan and the Tea Museum in Jia Jiang. We were all very excited!

Ebony Wood Culture Museum

http://inchinahil.travellerspoint.com/s21/

Since Sunee and I had already gone to this recently, Sunee decided not to see it again. I went in to take a few more pictures.


Welcome area outside the museum



The museum is built in Tang Dynasty style, or so I think. It took over ten years to build.


This is Zoe our Foreign Teachers Representative. She takes good care of all our needs.


A workshop set up to show how the wood is sculptured.



No touching, please!


Dr. Robert and his wife, Jean are foreign teachers from Canada but were actually born and raised in China


No Photos Please!


There is also a Mao Badge Museum. Now we now why those badges are hard to find.


Ebony wood carved like ginsing.


A buddha carved into the ebony wood

This really is a world class museum with hundreds of huge ebony carvings displayed on two floors. There is also a huge commercial area where one can spend a lot of money buying ebony wood. It is not cheap.

Wuyu Temple



We parked in front of this bridge which crossed over to the mountain where the Wuyu Monastery was located.


The bridge to Wuyu was absolutely beautiful with traditional Chinese pagodas and dragons everywhere. I took a lot more pictures than these but these are good representatives of what the bridge looked like.


Zoe sends her welcome. This is the typical modern-day Chinese reaction to seeing a camera. It happens all over China in the most unlikely places (with the exception of Wuhan anyway). How can a Western not love a people who constantly "ham it up" in front of a camera?


Panoramic view of the river area on the way to the Wuyu Monastery



Across the river, one could see another of the many Buddhist temples nestled in the forest along the river


The forest surrounding the temple reaches right down to the river's edge. Everything appeared in different shades of green making the temple even more awe inspiring


On the walk up the mountain we met this little girl and her father going down. Could not get her to smile or even say Hi


Along the path up the mountain to the Wuyu Monastery we came across many of these ancient Han tombs carved into the mountain side


Not the main entrance to the monastery but one of many we saw from a distance


As we entered the Wuyu Monastery area, Sunee found a place to . . . you guessed it. SHOP!


The signs pointed the way to the areas worth visiting


View of temple tops through a Chinese window. There is something about Chinese designed openings that I love to frame a picture with.


Two different views of the main courtyard in Wuyu Monastery. Red was the dominant color throughout


Doorway to another Buddha image framed in "Wuyu Red"


We found the Wuyu Monastery to be one of the most relaxing and beautiful temples we have visited in China. The layout was perfection and the contrasts awe inspiring. Notice the clean lines and harmony of this little area


This small pagoda was obviously a funeral pagoda in an area that was obviously used to bury the local monks. It was very ancient in its appearance


Serenity Stairs


Another temple complex nearby


Resting place, Chinese style


Red and black contrasted


Sunee against the Wuyu red wall


Buddha on a peacock


Embedded in red


A place for enjoying the river scenery below


Tea served in a relaxing pagoda overlooking the mountain scenery


Row of Arhats. These guys could have gone on to nirvana but decided to stay behind and help their fellow humans reach nirvana. Most Buddha temples have a few of these guys hanging around. Fu Hu Temple on Emei Mountain, for example, has a hall with 500 of these guys


A moongate beautifully framing Sunee. A postcard picture if there ever was one!


This monk flew by us in a hurry. I was lucky to catch him in digits.


Newly painted door with lion knockers


But, of course, the doors were locked.



Hallway to a vision of serenity somewhere inside the temple complex


I found this unique looking flower near the grave pagoda. Took some time to get the focusing correct. Nice yellow with pastel greens


Another one of the magnificent Chinese doorways. I think we will build one of these when we return to Thailand to live


Sunee checked out the Buddha image in this building and I stopped her to take this picture


Chinese patterns


Stone carvings of a huge dragon at the base of one of the funeral pagodas


Multiple Buddha images dressed in gold. Very typical of images all over China and the world


This door of black with red and gold carvings really stood out. I was forced by its unique beauty to photograph it and share it with you


Moondoor (at least that is what I call these round entrances) to a room that looked to be a reading or study room. Very beautiful and relaxing view of the river below


Portico in Wuyu Red


Capitalism Exposed - on the way out of the monastery, we found . . . you guessed it, a shopping area.

Lunch


Choosing which fish we wanted to murder for our lunch. The fish were very big


Fish Hot Pot preparations. This was the best fish we have ever eaten in Sichuan. Most of the time, the fish have way too many bones for us to try to eat.

Ten Fu Tea Museum
http://chinateatravels.blogspot.com/2008/09/ten-fu-tea-museum-jia-jiang.html


Entering the compound, one is confronted with this tall dude holding a tea leaf.



On the way to the main buildings of the museum, one sees this bronze representing the old Tea Horse Road from Sichuan to Tibet and Westward.

For more pictures and information on this great tea museum, please check out my tea blog:

chinateatravels.blogspot.com

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