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Dao Cheng

Dao Cheng… looks like Tibet?!?

(English version from the text posted in Jun/2014)

According to travel guides, Dao Cheng isn’t much more than a stop on the Tibetian Highway that links the Sichuan Province to Lhasa, capital of Autonomous Region of Tibet. But this proximity to the Tibetan plateau offers a breathtaking scenery in a wild aridity, where little vegetation nestles, in the valleys that also shelter for small villages.

Although the location and the fact that the majority of the inhabitants are of Tibetans, in Dao Cheng (also written as Daocheng) little can be found of this culture, with almost all the old urban mesh of the city being replaced by new avenues, wide sidewalks and modern buildings imitating the style of local architecture. Crossroads where almost any traffic circulates on the rhythm of traffic lights, and where the surviving traditional buildings resist in the backside streets, many still without pavement.

Along the streets of brown monotony stands the presence of groups of men and women, whose physical characteristics of tall and sturdy bodies, dark skin and faces with strong features. Women wearing colorful thin-striped aprons that stood out from the dark tones of their long dresses and men in heavy coats over their shoulders, or wrapped in their long sleeves around their waists, and broad-brimmed hats shading their faces, stand out from the discreet Chinese presence that nevertheless dominates the city’s commerce, where it is an arduous task to find a place to serve traditional Tibetan gastronomy.

Observed the calm atmosphere of the city, with the traffic lights change from green to red without a vehicle passing, where dogs sleep sluggishly along the walks wrapped in dust that evenly covers the city. An atmosphere of stagnation hangs out only broken by nightfall which carries with it the music emitted by the speakers placed in the central square of the Dao Cheng were daily and the local population gathers performing traditional Tibetan dances.

… and the sky, with its intense blue tone and scattered white clouds, where light strikes the eyes and invites the skin to the protection of the shadows, where the air is hot and dry and where, at the slightest physical effort, the altitude leaves the heart beating hard in the chest.

Dao Cheng
Dao Cheng

Dao Cheng
Dao Cheng

Dao Cheng
Dao Cheng

Dao Cheng
Dao Cheng

Dao Cheng
Dao Cheng

Dao Cheng
Dao Cheng

Dao Cheng
Dao Cheng

Dao Cheng
Dao Cheng

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

Dao Cheng
Dao Cheng

Info

Bus from Zhongdian (Shangri-lá) to Dao Cheng:

Departure: 7.30 AM, every day (only one bus a day, so it’s better to buy the ticket one day in advance)

Cost: 109 yuan

Duration: around 11 hours (including stop for lunch).

From Shangri-lá Old Town to Zhongdian Bus Terminal you just need to take the bus number 1 to the bus terminal, for 2 yuan. Note that the buses start around 6.30 in the morning, so if you need to stay in the Bus Terminal early you may need to catch a taxi, which is around 10 yuan.

População: 30.000 habitantes

Altitude: 3753 m

from Shangri-lá to Dao Cheng…by bus

(English version from the text posted in Jun/2014)

308 kilometers and 11 hours of bus separate these two villages near the border with the so-called Autonomous Region of Tibet: Shangri-la, in the Yunnan Province, and Dao Cheng in Sichuan Province.

Although since the mid-eighteenth century Tibet was under the administration of the Emperor of China, it was only in 1950, when occupied by the People’s Liberation Army, that it became part of China, with the majority of its territory on Autonomous Region of Tibet. The remaining area was then divided by the nearby provinces of Qinghai, Gansu, Sichuan and Yunnan.

Given the difficulty of traveling in the Tibet Autonomous Region, which requires specific authorization and obliges to travel in groups, which inevitably push foreigners to travel agencies, that increase significantly the cost of the trip, it gets too expensive to visit Tibet for a backpacker budget. The best option for those who want to know what remains of Tibetan culture and to enjoy the remarkable landscapes of the Tibetan plateau is to visit the villages located nearby the Autonomous Region of Tibet border, where the easiest access is made by the provinces of Sichuan and Yunnan.

Alternatively, the region of Ladakh, in the far north of India, is also another way to get close to Tibet. In Kathmandu, Nepal, and in the state of Himachal Pradesh in northern India, it is possible to have contact with this culture due to the presence of a large number of Tibetan refugees, including the Dalai Lama in Dharamsala district, precisely at McLeod Ganj village.

The bus ride, in spite of the poor road conditions, where part of the beaten path, crossing the mountain chain of Meili Xue Shan, also called Mainri Snow Mountains, climbing high passages and descending to the valleys to cross rivers, with the road winding up the steep slopes, offers breathtaking landscapes.

On the way out of Shangri-la, the landscape is dominated by the green of the pines covering almost every slope of the mountains, except for the highest peaks where the rigor of winter still leaves traces of snow covering these landscapes. In the valleys run streams and rivers whose low level of water reveals a rug formed by stones, rounded by the passages of the icy waters.

Leaving behind small settlements surrounded by modest agricultural fields, arranged along the fertile banks of water lines, where yaks and wild horses graze, we start to go up the steep slopes. Increasingly the landscape gets more desert, with the human presence disappearing almost completely. The abrupt gray cliffs seem to touch the white of the clouds that decorate the blue sky.

The settlements lying along the road, which are no more than a few houses scattered along the road, feature a characteristic Tibetan architecture, with buildings consisting of three thick stone walls forming a rectangle, within which are built With aid of robust wooden trunks the habitation, almost always of two floors; Whose main facade is entirely wood; The doors and windows are framed by elaborate and colorful designs painted in wood carved in intricate geometric shapes that stand out in the white of the walls.

As you enter Sichuan Province, the houses acquire other characteristics, the outer walls being entirely built of stone, with the door and window decorations giving way to a black trapeze frame, making these dwellings more solid and Dark, feeling enhanced by the gray stone walls that at cost stand out from the dry, dusty landscape.

Crossing the highest points, and moving North, the landscape grows more and more arid, with the forest giving way to sandy and rocky slopes of gray and brownish colors, giving the landscape a wild and inhospitable tone… the typical Tibetan plateau landscape!

...de Shangri-lá a Dao Cheng
… from Shangri-lá to Dao Cheng

...de Shangri-lá a Dao Cheng
… from Shangri-lá to Dao Cheng

paragem para almoço... de Shangri-lá a Dao Cheng
lunch break

...de Shangri-lá a Dao Cheng
… from Shangri-lá to Dao Cheng

...de Shangri-lá a Dao Cheng
… from Shangri-lá to Dao Cheng

...de Shangri-lá a Dao Cheng
… from Shangri-lá to Dao Cheng

bus ... de Shangri-lá a Dao Cheng
bus … from Shangri-lá to Dao Cheng

...de Shangri-lá a Dao Cheng
… from Shangri-lá to Dao Cheng

...de Shangri-lá a Dao Cheng
… from Shangri-lá to Dao Cheng

...de Shangri-lá a Dao Cheng
… from Shangri-lá to Dao Cheng

...de Shangri-lá a Dao Cheng
… from Shangri-lá to Dao Cheng

...de Shangri-lá a Dao Cheng
… from Shangri-lá to Dao Cheng

Note: photos taken from inside the bus

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I’m Catarina, a wanderer from Lisbon, Portugal… or a backpack traveller with a camera!

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