Showing posts with label travel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label travel. Show all posts

Elqui Valley*

Elqui Valley, Chile's New Age tourist mecca (think Taos, Tibet, Machu Pichu, Ayres Rock, the Pyramids), is 370 miles north of Santiago and 40 - 80 miles east of the beach city of La Serena. It begins in the little town of El Molle and runs along the Elqui River--which, like most rivers, is the result of several rivers coming together. The valley is known for its rugged mountains and clear desert air, both of which have prompted international astronomical organizations to set up telescopes here and to the north. In Chile, the valley is famous both as the home of Nobel Prize winning poet Gabriel Mistral, who is buried in Montegrande and memorialized in a museum in the valley's only city, Vicuña, where she was born, and as the home of pisco, a brandy distilled from grapes and flavored in many different ways.



One mid-fall May weekend, Irene and I visited the valley with Brooke Gregory, our physicist-friend who works in La Serena for the Cerro Tololo Inter-American Observatory, whose telescopes, along with those of the Gemini and SOAR observatories, are in the valley. Here we pilgrims are--Bill, Brooke, and Irene--at breakfast in the Hotel Galpón, a short walk from Pisco Elqui.



Elqui Valley boasts that it gets 340 sunny days a year. Alas, our Saturday was overcast. This is what the mountain in front of the hotel looked like.



In back of the hotel, there's a swimming pool--the water now far too cold for swimming--and a mountain with wine grapes planted half way up the side.


Grapes are the Elqui Valley's lifeblood; they are planted wherever they can be and watered by drip-irrigation. The fabric fences are windbreaks.



Montegrande, six kilometers from our hotel, has had its church recently restored thanks to the Luksic family, who own much of the valley and have greatly increased its prosperity. The family is also behind the initiative to build environmentally ruinous dams in southern Chile.


The church has a colonial baroque interior, but what I found more interesting was the staircase spiraling up to the choir loft. Perhaps we corkscrew our way into heaven.


Mistral, who was a schoolgirl in Montegrande, studying as well as living with her teacher, her older sister, Emelina, directed that she be buried in the town, and so she is, on a hill overlooking nearby fields. Her shrine has a bust of her romanticized to look like Arthur Rubinstein.


Gabriel died in 1957 in Hempstead, Long Island. Recently reburied with her in the tomb is her nephew and adopted son, Juan Miguel, always known as Yin Yin, who died, a suicide, age 17, in Brazil in 1943. To me, more lovely than the tomb itself is the rock wall in front of it, which knocks off the work of Joaquin Torres Garcia (see his painting in my article on him).



Having paid our respects to the art of poetry, we drove up the Cochiguaz road, looking for hippie painters and potters and jewelers, most of whom had in fact moved on when the end of summer took the tourists away. We walked up a lane with handmade signs promising "art" and crossed a creek. I stopped to look upstream



and downstream



The lane gave us the option of following a handsome horse to the stream we'd just crossed, which here was called the Rio Magico, or pressing on still further toward "art," whose sign pointed to the right; we chose right. (This photo is by Brooke.)


What we found, after a 20-minute walk, was the home of a remarkable woman painter, who built it herself and was now looking to sell it to move to Santiago and be near her 14-year-old daughter, who'd left because she wants to be a musician, needs advanced training, and had had enough isolation. The sign on the house says "Arte" in bright letters.



Interesting woman, interesting history; unfortunately we didn't care much for her paintings. Farther down the Cochiguaz road we came to the Casa de Agua, where Brooke's niece, who also had an interesting history, worked one summer. The remarkable thing at this resort was the pool the river makes for swimming. Please make your imagination quadruple the pool you see here (triple the boulder, too). The rope hangs across the pool for swimmers to grab to keep from going downstream, which wouldn't be dangerous but would be slippery and rocky walking back from.



Exhausted from our outing, we lunched in Paihuano at the bistrot Brooke is standing in front of. The sky looked like it might rain, and a few drops fell.



In the town square, as in maybe 80 percent of Chilean towns, there is a statue to one of the nation's heroes--collectively, they are referred to as "the glorious ones"--in the War of the Pacific (1879-84). He is Capt. Arturo Prat, who with a handful of sailors leapt from his sinking wooden ship, the Esmeralda, onto the Peruvian ironclad that had rammed it, crying out "Let's board them, boys!" and was quickly killed. Chile won the war and took territory away from Peru and Bolivia, which lost its access to the sea. The training ship on which Chilean naval cadets now travel the world to earn their stripes is called the Esmeralda also, and the navy keeps a memorial buoy floating where the first Esmeralda sank. As represented here, Prat is the spitting image of Nettie's handsome father.



At some point in our outing--and neither Irene nor I can remember when or, even more amazing, where--darling Brooke took this picture of us that makes us look younger than we have in years. A miraculous valley indeed!


(Brooke tells us the picture was taken in Montegrande.)


The next day, Sunday, the sun came out full blast, and the world looked quite different. Here's the Hotel Galpón pool, for example.



We drove to Pisco Elqui, revisited its square, admiring the facade of its renovated church.



We revisited Pisco Elqui's most famous hotel, the Refugio Misterios de Elqui, which we'd eaten at that Friday night. I took no pictures but I encourage you to see the ones their website shows, which are accompanied by music (http://www.misteriosdeelqui.cl/). Brooke took this picture of bougainvilla growing near the pool.



And we all relished the view up the Rio Claro Valley.


This valley we then drove up. We stopped at the artisanal village at Horcón, which isn't on the tourist map that begins this post (sorry). The tourist season being over, only four artists were showing their wares; we bought from three of them. The village's stage caught my attention; I was glad not to have to think up something to do on it.



For tourists, unless they have special permission, the road ends in Alcohuaz. Here, we came across a new resort, the Frontier. To look at its cabins and waterfront, Irene and Brooke made the long walk down to the river. On their return they rested.



I had neglected to bring my antidepressants on our weekend outing, and was feeling light-headed and glum. So while they walked down to the river, I rested--then wondered why they were taking so long. I looked for something beautiful to record and found it in the Frontier's restaurant trellis with a puffball cloud floating past.



Then, after lunch, when we got to the car to start the drive to the airport, I realized a better photo had been there all along, and I'd missed it.




China: Its English = Chinglish

The hegemon's idiom has prestige, so people try to use it though they don't really command it. I remember being reduced to happy convulsions when E.M. Forster's Muslim hero in Passage to India encouraged himself by saying, "One can but die the once!" Throughout our China trip we found instances of English misused in the effort to add panache to a product. The motto of gated multiplexes going up near Guilin: "Still excellent Manor So Scenery Life."

The most astonishing testament to our language's prestige I found in a business magazine, Expression, published for airline travelers and hotel guests.* The magazine, handsomely laid out and with sharp color photos, is printed on coated paper finer than any American magazine's. Except for article titles, which are given in Chinese and English, and article synopses and parts of a few ads, all the magazine's text is in Chinese. But so great is the aura of our language that China's most glamorous people, its economic superstars, have to be sprinkled with it. Here, seven synopses:

In the globalization progress, the Chinese business enterprise is awarding social responsibilities in the shoulders. This is the inevitable process of growing up, also the good choice if Chinese business enterprise to do spring.

Liu Wui Heart Farming in Seasons. By experienced China economy changes for several years, Liu Wei more and more thinks himself is a very tiny, because facing the world too abstruse, proposed question too formidable, there upon one become more adore and honest.

Jiang Jun Decisive Kick. To portrayed Rong Wei as a mid- to- high brand marketing, he moves it in a car, have the exquisite surgical.

Hun Jun Controls Second and Third Front. One week a month to run around outside, the average one-half to one day run a city. Eventually more than 50 county towns throughout the country.

Guo Jihong Dancing in the World Dreaming. A woman who attempts to melt herself into Television Arts and life is not lonely, not complains what is gain or less. She will be happy as well.

Zou Qifang BDS with Two Hands to Grasp. 8 years marketing management experience, and two years manages theories from The Wharton School, all finding out to use in start a business of 7,8 years of ground.

Pure and Pretty Concretion in West Pond. Peacefully sit in the afternoon west pond, this is the living appearance which looks forward endocentrically, don’t need prosperous, don’t need extravagance, needs pure river water and a wisp of sound in the boughs and feelings is slim to the utmost in the very tiny breeze.

And three ads:

Cheer Jagermeister Up High. The Jagermeister effect blended the feelings of tasty Jagermeister in the bar, expressing a happiness, wild, relax, brave, share with friend topic.

TAG Heuer World Cruises Exhibition of Beautiful. The images deduce beautiful, the moment touch the abyss of time. The watch of TAG Heuer expects to a kind of more emollient, more vividly way to express the brand fine wishes that establish a fairer and equal world through their hard work.

Have a good reputation in Sanya, can be Comparable to International Standards.



*“This periodical is designated for flight passengers of the Hainan Airlines Co., Ltd, China Xinhau Airlines Co., Ltd., Chang’an Airlines Co., Ltd, Shanxi Airlines Co., Ltd. and Deer Jet Co. Ltd[,] Luckyair Co., Ltd. This periodical is designated for room guests by Hainan Xinguo Hotel, Hainan Kangle Garden HNA Holiday Inn, Sanya HNA Hotel, Hainan Bo’ao HNA Hotel, Hangzhou Huagang HNA Hotel, Hainan Meilan HNA Hotel, Beijing Yanjing HNA Hotel, Shanghai HNA Hotel, Shenzhen HNA Hotel.”

China: Guilin*

The China most Westerners carry around in our heads comes from the province of Guilin, where views like this occur at every turn.




Why do they? Whence the scenery, the mist, the absurdly beautiful mountains?




From what I understand, the mountains are the result of volcanic activity under limestone domes. The mist is due to the (non-rainy) season of our visit, sand blown from Tibetan deserts, and illegal surface mining and subsequent burning of soft coal.

Chinese art work has taught tourists that the place to see Guilin's landscape is from, or alongside, the Li River. Today, tourists go by motorboat, and the trip includes a meal cooked at the back of the boat.



While a meal cooks below them, Irene, Nettie, Lucy, and our tour companion Ester Martinez agree to pose.



On the Li River also is a famous rock anomaly, Elephant Trunk Hill.



For the tourists who come here, the Guilin elders understand that the ambient motif has to be elephants. The children's playscape





the bridges



and the benches




For tourists unexcited by elephants, the elders, knowing from their youth that the island facing Elephant Trunk Hill is a hangout for neckers, call it Love Island and fill it with embracing statues.




In Love Island's parking lot gather the trinket and fruit sellers and three young women from "ethnic minority" groups in their native costumes. For pocket change you can have your picture taken with them.




Guilin's limestone mountains are full of caves and grottoes, and we were taken to the most famous, Reed Flute Cave, so called because the reeds used for making flutes grow, or grew, by the cave mouth. I'm not a big cave lover, but this one is spectacular, a fact only hinted at in my pictures. (For overlit views of the cave, go to http://www.molon.de/galleries/China/Guanxi/Reed/).








The photo I'll keep is the one everybody takes well: a stone city across an unrippled black pond that perfectly reflects it.


China: A Visit to the Wall*

Our second day in China we climbed the Great Wall at Badalling, its highest point. The Wall there runs beside the logo for China’s 2008 Olympics: “One World One Dream.” (Look hard.)


Here are Lucy, Nettie, and Irene as we started to climb in the blustery cold. Nettie and Irene made it to the Wall’s highest point, which is, they tell me, beyond the farthest tower at the left of the photo above. I got only as far as the second tower in the same photo.


While waiting for the women to come back, I took an emblematic picture in which the river apparently winding through the rugged hills is in fact a highway.

China's Lions*


For the Chinese, the royal animal is the lion. Which is why public buildings and many commercial establishments in China—and Chinese restaurants the world over—have a pair of lion statues beside the entrance.

As you enter, the lion on your right is a male and has his right paw on an orb, symbolizing power and authority. The lion on your left, a female, has her left paw on a baby lion, symbolizing fecundity and life’s continuity.

Symbolizing authority is no problem: an orb is a globe or a ball, and the male lion has his paw on something round and solid. But the lion cub, neither round nor solid, generally becomes a wadded pulp beneath its mother’s paw.

Not in Shanghai’s Yuyuan Park, where we find the cub above, to which an exceptional sculptor 100 years ago, working in and against tradition, gave an identity despite the tiny creature’s helplessness.