We just spent several wintery days in far north China in the town of Harbin - the ice capital of China.Wow! We have to say it was amazing! Harbin has a
climate similar to Minneapolis but much harsher. Very, very cold. Average January temperature of -2 farienheit. Lots of snow and ice and they treat it just like Minnesotans do. Go out,
do your errands, sightsee, walk long distances and most of all, bundle
up!
The city proper is about 4 million and the metro area is about 10 million. Lots of Russian influence and very, very few westerners. Very limited credit card use, mostly all cash. While there is tons of construction, lots of new building, and a pleasant downtown, we read the average cost of living is about 700 RMB a month ($120). Not if you eat in a western restaurant or pay the $50 admissions required for everything. I suppose this means that while Harbin as a more isolated town does not have as high a cost of living for those on the bottom, it is still obvious that things are prospering for a large part of the population
The coats and boots far outshine the plain articles we wear and the
hats are wonderful! Lots of fur, I repeat, lots of fur – on the boots,
the hats, the coats, and the gloves. Beautiful styles and quite
expensive.
But the most impressive sights we saw were the snow
sculptures, ice sculptures and tigers! Whatever we might think about doing –
like the St. Paul Winter Carnival – they do it 100 times over. Many multi-story buildings
made out of ice that are large enough to walk into and
lots of long slides that the tourists make heavy use of to exit the buildings.
Built into all of
these building walls (created out of large blocks of ice) of ice are lights! In the ice! Long strands
of LED lights that are computer controlled. Blinking and flashing they
create a magnificent display. We were awed by it all. The ice blocks were so clear they must have been manufactured. And it is hard to imagine how they did it to connect all the LED connectors in the middle of the blocks.
We also visited an area where there had been a snow
sculpture competition. There were huge (looked like 8' on a side cubes) blocks of snow that had been carved into
intricate sculptures. Dozens - maybe a few hundred. The variety was endless. Along with the block
sculptures were even bigger, several stories tall, sculptures. Some almost as long as a football field. It was possible
to climb up these and again use the slides built in. In the meantime, at the base
of these big sculptures you could ride in a dog sled, ice skate and use other
devices on the snow. All through the city as well were snow and ice sculptures creating a wonderful effect. It was just beautiful.
Last of all we
visited a tiger park that was again, in the grand scale of the rest of the
winter displays here. The park was built in a Bear Country plan where you
rode in busses to view tigers roaming free all over the area. They were divided
into groups – tigers who had grown up together so they didn’t fight – and then
fenced off from other groups. My goodness they are big! With their winter
fur and their innate size they were most impressive. I know we were less
than 12 feet from some of them. We also saw lions, jaguars, a cheetah and
a liger (a cross between a tiger and a lion). There were snow tigers and
white tigers. In all we were told they housed about 1400 tigers and related
cats. We were only able to see about 400 or so. Should I feel
cheated? I don’t think so. The park was surrounded by 20-30 story apartment buildings. Ama zing to be in such an urban area. I am sure they sit on their deck with binoculars and count the tigers!
The following are some of the pictures we took.
The lights in the ice blocks in the buildings flashed and blinked |
Chicken for dinner? |
Year of the horse |
This is seriously so cool! I'll never be impressed with our festival again!
ReplyDeleteWow!!! Looks amazing!! Glad you went!
ReplyDelete