Author Archive

Treehouse @ Sanchahe


Treehouse @ Sanchahe
Originally uploaded by paulbrockmann.


Jinghong – Paul & Gene


Jinghong – Paul & Gene
Originally uploaded by paulbrockmann.


Howard – Sanchahe by Night


Beijing Area Hikes


Beijing Area Hikes
Originally uploaded by paulbrockmann.

Even if I’m not going to amazing places like Yunnan or Xi’an (see below), I do try to get out of Beijing on hikes at least every few weeks. Otherwise the hustle, pollution and general craziness can get a bit overwhelming. Here
are a few shots I took on December and January hikes. All the ice on the lake was cool, because it kept settling and cracking, since it was in the sun and the temperature was just about at freezing: we’d hear these groans and cracks and pops. It was rather eerie.

Also note how dry the mountains are: we truly are on the edge of the Gobi desert here. It’s not rained or snowed any substantial amount since at least September: there have been three small snow flurries I know of, but so little it all blows away or melts very quickly. I love getting out of the city…but it’s getting pretty depressing, how dry and dusty it is out there. In the city, it’s amazingly dusty and dirty most of the time, but you’re surrounded by buildings so it’s easier to ignore it. There are also some shots of an early Ming temple at the base of a mountain our group hiked one day.


Hikes Around Beijing


Hikes Around Beijing
Originally uploaded by paulbrockmann.


Hikes Around Beijing


Hikes Around Beijing
Originally uploaded by paulbrockmann.


Hikes Around Beijing


Hikes Around Beijing
Originally uploaded by paulbrockmann.


Hikes Around Beijing


Hikes Around Beijing
Originally uploaded by paulbrockmann.


Hikes Around Beijing


Hikes Around Beijing
Originally uploaded by paulbrockmann.


Hikes Around Beijing


Hikes Around Beijing
Originally uploaded by paulbrockmann.


Hikes Around Beijing


Hikes Around Beijing
Originally uploaded by paulbrockmann.


Hikes Around Beijing


Hikes Around Beijing
Originally uploaded by paulbrockmann.


Hikes Around Beijing


Hikes Around Beijing
Originally uploaded by paulbrockmann.


Visiting Xi’an


Visiting Xi’an
Originally uploaded by paulbrockmann.

I’ve passed through Xi’an many times, since our Baoji Children’s Street Centre project is about 2-1/2 hours west of it, so whether I take the train or fly, I’m passing through Xi’an. But even though it was the first capital of a unified China, and remained the dynastic seat for more than a thousand years, until the end of the Tang Dynasty in 907, I hadn’t found time to visit all of its incredibly rich and impressive historical and cultural sites. Finally, in December I hooked a weekend onto one of my regular visits to the children’s centre. My friend Davey, who’s studying in Xi’an, was kind enough to accompany me throughout the weekend, so I had someone to share my impressions with — and someone who knows Xi’an well to help me squeeze an awful lot into two short days.

Most outside tourists know Xi’an as home of the famous army of terracotta warriors from the tombs of Qinshihuangdi, the first emperor to unite all of the core Chinese heartland under one rule. As you’ll see in the following shots and notes, Xi’an (Chang’an, as it was known then) was the primary dynastic capital from that time (221 BC) until 907 AD. (And oops, I I just realized I mis-wrote in a note you’ll read later on: I identified the Han as starting in BC224, while in facts its dates were 206BC to 220AD – sorry, take this as a correction in advance, since you’ll read this before that.)

In any case: though Xi’an today is only the capital of Shaanxi province, hardly one of the most important or beautiful provinces in contemporary China, it was for more ages the heartland and capital of what was most likely, at that time, the most powerful empire on earth. (Westerners get all hepped up about Rome, but this capital was in charge of huge territories long after the fall of Rome). This means it’s literally riddled with historical sites and buildings, far beyond just the terracotta warriors. It was a fascinating and philosophical experience for me, in the Shaanxi historical museum for instance, to see incredibly gorgeous ancient (300BC and earlier) jewelry and pottery coming from the ground around Baoji — a contemporary city that I know as a rather
dreary and polluted city without a whole lot to recommend it, honestly. To think that on that ground, in that place, civilizations were growing when my ancestors were hanging out in huts trying to ward off the cold…it’s rather humbling. 🙂

You’ll note two shots I took through museum glass (yes, they permit it — it hurt me to do it, but it’s permitted and these two items really grabbed me): one is a piece of pottery from around 600 or so AD, which is painted with designs that simply astonished me since they are so unlike other Chinese designs I’ve seen: both the design of the piece, and the painting, seem almost more Aztec to me than Chinese. The other are some metal horses and chariots from Qinshihuangdi’s tomb museum. And a note on the warriors: a few of them have traveled around the world with exhibits, but what’s astonishing up close are 1) how incredibly many of them there are, and they are still digging and excavating; and 2) how each of them has different and unique facial features. It’s rather overwhelming.


Scenes of Xi’an


Scenes of Xi’an
Originally uploaded by paulbrockmann.