Tuesday was our first post-conference day. James and I checked out of the business hotel early in the morning and, though we had carefully worked the
Chinese translation for "Can I check out now and store my bags until 2:00?", we carried our baggage over to Kevin's room at the RuYi hotel, which had a much later check out time. On the advice and with the help of Yang and her husband we took the number 374 bus to the Summer Palace in the morning.
The half hour bus ride revealed a wonderful slice of Beijing life. Bustling, smoggy, chaotic, routine; lots of bicycles and street vendors and buses and, well, people scurrying here and there. There was a lot of scurrying going on. The most futile thing you can do in Beijing is try to catch a taxi; the most dangerous thing you can do in Beijing is try to cross the street. It's quite challenging and demands resolve, courage, timing, stupidity and luck. I wouldn't try this at home; but then again, I wouldn't have to.
You can't visit a foreign country without visiting a Palace or two. Beijing's
Summer Palace is among the most beautiful I've visited. It's situated on a large lake with an island perfect for a temple and concession stands. We walked the bridge to the island, though we realized that real tourists take the boat over and back . It was another hot and muggy day but otherwise the weather was fine. We stopped for ice cream bars in response to the heat and I came to realize that ice cream had suddenly become my new favorite Chinese food. Largely because it required only one stick to eat, but it was cold and refreshing, too. We spent a few hours walking the grounds and climbing to the Palace itself, which is built into the side of a hill. Highlights included beautiful breezes at the top and a great view of the lake, filled with tourists taking boats to the island, where they found more tourists taking boats back from the island.
We returned to the hotel mid-afternoon and freshened up. We didn't meet up with our colleagues for Peking Duck as we had planned, but we did walk around the shopping district and found a Chinese restaurant. Reading a menu was a challenge without a native speaker and we were discouraged when the servers all laughed at our order--in fact, they sent over other servers to read our order and laugh. (Beer was a safe choice, I thought.) But we were happy with the results. Personally I think they were just laughing at us. I understand that.
We were up early on Wednesday to catch a taxi back to RuYi where we met up with Yang and her husband for a traditional Chinese breakfast consisting of a tofu/bean curd dish with sugar, soup, a fried bread and both meat and vegetable dumplings. We sat outside at a local noodle restaurant and talked for over an hour. It was quite a large breakfast, and it sustained us for the most of rest of the rest of the day.

Once again Yang came to our rescue by calling the concierge at our hotel to have the van, which was to take us to the Great Wall that day, meet us at the RuYI hotel, rather then force us to take the nightmarish taxi ride back the the Merriott as originally planned. Knowing someone who speaks Chinese has made the whole trip go more smoothly and Yang has been exceptionally generous in helping us out. Though her background is electrical engineering, she's become interested in philosophy, particularly concerning the nature of information and quantum mechanics. Her adviser, unfortunately, is a Marxist social philosopher with little interest in philosophy and science. It was nice to talk a little philosophy with an enthusiastic graduate student.
Miranda, a graduate student in informatics, studying in Sweden but originally from Kosovo, joined us for breakfast and our trip to the
Great Wall. We hired a van driver and guide for the day, which turned out to be a very smart move. We started with the
Ming Tombs where we let our guide walk us through the grounds on a beautiful, crowdless day. Turns out Chinese only visit the Tombs in the morning before lunch, so by 11 am--the time of our arrival and the traditional start of lunchtime, there were few tourists. It is also good luck to arrive before noon we learned (something about evil spirits sleeping in late and so not being around to mess with you in the morning). After our large breakfast, lunch was a fresh peach. A Chinese peach!
We decided not to go to the typical tourist-infested
Badaling section of the Wall and instead drove to the less-traveled
Mutianyu section. Another brilliant decision. The ninety minute drive itself trough the mountainous countryside was fantastic with great vistas and a genuine glimpse of rural life outside Beijing. We took a sky lift up to the wall itself and walked for about two hours. The crowds were so thin we virtually had the Wall to ourselves. (We did meet a couple of
Zoroastrians from India, but that's another blog post.) It was hot and muggy and quite a climb, but the experience was overwhelming. We would climb/walk for a stretch of the wall and then pause to "reflect" in the breeze of the shaded guardhouses every ten minutes.
After an hour's hike along the Wall, stopping every three minutes to take yet another breathtaking photo of the grandeur of the Wall and the surrounding mountains, we headed back to our starting point, where we were to take the alpine slide down to the parking lot. You would think that walking on a wall one could not get lost, but that is exactly what we did, walking right past the point from which we started and becoming utterly confused about how to get off. Two computer scientists, and informaticist, and a philosopher--lost on the Great Wall of China. At times like these you would be inclined to blame the philosopher, and you would be right to do so.
We returned to Beijing, stopping for a
tea ceremony carefully designed to make you buy lots of tea to take back with you. It worked. We were back to the hotel at seven in the evening, decompressed for 15 minutes, and headed out for
Peking Duck. We tried to find a Peking Duck restaurant the night before, following the directions of our concierge, but we ended up in a mall food court. Thinking that was a cruel joke, we that night walked the streets to find a better option (see above). This night, with directions clarified, we found the restaurant (in the mall but next to the food court) and enjoyed--really enjoyed--Peking Duck as only American tourists can. Peking Duck is my new favorite Chinese food.