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Travel Guide
People

Climate

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History

Dynasties and capitals

Currency

Changing money
Shopping & Bargaining

What to Look for/ buy from china

Emergency numbers

Stay safe

Talk

Transportation in Southeast Guizhou

Festivals in China

Customs
 
 
Emergency numbers

The following emergency telephone numbers work in all areas of China:
Police: 110
Fire Alarm: 119
Medical care: 120 (or 999 in some places)
Directory Enquiry: 114

Calling these from a cell phone is free.
Stay safe
Banned items

Lonely Planet's China guidebook has upset the Chinese authority with its contents and is now banned in China. Any copy found will be confiscated and the owner of the copy may face interrogation and detention. Lonely Planet suggests that travellers hide their guidebooks and has been criticised for being irresponsible for ultimately it is the carriers of the guidebooks who might get into trouble.

Crime


Petty crime remains relatively low, and it is common for people to quietly carry large amounts of cash. At the same time, one should take the usual precautions against being conspicuously wealthy. In some areas, there are many pickpockets. In crowded markets, buses, and even dance clubs it is common for wallets and mobile phones to disappear. Items such as purses left unguarded at restaurants are also liable to be stolen.

Traffic

Walking, especially in rural areas, can be very dangerous because of oncoming traffic. Pedestrians do not have the right of way. Traffic will not stop if they see you in the way -- in fact, they may speed up! In most places, the rules of the road are often ignored and the safest way to cross a street is via a pedestrian overpass, if available.
More generally, traffic in China can be very dangerous. The PRC does not recognize international drivers licenses and driving in China is definitely not for the faint of heart.

Begging


Begging in China is uncommon, with the notable exception of major tourist areas. In Beijing begging is exceptionally bad, especially around hotels and markets foreigners frequent. Shanghai has also seen a return of the child begging gangs from the pre-revolutionary era. Giving to one child beggar may lead to many more coming out of the woodwork. Beggars in China are almost exclusively professional and many have obvious deformities, which makes it easy to take pity on them. Others are fully functional and will use their strength to latch on to your leg or arm until you give them some cash or drag them for a few minutes. Children are frequently coerced into begging by adults, who force the children to beg and then take the money that they collect. In some areas, especially Beijing, beggars are often rather aggressive and persistent, even though there are traditionally strong social norms against begging, as it is considered shameful. The Mandarin phrase "qu ni de", literally "go to your (place)", has roughly the force of "bugger off". It might be appropriate for rude aggressive beggars, almost certainly not for others.
If you do feel it appropriate to give a beggar some money keep in mind that many Chinese only make ¥20 to 30 per day working hard labor jobs. Giving one yuan to a beggar is generous.

Scams

While begging is considered shameful, aggressive marketing of petty services that a person can perform is not. Some people will aggressively try to perform some sort of service for you, such as watching your luggage, steer you to a "great" hotel or have you ride in their taxi. They will often follow you for a while, so be prepared to ignore them. The Mandarin phrase "bu yao", literally "not want", is useful for these.

On the other hand, some of the services offered are worthwhile. Typical prices are ¥1 for a shoe shine, ¥10 for a shampoo and head massage or ¥15 with a haircut, and anywhere from ¥15 to ¥50 an hour for massage. Consider indulging yourself.

In touristy places, be cautious about unknown people approaching you on the street and striking up a conversation in English, as this may be a prelude to a scam. They are often students of or dropouts from English teacher schools and make money by abusing their English proficiency. Be polite, but there is no need to come along if they start insisting on you coming with them some special place you had not planned on going to. Some however are genuinely curious locals who want nothing more than a chat and a photo with foreigners.

One common scam is the free art gallery tour. Tourists are lured into small shabby art shops and pressured to buy overpriced Chinese art which is nothing but a copy. In Beijing this is most common, but also in other big cities such as Shanghai it happens when strolling touristy places.

Also beware of the scam operating in many of the larger cities where attractive women or a friendly group of students entice you into a tea shop, bars or karaoke parlor. They show you a menu with a price on it and once you finish your drinks and ask for the bill, they produce another menu with a much higher price on it. It's wise to verify prices in writing.
Talk:

The official language of China is Standard Mandarin, known in Chinese as Putonghua (???, "common speech"). It has been the only language used in education on the mainland since the 1950s, so most people speak it. However, the pronunciation varies quite a lot from region to region. Unless otherwise noted, all terms, spellings and pronunciations in this guide are standard Mandarin.

Many regions - especially in the southeast of the country - also have their own "dialect". These are really distinct languages, as different as French and Italian although referring to Chinese "dialects" as separate languages is a touchy political issue. Of true dialects within Mandarin, pronunciation varies widely and there is often a liberal dose of local slang or terminology to liven up the mix. The largest dialect groups are Cantonese, spoken in Guangdong (Canton) and Hong Kong, Wu (Shanghainese), spoken in the region around Shanghai, and Minnan (Hokkien, Teochew), spoken in the region around Xiamen. Many Chinese are bilingual in the local language and Mandarin. A few who are older, less educated or from the countryside may speak only the local dialect, but this is unlikely to affect tourists. It often helps to have a guide that can speak the local language as it marks that person as an insider, and you as a friend of the insider. As a general rule, almost all Chinese can understand spoken Mandarin even if they are unable to reply except in their local dialect.

Whatever the spoken dialect, the written language is always the same. Even Japanese and Korean use many of the same characters with the same meaning. There is a complication in this, however. Mainland China uses "simplified characters", adopted to facilitate literacy education some years back. Traditional characters are used in Taiwan, Hong Kong, Japan, and by many overseas Chinese, but also on the mainland in advertising and commercial signs. As a result you will just as often see ?? (yínháng) as ?? for "bank". The simplification was however fairly systematic, which means that all hope is not lost for the traveller trying to pick up some sign-reading skills.

In the far western reaches of the country, Turkic languages such as Uighur, Kirghiz and Kazakh are spoken by some of the non-Han ethnic minorities. In tourist areas however, Mandarin or English will likely be usable.

English speakers

Although most Chinese are taught some English at school, and passing an English exam is a requirement for a university degree, the focus of the instruction is formal grammar and writing rather than conversation. As a result, few learn it well enough to be able to participate in an English conversation. Outside of the largest cities and the major tourist areas, it is quite rare to find locals who speak decent English.
That said, a few locals who have studied English to university level (especially if abroad) generally have a reasonable to very good standard of English.
Useful hint: it's often helpful if you try to simplify your English. Stay away from using complex phrasing like "Would you mind if I come back tomorrow?" and stick to simpler, more abrupt phrasing like "I will come back tomorrow."

Learning Chinese

In the West, Chinese has an undeserved reputation as being exceptionally difficult to learn. While it is very different from English or other Western languages, there is no reason that a traveller can not learn a bit of Chinese; every bit you learn will be of enormous help. The main difficulty with learning to speak Chinese is the pronunciation; basic grammar is very simple.

Written Chinese is famously complex, however there is the advantage of it being easier to learn a bit of. In alphabetic writing systems, you can't understand anything until you know the whole alphabet and speak a good deal of the language. In Chinese on the other hand it's very straightforward to pick up the characters, for example for "Internet Cafe" or "Fried Noodles", without knowing anything else about the language. If you have a good visual memory, you may even end up knowing what a sign means, without being able to pronounce it out loud — still a useful skill even if only to distinguish, say, the exit ?? from the entrance ??. To bridge the gap between recognizing and reading out loud, pinyin was developed, which uses latin script to help teach Chinese to schoolchildren and foreigners. It is not obvious, as letters and combinations are not what you would expect, but learning it at even a basic level already has enormous practical value for the traveller.

 
Transportation in Southeast Guizhou

How to Get There?


Southeast Guizhou region is relatively less developed but transportation in the area is not as harsh as recorded on many guidebooks. A comprehensive network of highway centered on Kaili-the capital city of the region has been built to connect almost every village in recent years. 2 of the best options to getting there is: a.) from North, Take a train to Kaili and change to coach to the mountainous villages; b.) from South, Take flights or train to Guilin, and then coach to these villages. On the way you can visit Longsheng, Sanjiang.

Getting Around:

The best way to get around is to travel from village to village. Although roads are built recently to connect every village together, bus conditions can always make your trip uncomfortable. And limited transport and lack of information makes independent traveling a more difficult thing. One of the good solutions is that to hire a car and a tour guide who knows the areas, know the culture and history that behind the villages.
Tips:
  • You are advised not to travel by bus in the rainy day or at night because there are many mountain roads and the roads condition is not so good and safe.
Festivals in China

Dong New Year


The Dong New Year is the most important traditional festival among Dong people. Dong people don’t celebrate their New Year at a same time. The Dongs in Jiuzhao Dong Township of Jinping County and most of the Dong villages in Rongjiang County celebrate their New Year at the time from the end of October to the beginning of November of the lunar calendar. These people also celebrate an accompanying New Year, the New Year festival that the Dong people in the neighboring villages celebrate. That is quite a good chance to promote the friendship between the different villages.

Northern Dong Singing Parties

Singing parties are important occasions for young Dong people to get to know each other and to date their lovers. Dong people have several singing parties throughout the year. The Northern Dong Singing Parties are the ones mainly attended by young Dong people from the northern Miao and Dong Prefecture in Southeastern Guizhou.

Miao New Year

The Miao New Year is a grand festival celebrated by the Miao people from Kaili, Leishan, Danzhai, Rongjiang and Taijiang counties from October 26th to December 13th of the lunar calendar. The festival is divided into Preliminary Eve, the New Year and the Epilogue. The New Year is the most important part, when people dance Lusheng dances, watch bullfight or birdfight.

Bullfight


Lots of Villages in the Miao & Dong Autonomous Prefecture in Southeastern Guizhou (southeastern Guizhou for short) regularly hold bullfight competition every year. The bulls for the bullfight do not take part in the plough or some other work in fields.

New Harvest Festival


The New Harvest Festival is an important festival that Miao and Dong people celebrate at the end of summer and beginning of autumn (different villages celebrate the day at different time). People use bud seeds or the new harvested glutinous rice as sacrifice to worship their ancestors. On the day of the festival, people get dressed up, take their presents along and lead their bulls to go to the host village (the village which is celebrating the festival). After the host worships the ancestors, they have a big harvest dinner. On the second day, people watch bullfight and bird fight and race horses. They have Lusheng dance. At dusk, young people will sing musical dialogues in antiphonal style. The celebration will last until the dusk of the third day.

Gushe Festival


Gushe Festival, also called Guzang Festival, is one of the most ceremonious traditional festivals among the Miao people in the region of Leigong and Moon (yueliang in Chinese) mountains. It is held once every 13 years in the tiger year and it usually lasts for seven days. People kill ox to worship their ancestors during the festival

Customs
Cockfight


Before the cockfight people will cover the cock with a piece of red cloth and then hold it to worship and sacrifice to the Heaven and the Earth. The cock-owner drinks the first two glasses of alcohols and pour the third one on the cock. There is no time limit or game limits during the cockfight. They only fight once to make the champion. The Miao nationality is famous for their animals-imitation dancing such as cockfight dancing.

Wine Custom


There is a rule among the Miao and Dong Villages in the autonomous counties in southeastern Guizhou Province—no wine no etiquette, no wine no feast. Every family has one or two jars of rice wine made of sticky rice, spirit containing 20%-30% of alcohol.

Tai Guanren (Carrying the Government Official in a Sedan Chair)
Tai Guanren is a festival ethnic show in the Dong nationality villages in Liping and Congjiang, such as Jitang in Liping and Longtu in Congjiang. Tai Guanren in Chinese menas carrying the government official in a sedan chair. Usually, a boy will act as a rich and powerful government official, and another boy will act as his chamberlain or private adviser. The government official takes the sedan chair, while the chamberlain takes a wooden bucket, with a band ahead to clear the way and followed by clowns. They give the funny performance together until they reach the drum tower. Tai guanren gives us a vivid picture of the Dongs customs.

Singing in the Moonlight


Singing in the moonlight is a usual social activity among the young Dong people. Usually, girls who often work together have their own singing group. They gather together at a singing hall at night, which is also called Moon Hall (get the name from the moon at night). It is also an entertaining place for boys. In Dongs, the Singing hall just like the KTV, bars, cafes in the city, is a wonderful place for the young people to communicate with each other.

Welcome the Guests in the Way

It is the warmest welcome in the Dongs to receive the guests in the way. Actually, it happens when the Dongs invite guests to have a together or invite a friend-singing group to come to give performances.When the host hears the Lusheng (a reed-pipe wind instrument used by Miao, Yao and Dong nationalities) from the guest, the host will get ready for the welcome ceremony.

Exorcising Dance

Exorcising Dance originated from the ancient sacrifice and pray-for-blessings actions, which is now popular in Cengong and Zhenyuan counties etc. The exorcising dance in Cengong is the most famous
 
     
 
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