This is Part 1 of a series of posts about my trip from Changchun (长春), where I lived and worked last year, to the Liaoning (辽宁) Province. Check out the other parts of the story as I get around to writing them:

  • Part 1: Where we went, and why
  • Part 2: The Bus
  • Part ?: The End–Staring at North Korea from Dandong
  • Last year over May Day vacation Michael, Faye, Cindy, and I went on a group tour to see some of the sights in the Liaoning (辽宁) Province, which shares most of Jilin’s southern border and also borders North Korea.
    The first day we climbed Phoenix Mountain (凤凰山 FengHuang Shan). The second and third days were spent relaxing & eating seafood on Big Deer Island (大鹿岛 DaLuDao) and staring at North Korea from the border town of Dandong (丹东).We’d come up with the idea of going to Dandong for three reasons: (1) its border with North Korea; (2) the easternmost terminus of the Great Wall is there, and (3) Dandong has a supposedly fantastic anti-American Korean War museum. (To give you an idea of the bias that’s reportedly on display in the museum consider the Chinese name for the Korean war: “The War To Resist US Aggression And Aid Korea”. Our Lonely Planet made the museum sound delightful.)
    We ended up taking a package tour that didn’t actually go to any of the places that had originally piqued our interest, but that turned out to be OK.
    Going on a trip with a Chinese tour group was wonderful. We all rode together (for hours and hours) on a big bus, stayed together in the same crappy hotels eating the same crappy food, and had an inept tour guide who gave us matching visors to wear and shepherded us from tour spot to tour spot carrying a flag. The sum of the experience was something I’d have been very sorry to have missed.
    Diana’s wedding was May 1st, and our tour left on the 2nd, so we spent most of the afternoon on the 1st buying stuff to take on the trip.

    Continue to Part 2

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