The
new orient express
(cityweekend)
Updated: 2007-02-15 10:23
Out the window the emerald waters of sacred
Nam Tso Lake glints under a cloudless blue
sky. Along the aisle a foreign tour group
presses against the windows, furiously clicking
shutters at the passing Tibetan landscape.
From a soft sleeper cabin, a stylish young
Tibetan couple emerges. I venture to ask
their opinion of train travel. Yawning,
the man shakes his head: "No, we don't
like the train much." His wife smiles
in agreement, "Yes, it's far too slow
... next time we'll take the plane to Lhasa
as usual." They return to their cabin
and I am left to ponder the beautiful expanse
of the lake, and the merits of using 48
hours to travel by train from Beijing to
Lhasa on T27.
Getting to the Train
Assuming you can buy a ticket (they can
be very scarce during peak seasons) and
secure the requisite Tibet travel permit,
the first challenge is negotiating Beijing's
West Train Station. With a departure time
of 9:30 p.m., it is best to leave early
to avoid becoming marooned in Beijing traffic.
Entering West Station is like being flung
into a tumble dryer of humanity; it is overcrowded,
chaotic and brain achingly noisy. I watched
locals and foreigners gazing in slack jawed
confusion at a football field sized electronic
timetable. Concealed somewhere in the blinking
numbers and letters was the secret location
of T27-the train to Tibet. Every corner
of the station seemed full beyond capacity.
Even the "exclusive" soft sleeper
lounge was standing room only and knee deep
in luggage. To keep everyone guessing, two
giant lines had formed in competition on
opposite sides of the departure lounge for
T27. With the call to board, the line immediately
disintegrated into a bout of wrestle mania.
Calling on all my years of accumulated travel
nuance, I grabbed the nearest red hatted
luggage porter, handed him RMB5 and followed
safely in the slipstream created by his
bulky luggage trolley.
Life on board T27
Once aboard the T27, experienced China
hands will feel right at home. Despite a
serious makeover and a technical refit to
handle the rigors’ of high altitude travel,
the carriages belong to a previous generation.
They are laid out in the trinity of hard
seat, hard sleeper and soft sleeper. But
the new look is fresh, clean and pleasing
to the eye-there are even small screen televisions
in the soft sleeper. But the refit has further
reduced the little space there was, and
it's a snug fit in the sleepers. For those
with a phobia of long distance transportation
bathrooms, the facilities here are modern
and kept in pretty good order. Train staff
were generally helpful, cheerful and quick
to assist anyone distressed by the altitude.
The only low note was the dining car. Manned
by supremely disinterested staff, the menu
was a single piece of kitchen paper with
dishes scribbled in characters incomprehensible
even to Chinese diners. Breakfast, lunch
and dinner always featured the same choices.
Train Eye Candy
After exhausting conversation options,
available reading matter and the dubious
pleasures of the dining car, the major attraction
of train travel is what lies outside the
windows, and the variety of passenger life.
T27 offers a great platform to take in the
Chinese landscape. For much of the first
day the train passes through the desiccated
and tortured sandy landscapes of Shanxi,
dotted with settlements of cave houses.
Then the train enters the rugged, lunarscape
of southern Gansu and reaches the smog cloaked
suburbs of Lanzhou by late afternoon. Leaving
Lanzhou, the train tracks the surging Yellow
River, one of the few stretches where the
river has not run dry.
On the second night, T27 stops at Xining
and Golmud, then starts the climb up the
windswept Tibetan plateau. At Golmud I sleepily
peer out the window to see hundreds of shadowy
figures rushing to board the train. In the
morning, all eyes are glued to the windows,
soaking up the clear open skies and astonishing
landscape of the Tibetan plateau. The emptiness
is broken by herds of yaks, small deer,
yurts, shepherds and their flocks and circling
birds of prey. Distant peaks peppered with
snow and ice track the train's progress.
Along the line, small encampments of workers
in their flimsy tent villages are reminders
of the human effort needed for this project.
Making my way to the dining area, I find
a Tibetan monk asleep in the deserted car.
He had escaped from the overcrowding in
the hard seat section. I walk through the
train and find that it has been transformed
during the night-taken over by hundreds
of colorfully dressed, friendly Tibetan
nomads and monks bound for Lhasa.
The train stops along the way, offering
a brief chance to stretch your legs and
sample the exotic wares of the vendors.
Naqu, the last stop before Lhasa and the
only stop inside Tibet, will leave you breathless,
literally.
Every great trip must pose some element
of peril. Putting aside Beijing West Station,
foreign tour groups and spending 48 hours
in a hard seat, the T27 trip poses one serious
nasty: altitude sickness. On the second
morning I started to feel a definite degree
of discomfort. Others had headaches, sleeplessness,
shortness of breath and even nausea. Oxygen
is pumped into the carriages though and
there are personal oxygen devices in the
soft sleepers and throughout the train.
And it's not only people that break down
at high altitude. Technology can equally
fall victim to the thin air as a fellow
traveler found to his dismay when his CD
player ground to a halt. Stay hydrated,
take some aspirin, stay out of the mini
bar and you should make it in one piece.
TRAVEL TIPS
How to get there:
To travel the rails on the Qinghai-Tibet
Railway, head to the Beijing West Railway
Station and board the T27, or arrive at
the Shanghai Railway Station and board the
T164. The T27 leaves Beijing at 9:30 p.m.
and arrives in Lhasa at 8:58 p.m. on the
third day after 47 hours and 28 minutes.
Train T164/5 departs Shanghai at 4:11 p.m.
and arrives in Lhasa at 7:50 p.m. on the
third day running for 51 hours and 39 minutes
after 4,373 kilometers. For more information,
call the Beijing West Railway Station at
10-9510-5105, the Shanghai Railway Station
at 800-820-7890 or the Tibet Tourism Bureau
in Lhasa at 89-1634-3854 or 89-1634-9239.
We recommend the soft sleeper (after two
days on a hard seat, you'll understand why
there was a murder on the Orient Express),
but cheaper options are also available.
Prices from Beijing: hard seat RMB389, hard
sleeper RMB813, soft sleeper RMB1,262. From
Shanghai: hard seat RMB406, hard sleeper
RMB845, soft sleeper RMB1,314. Once in Lhasa,
head to the authentic and charming House
of Shambhala (see sidebar).
Where to play: Put down your book and check
out the stunning scenery as the Tibetan
Plateau rolls by. If you're looking for
more interaction, strike up a conversation
with one of the Tibetan monks heading home.
Where to eat: Bring your own food as the
dining car leaves much to be desired.
For detailed information,
please drop in an email and you will get
a tailor-made itinerary exclusively for
your tour calendar and interest.
john@chinahuangshan.com
congzhang35@hotmail.com
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