A Chinese Temple on the way to Yabuli
After three years of living in China and several decades of
going
back and forth on business, I was beginning to think I’d just about
done
it all in China. Drinks and Dinner at the Summer Palace, receptions in
the
Great Hall of the People and welcoming of President’s in Tiannmen
Square,
cruises down the river Li and viewing the Terra cotta Warriors in Xi’an
are
just a few of the many spectacular events China has to offer. However,
when
a Chinese friend called and asked me to consider a ski trip on my next
visit,
I must say I was intrigued. After all, Skiing and China aren’t
something
that immediately comes to mind. Also, although I’d skied since I was
slightly more than two till the time I went off to the U.S. Army in
Vietnam, I hadn’t skied again in nearly 30 years. Would the old skills
come back, would I even
want to strap on the ski’s once I saw China’s slopes? All these
thoughts rolled
through my mind as I packed my bags on an early Saturday morning in
Beijing.
As I jumped in
my
friend’s car for a ride to the airport, my friend told me that we would
be
skiing Yabuli Ski Resort in China’s far Northeast(website: www.YabuliSkiResort.com).
Yabuli
is within a short trip of the Russian border in Heliongjang province in
what
used to be called Manchuria.
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We flew from the new Beijing
Capital Airport by modern Boeing
737 aircraft in a one-hour plus flight to Mudanjiang Airport. We could
have
also flown into Harbin, which has a brand-new airport but the drive
time
is longer than from Mudanjiang. This made Mudanjiang Airport a better
choice.
At the airport, snow was already falling and the temperature was
several
degrees below zero, which may seem cold but winter comes late in North
China
and snow on March 1 is not unusual. The driver meeting us had our ski
suits waiting for us in the new van. Since most skiers visiting Yabuli
come from relatively far away and are not as likely to have or to carry
their ski equipment,
the Yabuli Ski Resort has nearly 700 sets of ski outfits which are
generally
very high-class Swiss and other models that one wears over existing
clothes. |
Clearing the new fallen snow
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The
drive
to Yabuli Ski resort took about an hour and a half because of the
falling snow and also because we paused twice to take pictures in front
of a rebuilt Chinese temple and in front of an old Russian church.
Because of the proximity of Russia, this whole area used to have many,
many Russian orthodox style churches. Most of these were demolished
during the Cultural Revolution but
still many remain and their presence adds an exotic note to travel in
this
area.
Yabuli Ski
Resort
is China’s largest ski area. The Chinese government has invested over
150 million U.S. dollars and local investors have invested an
additional 60 million
U.S. dollars in improvements. These have resulted in a first-class
water,
electrical and communication system including fixed line optical fiber
communications
between Yabuli and major interchange points and a state of the art
mobile
telephone network that allows you to make both local and international
calls
virtually anywhere in the region. Other services include a 20 TV
channel
earth-satellite receiving station, helicopter service available on
demand
from Harbin, internet access, several three star hotels plus many other
services.
The rental equipment room
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The internet room
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In
1996,
Yabuli Ski Resort was chosen as the site of the 3rd Asian
Winter
Games. In the nearly six years since the opening, Yabuli Ski Resort has
continued to improve its facilities and now offers winter downhill and
cross country skiing, snowboarding, ice skating, tobogganing (Yabuli
has the longest Toboggan
Run in the World), plus a host of other winter activities. The Windmill
Village
and Tinyihu Hotels are three star hotels with a total of over 300
rooms.
There are a total of just over 600 beds in the resort as a whole. The
Windmill
Hotel where we stayed has 89 rooms, an indoor swimming pool, a bowling
alley,
pool, billiards, fitness room, kids game room, large internet facility,
business
center, bar, gift shop plus multiple restaurants.
There is
also
a Youth Apartment block with over 300 beds where many younger visitors
stay
and where there is a much more lively atmosphere than the bigger
hotels.
Finally there are two large suites which go for nearly $2,000 on a
weekend
night in ski season which lasts nearly 170 days in Yabuli. The suites
tend
to be booked by Chinese companies or families and are often full during
the busy ski season. Prices of rooms at the Windmill Village Hotel we
stayed were
about US$50 during the week and just below US$70 on weekend nights,
which
is a real bargain. The rooms mainly have two twin beds and modern
equipped
bathrooms and although not as deluxe as the major chain hotels in
China’s
main cities are clean, warm and comfortable. Because of demand in
winter,
rooms are booked early so make your plans well in advance.
Five inches of new powder
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We
skied
on both Saturday and Sunday. We visited the ski rental facility for
boots,
poles and skis. Yabuli has over 700 sets of each which are all recent
models from Switzerland or other Western countries and in very good
condition. Ski
equipment costs about US$30 to rent. Rental also includes a full day
lift
ticket. Prices are thirty percent less if you bring your own equipment.
Yabuli
has a beginner’s area, a main ski lift of 4,228 meters and several
smaller
lifts. The main lift is Japanese supplied and is less than six years
old
and in very good condition. There are 11 ski trails and the vertical
drop
is 600 meters from the current lift but could be raised to 900 meters
if
certain readily accomplishable additions are implemented.
As it had
been
a while since I skied, I asked to ski with an instructor and I was
assigned
to Mr. Zhong. We skied trails six and eight to start which are easier.
Mr. Zhong has been skiing for six years now and is one of the Senior
Instructors at the resort. He trained with an American Instructor who
visited the resort last year to conduct instructor clinics. He said in
the future he would love
to ski Whistler, Switzerland and some of the World’s other ski resorts
but
has yet to have the chance. Mr. Zhong spoke quite easily understandable
English
although he said he would love to improve his English still further. I
asked
Mr. Zhong whether Yabuli has many foreign skiers? He said that there
was
a growing number of Russian, Japanese and some Koreans but that North
American
and Europeans were more rare. In the hotel at night, I often saw
Russians
and even a Korean but tourists are still rare.
As we
returned
up the mountain for another run, I noted the ski patrol skiing below
us. Being new on my skis I couldn't help enquire about
accidents. Mr. Zhong
said that as at any ski resort accidents do happen. The ski
patrol
is well trained and keeps accidents to a minimum. The resort has
a
fully furnished medical center and a hospital is available only about
10
minutes away by car. More serious accidents are transferred to
Harbin,
by road or helicopter, according to Mr. Zhong.
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According
to Mr. Zhong, and as confirmed by Dr. Tian Yuan, the Resort Chairman
and
Patrick Cao, the Vice President and General Manager, at the height of
the
season over 600 people work at the resort. On weekends, currently they
get
about 400 skiers a day using the runs but many more are using the other
facilities. During Spring Festival (what we in the west call Chinese
New Year) the resort
often has several thousand people at the resort. Skiing is a growing
industry
in China and now nearly a million people have tried skiing at least
once.
There are over 60 instructors at the Yabuli Resort although the number
that
speaks English is a fraction of this. Instructors charge nearly $40 for
a
day of one-on-one skiing and are much more attentive and focused than
most
of the western instructors I’ve seen who seem to want to spend 20-30
minutes
teaching and the rest of the day enjoying their skiing.
The Evening feast - The snow frogs are
served
whole and are on the right! |
OurAuthentic Chinese dinner
started
with raw vegetables . Notice the tin cups for toasting!
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On
Saturday
night, Dr. Tian Yuan, the Chairman of the Yabuli Resort invited me and
my
friends to a dinner at a Peasant’s house. The hotel now runs this house
but
the house is quite authentic. It is a two-room brick structure with a
picture of Chairman Mao and very basic furnishings. For the dinner,
everyone sits on the Kang, which is an elevated brick platform that is
heated and normally serves as the communal bed for the entire family.
One warning is that the guests sitting next to the chimney have the
hottest seats so please sit elsewhere
if you don’t want to be baked. The dinner was a sumptuous spread that
started
with raw vegetables and a garlicky dip and included – a very exotic
dish
of snow frogs, chicken and mushrooms, deer meat and vegetables, fried
yellow
flower, tofu and mushrooms, black fungus and a host of other dishes.
According
to the resort manager, most of the items are grown locally and are
organic.
This exotic but quite pleasing fare was washed down with numerous toast
of
a clear liquor that was smoother and had less of an aftertaste than the
Mao-Tai
often served in Beijing but was equally potent.
Modern lifts - many now with enclosed
wind
shields |
Over dinner, I talked with Dr.
Tien who heads the Yabuli Ski Resort
and some of his management team. They said that although the area was
little
known is the West, Yabuli is known throughout China as an area of
scenic
beauty and as a location in which a number of films have been set. The
resort area, which is just over 10 square kilometers, has the potential
to expand to a much larger development of vacation houses and expanded
ski runs. The
area is well known as a site of scenic beauty with a large number of
animals
in the area including deer, bears, leopards, tigers, pheasants, hares,
squirrels,
badgers, wild boars plus many lesser species. In 1993, the Chinese
government
upgraded the protection of the area to National Park status.
Sustainable
Development is being built into all the resort plans to recognize and
protect
this status. Measures include no tree culling, no mining, and no
building
inside the National Forest and no industry in the area. |
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Second
day - A quick and fun way to get to
unskied areas.
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Sunday
morning was again snowy and after a filling Chinese breakfast at seven,
we
arranged with the Manager to take motorized Ski Do’s to the top of the
lift.
Temperatures at the top of the mountain were a chilling 20 degrees
below
zero Celsius. Although the air was chill, the chance to ski the virgin
powder
upper slopes for two hours prior to the area being open to the general
public
was irresistible. Skiing trails after a light snowfall that you are the
first
to ski is a tremendous experience. After nearly four hours of
additional
skiing, it was amazing to note that my old skiing skills, which had
been
unused for over 30 years, were still there and each run I felt more
confident
and less precarious. Although I had been the one to limit the trip to
two
days as I had other business to travel onto, I found myself wishing I’d
agreed to a longer stay. I promised to return with my family for a week
long vacation next year when my son and I can benefit from the friendly
instructors – such
as Mr. Zhong. Who knows, next year I might even try trail nine, which
was
about as challenging as any trail is Switzerland or North America.
Although,
on second thought, maybe not.
Yabuli
International
Ski Resort - China: http://www.YabuliSkiResort.com
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