Downtown (pedestrianized!!!) Xiamen - bright lights, crowds and lots of interesting restaurants. Because it's close to Taiwan, there is a strong Taiwanese influence in the food and attitudes
In Xiamen, there is a very famous canteen style restaurant - you buy tokens at a little booth, and then jostle your way to the front to make your food choice - dumplings, steamed buns and the famous peanut soup. Andy, peanut lover, had to try this famous soup ... but was little disappointed - quite sweet with bits of egg in it ... preferred the dumplings and buns - but a fun experience.
Along the boardwalk by Xiamen beach - behind Evan is an fort built by the Germans.
We stayed on the larger, citified island of Xiamen but visited another island close by. Called GuLangYu, it is a car free tiny island that is pretty much devoted to tourism (Chinese - very few Westerners) - in it's previous life, the island was very popular with expats, who in the earlier half of the 20th Century built colonial mansions
We caught a free-for-all ferry there and back - it was OK - here is Evan looking ready to deal with the crowds!
The island is a beautiful mixture of China and crumbling colonial mansions ... a fabulous place to wander and relax
Evan stikes a pose along the waterfront of GuLangYuSome colorful GuLangYu boats with the island of Xiamen in the background
Another day we took a local tour (all in Chinese - no Westerners and definitely no English spoken (we felt brave!) to the interior of Fujian province to the land of Hakka people - famous for their round building (tulou = earth (tu) lou (stories/floors)) - an ancient style of apartment buildings built in a circle with one entrance - each family member had an apartment inside. These are very large buildings, and unique to the Hakka - some are now UNESCO sites - we got to visit several on the tour, as well as some local villages
Fantastic to be off the beaten track and to see an area of China that is not on the tourist trail so much - though we were looked at a bit by the locals and even had our picture taken posing with one!
A tulou entrance - this one from one dating back to the 1300s - fantastic!
In one of the villages, we visited an old, unusual 'Buddhist' temple - complete with lots of Chinese gods - this old artwork was on one of the doors and outside were several 'dragon poles' ... not sure what for but we know they are unusual - but our Chinese didn't extend to understanding Why!
Another picuresque village scene - quite a different side of China to the crowded, fast paced cities like Shanghai and Beijing.
So we had a great time in Xiamen.Now, we are getting ready to leave China with only 3 more weeks of work, and then another 2 weeks to relax and travel. We have plans for one more trip - to the famous HuangShan (Yellow Mountain) and back to one of our favorite places, Hangzhou.
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