In booking our homestay in Kinmen, I had to make many phone calls to the same, slightly confusing lady who ran the place. When I told her there were two people coming, she immediately asked, "you and your boyfriend? Is he handsome?" Later, I put Patty on the phone to talk to her about some of the reservation details, and in the midst of the conversation I caught Patty responding, "yes, she's very cute! Really, very cute!" Patty failed in her attempt to get me a discount, but the lady said she would give us some presents when we got there. Obviously we were in for a special time, accomodation-wise.
We flew into Kinmen's little one-room airport Friday morning, rented a scooter, and grooved on off to our homestay. The place where we stayed, Shuietou Yaoyue, is a 300-year old traditional Fujian courtyard house that has been renovated to have modern bathrooms and whatnot. Check it out:
Everyone in Kinmen kept apologizing for their hot weather, but it was actually gorgeous - sunny and in the 70s all weekend
The whole posse: 5 guests, one Taiwanese grandma, and one granddaughter
Kinmen was all about juxtaposition: sleepy little villages with giant tanks lying around, colorful temples with camouflage bomb shelters built in, and of course, the shiny green basketball court in the middle of our neighborhood of 300-year-old buildings.
Driving past this never failed to make me smile.
We got taken out for an extra-beefy lunch on Friday: beef noodles (made with kaoliang!), cold sliced beef, beef dumplings, and some other kind of beef.
I kind of knew that we were getting ourselves into something by the phone conversations, but it turned out when we got to our homestay that we had essentially rented ourselves a Taiwanese grandmother for the weekend. Oy vey. Zhang Mama was super cute, but very intense! The first thing she did once we got back after lunch was to bring us a small bottle of kaoliang (Kinmen's specialty, a liquor distilled from sorghum) and some beef jerky (beef things are also a specialty of Kinmen, which is full of cows), and to hassle us until we tried them. As if I weren't already fully beefed.
One of the funny things about Kinmen was how much trouble we had getting used to the scale of the maps. We wanted to go to a place on the exact other side of the island, but it was already mid-afternoon, and everyone assured us that it was too far to attempt. Knowing that the Taiwanese concept of "far" differs significantly from the American one, we went for it anyway. It took like half an hour to get there, even with a lot of getting lost. A lot of roads weren't labeled, and what looked like a big road on the map often turned out to be, like, a path through someone's field in real life, so navigation was a little bit confusing. On the bright side, because Kinmen isn't very big, we accidentally ran into a lot of its tourist attractions on the way across the island.
As a big battleground between the PRC and ROC, Kinmen is full of military monuments and such:
Note the giant ROC sun on the ceiling
Anti-landing devices on the beach. Don't try to land a boat on the north shore of Kinmen, because you will get poked like crazy.
There is a pillbox out on the northeastern point where you can spy on the mainland, so naturally this was the first thing we went to do
Taken through the binoculars: A boat off the coast of Xiamen, China. If you look closely, you can make out people playing on the beach. Creepy...
Besides poking devices, many beaches in Kinmen are still full of mines...Danger Mines! I was under the impression that pretty much all mines are danger mines, but I suppose they felt the need to specify. (note: the Chinese on the sign reads "ground thunder!" Don't you think that's a good way to say mine?)
We followed up a military-flavored afternoon with a peaceful evening watching the sunset by Cih Lake. But there were still tanks there, because there are tanks in a lot of random places in Kinmen.
We noticed later that the sign said "No Climbing." Whoops.
It's kind of pretty
Sunset over Xiamen, the city across the water on the China side
In the evening we got some dinner and poked around downtown Jincheng, the biggest town in Kinmen. I hadn't planned to do anything but go to bed early in the evening, but Zhang Mama would not let us get out of socialization, so we sat in the courtyard with the other guests and let people try to feed us more. Zhang Mama had cooked up a giant plate of little clams that one of the other guests, Afa, had dug up at the beach that day. He had gotten a seriously impressive number of clams, prompting comment from Zhang Mama: "You are so great! How is it that you haven't found a wife yet?" In addition to clams, we had kaoliang made with Chinese medicine (ew), shrimp chips with squid ink, and a random little fruit called pipa. Blehhhh, so full, and early bedtime was a total failure.
On Saturday I awoke bright and way too early to a pounding on the door. It was Zhang Mama, calling "Good morning! Come out and get your breakfast! Aren't you hungry?" Ignoring the pounding only made it intensify. Ha ha ha. I wasn't really hungry but I dragged myself out to breakfast to avoid further hassling. Then it was back to sleep until a more civilized time, like 11 a.m.
Saturday for lunch we went to a restaurant where we ordered something that we weren't sure exactly what it was off the menu (we knew it was a kind of bird). It turned out to be ostrich. It also turned out that I don't particularly care for ostrich, but whatever.
We meant to take the ferry to Little Kinmen that day, but you can only take scooters on the ferry at certain times, and by the time we got going it was kind of too late. Instead, we went up to Beishan Village and wandered around checking out old houses. Because of its strategic location, a lot of businesspeople have lived in Kinmen throughout the years, and some Kinmen residents who made their fortunes abroad came back and built houses in a hybrid Western-Chinese style of architecture. A lot of these houses are empty now. Slash full of bullet holes:
A little secret garden inside an abandoned house
After some wandering, we made our way on to a nature-preserve-type area, where somebody had abandoned their pedal boat. I can't imagine why, because we had a lot of fun with it:
The Chinese characters for Kinmen look like this: 金門。Telephone booths in Kinmen look like this:
Can you spot the resemblance? Cute, no?
As far as I could tell, pretty much all restaurants in Kinmen were located in the one main town, but it turned out that there was also a little one down the road in our neighborhood. They were so excited to have us that they gave us complimentary mulberry juice (I was informed that it is "good for women." Don't know why, but Gered also enjoyed it) and some kind of cold fried fish. We weren't that hungry, but they were so nice that we had to eat it anyway.
Some kind of veggie, pumpkin noodles, random fish item, mulberry juice!
We accidentally saw more of the tourist attractions in my book on the way to dinner. Also we followed the signs to a place called "Half Moon Lake," which turned out to be a stagnant semicircular pool surrounded by an appliance graveyard. Classy.
Sunday was our last day in Kinmen, so we made the effort and roused ourselves early enough to catch the scooter ferry to Little Kinmen. The most famous thing to see on Little Kinmen is the giant tunnels that were drilled out during the war as a place for ships to hide.
I am even whiter than usual in this picture
There is a military theme all over Little Kinmen too:
An introduction to wind chickens, from the Little Kinmen tourist information booklet (translated inexpertly by me):
"In the past, Lieyu (Little Kinmen) and Kinmen had both been damaged by strong winds, so in Lieyu every village erected a wind chicken on top of the village gate. The public chicken was made of clay, and because of its white paint it was called "white chicken" or "wind chicken" by the villagers. The wind chicken could hold back the wind, hurt insects, and protect household peace. This mighty spirit guards the land of Lieyu in a magnificent manner."
Obviously, we would be missing out if we left Kinmen without having seen a wind chicken. There was one on the map in the booklet, but we couldn't find it, and when we asked someone if there was a wind chicken in the vicinity, he treated me like I was crazy. "A white chicken," I clarified. He told me there was one on the other side of the island, just as Gered spotted the local wind chicken that was right behind us! I was not terribly impressed:
That's it?? Come on!
Disappointed with the first wind chicken, we went off looking for the one on the other side of the island. It was located at a temple that everyone knew about, so we had a pretty easy time getting directions to the second wind chicken. It was a big improvement:
Now THAT is that I call a wind chicken!
That afternoon, we scooted off to the other side of Kinmen to look for an elusive bird called the blue-tailed bee-eater, if my memory serves me correctly. The one hitch in the plan was when the road we were taking over the mountains ended in a security checkpoint. Although the road continued through, the guard told us that we couldn't take a scooter in. Boo. While we were pondering what to do, a voice from behind called, "hey, foreigners!" and lo and behold, it was Paige of the Fulbright crew in Yilan, who had managed to come to the same security checkpoint on the same mountain road on the same faraway island on the same weekend as us. What are the odds?
We took an alternate route, but returned after a while without having spotted any bee-eaters, sadly. The one last thing on our list was to go to Maestro Wu's, a shop run by a guy who uses metal from all the shells that have been dropped on Kinmen over the years to make really awesome knives. Kinmen was shelled by the Allies during World War II (when Taiwan was a Japanese possession) as well as by the Communists during the Chinese civil war, so there is plenty of raw material.
After knife-buying, we headed home to pack up so we could leave. We wanted to have a decent margin of time to return the scooter and get to the airport, but Zhang Mama felt that we were leaving far too early. "You're just trying to get rid of me! Let me take you out for some coffee. Come on, let's go."
As Zhang Mama marched us down the road with my arm firmly in her clutches, she spouted a stream of unanswerable questions my way: "When are you getting married? Soon, right? When will you come back to Kinmen? On your honeymoon? I bet next time when you come, you'll be bringing a little baby, right? Next time, bring the baby!" At the coffee shop, she bought us two cups of coffee and then disappeared. "I'll leave you two alone together." Like we hadn't spent any time together this weekend.
Finally, Zhang Mama deemed it an acceptable time to leave, and we scootered off, trailing behind our speed demon of a Taiwanese grandmother. What a weekend!
2 comments:
That first wind chicken looks strangely like a Duckie Maniac duck.
Check out our own wind chicken!
This trip sounds fun! I might do it with my roommate...do you still have the homestay's number where you stayed? Also, what is the cheapest way to get to the island?
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