Laowai Lushang! (Foreigners on the road!)

Nov. 24 – Beijing

“Hooooly mother of Mao, what have I gotten myself into?” Ahead of me, Daniel smartly steered his bike between two transit buses while I clumsily veered back out of the traffic and onto the sidewalk. Barely out of the apartment complex and dropped already. Ca commence mal.

It started yesterday, in fact. Daniel is an avid cyclist and in his salad days was a top amateur racer in France. He’s a very fit 61 now, rides wherever he can, and was determined to have me experience cycling in Beijing. He made some calls and found me a rental at the Trek shop in the embassy district, 30km away. 200 Yuan (about $30) got me a slightly too small bike and a slightly too large helmet. It was a basic Trek Alpha, aluminium frame, Sora components, flat pedals, and slightly undermaintained. All the same, it would do the job. The helmet’s size wasn’t a problem, since I would be wearing a tuque underneath to ward off the zero degree temperatures. While the bike was being readied I looked around at the store’s wares and gawked at the Trek Madone 6.1’s price tag of nearly $13,000. Performance cycling in China (the UCI Pro Tour held the inaugural Tour of Beijing in October) is growing quickly but is still very much a rich man’s game. Prices overall are similar to what one might pay in the West.

Getting back home should have been straightforward. Forget the crowded subway and hail a cab. Nothing doing, not even with the help of the Trek store clerks. Fortunately, they made some calls and soon a minivan appeared with a driver willing to take me home for 150 Yuan ($22). It was dark and took several wrong turns and phone calls with additional instructions before we arrived. Of course, the driver then wanted more money, claiming he’d driven further than agreed. My memories of being Shanghaied were fresh. After raised voices, mutual incomprehension, and slight bicycle tug of war at the elevator, the matter was over. I didn’t pay any more, but there were bad feelings all round.

Back to the ride story. If cycling has a “sink or swim” equivalent, this surely was it. We had avoided the morning rush, but in a megacity of 15 million, “off-peak” is still a lot of people on the move. So the first few kilometers were stressful. Left-handers through high volume intersections; sudden accelerations to get ahead of slow trucks; red lights optional, and occasionally a bad idea; dodging oncoming wrong-way vehicles; hearing the horn and engine of an approaching bus behind you. Thinking about what could happen doesn’t help in such situations. Focusing of the task at hand does.

After blue skies yesterday the smog was back after all. The U.S. Embassy reading was “very unhealthy” and would rise to “hazardous” during the day. Daniel said that normally he would not have ridden under those conditions, but it was now or never for me. I’ll say this, though. If you’re willing to risk life, lung and limb riding out of Beijing, it’s great in the countryside. The roads are good, wide and quite free of traffic. First destination was Xishan (West mountain) 3km at 10% of steep, shoelace switchbacks on clean concrete slabs all the way up. I got about two-thirds of the way before the drooling, phlegm-spitting, out-of-the-saddle, square-pedaling started. “Okens in difficulty” indeed. I can blame all sorts of things (and will), but the end result was Daniel casually pointing out various sights, as he dropped me. A feeble “ggnnhh” was my only response.

The view from Xishan was as good as a smoggy late November day would allow – mediocre. However, there were plenty of vigorous dog-walking seniors at the summit with whom Daniel could chat. The fast, full-on-braking, sharp-twisting descent took us past cedar plantations, rusty pine needles blanketing the ground. We heard chatty magpies, late-crowing roosters and even a small herd of goats. As the road leveled out, there was a broken down farmhouse, a cemetery, and a new, shockingly western-looking neighborhood – all skylights, slanting roofs, courtyards and driveways. We stopped for a snack of salty pastries at a roadside stall in a village. It was below zero, factoring in the wind chill, and we warmed our hands on the shopkeeper’s griddle.

I had made full use of my sports wardrobe (5 layers on top), but 3+ hours and 75km is a long time to spend in the elements. Breathing was no longer my only problem. Long-neglected Iliotibial bands also started to complain, and my speed started to slacken. On the plains north of Beijing we went alongside dark, partially frozen rivers with anglers on the banks, dodged the thankfully well-behaved stray dogs, and zipped past all two, three and four-wheeled traffic out there. The finale was food, of course. No Tim Horton’s for us, but rather a shop serving big bowls of beef and noodles.

In honour of American Thanksgiving (in any case we were still ravenous), dinner tonight was delivery Domino’s pizza and apple pie, all washed down with Great Wall cabernet sauvignon. Now if you’ll excuse me, I’m off to bed. Tomorrow I might have to go hunting for replacement ligaments and muscles. I hear you can get them for cheap in China, like almost everything else.


Clearing the air

Nov. 23 – Beijing

Four minutes without it and you die. I’m not referring to internet access but oxygen. You may have noticed that I’ve mentioned air quality in most of my posts from China. I’m particularly sensitive to the breathability for a few reasons; I’m from Vancouver, which has among the best urban air in the world. I’m into endurance sports, and use a lot of the stuff. And I have been asthmatic in the past. So the topic has preoccupied me in much the same way ocean waves did on the Pacific – it makes a big difference to how my day is going to go.

Consecutive mornings. The vantage points aren't identical, but you get the idea.

Today was great, air-wise. Overnight, strong winds blew away all of the smog that had been hanging over Beijing. Visually, the impact is astonishing. From the flat, the view is a mountain range rather than the gloom-shrouded apartment complexes nearby (which the Chinese call tower forests). And I’m breathing easy in the literal sense. Fortunately for me, it may take a while for the pollution to build up again, and in any case I can leave if it gets really bad.  Few Chinese have the luxury of making such a choice. Many go around wearing surgical masks, and on the really bad days it means kids simply don’t get to play outside at recess. How long it will be before the authorities get serious about air quality is anyone’s guess.

Since we’re on the topic of noxious substances, let’s talk about tobacco and alcohol. Smoking is rather prevalent in China. Although some people would rather that others butt out, it appears that frowning upon is frowned upon. As for the booze, I’ve finished my first bottle of Baijiu tonight. It’s a wheat-based abomination of 56% alcohol that is great for getting you drunk/thinning paint. Many Chinese drink this without moderation to celebrate festive occasions.     I’ve only had a little with each evening meal since I’ve arrived (mixed to tolerable level with fruit juice). And in any case I need to practice for the long vodka sessions on Russian trains.