Searching for Wolong
Never one to let imperfect conditions slow me down, I left Chengdu at 7.05 AM in a light rain to visit Wolong, the Panda habitat forest reserve. This forest preserve, according to the pre-earthquake guidebooks, is a 3 hour bus trip from Chengdu. The roads were quite empty. The expressway was empty.
I expected to follow the published official maps; exit the expressway at the southern border of Dujiangyan city, cross the bridge southward and then turn west. This paper road passes Dujiangyan while hugging the south bank of the major river until the westward turnoff to Wolong. Then we’d meander on a narrow road up a branch river to Wolong.
Nice fantasy.
As we neared Dujiangyan, my driver advised that we take a sparely labeled (in both characters) exit before the highway end. This was news to me since we’d done this route numerous times to Qingcheng and LongChi parks and never ventured this way. So I went with the flow upriver on an expressway that is not on any of the published maps. This four lane expressway bypassed Dujiangyan completely, went across several large bridges and at least 3 tunnels. As I found out later, the opening of this expressway was announced in the Chinese media in the middle of May, so it had only been open one month.
The expressway ended after a tunnel- 1-1/2 hours from central Chengdu. About 500 meters later a sign directed us to the left, across a bridge and tunnel to the Wolong road and YingXui. Ying Xui, Wenchuan county is the unfortunate town that was almost above the epicenter of the 8.0 earthquake on 12May 2008 at 2.28 PM. The elementary school collapse was the heartbreaker, in a country where one child is the norm for urban families. YingXui is located just after the expressway ends on both sides of the road and at the junction with the Wolong road.
It is now a year after the devastating earthquake. Reconstruction is proceeding with all activities- roads, bridges, and buildings. Most of the temporary and longer-term temporary blue-roofed portable homes are empty and gone, the people being relocated to better places. The heartbreak is still there even if no tears can be seen. Most of the town has been cleared with new foundation work in preparation, drilling deep holes for foundations. I’ve never seen so many small scale drill rigs before.
Local tourism to visit the devastation has been set up, signs telling of what happened and where things were, official parking lot space and a few memorial engraved stones. Katrina revisited. There is even a published map of earthquake effected areas, routes and distances to these areas with a primer on earthquakes – available in downtown Chengdu from XinHua bookstore.
The valley was pretty with mountains whose tops were hidden in the clouds as a light rain mist still fell. We exited the tunnel and an immediate right turnoff directed us to the un-signposted road to Wolong. The road is a 1 to 2 lane dirt track blasted?, or dug? between a raging river and vertical canyon walls. My driver was not completely convinced we were in the right place. He asked three times along the road.
I was in shock. Red signs were posted along the road less than every 500 meters warning of “Fei shi lu”-- Flying rocks on road. Vertical cliffs and steep canyon walls hung over us. Fresh slide rock littered the road in places. A few trucks and cars traveling down-river passed us as we waited in pullouts. This wasn’t a road, just a Colorado jeep trail connecting Leadville to Alma. A journey in time and space: From 4-wheeling in Colorado 20 years ago to 2-wheeling on the edge of the Tibetan Plateau. We passed an earthquake lake with drowned trees. The Madison landslide earthquake lake at the West Entrance to Yellowstone National Park flashed in my mind from my visit in July 1972, during geology field camp. Only the infrequent leveled remains of buildings were seen. The canyon cliffs soared more than 1,000 meters into the clouds. Boulders choked the landslide rock chutes. More earthquake lakes were passed including one that drowned an entire village of perhaps 10 to 15 buildings - water still raging through hotel walls.
After the quake, the road was gone, buried under rock, water or ripped off the canyon wall and carried downstream. Ravaged bridge foundations were passed. High-water sediment marks above the car were seen in one spot along the road.
Passed a standing dam, where they opened the gates to save the dam. Further up river, a landslide took out an entire hydroelectric facility – only some twisted metal left.
The road route is heavily occupied with activity. Full time construction was in evidence along every spot on the road – carting off rock, blasting rock, hand drilling foundations, pouring concrete bricks for walls, bulldozing off roads, preparing for tunneling (two new tunnel entrances were prepared).
We passed the shelled entrance gate to the Wolong habitat preserve. Not much left. I stopped to photograph. A piece of the gate collapsed in front of me. At one spot the river narrowed due to one rock slide so the river rapids foam splashed on the road. I could (and did) touch it as we passed. Would the road still be there on the return? Would the construction crews let traffic pass on return? Baboons and Bridges.
At 25 kilometres still to go to reach Wolong (and only 18 km done), we had reached 3 hours of travel. The rain had decreased to an occasional mist. Clouds still covered the sky and upper canyon walls. We reached a spot where a crane was removing rock. Down river traffic was not bothered by dodging around the crane. I’d seen too much already, so we turned around and headed downstream, past the foam, shattered gate, flooded village, open dam and drowned trees. At one bend a small rock fall started above us, only one piece smacked the car roof.
At the junction with the paved road at Ying Xui, perhaps a dozen trucks, mini-vans and cars were parked. They had closed the road to westward travel for construction until tomorrow, Monday. A Yunnan-originated tour from Great Britain, heading for Wolong twiddled thumbs for recreation. The mist had stopped.
Instead of heading back, we drove into Ying Xui, or that is to say around the edges of what was Ying Xui. I saw the memorials, the preserved wreckage, and the cleanup crews from the recently emptied survivor’s camp. Outside and south of town, a small dirt road ran along the eastern edge of the river, passed a closed coal mine. Along here I walked for some peace and butterflies. I climbed a farmer’s switchback road for a view over the green, scenic and still clouded in valley. At the top switchback, the farmer sat along the edge of the road with his straw hat looking out and enjoying the view. I briefly joined him, feeling slightly guilty for disturbing his peace.
