Trip to Lantau Island (大嶼山) and Tai O Fishing Village (大澳)

Sorry for the delay in posting! I was very busy searching for a job and didn’t get around to posting as of lately!! Sorry! But welcome back to HKBushcraft for another installment of outdoors fun and adventure with me!

This time, I took a day trip to Lantau Island 大嶼山 (Dai Yu Shan) and Tai O Fishing Village 大澳 (Tai O) with my parents. It was an awesome experience to say the least. The weather that day was very foggy and overcast, as you will see from the pictures below, and had a median of 22.2 degrees Celsius, but was much colder at the top of Lantau peak.

Our trip began at Tung Chung (東涌) at the Ngong Ping 360 Cable Car (昂坪360). Tickets were quite decent: adult round-trip was $185 ($33 CAD). There are ways to get discounts from tour groups or coupons, but we went on a whim and didn’t look into it. Here is the link for more information: http://www.np360.com.hk/en/buy-book/pricing-and-packages/.

Ngong Ping 360 was opened in 2006, and stretches for 5.7km and is owned by the MTR Corporation (What transit in HK isn’t?). If you have ever skied before, I would advise going on it, as it really isn’t anything spectacular. However, if you’re inclined to check off all the tourist attractions in HK, the price is decent enough to warrant a ride up.

Colour Map of Ngong Ping Cable Car System

Map of the Ngong Ping Cable Car System. From Wikipedia: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:HKTYS_ngongping360.png

When we got to Ngong Ping Village, the thing that caught my eye was how well it was built. It felt like Universal Studios or some other type of theme park. And I found out it’s because it was built for tourists. There was the usual souvenir shops, restaurants (even a Subway’s), and gimmicky items for sale. Although the storefronts all looked the same (the whole village is one retail enterprise by MTR) two stores caught my eye. One displayed a wide collection of chopstick sets made from different materials like Red Oak, Ebony stone, Sandalwood, and even some made of ivory (which I am against). The other store sold figurines of Chinese operas (戲曲).

HKBushcraft standing in front of a mask store in Ngong Ping Village

You get to see my face.. should’ve bought a mask here.

As we walked to our first ‘real’ attraction – the Po Lin Monastery (寶蓮禪寺), we saw… cows! Apparently they were once used to farm in the villages near Ngong Ping and have since been set free. What I don’t understand is how the villagers got the cows up here in the first place, Ngong Ping is at 500m elevation, so those cows had to have been herded up at one point.

 

Finally got to Po Lin Monastery! About a 10 minute walk from the Ngong Ping 360 station. Had to take a picture to commemorate, but since we went right after Chinese New Year, there were people EVERYWHERE.

Po Lin Monastery Gif

Please get out of the way sir!

When arriving at a monastery or Buddhist/Daoist temple (They often share temples and monasteries, but have different practices), it is customary to place incense sticks, even if you’re not a believer. So we went ahead and got some incense for $8HKD and put them in the offering holder.

The offering holder at Po Lin Monastery, Ngong Ping

Smokey smokey. The offering holder in front of Po Lin Monastery

Big-ass incense sticks

I only bought $8 worth of incense, but these big mommas cost $100+ and burn for more than 24 hours.

Inside the prayer chambers, you aren’t allowed to take any photos, but you are allowed to photograph from outside. The architecture of the monastery is beautiful, but I had a feeling that what we saw was a facade covering the old Po Lin’s real walls.

Architecture of Po Lin Monastery

Unfortunately, the only photo of the walls I had that is decent

Picture of the 5 Golden Buddhas in the Hall of Ten Thousand Buddhas

Hall of Ten Thousand Buddhas. Each little tile you see in the back is actually a miniature golden Buddha donated by someone.

After that, we climbed up the 1000 Steps to see the O.G. himself, Buddha. Well, a statue of him anyways. Did you know? Buddha is not Chinese! He is actually Indian! His original name is Siddhartha Gautama, and he lived from 563 BCE to 483 BCE. I’m no expert on Buddhism, so read up on Wikipedia here. The 1000 Steps to get to him are supposed to make visitors feel the journey towards Enlightenment (of calories maybe!) because Enlightenment can only be brought forward by endurance and the understanding of suffering, or so the scriptures say. When we got to the top, Buddha was sure huge! But we couldn’t really see his whole body because it was really foggy that day.

Walking up the 1000 Steps to the Big Buddha Statue. Foggy day.

Somehow the fog adds a bit of mystery and sense of awe to this experience.

Statue of Gautama Buddha at Ngong Ping

“No one saves us but ourselves. No one can and no one may. We ourselves must walk the path.”

After our spiritual experience, we boarded the bus at the top of Ngong Ping to head to Tai O Fishing Village! Again, it was a very touristy spot, but the feel was quite chill. WARNING! Don’t eat seafood at restaurants there unless you are willing to pay a boatload of money. A freshly-caught sea bass cost us $600HKD ($107CAD) WOW!! Make sure you ask for the prices before ordering.

Bus route from Ngong Ping to Tai O

The bus driver should be hired for the next Fast and Furious. He literally swerved that car like it was a twin turbo RWD. Skrr!

Other than the surprise bill at lunch, we had a great time. We went on a cheapo boat tour for $25HKD and walked around.

Tai O Heritage Hotel from a boat

Tai O Heritage Hotel. Converted from a police station built in 1902. Check out the history: http://www.taioheritagehotel.com/eng/abthotel/hotel_history.jsp

Word of advice, if you plan on taking the cable car back down from Ngong Ping Village, make sure to leave before the peak times of 4:30PM-5PM. If you get caught in the evening rush, expect to wait at least an hour to two just to get to the terminal, and another half an hour to get back to Tung Chung. We ended up taking the bus from Ngong Ping to Tung Chung, which took an hour in itself, and had another Fast & Furious experience haha!

That’s it for this adventure. As always, stay tuned for more adventures, hikes, AND BUSHCRAFT RELATED MATERIAL FINALLY on HKBushcraft. Visit http://www.hkbushcraft.wordpress.com for more! Take care, and join me again next time!

-hkbushcraft.

Cold, Windy Hike to Lai Chi Wo Heritage Village!

Hi friends! Finally got around to posting the video about my first hike in Hong Kong. And what a day to choose to go hiking: January 24, 2016, the day that Hong Kong experienced the coldest weather in 60 years… Aiya! But what is life but overcoming challenges? I participated in a local hiking group’s excursion to Tai Po District. As I mentioned in my previous post, we traveled from Wu Kau Tang to Sam Ka Tsuen to Lai Chi Wo Heritage village. It was super rainy, windy (although I tried to cut out most footage with high wind noise) and cold, but I saw some beautiful landscapes. It was like travelling through different worlds on this trip: I got to saw mountaintop views, trails inside wet, dense forests that gave me an impression of the Amazon (I’ve never been, but it’s what I imagined it to be), picturesque views of the Pacific Ocean, huge bamboo trees, mangroves, buttress root trees, giant lotus plants and other amazing flora.

Although this was my first video after a while of not producing, I have improvements for myself for next time: Don’t be so eager to shoot everything in the beginning to save battery (I had to swap to my phone for half the hike!), take breaks so that I am not so tired at the end of the trip (where most of the cools stuff like the dense forest trails, ocean views, and mangrove forests) that I didn’t want to film anymore, and try to get an external mic, wind cover , and gyroscopic mount for my camera so that the overall production quality will be increased.

Without further ado, here’s the video of that adventure!

The most time consuming part of the production process was adding subtitles, but I thought if I was going to do it, I might as well do it well. I hope I can continue this philosophy as I move onwards and expand this platform. As well, my ATI Radeon HD7470M kept crashing on me as I made the video longer in Adobe Premiere Pro, but the struggle is what keeps me going.

Until next time!

-hkbushcraft.