by Jim Goodman
on the road north of Tanhua |
When I first visited Yunnan in
1992, the province had already been partially open to foreigners for several
years. They could visit established
tourist destinations like Kunming, the Stone Forest, Dali, Lijiang and
Jinghong, but little else. But by
then, the open-door policy was proving successful and over the next few years
the government allowed foreigners into several more counties every season.
Enough attractions existed in
and around these popular sites to warrant extensive exploration and return
excursions. But once I began to
make my trips to Yunnan regular, from then on as it turned out, I included at
least one newly opened county every itinerary. To guide my choices I thumbed through the coffee-table
picture books on the province I bought from Kunming’s Foreign Languages
Bookstore.
Having already had encounters
with some of the Yi minority sub-groups, I decided to visit very different Yi
in Dayao County, in northwest Chuxiong Prefecture. Nobody went there because it was not en route to somewhere
else. Except for Dayao city
itself, it was a Yi-dominated county, with different related sub-groups, and
that was sufficient to lure me. They would show up at the Sunday market and particularly
dominated the hills north of the city.
the Yi style in Guihua |
After a couple visits to Tanhua, where most Yi women dressed
in traditional style and both sexes wore goatskin jackets and everything seemed
pretty old-fashioned, I decided to go further north, where other Yi sub-groups
lived. Also motivating me was the
fact that at the end of the road, such as it was, was a Dai district on the
Upper Yangzi, in Yunnan called the River of Golden Sand (Jinshajiang).
Back then that was certainly
an off-the-beaten-track adventure.
The only public transportation was a weekly bus, several days off, so I
had to pay for a ride with a logging truck going north of Guihua, the next
major settlement and my destination 50 km away. A couple foreigners had briefly been to Tanhua, so I was
told, but no one went beyond, so I would be the first to visit remote ethnic
minorities as well as rural provincial government officials. As it turned out, the latter were more
interesting than the former.
Above Dayao the unpaved road
zigzagged along the eastern slopes of Tanhua Mountain, at each turn providing
views of mountains and distant villages perched on the ridges and just below
the cliffs. To make parts of this
road, workers had to carve or blast through sheer walls of rock, with 70
degrees gradients on either side.
Aside from the views, I also appreciated the skill of Chinese road
engineers.
Guihua town, Dayao County |
About an hour out of Tanhua
the road crosses the last extension of Tanhuashan and the scenery changes
abruptly. The mountains are
steeper, less forested, heavily terraced and rather densely populated, compared
with the Tanhua area. The road
slowly winds down to the river valley below Guihua, visible nearly an hour
before arrival. The town sits on a
ridge above the river, mainly comprising wide, mud-brick houses with wooden
beams and tiled roofs, typical rural Yunnan style.
I checked into a local cheap
lodge, but before I could settle in and finish my coffee a representative of
the local government arrived to invite me to stay in a private room in their
quarters. He also introduced the
local middle school English teacher Li Hui to accompany me on my tour of
Guihua. That consisted of
walking around looking for good photo angles, as this was the middle of the
week and not much was happening anywhere, other than on the farms outside of
town.
the 'family history' coat |
All that changes on Saturdays,
when Guihua holds its market day and Yi from the hills stream into town. I couldn’t stay that long,
unfortunately, so couldn’t assess how popular traditional clothing might still
be in the district. Judging from
how few Yi women wore it in Guihua and the villages nearby, and what Li Hui
told me, it seemed to be less common than in other districts in the county,
such as Tanhua and Santai.
Two traditional Yi styles
prevail in the district. The more
common one resembles that of the Tanhua Yi, the women wearing a side-fastened,
long-sleeved jacket, embroidered apron, shoulder bag and plain black
trousers. Older women’s jackets
are solid color and plain while the younger generation applies wide bands of
colorful embroidery and appliqué on the sleeves and along the lapel. Both the apron and shoulder bag feature
bright red embroidered flowers.
Very different is the outfit
worn by the women of a small Yi sub-group north and west of Guihua. Over an ankle-length black skirt
trimmed with bands of bright appliquéd designs, they don a long-tailed jacket
with wide bands of different cutout designs on the sleeves, front and
back. The patterns chosen for the
back of the coat symbolically represent events in the wearer’s family history. Thus, no two coats are identical and
while they may only wear them on special occasions, every woman makes herself
one because custom demands they be buried wearing it after they die.
the Yi 'chicken hat' |
For headgear, Guihua Yi women
inclined to dress traditionally may don a simple black turban or a colored headscarf. But a more common and striking choice
in the area is the brightly embroidered ‘chicken hat.’ Shaped like a coxcomb and often worn
sideways, with the head and tail above the ears, similar ‘chicken hats’ are
popular with other Yi sub–groups in the province (Nisu in Yuanyang, Tuli in
Weishan).
The origin of this hat is an
ancient tale of two lovers pursued by the Prince of Devils. First he killed the young man, then
tried to capture the young woman.
She fled through the forest, with the Prince of Devils in hot pursuit,
until she came to a village in a clearing. A cock crowed, which stopped the demon in his tracks. A witness to that, she guessed the
demon was afraid of roosters. So
she grabbed it and ran back into the forest to where her lover lay. The cock crowed again and the young man
came back to life. Ever since then
Yi girls wear the hat in honor of the rooster, to symbolize good luck and happiness
in love.
Yi house in Guihua |
In my engagements with the Yi
women I met in Guihua I persuaded a couple of them to sell me their shoulder
bags. One featured the big
embroidered flowers typical of the Guihua style. The other was cross-stitched, like the bags in Tanhua. Li Hui apparently mentioned this while
we dined with the Party officials that evening. After a few rounds of corn liquor one of them proposed that I
set up a factory in Guihua to produce Yi embroidered shoulder bags for export. They would allow me 70% ownership.
I explained that traditional
handicraft work was not something done in a factory, but at home and in the
field whenever time was available.
Besides, I was a petty trader, at best, and in fact more of a collector,
with no idea how to market Yi shoulder bags.
Dacun village, on the road northi of Guihua |
Undaunted, perhaps ambitious
to secure a business relationship with the first foreigner in Guihua, he next
proposed I build a paper factory.
My first thought was the horrific effect that would have on the clean
stream that ran below the town.
But I didn’t mention that.
I told him the area didn’t have the right trees. In fact, it didn't have hardly any
trees at all, of any kind.
The conversation soon
shifted to other topics and the evening was quite convivial. My hosts tried to arrange a jeep to
take me to Wanbi. Unfortunately,
the Party was having an important meeting in Beijing at that time and Party
officials in districts throughout the country had to have their own meetings to
discuss the Meeting. The jeeps
were busy fetching people from remote villages to attend the meetings, both Guihua’s
vehicles and those of Wanbi.
the main street of Upper Wanbi |
Wanbi lies 88 km north of
Guihua and the logging trucks only went to a depot about half way. So my hosts arranged the only available
transportation—a tractor-trailer (tuolache).
I had to pay 200 yuan and Li
Hui would accompany me to smooth the way with the Wanbi officials. I was familiar with these
vehicles. I’d seen them bring
people to market day in Dayao, for example. But that was on paved city streets. The road ahead was unpaved all the way
and had been pretty bumpy riding in the relative comfort of a truck up from
Tanhua. Nevertheless, there was no
other choice.
By tractor-trailer is probably
the least comfortable way to travel.
The driver sits on a small, three-wheel tractor in front and passengers
sit or stand in the four-wheel trailer behind. It was too rough to sit and even standing we were
continuously jolted. Moreover,
though it was a fine spring day, the wind was fierce and blew the dust from the
road all over our bodies, baggage and camera. I often had to call for a pause, just to give my bones a
chance to settle down.
Lower Wanbi and the river in the morning |
The rough and
rollicking journey took most of the day. The scenery was much the same as
around Guihua, with farms, pastures and villages dominating the largely
deforested lower mountain slopes. We
crossed the last ridge, descended to Wanbi on the river and arrived in time to
check in at the government lodge and have dinner with our gracious hosts, the local
Dai government officials.
There was no shower in the
building, but they arranged basins of hot water and towels for us to wash off
the dirt from the ride. The Party
was holding meetings here, too, so they would be busy until Sunday, when it
would be possible for me to cross the river. Li Hui and the driver returned to Guihua next morning and I
had two days to explore the vicinity on my own.
Dai woman in Wanbi |
the Jinshajiang near Wanbi |
Lisu girl at the Binghai ferry port |
Lower Wanbi is the
administrative town, full of drab concrete buildings. But it is on a knoll close to the river, the main
attraction. Rice fields lay beside
the town all the way to the riverbanks, but on the other side the steep hills
are practically barren of any kind of vegetation. The river is in places turbulent, but at other sections
placid enough for fishermen in small boats to cast nets. Huge boulders bank the river
periodically, while in other places it laps along stretches of white sand. Colors on the river and the hills vary
throughout the day and are richest in late sunny afternoons.
crossing the river at Binghai |
The regular ferry had engine trouble at the time,
so people were taking rowboats instead.
We wound up paddled across in a dinghy made from inflated tire
tubes. Beside the marketplace
several tractor-trailers were parked and I fretted I’d have to ride one of
those to the nearest highway. But
my host, who insisted on paying for everything, found a truck to take me
instead. I departed thanking him
for his hospitality and in particular for the final service of securing me a
truck to take me to the highway.
One tractor-trailer adventure was quite enough.
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