by Jim Goodman
the highway through Ninglang County |
Like most places in northwest
Yunnan, mountains dominate the landscapes of Ninglang County. Called Xiaoliangshan, the Lesser Cool
Mountains, to distinguish them from Daliangshan, the Greater Cool Mountains
across the border in Sichuan, they rise on either side of the main north-south
highway, sometimes reaching over 4000 meters altitude, blanketed in snow after
a late autumn rain, a gleaming white mantle that persists until the warmth of
May. The county’s towns lie in
separate valleys along the highway, with mild ascents over the hills between them.
As with any mountainous area, the higher you hike the greater
the view. But Ninglang County is
not noted for its trekking routes.
Visitors to the county almost all head straight for Lugu Lake in the far
north and rarely attempt to appreciate anything anywhere else. As for the mountain scenery, one could
argue that it is better and easier to appreciate in Diqing, upper Nujiang or
Tiger Leaping Gorge. Good mountain
vistas in Ninglang require strenuous hikes up some rather steep slopes. And the shapes of the peaks on the far
horizons will not rival the higher, more jagged summits of the mountains in the
Three Rivers area.
the view north from Yangpinzi in November |
What drew me to these mountains,
however, was not the possibility of discovering hitherto unknown scenic
panoramas. Ninglang is a Yi
Autonomous County, where the Yi comprise a majority of the population. And the bulk of them live in the mountains. Since my purpose in Ninglang was to do research
on the Yi, that was going to require some long excursions up the slopes of the
Cool Mountains.
The Yi minority nationality
dominates the population of Ninglang city and other county towns. Visitors will hear more of the Yi
language, a member of the Tibeto-Burman linguistic group, than Chinese spoken
in the markets and restaurants. I
could find and befriend Yi men who could fill me in on Yi history and mythology,
customs and taboos. Though they
were comfortably ensconced in the modern accoutrements of urban Ninglang, they
were ethnically conscious Yi, proud of their customs and traditions and I
learned much from them. Their
wives were usually from the mountains, their in-laws still lived there, and
they themselves made occasional visits as part of keeping in touch with their
Yi village roots.
Yo woman, NInglang County |
Yi man in the northeastern hills |
Still, there was a limit to
what I could learn in Ninglang city, for that was not a traditional environment. I had to visit the villages and that was
going to be physically demanding .
The first village I visited, Yangpinzi, the nearest to Ninglang, took at
least an hour and a half of uphill hiking to reach. But the exertion was worth it. The people were surprised, but quite hospitable, and the result
encouraged me to venture further into the mountains in the future.
To see the Torch Festival in a
rural environment meant hiking uphill all day to a village high up in the
mountains northeast of Ninglang.
To visit Bainiuchang, site of a school with bi-lingual education and a
special class teaching the written Yi language, I had to endure another steep
climb up the slopes east of Ninglang.
In both cases the journeys were worth the effort, of course, just for
the cultural experience. As for
the views, they were splendid, yes, but merely as a setting for the encounter,
a bonus of a backdrop.
turnip harvest in a Yi hamlet |
Yet on one autumn excursion
scenery would prove to be as significant a feature as culture when my Yi
friends in Ninglang suggested I should take a hike to the near-legendary lakes
of Yaoshan—Medicine Mountain—northwest of the city. I say ‘near-legendary’ because it seemed many Yi people knew
about them but hardly anyone had actually seen them. And who lived up there? Yi yak herders.
Well, I’d visited a few
mountain villages by then and had met Yi barley and buckwheat farmers, turnip
and potato gardeners, goatherds and shepherds. Didn’t know there were any Yi yak herders. Always thought that was a Tibetan
thing. So when my Yi friend said
he could arrange a guide I agreed to go.
The guide was a young man named Jikeu, who worked in the city but came
from Jinzigou, a Yi village at the southern foot of the mountain.
Jinzigou village |
We set out along a creek
northwest of the city and then had to climb up a steep hill through a thick
forest, here and there speckled with blue, white and yellow flowers and piles
of fallen russet or yellow leaves.
At the crest of this ridge was a Yi hamlet of about ten houses, with
most of the people outside threshing barley or harvesting turnips. One family called us over for tea and
gave us a large radish for us to consume during breaks climbing over the next
ridge ahead.
Though it was just as steep as
the first ascent, fortunately the ordeal was over after an hour. We now gazed down at the sprawling
village of Jinzigou in the valley below, with around a hundred buildings, all
except the middle school typical traditional Yi log cabins. Judging by the very friendly encounter
we’d just had in the hamlet, I anticipated a warm reception.
Shàhma Lake on Yaoshan |
But things started off
awkwardly. There were stares but
no smiles as Jikeu led the stranger through the lanes to his family’s house. Even there everyone seemed hesitant to
greet me. A short discussion
ensued between father and son.
Then the mood suddenly changed and I was welcomed with the same warmth I
had experienced in other Yi villages.
Familiar with the custom of compensating the family for their
hospitality, I gave out the gifts I’d brought for the hosts; liquor for the father,
cowry shells from Thailand for the women to embellish their clothing
accessories and a pound of sweets for the children. And as we settled in for our stay and sipped tea, Jikeu
revealed what the discussion had been about.
Recently there had been
reports of strangers going to remote villages in the county to preach the
imminence of the end of the world and urge people to join their religion to
assure their salvation. Jinzigou
residents hadn’t seen any yet, but some of their relatives in other villages
had. Was I one of those Doomsday
prophets? If so, they really
didn’t want to hear that kind of talk. Assured that I was not, they were pleased to meet and welcome
the first foreigner to Jinzigou.
Zhihu Lake |
After a hearty morning meal
and a photo session of the family dressed in their best Yi apparel, we
commenced our hike to the summit of mighty Medicine Mountain. We crossed the creek at the edge of the
village and the trail almost immediately began zigzagging up a 70-degree
gradient. Much of it went through
thick forests of pine, fir, rhododendron and poplar, with moss hanging from the
branches, lichens covering fallen logs and bighorn sheep sharing the trail.
I learned all about false
summits that day: seeing an end to
the uphill trail, discovering the level walk only continues five minutes and
then another steep ascent begins.
Two Yi herders joined us for the last stretch of the journey, carrying
my shoulder bags and cutting a staff from a tree branch for me. But when we finally arrived at the
broad plain lying next to the steeply sided granite rocks on the summit, all
the pain of getting there was soon forgotten.
yaks on the summit of Medicine Mountain |
It was mid-afternoon
and our first stop was a hut belonging to an older Tibetan woman, who lived
there with her two grandchildren.
She prepared buttered tea for us while Jikeu heated the buckwheat bread
his family had given us. After our
refreshment (including a cup of precious corn liquor for the foreigner guest)
we headed for a Yi herder’s cabin a short distance away, where we would stay
the night.
This cabin was close to one of
the lakes, so after making arrangements for the night we all headed, along with
the Tibetan girl, to the lake the Yi call Shàhma. This small and shallow lake lies in the lap of a steeply
wooded slope. The view from here
encompasses the stark cliffs along the summit to the west and out across the
wrinkled horizon of the Lesser Cool Mountains.
We joined our companions as
they went up the slopes to fetch their yaks down to the cabin area for the
night. I found these animals very
curious about the stranger alongside them. They often sidled up to me, but whenever I reached out to
touch one, the yak backed off.
Still, they were a lot less skittish than their lowlands cousin the
water buffalo.
milking a yak |
churning yak butter for Tibetan-style tea |
Yaks rise at dawn and head for
their favorite pastures. Around an
hour after sunrise the herders go up to bring them down again. Then they take one cow, tie it to three
stakes and get a calf to start the cow’s udders working. Then the man kicks away the calf and
milks the cow for about twenty minutes.
Much of this will be turned into curd and some processed into cheese and
butter.
Less than ten people seemed to
live up here, their economy centered mostly on their yaks. In the valley markets at that time yak
butter sold for 50 yuan a kilo,
cheese for a bit more and a fully grown yak fetched 1000 yuan, somewhat higher than a water buffalo or ox of the same
size. While tending yaks, goats
and sheep was not physically demanding, their lifestyle was necessarily austere
and simple. For every essential
except water, meat and firewood they had to make the long trek down the mountain
to Hongqiao, the nearest town, and back up again, their ponies loaded with
buckwheat flour, rice, potatoes, salt, oil, tobacco, soap and liquor.
Yawshalavoe Lake |
After a breakfast of buckwheat
bread, potatoes, buttered tea and curd, we set out to see the other Yaoshan
lakes. This proved to be almost as
grueling an exercise as getting to the summit the previous day. To get to the second lake we had to hike
up above the yak pastures, cross the ridge and descend through a thick
rhododendron forest with no clear trail.
This was Jikeu’s first trip
here as well. I had no idea what
kind of directions he’d been given, but as I searched the slope for footholds
and slid under thick fallen tree branches, I was sure we were lost.
Jikeu’s internal compass,
however, functioned brilliantly
that day and steered us to an opening on a ridge overlooking Zhihu, the second
lake, which also lay in the lap of a steeply wooded cliff. From here we descended eastwards through
another trackless forest, following the trails that martens and rabbits take. Eventually we arrived at the shore of
Vahlilu, the prettiest of the lakes. A thick rhododendron forest backed its northern shore,
with small, partly iced, yellow clumps of grass lying just off the shores of
the other sides.
We rounded the lake, climbed
the ridge behind it and slid down through a forest to the fourth lake,
Yawshalavoe, which also lay in the lap of high, forested slopes. The trees on its eastern slope, though,
had all been cut, and big logs lay drying out on the ground. Someday these would have to be hauled
by hand all the way down the mountain.
Vahlilu Lake |
After a short break here we
climbed back over the ridge above the yak pastures and descended to the Tibetan
cabin for a meal of buckwheat bread and yak cheese, washed down with buttered
tea and, in my case, a final cup of corn liquor. As it was not yet four o’clock and we were now fully
nourished, we bade farewell to our hosts, and their yaks outside the cabin, and
descended down the same trail back to Jinzigou, arriving just at dark.
Now I was back in the familiar
conviviality of a Yi village community, where people interact more often, do
many things collectively, celebrate festivals and so on. How different it was from the lifestyle
I had just observed on top of the mountain. The Yi yak herders reminded me of backwoodsmen in 19th
century America, who built a cabin in the forest and, except for provisions
trips to town, in the course of the day were more likely to meet a bear than
another human. Yet American
culture reveres them as representatives of a fiercely independent spirit.
Could that not
be said for the Yi I met on the mountaintop? They opted for the solitary life over the community one. They chose immersion in nature instead
of participation in society. For
their occasional pleasures they rely on things like unexpected warm breezes in
cold months, an especially brilliant sunrise and the birth of healthy
animal. And for faith, it’s their
own proud, independent spirit.
the cabin and yaks of our Yaoshan host |
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for more on theYi of Xiaoliangshan, see my e-book Children of the Jade Dragon
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