Thursday, April 30, 2009

豫園 (yuyuan garden)

I still haven't blogged about Yuyuan Garden yet! I can't believe that we were there only four months ago visiting my folks. This is considered to be one of the lavish and finest gardens in Shanghai. We visited it twice while we were in China. I wish I could go back for more, it's breathtaking.

It's called "The Garden of Peace and Comfort" and is truly that. It's in the Pudong district (where my parents live) and it's only a taxi ride away from their apartment. It's so lovely!
It zigs and zags up a rockery, down a rockery, through tunnels, around ponds, etc. It's so cool!


Outside the walls there's a busy city, but inside it is quiet and serene.
Another little bridge going over the ponds and streams.

I would have loved something like this as a kid, because there's secret tunnels, rooms, and coves all over the place. Endless places to play hide-n-seek!
General Guan Yu's statue on top of the garden. He played a significant role in the civil war that eventually brought down the Han Dynasty. He is still worshipped in China today, a symbol of loyalty and righteousness.


(Here's what he looks like up close--yikes)

The garden is said to have been established in 1559 as a private garden by Pan Yunduan. He spent nearly 20 years building it to please his father.

This is one hallway from the inside, looking out.

A similar hallway, from the outside looking in.

Ryan outside of the hallway.

This is where you can pay to dress up in the traditional clothing and take pictures and cause quite a scene!
Lots of lucky gold fish. Some were gigantic. The biggest goldfish I've seen. They enjoyed the Chinese crackers I fed them.

I learned that if you go find the bathroom by yourself, it will take you about 40 minutes of aimless wandering around through the rock hallways, quarries, pagodas, courtyards and trees looking for the rest of the gang. And then they didn't even realize that you were gone...


My dad through a rock hallway.

I love this picture! You can see the old Ancient Shanghai garden in the foreground and then modern, smoggy Shanghai in the background! (it's the Shanghai World Financial Center building, the one that looks like a can opener--just to the left of the pagoda. Can you see it faintly through the smog?)


I told Ryan (when I finally caught back up to them again) "Hey look! A rockery." It's made of huangshi stone.

A rather large stone with writing on it. It is huge, look to the right of the stone, that's a person's legs. Not sure what it says and why it's significant, but it looked cool!

In 1842, during the Opium Wars, the British army occupied the Town God Temple for five days. During the Taiping Rebellion the gardens were occupied by imperial troops, and damaged again by the Japanese in 1942. They were repaired by the Shanghai government from 1956-1961, opened to the public in 1961, and declared a national monument in 1982. (taken from wikipedia.org)

Here's an ancient end table inside a little building. Betcha can't buy that at RC Willey. I was told this is probably original road, very weathered, and so cool! It was uneven at times, if you didn't watch your step, you'd trip like I did.

A rock "window"

My dad again. Where in the world were Aimee and Mom?




Another little tunnel through a rockery, where it can only be reached by little boat or wading in the ponds. See how the water comes right up to the steps?

(I loved this peaceful place, this is me hugging the garden--I didn't want to leave!)

7 comments:

Tami said...

Breathtaking photos, Ang. I think you have only pictures of Dad because he was the one who went looking for you when we were ready to take family pictures and you weren't there. You were probably so grateful to have someone find you that you took pictues of him leading you all the way back! :P (sorry! for the record we really DID notice you were gone, just didn't know what to do about it since we knew whoever we sent after you would probably get swallowed up in the labyrinth too!) Loved your photo essay about Yuyuan. That truly is quite a place, a garden in a city that has more people than entire states in America. No wonder they preserve their gardens! Loved that you were there to see it in person...but was it 4 months ago already?!!

Love you!

Tami said...

P.S. Aren't you glad that your dad has all those years of scouting under his belt so he was skilled enough to find you?!! ,}

Just Only Me said...

I should have credited you for half the cool pictures, they're also yours!
Oh and tell Dad that he didn't find me, I found HIM! (okay okay, tell him thank you for finding me) We were both distracted through the mazes and then eventually caught up with you gals. The garden is huge, though. It doesn't seem like it would be that big, but you keep turning corners and you wouldn't retrace your steps at all. Amazing.
About his Scouting skills, yes it is a good thing he knows survival, but he'd probably get thrown out of the country if he used the 400-year-old trees as firewood!

Barb said...

I am so glad you posted these pictures, as this was the one site we missed due to our 20 hour unplanned stay in Nanjing. Now I feel like I have been there!

I thought the garden at the Forbidden City was beautiful but Yuyuan looks even more beautiful!

Melissa-Mc said...

Maybe I need to grow up, but I would really love to go there someeday and play a serious game of hide-n-seek!

Brooke said...

Wow, what a fun adventure for you and Ryan. My parents went to China and absolutely loved it. I bet you had such a wonderful time while you were there. You took some really neat pictures as well.

Ryan and Sariah said...

I am jealous...so beautiful. What a fun place in history to have visited. Take me next time instead of Ryan...ha j/k. Really though take me. Love ya sweetie!

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