
Turpan¡¯s Grape Oasis 2008-6-23 10:08:56
An ancient Silk Road trading post, the Turpan oasis is surrounded by desert and mountains, ruined cities and Buddhist caves.
It's often said that when hanging clothes out during the summer in Turpan, it'll have dried before you're finished. Enjoying numerous consecutive days over 40~C, the dry heat of Turpan's summer days infuses the city with a languid torpor relegating daytime activities to consist mainly of drinking tea and sleeping.
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City life centers around the bazaar with its numerous food stalls and goods for sale, and the punic square, which deserted in the daytime, becomes a riot of colors, scents and sounds by night. Though the heat of day can make even the hardiest of travelers nearly comatose, many of Turpan's streets are covered with grape trellises providing welcome shade. Turpan has long been famous for its grapes and was once renowned throughout all of Asia for its wine. Now, most local families have a hand in the grape industry, either in the growing or selling them as they are or as raisins.
Because the Uyghurs are Muslims, there are many interesting mosques around Turpan. The most active is the City Mosque, located 3km out of town on the city's western outskirts. As it goes for visiting mosques anywhere, shorts are considered disrespectful and women should cover up. Also, it's a place of worship so loud or disruptive behavior is not appreciated.
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Saturdays, built around an open, shaded space. Only 2km southeast of the city, it's, on foot or by bike.
Another interesting option for exploring Turpan and the immediate surrounding countryside is to hire a donkev cart for a morning or evening tour. Leaving the city, dusty roads soon give way to traditional mud-brick homes, irrigation canals woven through poplar trees swaying in the desert breeze and hordes of smiling children playing in the streets.
TURPAN DESERT TOUR
Most of Turpan's most dramatic and impressive sights dot the desert surrounding the city. Over its 2,000-year history, the focus of commercial and cultural activity has shifted several times, often following the shifting courses of the melting snows of the Tian Shan. These sites are best taken in by hiring a minibus. They often wait outside the hotels and tourist cafes, offering their services. While the ride itself is cheap, usually around RMB 40 per person for the day, most of the sites have their own prices for admission.
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Dating back to the 7th century during the Tang dynasty, Gaochang, once the capital of a local ruler, hold remnants of the Uyghur's pre-Islamic past. A large Buddhist monastery stands above the southwestern corner of the walled ciW. Most people walk or hire donkey carts to ride around the crumbling mud-brick structures where the whispering desert wind evokes a sense of endless time.
Located nearby are the Astana Graves where Gaochang ancestors are buried. The history of the graves are somewhat shrouded in mystery - archeologists have discovered many buried are Han Chinese and Uyghur.
Three of these tombs are open to tourists and are approached through narrow staircases descending to cool, damp burial chambers 6m below ground. Paintings on the walls of the deceased, many depicting birds, indicate the belief in an afterlife, on honoring of the dead and their hopes for the deceased's repose. One tomb contains two well-preserved corpses, and the third was relocated to Turpan's museum. Artifacts dating back to the Jin dynasty, from the 3rd to 5th centuries AD, were uncovered here including sashes containing important records and documents.
Leaving the graves, the ride takes in the Flaming Mountains, a great photo opportunity. Made famous by the ancient Chinese classic novel Journey to the West, the surfaces of these desiccated mountains

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