China's "Little People Kingdom" of "dwarves"

in #travel7 years ago (edited)

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Hey Laowinners!
Before I made videos, I had a ton of awesome adventures. A trip to the "Little People Kingdom" in Yunnan was one of them.

I ended up with nearly 2 months paid vacation from work for Chinese new year, and my trip began with a nice visit from my buddy Andy. He came down from Fujian to Huizhou for a small trip, and Vivi and I ended up following him to Kunming, which is in the southwest province of Yunnan; a place I had previously not been to before.

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The flight was quick, and upon landing, we were greeted with pleasant temperatures. Kunming is on a mile high plateau, and therefore enjoys the same temperature year round. Some call it "the land of eternal spring."

We had some awesome food, and noticed that all of the ingredients were fresh, and mostly wild vegetables that we had never tasted before.

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Later on, we found a bar that was built in a Mao era bomb shelter. It was well off of the beaten path of the main city of Kunming, and it was cool to explore the underground cavern that once served as a paranoid bunker to protect against Soviet/American bombings. We couldn't get pictures inside of the shelter as it was too dark.We had a few too many at the bar, and ended up playing a drinking game that Vivi had on her phone. The night ended up with us walking out of the bar covered in garbage, and we may or may not have vulgar pictures and uni-brows drawn on our faces.

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The next day brought headaches and mountains. The fresh air was potent, and we hired a car to take us out to the countryside. Our driver was fairly useless as he insisted that there was nothing to see in Kunming. We could clearly see gorgeous scenery surrounding the entire area. The rolling green of Guangdong gave way to stark cliffs and very low clouds. It was very pretty.

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We ventured further out into the countryside, and the driver informed us of something very strange coming up in our direction. He told us that there was a village of midgets, and we didn't quite understand how something like that could exist. Later, we found out that a government/tourism project was set up, and a village of more than 1000 little people had been built. The the little people run everything from the shops to the shows, and even have their own dormitory and life provided for them. They make about 1000 RMB per month, and it saves them from the certain discrimination they would face in their homes.

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Some Chinese people are not the most accepting of folk in terms of physical disabilities, and a statistic says that 70% of the little people working at the "Dwarf Kingdom" had previously tried to kill themselves. There is a tirade of politically correct people online who cry that it is degrading and terrible of them to set up an attraction where people can ogle and treat midgets as a novelty. However, what we saw puts any of that politically correct negativity to rest.

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To our dismay, the tourist attraction (complete with castle and rides) was closed that day. We were very disappointed. To our surprise, we saw a few small people doing some laundry. After they finished hanging it up, they told us it was their day off, and they were going to climb a mountain. Despite being tired of tourists taking their picture day in and day out, they invited us to climb the mountain. This gesture gave us the opportunity to have a one on one interview/experience with many of the little people who worked there.

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Most of the girls were dancers, and the boys did various jobs. Some ran shops, and some did acrobatics. They were very happy at their job, and they said that it was a huge improvement over the opportunity-less lives that they led before. Most of the little people came from different places in China, and it was very nice to see them come together as one community.

As we hustled up the mountain, we reveled in the looks that people gave us. Imagine a remote area of China. Seeing 2 foreigners climbing the local mountain was strange enough for the local people, but 2 foreigners among a huge group of
little people was something different entirely. We can only imagine the conversations that they had at the dinner table.

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Throughout our climb, we found that three of the guys and girls were actually dating each other. Initial appearances led us to treat the little people as children at first, but seeing them act like normal Chinese 20-ish year olds eventually allowed us to adjust. It wasn't long before we realized that their height challenged stature had nothing to do with their personalities. If anything, they were friendlier than the average Chinese person.

Their incredible athletic ability allowed them to pursue the next peak of the mountain. It was there that we decided to separate and head down the mountain to see some other things around the city.

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Our driver went fully insane and ended up not wanting to drive more than 20 miles out of the city, so we decided to get some food. We went to a tiny little local restaurant out of a woman's house and we ate very well. She cured her own meats, grew her own vegetables, and made her own alcohol, which she proceeded to allow us to taste. We figure most of it was medicinal, because we couldn't find one alcohol that was even remotely palatable. In fact, after sampling only a few, we ended up feeling as though we had consumed some bizarre drug. Some were made from various fruits grown out in the woman's yard, and some were made from roots that we couldn't even come close to identifying. I don't remember much from the meal, or the car ride after that, because of how bizarre we felt. I vaguely remember a terribly boring conversation that I had with the driver on the way up a different mountain, but that is about it.

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The mountain was our last attempt at getting our driver to heed our wishes. We got so
frustrated that we ended up forcing him to park and wait for us while we explored on foot. We ended up finding a really beautiful mountain covered in flowing grass, karst stones, and fading mountain scenery in the distance. We built a small fire, and we watched the sun go down. The fire ended up being a bad idea, as it was so unbelievably dry up there that we could have set the whole mountain ablaze with a single spark. We ended up staying so long at the peak, exploring, that we had about 5 missed calls from the driver who was anxious to get back. It was unfortunate, because we were hoping that he would just get frustrated and leave without us paying him. Too bad he was waiting at the bottom when we descended.

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Our Kunming adventure ended up in a night market full of delicious, bizarre snacks. We were surrounded by the minority population of Kunming selling their native dishes. Kunming is home to the majority of China's 56 minorities, and it wasn't hard to find them in the market. You could find everything under the sun here, and we were on a mission to find some insects. I have had insects cooked into things when I went to Thailand, and I had sampled some sort of huge pulsating cocoon thing while living in Inner Mongolia, but I had never had plain bugs. We found a stall selling grubs and grasshoppers, and we jumped on the opportunity.

The locals tried to take me for a ride, and rip me off, thinking I was some sort of foreign tourist going on a bizarre foods adventure (I guess I was, wasn't I?). In the end, I ended up pitting the different insect sales people against each other, and lied about how much each one was charging me. We ended up getting two big plates of bugs for next to nothing, and snacked on them over a couple beers. The flavor was nice. I can't really describe the grubs.

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They were kind of oily, creamy, and crispy at the same time. The flavor was kind of like nuts and milk. The grasshoppers were crispy and tasted like potato chips or roasted nuts. Overall, not a bad deal.

Our send off and departure ended with some dog meat. We ate at a normal bbq restaurant and ordered a ton of random food, and it turned out that some of the little bbq ribs we had sampled was dog meat. Whoops... No one was very happy about that.

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After Andy headed back to Fujian, Vivi and I made our way south to the untouched jungle region of Xishuangbanna, on the border with Laos. More to come...

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A kingdom of dwarves for the visitor's entertainment, only in China... :)

Off topic, why don't you make a weekly post with your youtube video embedded?

That is the plan starting this week!

I was going to say the same :)

Looks like a really interesting place. Would mind finding it myself if given the chance.

One tiny critique. If possible, any chance you can make the pictures closer to the width of the text? Might make it easier for us to see.

Yeah, thanks for the tip!

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Interesting, I remember you mentioning a little bit about this before.

Yeah, a little blast from the past :)

That's great that they have each other. And a place where they can be loved and accepted for who they are. Do you have a video of this adventure on YouTube?

Unfortunately this was before I started YouTube. Oh 20-20 hindsight :(

What an interesting vacation and adventure I saw that village of tiny people in a documentary on television and I was amazed. They seem well adjusted.