Weekend Biking - Sunday - Hills of Death... 殺の山
Tuesday, Jul 22, 2008 3:23AM / Standard Entry
/ Hong Kong
/ Members only
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OK, I'll admit something - the main reason I decided to still go
biking
up to Taipo late on Saturday Night was actually to get my
bike in position for Sunday's ambitious ride...
日曜日午後もう一度NTで自転車乗った。今回とても壮図だった、粉嶺(ファンリング)と深圳(シンゼン)の間の山の上の通りを登った。オンライン地図サイトで直りました。
I
read online about a
small concrete path along the ridge of the mountains that separate
Fanling from Man Kam To... It offers views of Fanling and
Shenzhen across the border....
Well I checked some
online mapping sites and found the path they mentioned, while
doing that I found out they now have topographical maps for HK on
google maps now too!
Just what I need!
Here's the path -

They said it was steep but the views
were worth it... 一寸乗り難いみたい!
ok, how hard
could it be? REALLY HARD, thats how hard...
実は本当乗り難かった!

the really hard part is labeled...
:-P http://www.gmap-pedometer.com/?r=2096303
So was it worth
it? Actually it was! Check
out some of my pics -
難けど、本当張り合かった!写真を見て下さい:
I rode from Taipo to Fanling and then
to Ping Che, busted out the map i printed from centamap's map and tried to triangulate the proper path... I followed some random side streets
full of scrap yards and truck repair shops til I found a random concrete path
going up a hill... no signage at ALL...
一寸見つけ難かった、看板全然なかった。

I quickly realized that this was the right way...
and that it was frickin STEEP!

There was this random abandon
guardhouse on the way up... it looked like 100 years
old. I'm not sure exactly why they needed a
guardhouse... but we are close to the 'Closed Border Zone'...
you can kind of see the angle of the road compared to the verticle
walls of the booth though to get an idea how steep it was here... and
this wasn't even the worst of it.
I made it about
50% of the way up and finally gave up and walked the bike up the rest
of the way... this would be a common theme this day... ride down, walk
up... :-P
After the first crest of the hill I
stopped to catch my breath and get a few photos:

Boy the scrap yards look much more
peaceful from up here... (looking to the SE towards Ping
Che)

There was some sort of surveyors
marker here... (looking SW towards Leun Wo Hui).
By the way, that
alivenotdead sticker was already there when i arrived, i
SWEAR...
Note the weird stick with red flags on it... hmm, I
wonder what that could possible be? [read on to find
out!]


By the way, all over the hills around
here, there were things built way up on the hill sides... can
you guess what they are? I guess everyone wants a room with a
view. :-P
Oh yes, i forgot the other half - the
North side of the hills -

At the base of the hill were some
small towns (with humorous names like 下山雞乙 and 上山雞乙)... but
in the not so far distance you can see across the border to
Shenzhen, which as I've mentioned a few times here - is quite
a big city, with a larger population than all of Hong Kong (and most of
it is concentrated along the border, whereas the border area is the
least populated part of Hong Kong (as you can
see!)

A zoom shows the skyscrapers of
Shenzhen... thats the Shun Hing Square's tower, which, at
1260 ft (384m) is ALMOST as tall as HK's 2 IFC (at 1362ft / 415m) -
making it the 9th tallest in the world right now -- (click
for a list of the tallest buildings in
SZ)
I soldiered on, this part
was tough because it was pretty much just uphill, then flat, then
uphill again...

On the 3rd or fourth peak, I stopped
to catch my breath and used an old plastic stool that was left there as
a camera stand for a self-portrait (w/ some of SZ in the background)...
you can't see that I'm dripping in sweat and pretty
exhausted.
About 2/3 of the way through the path
makes a sharp right turn and looks down at this big open valley with a
nicely manicured open, flat area surrounded by hills... what is this
place?


Upon closer inspection I quickly
guessed...
Its a frickin' firing range! and not just for pistols
or rifles... let's look at those markings on the
hill-side:

You can kind of see some bullseyes
marked in white on the hill side... i'm guessing that's for something
bigger than just a hand gun. :-O
Here's a panorama I
stitched together from several photos:

Its about 150-180 degrees of the
view. Zoom to get it in full glory.. ;-)
I
kept going... to a site i hope I don't have to see again:

The firing range from the wrong end...
Well you can be sure I made sure it was empty
before I got this far... but funny enough as I came up to this point I
saw the VERY FIRST bit of signage on this path:

Its obviously a bit out of repair,
but I could make enough out to tell what it said:
"DANGER: MINISTRY OF
DEFENCE RANGE. KEEP OUT WHILE RED FLAGS ARE
DISPLAYED"
ok... very
confusing... first of all there hasn't been a "ministry of defenCe" for
HK since 1997, right? and regardless, why hasn't anyone kept this sign in a readable condition? the sign may be abandoned, but obviously
the shooting range is still well maintained...
:-? no red flags here, but then
I remember way back at the first hill I passed that stick w/ the red
flags (remember?)
so
either I'm about to be shot... or they forgot to remove the red
flags... :-P
Actually at this point the
path got harder -

You can't really tell from the photo, but its super steep downwards... too steep to ride down safely. i had to inch down as slow as possible and keep the brakes clamped just enough to keep from flying down at deadly speed... but not so hard to lock the wheels and skid and fall on my head... (all that lovely potential energy wasted!)
I used my Casio's 'sunset' setting to get a good sunset photo of SZ before the last hill:

actually this is cheating, this camera setting puts a heavy orange tint on everything...the view wasn't quite this rosey, but I didn't feel like waiting another hour on the hill top to get the real-deal... (going down super steep slopes in daylight was bad, doing it in pitch black dark would be worse)
Some extra photos:

On my way to Ping Che i accidentally turned at the first traffic circle instead of the 2nd one, as I came around that wall on the right I was surprised to see a PLA soldier holding a machine gun standing guard at the gate (PLA = People's Liberation Army, aka Mainland Chinese army)... I realized immediately that this was a Military barracks that was turned over from the British to the Chinese army... oops!
On the wall on this side I found the old British name of the barracks:

It says 'Gallipoli Lines'... very British... I guess the PLA wanted to change the name (its now just called the San Wai Barracks)... but they left the old sign there for historic value.
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