Featured image of post A Fantastic Journey to Altay

A Fantastic Journey to Altay

On August 30th, we set off for Altay and encountered an unusually early cold snap. Although we had to beat a hasty retreat three days later, those three days were far from just regrets.

Perhaps the filters used for Lake Brienz in the K-drama were unnecessary,

but Kanas in September,

is a movie in itself.

Check out our video footage:

A magical scene unfolded at the Diaoyutai (Fishing Pavilion). The weather wasn’t cooperating that morning; hail started falling the moment the shuttle bus dropped us off on the mountain. We bit the bullet and hiked up to the highest peak, and suddenly, the sky cleared up. We didn’t miss out on this beautiful piece of amber.

Kanas Lake below Diaoyutai

An equally magical moment happened at the Tuluke Rock Paintings, but it was really strange: why did this trail feel completely abandoned? We didn’t even notice the rock paintings, but this has got to be the absolute best viewing spot for Kanas Lake!

Kanas Lake by the Rock Painting boardwalk

Wood grain on the Rock Painting boardwalk

A strange right-angled tree on the Rock Painting boardwalk

The next day, we saw another side of Kanas Lake at the Three Bays.

Cows strolling slowly on a wild path

Wild mushrooms along the trail

Snow-capped mountains behind the Three Bays

A spectacular view of the Three Bays, seemingly after a landslide

The surface of the lake at the Three Bays

Whirlpools in the Three Bays

Before heading to Kanas, we also visited Baihaba in the far northwest of China, and found the scenery across the border to be surprisingly pristine and magnificent.

The China-Kazakhstan border at Baihaba

Our three border passes

We only slept in the tent for one night. We took advantage of the time before the cold snap hit to gaze at the long-lost starry sky, though unfortunately, our gear was too crappy to capture how breathtaking it was in person. Anyway, we fell asleep listening to the wind and rain that night, and woke up freezing the next morning.

Shaoda and I setting up the tent with headlamps

Then the cold snap actually hit, so we had no choice but to retreat to a 300-RMB-a-night guesthouse—but I have to admit, it was super comfortable! That evening, we still cooked dinner in the kitchen like a camping meal and watched a badminton final (though I forgot which tournament it was).

A rainbow captured in the morning from the guesthouse

The funniest part is that the three of us only did one thing across all the tourist spots in Kanas: we ate grilled sausages from every single vendor…

Of course, in Burqin, we also had the best banmian (pulled noodles) we’ve eaten in Xinjiang in years!!! (Daidai’s Lapizi Banmian and Zhuafan )

During this little gap trip (since we had been stuck at school all summer), one person was terrified of getting mauled by a bear, another was walking around blowing vape clouds from his “character enhancer,” and someone else kept making plans only to watch them get completely derailed by reality.

Our only group photo, taken by the carpool driver after we got back to school

📷 Photo Credits (Excluding Videos)

Oops, by the way, all the photos above (except the last one) were taken by Sidney Wong with his beloved Panasonic GX85.

Hit him up on Instagram: @aminoacid.w

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