Home | Hotels | Hotels Video | China Flights | China Train Tickets | Main cities | China map | Contact us | Reservation Status  

China Travel & Tourism News


Search China Travel News:

Adventurer to Tackle Amazon


30-Sep-2002 -
Ma Chunghsin has sailed on the seven seas, trekked five continents, and visited 150 countries. And the 60-year-old adventurer is still at it, planning an Amazon expedition before settling back to write a series of books about his travels, writes Zhao Feifei. "Real travelers need psychological and physical endurance," says globetrotter Ma Chunghsin, adding that "a good sense of direction and language skills can come in handy too." The agile, slightly built 60-year-old is something of an expert on the subject. Sporting a beret, threadbare jeans, and with his ever-present camera, Ma recounts 20 years of travel tales that seem almost beyond belief. In that time, he has conquered seven oceans and five continents, and more than 150 countries. He has studied Sanmao, a well-known Taiwanese authoress who once toured the Sahara Desert alone. He has explored the Nile, trekked in Pamir, and traveled from the Arctic to the Antarctic to celebrate the Millennium. As part of the National Expedition Team of China in 1996, he caused a sensation with a photograph of himself on the South Pole, standing naked at minus 40 degrees Centigrade. "I didn't take that picture to cause a sensation," says Ma defensively. "In that setting, I just couldn't help myself. The colors were remarkable. Glittering white, shining blue, raven black. In the light of the sun, the land looked like something out of a fairy tale. Drunk with the wonder of it, I wanted to sample the cleanliness and isolation of the last pristine ecosystem on Earth next to my skin." Ma's next challenge is the Amazon. But he is looking forward to marveling at the lush, tropical rain forests, and listening to the sounds of exotic creatures. Born in Lanzhou, Gansu Province, Ma became a mountaineer during his college days in Taiwan, when he conquered many of the island's peaks. He opened a backpacker hostel in Taiwan, which opened up the world of the globetrotting for those who shared his passion. Ma was 30 when he closed up his business, packed his bags, and hit the road. "The world surprises you every single minute when you're out on the road. Even your dreams are different from those you have at home," Ma says. There was never a dull moment. In Athens, he was offered free accommodation, but his host turned out to be a transvestite who kept scores of cats and had an obsession with women's lingerie. "It takes all kinds to make a world, after all," Ma laughs. Traveling offers not only close encounters with alternative lifestyles, but also allow one to chance upon enlightened souls. Eighteen years ago, Ma met a Swiss painter in Nepal. "It was as if I'd known him before," he says. "His name was Teo. But everybody called him 'Baba,' which means sage. We talked about Bach, discussed the paintings of Vincent van Gogh. We just hit it off." If meeting saints and cross-dressers are some of the unexpected pleasures of road life, unexpected dangers are one of the downsides. In 1983, Ma was caught in a cross-fire between India and Pakistan troops while on a trek through Pamir, and was jailed by the Indian army on spying charges. After a three-day confinement and a US dollar "payment," he was released. "I was lucky to be able to return in one piece," he says. Ma doesn't count on luck to be with him every time, and writes a new will before each dangerous journey. His family has already become accustomed to his high-risk journeys, and his travel has cost him two marriages. He is single now. "It may be that vagabonds are not entitled to love or marriage," he says. Prod him a little further, however, he confesses that there's plenty of romance on the road. But something is still missing. "I met some very nice girls," he explains, "but I'm only passing-through. So it can't work for us." But he's still nurturing the hope that he will find that soul mate who can travel with him and share his love of new places and experiences. "When you're standing on the beach in Athens, or by the Rizin Lake in Kashmir, taking in a gorgeous view, you really want someone you love to be there with you. And that's when I feel lonely. My only comfort is music," says Ma. As if a missionary, converting tourists to travelers, he says, "The problem with being a tourist is that you are invariably taken to all the commercial tourist destinations. You're deprived of nature's beauty that awaits those who take the unbeaten track. On a package tour, there's no time to delve into the local customs. It's a pity, gaining a shallow understanding from a fleeting glance." Ma recently began writing about his travels. He plans to publish 10 books, chronicling his experiences on the Silk Road, Shangri-la (which Ma places in Ladakh, in northern India), Tibet, the Himalayas, South America, the Amazon, the Nile, the Aegean Sea, the Golden Triangle and Antarctica. He is enthusiastic about the upcoming trip to Amazon, and is currently organizing a six-member team -- all between the ages of 25 and 40. On his latest trip to the city, he has just found one man and one woman who qualify. Ma is perhaps so strict because he knows what dangers lie ahead. This is his third trip to the Amazon. He rolls up his jeans to reveal a deep-cut scar, self-inflicted to save himself from the potentially lethal snake bite. "In the Amazon, creepers lash themselves to tree trunks and marshlands. Piranha (man-eating fish) infests every river. Everybody who enters the Amazon should carry a sharp knife. But the rain forest not only intimidates, it also exhilarates, not from day to day but from moment to moment. With a 50 percent survival rate, I'm raring to go, a little bit deeper than before."
30-Sep-2002 -

Main Cities in China Travel and China Hotels

Beijing Hotels China Guangzhou Hotels China Shanghai Hotels China Hongkong Hotels China Qingdao Hotels China Hangzhou Hotels China
Beijing Canton Shanghai Hong Kong Qingdao Hangzhou



Search China Hotels China Hotels:
Please Select a City:
Find Your Hotel With China Map
Check-in:
Show Calendar
Check-out:
Show Calendar
Currency Adults Child

Search China Flight Ticket China Flight:
One Way Round-Trip
Departure city:
Destination:
Departure date:
Return date:




China Hotels info

Beijing Hotels, Shanghai Hotels
Guangzhou Hotels, Shenzhen Hotels
Hangzhou Hotels, Yiwu Hotels

China Travel info

Embassies and Consulates
China Health
China Currency
China Visa

China Tourist info

China Itineraries
Traditional Holidays
What to see in China
Weather in China

China Business info

Fairs and exhibitions
Shanghai Expo.
Canton Fair, Yiwu Fair
Institutional offices
China investment guide
Doing business in China

China Vacation info

China Map
China Travel Tourism News
Harbin Ice Lantern Festival
Hotels Reservation

China Province:

Hubei, Inner Mongolia
Jiangxi, Shaanxi, Tibet

China Cities:
China Introduction
Beijing Travel Info
Changchun Travel Info
Changsha Travel Info
Chengde Travel Info
Chengdu Travel Info
Chongqing Travel Info
Dali Travel Info
Dunhuang Travel Info
Guilin Travel Info
Haikou Travel Info
Hangzhou Travel Info
Harbin Travel Info
Nanning Travel Info
Ningbo Travel Info
Qingdao Travel Info
Shanghai Travel Info
Shenyang Travel Info
Shenzhen Travel Info
Suzhou Travel Info
Taian Travel Info
Tianjin Travel Info
Weihai Travel Info
Wuyishan Travel Info
Xiamen Travel Info
Xian Travel Info
Yangzhou Travel Info
Zhuhai Travel Info


 
| Home | Hotels | Hotels Video | China Flights | Flights Schedule | Pickup Service | Travel Packages | Affiliate | Add your hotels | Interprete Italiano-Cinese | Contact | Site Map | Link | FAQ | About Us
Copyright © 2001-2025 China Hotels Reservation - All Rights Reserved
Europe Office: ChinaHotelsReservation- Via Gerolamo Forni 64 - 20161 Milano - Fax 0291390522
China Office: China Travel(Hualv) Business co.,Ltd. - Tel 0086-577-88555070 Fax 0086-577-88522570
Xishan Donglu Xicen Gongyu 7 Zhuang 802 - 325005 Wenzhou China