Beneath and inside the clouds in Tai’an

Mount Tai (泰山) dwarfs the city of Tai’an (泰安) and is the central attraction. In the park we take the bus to somewhere midway — cheating, I know — but it’s already passed noon and several people told me the whole trip takes ~8 hours.

In the bus we’re with other couples, mostly university students (sitting together and arms and legs everywhere), and it makes us — or at least me — feel young again, surrounded by all this teenage love.

I carried sunglasses and suncream, but that was a bit optimistic. As soon as we leave the bus it starts drizzling. I hear a girl tell her friend it’s best to buy water now, 5 RMB for a bottle here, but 10 RMB on the top. (It’s true, prices go up the higher you go.)

I was worried this’d be one of those 做作 (playacting) attractions with dancers in Hanfu clothing and fake pagodas, but I was totally wrong. It feels like a pilgrimage, with loads of writings on the rock walls, and everyone is friendly; together aiming for the top.

The trip is easier than the climb in Jiangshan (江山) because Mount Tai is basically a wide stair to the top, albeit with six thousand steps. And people of all ages are making the climb, united by the mountain. A ~10-year-old girl taps her umbrella on one of the stairs and tells her mom to hurry up. 快点儿!

But halfway it starts pouring. We hide in a sort of cave and it’s cozy, people are chatting, and laughing. We talk a lot with a lady from Qingdao who says foreigners look young before they’re 30, but after that they age super fast.

The pour doesn’t ease but we’ve got to continue if we want to reach the summit, or actually any summit before nightfall.

Fog covers the view, and suddenly the mountain doesn’t feel big anymore. But our ponchos are wet on both sides, the wind is cold and our socks and bones are soaked.

We’re thoroughly cold when we reach the South Gate to Heaven (南天门) and in a fried chicken restaurant we and everyone else is catching their breath and warming their bones.

The view:

Another peak, the Jade Emperor Peak (玉皇顶), is a bit higher, but one guy says it’s 30 minutes away, another says it’s 1 to 2 hours walking. We’re 1460 meters high already and calling it quits, not to wreck the rest of the holiday with a cold.

On our way down we sit down with five others, including a lone traveler from Guizhou. He says this is the third time he has come to Taishan and it’s the third time it rains. One guy says: “When’s the next time you’re coming? I won’t be going then.”

Ironically we get the best view of the mountain when we’re lower again — beneath the clouds rather than inside them.

Latest

Rich People Park

Rich People Park

We’re in TaiKoo Li QianTan (前滩太古里), a brand new, high-end shopping mall near the Huangpu River in Pudong. It’s a beautiful complex with four levels, viewing bridges, walls of white steel and vertical gardens (the first I’ve seen that actually look like on an architectural drawing), and paths of bright bricks alternating with patches of […]
June 5, 2026
Torrential rain and colorful umbrellas

Torrential rain and colorful umbrellas

I was planning a bike ride, but then saw it was drizzling, so I carried Hasse outside — underneath an umbrella — to go get a coffee. Yet the rain was so heavy we just hid underneath the canopy in front of a supermarket to see some of the chaos unfold. I’ll miss these streets […]
May 25, 2026
Streetside in the AI Park

Streetside in the AI Park

Be skeptical of sweeping stories about China, regardless of how good or bad they portray things. The technological advancements mentioned in the news may be even more profound in reality, but not as widespread as shown. The GDP growth has lifted hundreds of millions out of poverty, but real wealth is mostly concentrated in coastal […]
May 16, 2026
Clothes Making Clouds

Clothes Making Clouds

There are so many ways to define Shanghai, yet a few popular icons do a lot of the talking. As the international metropolis and a symbol of China’s rising economic power, there’s the Lujiazui (陆家嘴) skyline — with the Oriental Pearl Tower (东方明珠) and high offices of Chinese and multinational corporations. There’s the Maglev train […]
May 5, 2026