Transport getting there: if you want to go all the way there from Kunming you will need to catch a bus from the new northern station to Fazhe 法者, which on some maps has now been renamed as Hongtudi Zhen Red Soil Township. But you will need to get off before at a cross road locallly known as 109 (it is where the road branches with the right turn going down to Dongchuan). It is only a cluster of a few houses on top of a hill.
Actually it is best to stay on the bus for another two hundred meters and get off right where the km marker says 110, it is where the best guesthouse is in the area. It is run by a local guy who made it by being a most amiable host to all photographers. I was there first when he had only three rooms in his farmhouse which went for Y5 each and local travel was by horse cart driven by his brother. His guesthouse went through a few iterations and last time he had standard rooms for up to Y120 in addition to a number of smaller rooms. His wife will cook, there are no restaurants. Last time I was there the owner also had a minibus which he used to drive people around. Bus drivers generally know the guest house and will stop there to drop you off.
The official time-table of the northern station says there are six busses per day to Fazhe, I do not believe that as only two years ago there was really only one, leaving early in the morning around 7:30 and arriving just after mid-day. The alternative is to take just a bus to Magai 寻甸马街 (there are lots of Magais around, the one in Xundian county is the one you want), which is the next larger town, but on official maps it always appears as something else. In Magai you can easily find a minibus to take you up to 109. Price maybe Y200.
Around 109 there are quite a number of scenic spots, some are within walking distance, others not. Some think that sunrise is best from Damakan (about 15km along the road to Fazhe, you will need transport for this), while others stay more locally. Afternoon is perhaps nicest from a viewpoint down and off the road to Dongchuan, I forgot the name of that place, again, transport is needed. A closer area is '114', reachable via the road (and a shortcut along the fields).
Particularly nice about the area is that you are really in the middle of pretty countryside, no town, just fields and a few farm houses combined with good views over the Wumeng mountains. I have never been there in April, autumn being the prime photo time there, so I would not think that the place will be overrun by tourist, but numbers have steadily increased.
To return to KM you can either go the same way back, waiting for the KM bound bus from Fazhe, or go to the 109 crossroad and wait for the bus from Magai to Dongchuan along a quite spectacular road through desert mountains. Check with the locals on what time the bus passes, I think it is only one per day. From Dongchuan to KM is easy.
Nobel laureate Mo Yan's Yunnan connection
发布者Apology accepted, sometimes in the heat of the moment we do things that we know are not right and regret later.
However, there is a different aspect to this story, which prompted my original comment. Certain countries try to erase unwelcome people from their collective memory. For writers this means: their books never published, their plays not performed, their names not mentioned. In the case of Gao Xingjian the official Chinese response was to deny that he is Chinese and he has become one of those unmentionables: so for the Chinese media, Mo Yan is the first Chinese to receive the Nobel prize for Literature.
I can accept that GoKM tries to avoid anything that is even remotely controversial (even though that is a marked change from the previous owners and GoKM appears to be more Catholic than the pope by even not mentioning Kunming events that are widely reported in the Chinese media, the most recent involving a Fujian official and a Kunming newspaper). But I do draw the line where this policy turns not just into statements that are not true, but that collude in the practice of erasing dissidents from collective memory.
There has been another Chinese writer receiving a major literary award with two more than tenuous connections to Yunnan. Searching for 'Friedenspreis 2012' will give you a few more details.
@Liumingke1234
thank you for accepting the apology on my behalf. I did not know I had an impostor on GoKM.
Nobel laureate Mo Yan's Yunnan connection
发布者Correction: your original page said he is the 'Mo is the first Chinese person to win the Nobel Prize for literature'.
Double checked with the Google cache:
See webcache.googleusercontent.com/[...]
Shame on you, Patrick, for changing the article and pretending you did not.
Nobel laureate Mo Yan's Yunnan connection
发布者... 'as it clearly states in the article's final paragraph'...that you changed after I posted my comment.
The previous version said 'Mo is the first Chinese to win...', no mention of the cop-out 'citizen' in your initial version.
A mistake is one thing, a stupid mistake is another thing, not having the integrity to own up to it is three steps down from that. Shame on you.
Gao Xingjian was born in China, wrote in Chinese, got his book published in Taiwan, wrote about his life in China and everybody understood the award as criticism of contemporary China/Chinese literature.
The guy is French, obviously.
Nobel laureate Mo Yan's Yunnan connection
发布者Gao Xingjian was the first Chinese person to be awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature. China was not pleased about it and tried to ignore it happened.
Is this already too controversial for the new GoKM?
Golden Week: Planes, trains and especially automobiles
发布者Thanks for providing another sanitized view of Yunnan that bears little resemblance to what people say about their 'holidays'. It is also good to 'know' that Yunnan has one of the best road safety records in the world, with (if one would extrapolate) just 150 people dying in traffic accidents over a year in a population of over 40 million.
Most articles by you seem to be just sloppy copy and paste jobs from the internet - essentially collations of unchecked numbers. Sometimes I wonder if you actually live here.