So here's the story. I am going to Chinar this summer for "research." It's in quotes because I doubt my capabilities as a researcher. But it means that I get to buy a cool MP3 player, so that's pretty cool. But I digress. To get there, I need a visa and for once, it's a visa everyone has to get. Beat that, holders of blue and red passports. Yesterday morning, I set off on a trek for the Chinese Consulate General, who chose to place the Consulate far farther from the city centre than any other nation and placed itself right next to a football stadium. Well done, Chinar. So, I take the bus. Then the long walk. (Because I didn't know how far exactly it was from the Stadium and didn't think to take the bus there...) And then I see a sign that tells me that the Visa Office is closed for the next couple of days. Awesome. I have to trek back to civilization where I can then take a bus home. Because I don't know the stadium bus routes and didn't want to hop on. Plus, it was sort of a nice-ish day, because at least it wasn't raining. It was just windy, cold, and cloudy.
So I'm walking along a mostly deserted road (apparently, outside of the city centre, people drive cars. Bizarre, I know). And two roads diverged in the yellow woods. Except by "yellow woods" I mean the main street. There was either the broad, paved path that I was already on that led me back to town center. Or a tiny little path, the crooked and narrow, with a sign proclaiming it as the "Waters of Leith Walk." Intriguing. I had wanted to go there. I thought it was farther away. I wonder how long the walk is. And so I be one traveler, long I stood, and looked one down as far as I could, to where it bent in the undergrowth. Then took the other, as just as fair, and followed the tiny sign and sketchy path and walk behind a couple of backyards and come upon a tiny stream, which smelled pretty bad at parts. And then I realized that I am all alone in a secluded area that I don't know. And wonder if perhaps following this path wasn't the best idea. But, lacking any common sense or sense of urgency, I pressed on, though ever fearing that I would be the first person to discover some dead body along the water. (What else can explain the weird smells?)
These were my discoveries:
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Just about the meanest bike path ever, don't you think? Upward stairs?! No railing?! What kind of bicycles are these meant for?!
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Do not look too closely into the water's reflection. You might spot something rotting. Seriously. If I ever kill someone (purely hypothetical, people), this is where the body would go. There are houses all along the first half of the path, but I don't think they're on the look out for anything.
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What? Does every photo need a caption? These are flowers.
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Here, was the cool payoff for me. I'm sure if I stuck to the path long enough and saw the more impressive parts of the Waters of Leith, it'd be cool, too. But instead of following the path I crossed the bridge and came upon the gate of the National Gallery Museum of Modern Art. And the Dean Gallery. And that was too cool, a hike in the woods to get to a museum. Where else do you get to do that?
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View from the Museum of Modern Art.
So one road diverged from a big, wide path, and I, I took the one less traveled by, and that, has made all the difference.
2 comments:
i love the waters of lieth walkway! i found it the other way, coming from the museums. i was with my dad. turns out the whole walkway is eight freaking miles long.
oh, it's lucy. semi-obviously.
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