ABOUT WORLD BLOG

NBC News World Blog aims to provide a dynamic look at world events and trends -- both big and small -- from NBC News correspondents, producers, and bureaus around the world. Online entries -- from text to video -- will explore news events and how they are shaping our world.

Regular contributors include NBC News correspondents, producers and staff based in bureaus across the world and on assignment.

Click here to read more about the journalists behind NBC News World Blog.



Brr! It’s a wrap at China’s winter wonderland

Posted: Tuesday, January 13, 2009 9:39 AM
Filed Under:

HARBIN, Heilongjiang Province, China – The first thing most passengers do in China when they get off a plane is head for the bathroom or light up a cigarette.

In Harbin, they make for a row of booths labeled "Clothes Changing" and throw on long underwear.

Seven layers later, I was still shivering.

Image: Ice cathedral
Adrienne Mong/NBC News
A cathedral reproduced entirely in ice.

"It says here that Harbin is below freezing more than six months of the year," said David Lom, our cameraman, as he scrolled through his Blackberry. "That's ridiculous."

David has made it his life’s ambition to work only in warm climates.

I was beginning to think that wasn't such a bad goal.

We came to Harbin to film the annual Snow and Ice Festival. And I was looking forward to spending an extra day afterwards to explore this city of three million and its other major sights: the Siberian Tiger Reserve (home to the extremely rare Manchurian tiger); the Germ Warfare Base (where the Japanese conducted controversial experiments on war prisoners from 1939-45); and St. Sophia Cathedral, one of the few Eastern Orthodox churches in East Asia. 

But as soon as we set foot outdoors, I was having second thoughts.  The taxi driver told us it was 18 below Celsius, which sounded and felt much colder than its Fahrenheit equivalent: -4F.

The snow and ice festival  
The festival – apparently one of only four of its kind across the globe – is spread over several park sites on the edge of the Songhua River, spanning what would take up 75-odd football fields. 

We, however, were concentrating on just a couple of fields, both on Sun Island, which features what must be the world’s largest snow Santa Claus and dozens of other snow sculptures, plus an ice park, where more than 30 structures were gleaming – but not melting – under the bright morning sun.

Image: Ice Festival
VIDEO: Vistors flock to China's Snow and Ice festival
The sculptures were made from artificial snow, trucked in at regular intervals, and looked from a distance like they were made from Styrofoam.  Up close, they were remarkable – especially the giant Santa, which measures 525 feet long and 79 feet tall. Families were sliding down from his beard on rubber tires.

"I do love the smoothness of the snow, it does make you want to touch it and feel it," enthused Lorelie Fox, a visitor from Leeds, England.  "And of course it’s so very dense whereas the real snow is very powdery."

SLIDESHOW: An icy city of lights

32 million gallons of frozen water
But the most extraordinary sight had to be the ice sculptures – although "sculpture" doesn’t quite do them justice. 

Before us, the spiky towers and spires of dozens of buildings rose up against the real skyline of Harbin. There were Chinese temples, several cathedrals and churches, a mosque, and – wonder of wonders – a pretty good 115-feet replica of the Neuschwanstein Castle ("Mad" King Ludwig’s castle) in Germany.

Artists and almost 8,000 workers used 32 million gallons of water to make ice blocks to construct the sculptures. Chipping and hacking away 24 hours a day, the workers took nearly 14 days to make everything – right down to the last detail: steps, banister posts, rooftop figurines.

Image: ice sculpture
VIDEO: Americans in China marvel at the Snow and Ice festival
 
We watched as kids sped down giant slides of ice from atop a hill. Dozens of people rode bicycles across a frozen pond as an ice sculpture of Milan’s Cathedral loomed above them. Horse carriages drove by, their bells tinkling. Vendors sold fake fur hats, gloves, and whole roasted sweet potatoes. 

And as the sun set, the ice city took on an entirely different kind of glow. LED lights encased inside the ice blocks began to flicker in rainbow hues. 

We filmed for another hour until the sky was blue-black and the crowds around us grew. By that time, we had been outside for six hours; my fingers and toes were thoroughly frozen. 

And I had decided the tiger reserve, the germ warfare lab and the old Russian quarter would have to wait until summer or, at the very least, spring.

MAIN PAGE

Email this EMAIL THIS

Comments

Gee, must be that global warming!
I've been trying for two years to find a travel agency that can get me there.  Anyone out there have that info?
Weather wimps!  Spent two years in Edmonton, Alberta, where my kids would regularly wait out at the bus stop for the school bus in temperatures of minus 40C (which equals minus 40F).
I want to go!  This is fantastic!
Air China flies into Harbin, also China Southern, for the fellow in Florida, you can call Continental or Delta to request connecting flights via Beijing or Seoul
It never ceases to amaze me how beautiful our planet is, and the simultaneous commonality and diversity of our responses to it.  Stories like this remind me how much more we all have in common.  Wouldn't it be great if we could find ways to use things like this to trivializes our differences.  
So cold, So beautiful, So, going to checked it out.
Aww, c'mon.  It was -17F in the Twin Cities this morning.  :D

As for daniel in AZ who cluelessly took a dig at global warming, as a matter of fact, it is: the record melting of Arctic sea ice in the summers of 2007 and 2008 has contributed to a shift in the jet stream / airflow at the pole, resulting in colder and snowier winters in China and North America.  This was supported by several modeling studies presented at the AGU this year.
I loved the pictures, but a full six months of the cold...maybe not; but then again I just spent 2 yrs in MN and am now into my secound winter in SD; so how bad can it be???  
Wahhhhh... I had -36 F in my car on the way to work this morning. Supposed to be a high of -4 today. Too bad the safety czars wouldn't let those ice castles happen here in the States. Very beautiful with the lighting.
I went there in winter 2001, and I agree it is amazing, but way cold.  We could only last two hours at a time and would warm back up at the hotel (it's a good idea to stay somewhere close to the Songhua).
Too bad you missed the tiger reserve (they throw live chickens at the tigers!) and the 731 germ warfare museum (the animated display of a vivisection is something you don't see every day).
To get to Harbin, I took a local tour from Beijing.
EVER GO TO ALASKA'S WINTER FESTIVAL? QUITE NICE EVEN THE IDITAROD. THAT'S RIGHT HERE-HOW ABOUT IT?
al gore. Still looking for al gore. Did he desert us?
Uh... b4r I book my flight, what is this "man made snow" and "dense ice" compose off?  And what's the environmental impact of this yearly show?
I know someone who made this trip about 6 or 7 years back. It was organized by one of these tour agents specializing in exotic tours like the ones that National Geographic photographers might use to photo artic polar bears. This particular tour was really small, only seven people drawn from all over the world. Getting there was real arduous too, requiring split second timing on rail routes running perhaps once a week or so. Probably easier now and google would make it easier to find a tour but at the time yiu had to be on somebody's list as an exotic traveller.
While there you have to check out the museum at Sun-Ilsand park.  One floor has a collection of statues that can only be described as the "display of wildly exageratted human anatomical (mostly mammory glands)features".  Pretty amusing.
I have visited the Harbin ice festival two times (2000 and 2002) and it is a world class, awe inspiring experience!  And yes, Harbin in winter gives new meaning to the word cold.  Wear your woollies!
Absolutely beautiful!  It's not really "bitter" anyway until the Ferenheit negative temps catch up to their Celcius equivalents.  Try telling central Alaskans that -4 F is cold right about now.
Here I am thinking how beautiful the sunset will be today while I sit on the beach and enjoy the nice caribbean weather.... layers of clothes????? I rather this anyday
As a Canadian, I fail to see what the big deal with the weather is. Also as a Canadian, I wish Canada would have an ice festival of this caliber.
So global warming is going to make it colder? Am I missing something?
whimps. thats all i gotta say. try livin in Alaska, where the temps plunge to alomst -60f below.  if you cant handle it dont go there and dont complain.
To me he most awesome thing besides the beauty is that it was made by the people. The long hours, the cold,and the fact that it will melt did not slow them down one bit. It is apparent that they did not short change the project on their artistic abilety either.I congradulate each and every one of them for creating such a tredmous work of art.

Beautiful pictures
"O Cananda"   how I wish you did have an ice festival on par with the Chinese!   Perhaps it would be easier to get there from Chicago....which by the way is also very cold right now!
Global warming!!!  What a joke.  Just gives Al Gore something to whine about and give the EPA Wackos a job!
The few folks here who think this article in any way refutes the fact of global warming have merely demonstrated how utterly rudimentary is their understanding of climate science.
I was in Harbin this last summer.  It has many interesting sights.  The Siberian Tiger Park had to be one of our favorites.  My 8 yr old got to feed a tiger and we got to hold a baby tiger.  Also, China's first movie theater is in Harbin - they have to have something to do when it's that cold.  When we were there the sun rose at 3:30am and by 4am people were out in the parks biking and roller blading.  All in all a very neat city!
looks like it would only be possible through slave labor or extortion
Don't get me wrong, the festivals really nice. However, you might not be able to enjoy it so much when you're near frozen. And I mean LITERALLY frozen.
Alaska, South Dakota, Minnesota or Missouri......I've been to all 4 states and trust me they're all the same in the winter....Cold!! The worst has to be Missouri where the weather is sooo unpredictable......Regardless I'd love to see ice sculptures in the U.S.....
If all the polticians and politico factions could group us artists together we could solve some of this hostility in beauty and ,maybe they would try harderfor all common man. Really not BS
If all the polticians and politico factions could group us artists together we could solve some of this hostility in beauty and ,maybe they would try harderfor all common man. Really not BS
Harbin's hardly exotic travel. Just book a cheap international flight to China and get online with ctrip or elong to book a cheap domestic flight within China. The Chinese love their long underwear!!! I wish the article had listed the other major festivals. I went to one in Breckinridge about 8 years ago that was impressive. Cold is relative, right now it's 65F and dry and I don't want to go outside because it feels freezing compared to the 80 and humid I'm used to! And I come from a ski town where 65 is considered a balmy summer day!
You can get there by Continental Airway to Beijing (or Air Canada). You can also book a trip from Beijing to Harbin from here through Cheapoair.com (it really is the cheapest as everywhere else in NA is more expensive at least a $100 or more ). If you try to buy your ticket in China then you will be robbed blind there.  
-4 F! It was 87 at my house today. My wife and I have decided that its too cold for us. We'll check out the images on the Internet and leave it at that.
I teach in China, and just went for a week long visit to the Ice and Snow Festival in Harbin, and it is nothing short of spectacular.  You are welcome to read my two-part Travelblog and photos on Harbin at: www.mytb.org/Hans  Entries #110 and #111.
My journey took me on a train-ride from Taizhou,Jiansu through Beijing and on the Harbin, some 1,500 miles.  It was bitter cold but worth it. I come from Florida, and though I will never regret the experience, one visit is enough. It was beyond cold.
you can take the D train from Beijing and it goes through Shenyang a city of 8 million in Liaoning Province, it also has a ice and snow festival but not as nice as Harbin. Then get back on the D train and head to Harbin it is a wonderful place to spend a few days.
 Message for Brent Fry which he posted Jan13,09 at11:08am.
 To travel to anywhere in China is very easy.
 Purchase a round trip ticket to wherever you want to go and send it to a Visa company which can, for a fee of course, have a Visa for you in a day or so and you can be on your way.
 I acquire my Visas from a company in Miami Fl.
 I have been to China three times since June 2006.
 It is a trip you will never forget.
I have been there - you need to get passage to Shanghai...once in Shanghai, book passage to Harbin...excellent place to hang out - this article doesn't even tell you about the guys that SWIM (yes, swim) year round. Every morning, they break the thin ice that has formed over their pool hole and go for a swim...I loved going there and watching that everyday!
My son Matthew & family live in S.China Guangzhou and just returned from a trip to Harbin. They said it was cold but very beautiful and the kids loved seeing and playing in snow something they miss @ Michigan.


SEND A COMMENT

PLEASE READ: All comments must be approved before appearing in the thread; time and space constraints prevent all comments from appearing. We will only approve comments that are directly related to the blog, use appropriate language and are not attacking the comments of others.

Message (please, no HTML tags. Web addresses will be hyperlinked):

TRACKBACKS

Trackbacks are links to weblogs that reference this post. Like comments, trackbacks do not appear until approved by us. The trackback URL for this post is: http://worldblog.msnbc.msn.com/trackback.aspx?PostID=1742108

Syndicate This Site

Add World Blog to your news reader:
live.com xml
myyahoo msn
bloglines newsgator
google

Interactive

Fight for Iraq
Learn more about the ethnic, religious and political power plays in and around Iraq during a briefing of the region led by NBC’s Richard Engel.