Flooding the 3 gorges....
#6
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Fred, <BR>I don't think it would be particularly unsettling. For one thing, you'll probably never notice any difference while you're on the boat. The river banks won't be teeming with DP's wandering aimlessly. For another thing, when I took the cruise in 1997 (we were the last ship through the main channel before they closed it), you could see the new accommodations being built higher up the mountainside, and they were at least as liveable as what was going to be flooded. In fact, our guide in one of the cities along the way said that, in general, the young people were looking forward to the relocation - it would be the first time that they would have indoor plumbing, running water, and electricity. It's the old timers that don't want to give up their homes. <BR>The concern about waiting until 2003 to take the trip is that, according to a previous poster, the water level will rise significantly during that year. Yes, the trip will still be worth taking, and may still be beautiful, but if you want to see the gorges as they are now, then 2003 might be too late.
#8
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If I recall the explanation that was given to us when we visited earlier this year, the river drops to too low a level to be navigable in the dry season. This starts around December. <BR> <BR>In December of 2002 they will build an earthen dam (called a cofferdam) just upstream from the dam, stopping the river. They will then complete the final section of the dam, finishing it before the water flows over the cofferdam. <BR> <BR>The spring rains and melt will then start to fill the area behind the dam. No ships will go past the dam until the water rises to the level of the locks. I am not sure how long that will take, but it will probably be all of 2003. Enough water will be allowed downstream to keep the river navigable below the dam. <BR> <BR>During that period there will be buses and trucks carrying goods and passengers between a port below the dam and a temporary port above the dam. It will be like two rivers with a hill in between them. Tours should continue, but you will have to change ships at the dam. <BR> <BR>Fritz <BR>(pictures at http://www.peacham.com/china/yangtze.htm )
#11
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Sue: If you can go before December 2002 as one of the people explained, they have markers of where the flooding will begin. I went in September and found it will make a great difference. One of the 500 year old temples I got to see and the quaint village will be gone, under the first marker. Nothing will be the same. Also, if you thing the awful concrete apartments the people will be moved to can compare with the beautiful stone homes they have lived in for generations with their beautiful gardens, you are sadly mistaken. I advise you to go as soon as you can. I am going to try to get there again before the flooding. Sharon