
Arnaud Bertrand
@RnaudBertrand • 407,330 subscribers
Entrepreneur. Previously HouseTrip (sold to TripAdvisor), now https://t.co/C4SmZQ8bl6 Subscribe if you like what I write
Shorts
Videos

People in the comments have been asking me for videos of a local supermarket during my current roadtrip in Xinjiang, so here you go 👇 It's actually proven to be a very humbling experience: the abundance and diversity of products vastly exceeds anything you'd find in most supermarkets in the West, even in my native France. And we're not even in a big city: I'm at a local supermarket in a small remote town named 特克斯, only 50k inhabitants, which is super tiny by Chinese standards.
Arnaud Bertrand30,004 просмотров • 4 часов назад

Something quite interesting happened to us earlier today in Xinjiang. We were in a place called Jade Lake (玉湖, Yu Hu) and noticed on Xiaohongshu (the most popular social network on China) that a place nearby had recently gone viral for being super charming and looking like a small hobbit village (see screenshot of the XHS post 👇). So we decided to go check it out. However, before the entrance of the village we saw the road was blocked by a local villager: no-one could go through except locals. We asked why and sure enough it was because of the XHS post: the villagers didn't want their village suddenly turning into a tourist attraction. Which can take very dramatic proportions very fast in China: before you know it, literally tens of thousands of people could come to this village every day. The local villagers would be completely overwhelmed, and it could actually prove very dangerous. Chinese tourist spots are sometimes criticized for being highly managed: well imagine what happens when they're highly unmanaged... People can literally die. In any case we really wanted to see this particular spot so we asked that an exception be made, my wife even argued her case on the phone with the village leader (see video) but no luck 🤷♂️ So looks like, for the foreseeable future, all we'll know of this hobbit village in remote rural Xinjiang is that one Xiaohongshu post.
Arnaud Bertrand36,438 просмотров • 6 часов назад

This is quite funny: just spotted cannabis growing in the wild in China. We're in Xinjiang in the Zhaosu valley, at the bottom of the TianShan mountains. It's actually not that unsurprising to see wild cannabis here since the plant originates from the region. And cannabis is traditionally an ingredient in TCM (under the name dà má - 大麻) although today it's of course banned, for the most part: interestingly the seeds - called huǒ má rén in TCM - are still allowed AFAIK (see the details of the ingredient here: ) Necessary addendum: don't ever think about doing drugs in China, the regulation is extremely strict here - in part due to the extremely bad experience they had with widespread opium addiction during the century of humiliation.
Arnaud Bertrand242,532 просмотров • 2 дней назад

It's day 13 of our Xinjiang RV roadtrip and we've just arrived in one of Xinjiang's weirdest towns, at least in terms of city-planning: it's called "Tekes Bagua City" (特克斯八卦镇, "te ke si ba gua zhen") and it was entirely planned according to the I Ching (Book of Changes), a 3,000 years old Chinese philosophy classic. Specifically, it's in the shape of a "Bagua" which I'd describe as "a philosophical shape based on the yin-yang theory". If you want a quick "explain me the yin-yang theory like I'm 10 years old," my eldest 10-year old daughter did a very decent job explaining it in the second video 👇 The Bagua figure is basically the consequences of the yin-yang theory, as a drawing. Each "gua" - there are 8 of them - represents a different combination of yin and yang. For instance the "Li (离/離)" gua is fire: two yang lines with a yin line in the middle ☲. The idea is that from the interplay of just two opposite forces, you can generate the entire complexity of the world. Tekes Bagua Town is basically that idea, as a town, with each area of the city a specific "gua." This city shape actually has some interesting concrete advantages: for instance Tekes is one of the only cities in China with zero traffic lights! The Bagua shape means the city works as a series of concentric ring roads connected by 8 radiating avenues, so traffic flows continuously in circles rather than stopping at intersections - essentially the whole town functions as one giant system of roundabouts. Ancient Chinese philosophy accidentally solved modern traffic engineering 😅
Arnaud Bertrand26,181 просмотров • 8 часов назад

This really shows how much coffee culture has picked up in China. I've been traveling in the country for 20 years and, up until a few years ago, finding coffee when traveling in the countryside was basically mission impossible. Now even when you go to the most remote places (I'm presently next to a remote mountain lake in Xinjiang next to the border with Kyrgyzstan) you see itinerant coffee sellers like this guy 👇 selling really high-quality espresso that even the snobbiest Italians would approve of! And he is not a one-off: you know see these itinerant coffee sellers in almost all tourist spots!
Arnaud Bertrand44,318 просмотров • 14 часов назад

This is day 13 of our Xinjiang RV roadtrip and we've now reached Xinjiang's famous Jade Lake (玉湖, Yu Hu), one of the most beautiful lakes in China. The lake is located deep in the Ahexiazhi Canyon, not far from the border with Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan. You can drive along it by car (or RV in our case) and even take a boat tour, which we'll do!
Arnaud Bertrand36,274 просмотров • 15 часов назад

That was a really cool experience! After about 5 hours of walking we noticed a very remote yurt, lost in the mountains, so we went to check it out. There we met two Kyrgyz boys (at first we assumed they were Khazak but we were wrong) - two brothers 14 and 12 years old - who lived there with their horses and cows. As they explain, they were a whole family living there during the summer: these 2 boys, their sister, and parents. The parents were out working when we went there. During the rest of the year, they live down in the city where they have an apartment and where the kids go to school. They kindly invited us in and we bought some of their homemade cheese and yogurt. We paid them through WeChat, which really goes to show how universal it is in China: even in the most remote places! We also spoke about life and... guess what... Mbappé, who truly is the only thing people worldwide seem to know about France these days 😅 Having traveled in some 64 countries so far, China is really one of the only countries out there where you can still find people - like them - living truly in accordance with their ancestral ways and their traditions. I've met hundreds of people like them over the years in China. Which is why the accusations against China on eradicating minority cultures are so shameful: they're literally best in class worldwide in letting people preserve their traditional ways of life.
Arnaud Bertrand69,803 просмотров • 1 день назад

This is day 12 of our Xinjiang RV roadtrip and we've just arrived in Xiata (夏塔), one of China's most beautiful natural parks. I think most people wouldn't believe such a place exists in China, yet here we are 🤷♂️ We'll spend the day here, hiking in the mountains. I'll add to this thread as we discover this place!
Arnaud Bertrand71,295 просмотров • 1 день назад

It's day 10 of our Xinjiang RV roadtrip and we're now driving through the legendary TianShan mountains ("TianShan" - 天山 - literally means mountains of heaven), one of the highest mountain ranges in the world with peaks as high as 7,439 meters (24,406 ft). As you can see, quite the scenic drive! Our destination tonight is Zhaosu, a place famous to have the most extraordinary horse breed in the world: the Akhal-Teke, known in Chinese as the "blood-sweating treasure horse" (han xue bao ma, 汗血宝马) because - apparently - they sweat blood when they run and, as a result, are pink in color. These horses are so precious in Chinese history that the emperor of the Han dynasty (emperor Wu) launched not one but two full-scale military campaigns into Central Asia just to get his hands on them. So expect a lot of horse-related posts tomorrow ☺️
Arnaud Bertrand154,458 просмотров • 3 дней назад

We found them! China's legendary "blood-sweating treasure horses" than emperor Han Wudi went to war - twice! - to acquire. They're extraordinarily rare and precious: we've been told a pureblood can cost over 10 million RMB. And even more expensive than that at the time of the Han dynasty since the emperor literally spent 10s of thousands of lives to get his hands on those horses. The belief is that they sweat blood when they run, and become pink as a result (hence their "blood sweating" name), but so far we haven't been able to see that since we've only seen them at rest here.
Arnaud Bertrand103,213 просмотров • 2 дней назад

Pro-tip: if you travel in China, don't buy honey in the supermarket, buy it from these guys 👇 All over China, next to flower fields, you have those itinerant honey sellers who travel with their bee colonies based on the season. You see them everywhere in China (see quoted post from our previous RV roadtrip in Dongbei) and the honey couldn't be more fresh and natural. This particular guy we met today had 3 types of honey on sale based on the 3 latest flower fields he set up shop next to: mint (first time I tasted mint honey and it's surprisingly good!), lavender, and perilla (the flowers next to which he currently is in the video). We bought the lavender because, as good as the mint was, lavender was still our favorite ☺️
Arnaud Bertrand67,359 просмотров • 2 дней назад

This is so funny. I followed Luke's recommendation in the comments yesterday 👇 and went to this Russian bakery here in Yining, Xinjiang. And I met the man himself: Alexander, a Chinese Russian! He looks 100% Russian but speaks Chinese like a local. And he is, in fact, a local: we chatted a bit and he explained his family history - they've been here in Xinjiang for 6 generations! This is something people commonly don't know about: China recognizes 55 official ethnic minorities living in the country and Russians is one of them - there are quite a few Russians exactly like Alexander who look Russians in all respects but are Chinese. We saw many of them during our previous RV roadtrip in Dongbei on the border with Russia, it's more unexpected to meet one here in the middle of Xinjiang 😅
Arnaud Bertrand122,986 просмотров • 4 дней назад

Eric Schmidt saying the quiet part out loud: "What I don't like about [China's AI] is that it's all open source which means it's largely uncontrolled and not controlled in any way by us." He adds, "if that makes you feel any better," that only 2 or 3 countries can be independent AI powers. In other words, it's all about hegemony: the ideal scenario is a world where AI is controlled by the US - and the fewer countries that can resist that, the better. Src for the video:
Arnaud Bertrand869,168 просмотров • 28 дней назад

I just arrived in Xinjiang for our family holiday and the one thing that immediately strikes me is that, so far, there seems to be virtually no foreign visitors (other than myself). We're in one of THE most touristic spot in the entire region, the central bazaar in Urumqi (which has great food, by the way, offering full refunds if the food doesn't taste good, see picture 👇), and it's fully packed but only with local Uyghurs and visiting Chinese tourists - not a single foreigner around! This is pretty crazy to me: there's so much being said about Xinjiang but obviously people don't bother coming here to check things with their own eyes. Despite there being absolutely zero restrictions to do so: as a French man I can even stay here 30 days visa-free, I just need to book a flight and show up, that's it 🤷♂️ I know I sound like a broken record on this but that's the biggest illness affecting commentary on China: people simply speak about it in the abstract without engaging with the reality of the place.
Arnaud Bertrand329,168 просмотров • 13 дней назад

This is genuinely incredible and says SO SO MUCH about the perception of China in the West. This is the #1 news show in France, and the host - David Pujadas - asks the pundits around the table (a sample of the top media figures in France) if they can name 3 living Chinese people. That's it: they just need to say the names of 3 living Chinese people, anyone. This should be extremely easy. Yet not of a single one of them can name a single Chinese beyond Xi Jinping. They do not know a single living Chinese person beyond the president. That's the level of ignorance of China we're dealing with in the West today, in 2026. This is the source for the video: Aired live yesterday 28th of May 2026.
Arnaud Bertrand1,135,053 просмотров • 1 месяц назад

This is day 11 of our Xinjiang RV roadtrip and we're watching probably the most beautiful horse scene I've seen in my life: look at all those horses running together in the water! We're in a place called the "Zhaosu Wetland Park" (昭苏湿地公园) in the Zhaosu valley at the bottom of the TianShan mountains, famous all over China for its legendary horses. 5 times a day, the horses come run in the local "Te Ke Si" river, which is a very popular sight here.
Arnaud Bertrand32,985 просмотров • 2 дней назад

This is a very interesting place, and I think fairly unique in China: a free trade zone that is jointly owned by China and Kazakhstan. I believe that both countries contributed a piece of land to create this place and you need to go through immigration/border control to enter here - which we did!
Arnaud Bertrand99,660 просмотров • 6 дней назад

If you want to see what a small Uyghur village looks like in Xinjiang today - a place that's absolutely not on tourist maps - here it is 👇 We stumbled upon this small Uyghur village called "yang bu la ke" (央不拉克村), next to Huiyuan ancient town, and decided to walk in. As you can see, we're the only tourists there and, by the stunned reaction of the kids we met (who were speaking Uyghur language between them), I was probably the first French person they ever met 😅 On one of the houses, we saw they were selling ice cream so we went in and got ourselves a delicious ice cream made solely with eggs and milk. It was also a good opportunity to see what a Uyghur house looks like from the inside: very charming and full of flowers! Needless to say, this is very much not the image you'll get from Western media on the way Uyghurs live in Xinjiang today - just basically normal lives - but yet again none of these journalists ever bother coming to places like here so 🤷♂️ And, by the way, there are zero restrictions, anyone can come here unannounced as we did.
Arnaud Bertrand75,395 просмотров • 5 дней назад