Saturday, 27 October 2007
Texture (9)
Saturday, 29 September 2007
Texture (8)
Thursday, 13 September 2007
Panda-monium
Some Chinese propaganda that I endorse
Chinglish (More Silly Signs)
Lucky we were warned about this one. Lijiang, China (it was actually a cobbled road, so perhaps they had the 'antonym' function on when they sent this through Babelfish)
The term 'Chinglish' would be familiar to anyone who's visited China, much as 'Japlish' is to travellers to Japan. As these highlights show, this is a travellers delight - thank you Shanghai underground, for these gems:
This one reads more like a haiku...
Very sound advice
Hmm... Guesses anyone?
Yes, immediately!!!
Saturday, 8 September 2007
Nasty Wine
Friday, 31 August 2007
Texture (7)
Sunday, 26 August 2007
A girly entry... (guest Blogger, Ros!)
Friday, 24 August 2007
Climbing a Mountain (2)
We had to stop every 10 meters for air - that's a lot of stops - but we made it. Few!
This is Litang, with the hill that we climbed behind
The view from half way up, overlooking the Monastary that dominates the town
Hanging out with a local Yak farmer on the peak. We were pleased to see that he was out of breath whe he arrived also
Climbing a Mountian
View from a small hill behind the old town
Now let me show you the view from the top.The small hill where the other photo above was taken is in the far left. Note the Prayer mound and flags to the right
Now the best bit - we 'flashpacked' it! We were mostly Aussies, pining wine, cheese, and great picnics, so we improvised. A few bottles of local wine (quite good actually), some 'to die for' yak cheese, and all the other accouterments you'd expect of a tip top picnic. If I was Leighton I'd say "Yeah, we do alright"Jane and Stuart in the background (those who suggested the trip). You can't see the wine as it was being drunk!
Dancing in Zhongdian
Tuesday, 14 August 2007
Texture (6)
Sunday, 12 August 2007
Welcome to China
Main train station
A not to uncommon sight: well dressed women with umbrellas as parasols
After 3 days in the city, I've left with the impression that many residents enjoy a quality of living similar to smaller Australian cities with the major exception of housing. Yes, housing is very important, but my comment on this is that there were apartments everywhere (it doesn't look like even the rich have free-standing houses), and you had to get quite a bit out of town to get to fairly decrepit looking estates. There were cars everywhere (including Lexus, Audi, VW etc), great clothing (in moderation), and fantastic food. The big difference was the relative pricing e.g. bus ticket 10c, basic lunch 40c, hostel bed $6.Great parks to. This one even had a jumping castle (although there were kids on it, so I didn't get my chance. Bloody kids)
Just because it's a modern city, doesn't mean there wasn't any references to the past.