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Still More Yunnan Photographs Options · View
LaughingJack
Posted: Wednesday, September 10, 2008 11:29:10 PM
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This is the last of my photographs of my trip to Yunnan. if you'd like higher quality copies of these photographs, cont tact us and I'll send them to you.

Feel free to use the photographs as you wish, but please credit TheOnlinePrinter.com.au as the owner.

 

It seems wherever one is in China, one sees electrical cable. The notable thing here is that the distant hill is not obscured by smog.

 

 

 

Bringing home the veggies.

 

 More photographs of my Yunnan holiday can be viewed at:

http://forum.theonlineprinter.com.au/site_postst118_Traveling-in-China--More-Yunnan-Photographs.aspx

http://forum.theonlineprinter.com.au/site_postst111_Travelling-In-China--Hubei-and-Yunnan.aspx

LaughingJack
Posted: Wednesday, September 10, 2008 11:34:12 PM
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 Carrying away the rubbish to sell. It will be re-cycled.

 

 

Combing her hair in the street. At least she wasn't carrying out other personal measures.

 

 

I think it is an "expresso". If you say it fast they foreigners won't know the difference.


The roof is used as an ash tray.

 

Fried "azaleas" - yum!

LaughingJack
Posted: Wednesday, September 10, 2008 11:39:54 PM
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 Sucking on a durry.

 

Fried Yak! It was VERY nice, indeed.

 


Deep fried dragon-flies. Not so yummy.


Washing dishes in the street.

 

Roof tiles from the inside.

 

 

Keeping the streets friendly for the olympics.

 

It ain't heavy - it's for my brother.

 

LaughingJack
Posted: Wednesday, September 10, 2008 11:45:26 PM
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 The inside of the bus. Everyone has a bed.

The outlook.


Between Dali and LiJiang.

Rice paddy.

 

Blueskies!

 

Roadside stop.

 

This woman's job is to collect money from all people who use the toilet - behind.

 

Everyone uses the one tap to wash their hands. Well, there was only one tap to use, and not all people used it.

 

LaughingJack
Posted: Thursday, September 11, 2008 12:05:28 AM
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 The bus. Does wonders for one's belief in God: all passengers pray, which is kind of the same thing.

 


Check the sign. I don't think the foreigners will notice.

 

Our tri-shaw driver in Ruili.

 

Riding in the tri-shaw towards Burma (now called Myanmar). We saw lots of illegal Burmese migrants.

 

 


This is the route to Burma. The building behind is in Burma. This is the top of The Burma Road. This was the road that kept Chiang Kai Shek in the '39 to '45 fracas. If he had not been supplied by the West, China would most probably have had to withraw from the war.


I don't know if these are 'she-males' or 'gender-reassignees'. Either they're about to go on the slab to loose their 'forget-me-knots', or they've been on the slab already. There are many of them here, close to the Burmese boarder.

 

Burmese Customs.


Illegal Burmese workers (without work) watching the olympics on an outdoor screen. They come over for the day, and then don't go home for some years. If China is the type of place they escape to, one wonders how bad Burma must be.

 

This Burmese woman exchanged with me the currency in the envelope. I gave her RMB5 (about $0.75) and she gave me 100 units of Burmese money in return. She thanked me profusely, saying what a wonderful man I was. I figured she must have got a favourable exchange rate. She did. One can normally get 1,400Burmese units for RMB1. I gave her an exchange rate that was over seventy times better than normal. She'll keep her family for months on that!

LaughingJack
Posted: Thursday, September 11, 2008 12:29:30 AM
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 Commerce struggles in Burma. This was taken through the fence.

 

To live this well, I reckon he must smuggle stuff across the boarder.

 

A glimpse into Burma.

 

Looking in the opposite direction into China, from the exact same position as the above photograph.

 

No longer functional. I thought they should paint it lots of different colours and call it a sculpture.

 

I think it should read, "Local Tradition Customs Tour". It included the de-knackered (or pre-de-knackered) she-males.

 

The pace of life at Ruili was beautiful.

 

Peak hour!

 

These people have the time to take their time.

 

At least he's not doing it on the footpath.

 

Move the one on the bottom right to the middle left and then you can ..... 


A mushroom.

 

A begger - from Burma

 

His brother. I gave them both RMB5 (about $0.75) each. They were over the moon.

 

This is in the main shopping precinct.

 

EVERYONE has an opinion.

 

The (extremely proud) father escaped from Burma and is now living 'the good life' in China.

 

 

The father's drink shop.

 

They'll wake her if they want anything.

 

Carting away the rubbish - to sell.

 

Selling brooms. He's Burmese and they waer undies under their waiste-cloth. [I asked.]

 

 

They couldn't imagine doing this home in Burma.

 

Or this, either. Will you just look at me now!

 

Off to Friday prayers.

 

A Burmese restaurant. [Is it any wonder they're doing so well?]

 

Burmese women (with 'make-up').

 

Life in the fast lane.

 

Also off to Friday prayers.

 

 

LaughingJack
Posted: Thursday, September 11, 2008 12:50:48 AM
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Preparing for a future that is better than her home-country's present.

 

Someone's hopes and dreams.

 

A carter waiting for something to cart.

 

A lot of people spend a lot of time sitting around waiting for work.

 

She's seen it all before.

 

Buying fruit.

 

Selling cured meats.

 


Smoked pig's stomach.

 

Chinese pig tails.


Chilli duck. I know it's duck because I can see the head.

 

 

I thought they were telling me that the food was so very delicious that my 'tongue would hang out'. What they were really telling me was that this was 'the tongue hang-out' - the best place to buy tongue. And it was, too. Just look at the stuff.

 


Someone will want something carted somewhere, soon... ... or, eventually.


Sorting through the rubbish for something to sell to someone.

 

A family 'factory' on the footpath.

 

The end of Friday prayers.

 

The mosque. The roof makes for good ventilation.

I have no idea why, but I'm attracted to mosques wherever I see them in China. I do not go inside because I don't want to be disrespectful.

 


Buying nuts.

 

 

LaughingJack
Posted: Thursday, September 11, 2008 1:14:24 AM
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 If only Hangzhou streets were like this.

 

I think it means, 'this way to board the buses'.

 

The Burma Road. I little different from The Early Forties.

 

A police check point just outside Ruili.


The officer is pointing and saying "No Photographs". I pretended to delete my photographs. I asked if this was part of the friendly olympics, but it didn't seem to translate into Chinese.


The bus was searched five times within 150 km's. This is done in an effort to stop drugs being smuggled from Burma to China.

 

I sat next to the bus driver, because I could see more there than I would from my bed. This is his 'inteligent' monitor. Check the brand name.

 

This is a Yunnan 'roadhouse'.

The bus is filling the drum on the roof with water. The water constantly drips onto the breaks, cooling them. The breaks need cooling because of constant breaking on the windy, hilly, steep, roads. 


The roadhouse restaurant.

 

Lunch.

 

Happy eaters.

 

Having a toke. Given the windy roads, it was the sensible thing to do - even for the driver.

 

Another Gestapo check. I kept asking the police their names. They said they couldn't tell me that. I asked if they'd forgotten their names.


Wating whilst the bus is searched - again.

 

Hosing the breaks, to cool them, and filing the break-water tanks for the next stretch of road. Occaisionally a vehicle falls off the edge.

 

 

They use lots and lots and lots and lots of water.

 

Someone else with a 'shit-of-a-job'. Although, it does pay hadsomely and people don't tend to argue about the price. They just jig up and down for a short time whilst they weigh up their position, and then pay.

 

 

Yep! It's all there.

 


This was a beautiful gorge that would be heritage listed elsewhere, so they put an expressway through it. I saw it all at sixty miles per hour.

 

 

The bus driver checks in with the movement police.

 

A pagoda.

 

 

 

LaughingJack
Posted: Thursday, September 11, 2008 1:26:27 AM
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 When you log onto the internet in Kunming, this message came up.


 

I think it was to tell you that the internet police were watching you.

 

Selling nuts and grapes on the streets of Kunming.

 

Forget the smell, feel the smoothness!

 

People seem to fondle four to five pieces of fruit before buying one. This helps to soften unrippened fruit so that it feels like ripened fruit.

 

I didn't buy an ice-cream from her freezer.

 

 

This woman had to move her stall each time a truck or car drove by.

 

 

 

 

Learning to take their time.

 

Being a role-model for the youngsters.

 

Market.

 

Rose petals.

 

The flowers are on one side of his bike, so he must ride it with a lean. He seemed happy enough.

 

They really do wake the stall owner if they want anything.


 

I'm glad I didn't fly with them. I like my flying to be CERTAIN.

 

 

 

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