Forums > Living in Kunming > Cycling in Kunming I agree with the above. Kunming and Yunnan are great for cycling. Without stretching this thread past what it should be, you should just search the forums for one of the other, identically named forum threads. And of course, report when you are here so we can go on a couple of rides together.
Forums > Living in Kunming > UEFA EURO 2012 buy a projector, hook it up to CCTV5, project across the road on your neighbour's facade. instant entertainment for the entire street.
Forums > Living in Kunming > "Lazy" English teachers? Oh the newspaper is by no means wrong or trying to hold an anti-foreigner campaign. It is simply addressing a very real issue. Many English teachers are highly qualified and do excellent jobs. But there are others.
I know of one particular non-native teacher whose English was so bad that she was neither able to express herself clearly to native speakers nor to understand what native speakers were trying to tell her.
Yet she accepted a job as a kindergarten English teacher. You may well think: any English is better than none at that level, but however mouldable the brains of young kids are, getting them to pronounce stuff wrong in the very beginning and teaching them meanings of words that are incorrect is definitely not helping and unworthy of a salary.
It is the school's fault for not checking and I find the attitude of this person is very immoral but I know of more than just one student or traveller accepting such jobs. The low salary does not stop these people.
Forums > Food & Drink > Vietnamese food afaik, that's the Daizu 傣族 place on Jianshe Lu 建设路. Other than that the Dai are probably the ancestors of the Thai, the food is nothing like it. I go there quite often and enjoy the place even for its spartan interior. iirc the place does not have a proper licence and is therefore so cheap but also so basic. Anyway I know of few Chinese restaurants where I like to linger around long after eating.
Forums > Living in Kunming > Lenovo Thinkpad support thanks for all the help.
for the record, the engineer at the thinkcentre can be reached on 0871-5157999
China's first provincial 'tourism police' approved for Yunnan
发布者Can I ask them whether I really have to pay for putting my bike on the bus? How do I call them?
Getting Away: Vietnam's Ha Long Bay
发布者Check out Quan Lan island too - four hours away by boat from Ha Long City (160 000 VND five years ago).
There's no electricity on the island - they run a generator from 6-8 pm and so most tourists stay away. There are a few small hotels and restaurants, though, and you have most of the island for yourself: beaches, mangroves and dunes. But the best of it all is that, for a fraction of the price of a junk cruise, you tour through the exact same rock formations of Ha Long Bay.
There's also a ferry to and from Cam Pha.
Pictures:
www.crazyguyonabike.com/[...]
Wanda opens 15 billion yuan Yunnan resort
发布者Finally, some much-needed tourism money for Yunnan!
Boy raised by Kunming hospital staff turns five
发布者What a perfect China story. Beautiful yet sad, involving money, law and probably stupidity, and with very contradictory characters. And in the middle of it, innocence.
Interview: Kunming Craft Beer Society founder Darryl Snow
发布者I beg to differ that Germany is home to lots of variety. Indeed the purity law was more or less accepted as a way to get Bavaria to join the German Union, favouring their beers (uniquely wheat and pilsner beer) over the much more varied, northern beers. As a result, the variety completely disappeared and the purity law really is a load of hogwash.
The implied purity is not guaranteed because you only use barley, hops, water and yeast - you can still get yeast infections in your beer.
So really it was a political decision which erased Germany's beer variety and gave neighbours like Belgium the competitive edge.
What Germany _does_ have, however, is some of the best Pilsner and wheat beers in the world. But those are hard to come by outside of Germany (think Jever and Rothaus).