Yang laoshi is still teaching at the zoo on Yuantong shan... I don't know how to get in touch with him, but I believe he teaches class sometime around 9am on weekday mornings
Yang laoshi is still teaching at the zoo on Yuantong shan... I don't know how to get in touch with him, but I believe he teaches class sometime around 9am on weekday mornings
Hi Jimmy,
I've only been to Jinghong once, but while there I did get hooked up with a good rafting guide via Sara at Forest Cafe (www.forest-cafe.org/). Forest Cafe also offers guided jungle tours - I've never taken one, but Sara seems to have a good grasp of what foreign travelers are looking for, she may be worth contacting. Hope that helps.
Chris
I always enjoyed quiz night... maybe instead of fortnightly it could be revived as a monthly event - first Wed of each month or something along those lines perhaps. I think a lot of people would attend regularly if it started up again.
I think there are a few places out of town, you may want to try Juhua Cun, GoKunming ran a short piece about it last year: www.gokunming.com/en/blog/item.php?blog_id=394
Sounds like they have all kinds of houseplants as well as herbs - the story's author evidently scored some rosemary.
Street food in Kunming tends to focus on Kunming/Yunnan-style snacks: cold noodles, stinky tofu and barbecue are all worth trying
I remember that outside of Yunnan University's west gate there was a row of food vendors selling all kinds of snacks, somewhere in there was a vendor of "Thai-style" pancakes that were pretty good, I think the banana and strawberry pancakes sold well. As far as I can tell that area has been more or less shut down, but I'm not positive as I haven't lived there for a while now.
Another area that used to have crazy street food - but I'm not sure if it still does - is the street heading north from Yieryi Da Jie just west of the Yunnan Minority Institute. This major student area seems to have also been getting gradually shut down by its friendly neigborhood chengguan too, but there should still be plenty of stalls selling quick eats near the top of the hill. Good luck.
No results found.
Happy ninth birthday Sal, you've made Kunming a better place.
Four stars for a great restaurant with friendly staff.
I give Tusheng Shiguan a fifth star for its goal of promoting environmentally sound food production.
My favorite Tengchong-style restaurant in Kunming. Their ersi and erkuai are trucked over from Tengchong and are the real deal — Kunming ersi and erkuai do not compare.
The restaurant itself is a bit jumbled, but there are a couple of tables outside in the courtyard that are nice to sit at when the weather's pleasant.
Don't believe them when they say they don't have lufu.
Tom and Jiajia have been baking up a storm lately. Thanks to them I have delicious sourdough bread to toast on the space heater in the office.
The Bircher muesli is probably the healthiest and most delicious breakfast around.
Pound for pound, one of the best little Western restaurants in China. 佳佳万岁!
Just had gnocchi in mushroom sauce and a glass of wine for dinner on the balcony in mid-January. Awesome.
Kunming's etymological vapor trail
Posted byCorrect Jarhead, thanks for spotting that. The error has been corrected.
Results: Best of Kunming 2011
Posted by@walter: Thanks for the suggestion.
@The Mask, congratulations and thanks for the kind words. BTW, we serve the English-speaking/literate community, which of course includes most foreigners, but also many locals!
Getting Away: Chiang Mai
Posted byIn Chiang Mai now and must say the North Gate Jazz Co-op, just a 10 second walk to the east as you walk out the north gate of the old town, is highly recommended for anyone that likes good live music. Saw 15 musicians tear it up on Tuesday night... the audience wouldn't let them stop playing. Great fun.
2012: Three game-changers for Kunming
Posted bywww.travpr.com/[...]
According to this report, there will be four runways and an eventual annual capacity of 68 million travelers, with total investment at US$3.6 billion.
Forgotten British consulate getting Chinese facelift
Posted bywww.ynbaoshan.travel/en/lmview.asp?lmid=230&newsid=475
I'm operating under the assumption that the "war" in the penultimate line is supposed to be "wall".