User profile: b galipeau

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Forums > Food & Drink > Yunnan Wine Grapes?

For sure there is a difference between Yunnan Red and Shangri-La Red, but the French grapes the OP was asking about are almost indeed certainly those grown in Northwest Yunnan in Cizhong in the same general area where Shangri-La Red Wine grapes are grown. I may be mistaken, but I have also never seen any white wine grapes (i.e. Chardonnay) grown anywhere in Deqin up north. The wine company itself is indeed called the Shangri-La Red Wine company, so I'm still not sure what whites you are referencing. I have yet to observe a single village throughout Deqin that grows green grapes for whites.

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Forums > Food & Drink > Yunnan Wine Grapes?

I study this topic extensively as part of my PhD in anthropology and have spent significant time in Northwest Yunnan where the grapes are grown. The original Rose Honey strain introduced by the French can indeed be found in Cizhong at the Church and in the homes of a few villagers who grow it, specifically the owner of the Rose Honey Guest house who grows only Rose Honey. All of the other grapes grown in the region and in most Cizhong homes are a Cabernet (not chardonnay) as Liuer mentioned that have been introduced by the government for sales to the Shangri-La Red Wine company and others. You can read more about this in my interview with GoKunming here: www.gokunming.com/[...]

The grapes found in one of the church yards at Cizhong are indeed the actual original vines planted by the French missionaries, though they are kept in a locked walled off area for which only the township government holds the key.

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Forums > Living in Kunming > Should I rent an old apt off Wen Lin Jie??

Whenever I've been in Kunming long term I've always liked the Hong Shan area for actually living much better than Wen Lin Jie even though I spend a lot of time down there. As you mentioned it is only a 20 minute walk and when I was commuting to Yunda this provided nice daily exercise. Hong Shan is much quieter, many of the complexes have nice new apartments, and there are indeed plenty of restaurants and services nearby including Slice of Heaven which provides good coffee and food if you are in need of a western food break and don't want to head down to the Wen Hua Xiang area. There are also two large markets (one on Hong Shan Nan Lu) for buying produce, two banks including ICBC at the end of the road, and a variety of other services. Next year when I move back for a year or longer my soon to be wife and I are definitely planning to live in this area based upon what is available there and also the low level of noise.

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Forums > Living in Kunming > Salvadors Support It

+1, they deserve everyone's faith and support for all they do as a wonderful gathering place and for what they give back to the people of Yunnan. I'm away from Kunming in Chiang Mai for a week and just curious though, has business at Sal's actually decreased that dramatically over the past two days since the incident?

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Forums > Study > New Chinese language students in Kunming?

If you are on an (F) business visa and you will only be taking classes for six months or less you don't have to change it. This type of visa is multi-purpose and is used for short term studies under six months. I recently took Chinese classes at Yunda with the (F) visa I had already obtained and they had no problem with it and didn't require me to change it.

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Thanks Patrick for the update! Planning to revisit the site of the Moet winery and lodge in the next couple weeks, perhaps after I get back to Kunming a new blog style update for GoKunming on my work out here will be due...

Great article and write up Dan! Ever since first visiting Liming in 2007 I knew it would be great for climbing so it's wonderful Mike has put it on the map and spent so much time developing the area. Having gone on two multi-day hikes and another trip with several day hikes out of Liming, I can reiterate that indeed with some gear the possibilities for other hiking and trekking are endless and fantastic. The valley alone is worth the visit, but some of the high mountain areas with alpine lakes and some of the best rhododendron forests anywhere are also very much worth the trip.

Hi Matt,
Mandarin should be able to order it for you, the owner Liu Feng is a casual friend and has special ordered a lot stuff for me but the regular staff don't know how to do this. If you want let me know and I can send you his email offline.

I don't believe I ever actually used the terminology distill in this interview, but it was over a year ago so I may have forgotten. Indeed I recognize wine making is quite different from distillation, though in fact in Cizhong many households partake in both practices and in fact distill liquor both in the traditional method with barley but also with the discarded grape skins and seeds left over from wine making. This makes a pretty powerful baijiu indeed!

It looks like Thai has only reduced flights by one day a week; they're just not flying on Mondays anymore. China Eastern has also increased capacity to two flights per day to BKK instead of one on Sunday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday, and Saturday. However I'm not necessarily a fan of China Eastern as I know many of us aren't, and what I would really like to see is Thai bring back their old twice weekly service to Chiang Mai, which I used to fly regularly up through 2008 until it was cancelled. China Eastern being the only non-stop option to Chiang Mai for several years now has not been fun, and considering the explosion of Chinese tourists there now I'm surprised Thai hasn't resumed the route, especially since it was the regular Bangkok flight that just made a stop off twice each week...

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