If you've been here long enough, it seems to get better. Alternate take on that, I guess, would be that you've been here too long, but either way it tends to make dinners with Chinese friends more fun.
If you've been here long enough, it seems to get better. Alternate take on that, I guess, would be that you've been here too long, but either way it tends to make dinners with Chinese friends more fun.
Overall it's been going up for years. Given the local economy & the global economy and local needs and differential access to resources everywhere, how much should it be? This is not a smartass implied criticism - I don't know the answer - but a real question for discussion.
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I'm not a health foody but the few meals I've had here have been really good and, yeah, I'll be happy to go back alone to sample all the rest of them. It's also not a bad place from which to people-watch the street below.
Law prohibits new shared bike companies from coming to Kunming
Posted byBeats building and junking more cars. Like I said, there needs to be a system which leads to having the ones reparable repaired.
Celebrating Yi Torch Festival in the highlands of Yunnan
Posted byAnother good article by Jim Goodman. Note that he has made his home in Chiangmai for over 30 years. Chiangmai has become a tourist destination and/or visa renewal destination for many foreigners living in Yunnan over the past years and,knows a great deal about the history, temple iconography and other aspects of life of Chiangmai city and of surrounding areas.
The enchanting remoteness of Yunnan's Nujiang Canyon
Posted byOK, guess I spoke too soon.
The enchanting remoteness of Yunnan's Nujiang Canyon
Posted byVery nice photos, of course.
The enchanting remoteness of Yunnan's Nujiang Canyon
Posted byThis is all good and useful but I think we could use some more indepth articles on the areas covered as well, including some history and discussion of how people actually live, their practical problems, etc., as well as tourist promotion.