Forums > Travel Yunnan > Kunming to Guangzhou train I'm also going; but since the flight is only Y200 more, I think it's worth skipping the 24h ride. The nicer part is Kunming through Luoping and into Guangxi after which it's all tunnels and night, depending which train you take. If you don't mind spending time on the train... go for it
Forums > Living in Kunming > Why I love Chinese women I beg to differ. The ones that are dating laowai may sometimes have an agenda, but not always. Some of them are just interested in the otherness, feel their own world is too small, or simply find men of another race attractive.
I'm no different. The otherness of Asian women attracts me, I find them generally more physically attractive and I too travelled here to experience a new and exciting culture. And if I marry them, I may get a residence permit for a country I'm very interested in. Maybe that's why I like to date Asian women.
Some practical reasons definitely exist, but in the end I will only choose a women that fits me. When I'm ready for it.
Forums > Travel Yunnan > needed good map shop in Kunming There is an app that shows '80s Soviet maps. Called Soviet Military Maps or something. It's 10 bucks for the full version, it may help but you still have to do lots of stuff yourself.
Forums > Living in Kunming > Why I love Chinese women I'm not a hero on the battlefield of love, having slain and been slain several times. But I heed something my mother has told me: "I was never sure I wanted to be with your father for the rest of my life until the very moment I married him." They are one of the happiest couples I know.
I.e. love is a decision.
Of course, you need a compatible enough person, but what's wrong with letting some practicalities such as money play a part in your decision-making? It's the oldest practice in the world. As long as you choose to stick together, it has a chance of working out.
Since the age of romanticism, we have become so obsessed with this idea of finding Mister or Miss Right, that we are unable to make decisions anymore.
Just a thought. Now I will sulk back and lick the wounds from my previous decision-making.
Forums > Living in Kunming > Little razzia at Moondog On my arrival at Moondog yesterday, I was a bit surprised to find a bunch of policemen doing ID checks and filming everyone. Of course I realised I'm not living in the West where you could with varying degrees of success ask for any proof that they can actually do this without giving a reason, but I was wondering if anyone else knows the details on this one.
Anyway, I'm convinced that the less the government knows about you, the better. They were unorganised enough to be happy with me just reciting my passport number from memory, so I suggest no one give his real ID number or name.
Yunnan GDP third fastest-growing in China
Posted byPeter99, stay off the drugs man. Indeed, a fast growing economy is not necessarily a healthy one (which is why countries sometimes try to put water on the fire). The article doesn't claim that it is, either. Of course, stable economic growth relies on small and medium-sized enterprises rather than on big business. But big business does contribute to the GDP, hence the impressive figures.
Getting a fast growing economy and high GDP only requires one thing: cheap resources. In Australia's case it's natural resources in the mines of WA, in China it's cheap labour and badly protected worker rights. So it's actually a symptom of the sickness of this country: the income gap, as Alien suggested above, is ever increasing and that's just a recipe for instability.
China's leaders are nicely putting their cash on Caribbean accounts (The Guardian today), for when this can of nitro-glycerine blows.
Myanmar to Tibet: Hiking the Dulong, part II
Posted byUnfortunately we have not a lot of information on this walk; but there are people who do, such as A Luo (in Bingzhongluo). All we know is that you need to know the trails very well, that you'll have to camp or stay in shelters (no real villages) and we can estimate that it'll be a two to three-day walk.
Mountains are _very_ steep so if you end up on the wrong trail you may have to turn back unless you want to risk your life. It'd be an interesting thing to do if you have a tent, time and a GPS.
Yunnan's Stone Treasure: Shibao Mountain
Posted byI'm with flengs on this one. I guided a tour group there last year. Even though I'd prepared, I was able to lead the way but not to explain beyond the very basics the worth and significance of these grottoes and treasures.
If you want to understand what it's all about, what the things you see mean, then you need a guide or at least a fair amount of insight in the history of Buddhism.
If you just want to see a bit of nature and snap pictures of some temples and relics you don't understand or don't care to understand: go ahead, you don't need a guide.
Changshui once again closed by fog
Posted byI inquired a bit the last time I was held up by fog. It was a clear and bright day in Kunming. Turns out the fog was at my destination airport of - waitforit - Beijing. I inquired a bit further. Turns out 80% of Chinese airspace is reserved for military use. That means that when there's difficult weather conditions in those small corridors, planes have no way around it.
Myanmar to Tibet: Hiking the Dulong, part II
Posted byWe didn't see any live monkeys but for the one having a good time counting his legs near the Myanmar border (see part one). I think they're mostly shy outside of parks where tourists give them food or an opportunity to steal. Sneaking up the hills in the northern section, you may catch some snub-nosed monkeys.