I have a one-year F visa issued in April that allows me to stay in mainland China for 60 days, after which I must leave the country and come back. Recently I was told that making a trip to China no longer (since July 1) counts as 'leaving China". I checked with the visa office in Kunming and they said that, yes, a trip to Hong Kong is still sufficient to get me another 60 days. Since there's been some confusion about all this, I am now worried that I'll go to Hong Kong and then find that I cannot come back to Kunming without going to a foreign country first.
Does anybody know what the truth is?
Popular night market locations closed, ban appears permanent
Posted byI think street vendors are fine, although not nearly so many together as are on Wenhuaxiang.
As for the chengguan, I hope enough get in hot water to eliminate the pay-to-look-the-other-way syndrome.
Popular night market locations closed, ban appears permanent
Posted bySeems to me that the clearance of this market is, on balance, a good thing, but such determined activity by the chengguan, apparently carried out in the unnecessarily rough manner which has been their trademark, must have been at the orders of some serious source in government or Party, at some level. Would like to know what level that was, and why it all seems to have come down so vigorously and all at once (the timing, just before Chunjie, doesn't strike me as odd - there's usually a coming-to-an-end and then beginning-anew theme around this time of year)?
Getting Away: Yunnan's eerie Wumao Earth Forest
Posted byHey, great photos. I've long heard of the 'earth forest' but somehow the thing never sounded that interesting to me, but thanks to your photos I now have a different point of view.
Kunming to put 45,000 public use bikes on roads
Posted bySeems to me the deposit might be returned only after the bike has been returned, and vice versa. Naturally, profit-seekers here have to be controlled by law, registration, etc., and not allowed to run off with the deposits. I don't understand that people would junk the bikes somewhere if it meant they'd lose Y299.
Kunming to put 45,000 public use bikes on roads
Posted byTiger, thanks for the Guardian article - seems the refundable Y299 is a good idea.