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South & East Asia 02 - China/Sichuan 01: Sichuan info & on the Min river valley road
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Jan 5, 2022 12:52:37   #
Umnak Loc: Mount Vernon, Wa.
 
A very good start Joe, great to have you posting another adventure.
So much great information included with these shots that make for a good experience.
Thanks for taking us on another journey! I too think #9 is a great shot!
In #6, what's the story on the large door and window in the mountain side? Some kind of stronghold?
Rob

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Jan 5, 2022 13:50:49   #
Blair Shaw Jr Loc: Dunnellon,Florida
 
Wow....pretty place Joe and that bridge is something else....yikes.

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Jan 5, 2022 13:54:24   #
weberwest Loc: Ferndale WA
 
Umnak wrote:
A very good start Joe, great to have you posting another adventure.
So much great information included with these shots that make for a good experience.
Thanks for taking us on another journey! I too think #9 is a great shot!
In #6, what's the story on the large door and window in the mountain side? Some kind of stronghold?
Rob


Hi Rob, thanks for looking in on this new journey, glad you liked the shots. Good eye and good imagination Rob as to # 6: we don't really know, but don't think that it is a door, rather assume it to be a wall plaque. The shot is not clear enough to properly decipher the Chinese characters, but my resident Chinese expert "Susan" thinks that it says something about this old route, most likely done later than the establishment of the route. At the right hand side, we also have no idea what the purpose of that rectangular hole/window could be, but it definitely looks artificial. The Chinese writing beside that "hole" denotes that this is an ancient trade route, literally the characters read, from the right: Tea - Horse - Ancient - Route.

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Jan 5, 2022 14:12:14   #
weberwest Loc: Ferndale WA
 
Blair Shaw Jr wrote:
Wow....pretty place Joe and that bridge is something else....yikes.


Thank you Blair, great to hear from you again and to see you looking in on the tour. Yes, that bridge is rather unusual, in most of the western world, it would probably be banned, but that is how many people in much of the world still function - and it sure beats stepping through that water below! Welcome aboard again, I look forward to you traveling with us on this exciting journey!

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Jan 5, 2022 15:31:00   #
Dalbon
 
You have been a very busy person. How do you find time or anything other then photography. I have been to China 6 tims and 2 times to Chengdu. My friend from Chengdu drove me all through the area that was hit by the worst earthquake ever recorded either a 9.6 or a 9.8 quake. It hit just 4 days after l left Shanghai during my second visit and that was in May of 2008. When my friend drove me through that hard hit area and there were still landslides and roads that hadn't been repaired, cities that were almost gone and schools that weren't available for use any longer and that was in Oct. 2011. We here think we have hard times here but it's nothing like I saw there. I think my favorite areas would be Guilin, Yangshuo and Xingping in the South. Thanks for the links and I will look at them more closely later.
David

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Jan 5, 2022 16:15:36   #
weberwest Loc: Ferndale WA
 
Dalbon wrote:
You have been a very busy person. How do you find time or anything other then photography. I have been to China 6 tims and 2 times to Chengdu. My friend from Chengdu drove me all through the area that was hit by the worst earthquake ever recorded either a 9.6 or a 9.8 quake. It hit just 4 days after l left Shanghai during my second visit and that was in May of 2008. When my friend drove me through that hard hit area and there were still landslides and roads that hadn't been repaired, cities that were almost gone and schools that weren't available for use any longer and that was in Oct. 2011. We here think we have hard times here but it's nothing like I saw there. I think my favorite areas would be Guilin, Yangshuo and Xingping in the South. Thanks for the links and I will look at them more closely later.
David
You have been a very busy person. How do you find ... (show quote)


Thank you David for looking in on my just starting travelogue and taking the time to pen your comment. I can see that you are an "old China-hand" and have seen quite some places. That country certainly has its share of riches when it comes to landscapes, be it in the mountains such as here in the Jiuzhaigou area, or at the incomparable Wong Shan/Yellow Mountain area with its ancient Anhui villages. The karst landscape of Guilin is certainly also one of our favorites, as are the caves and the stone forests in Yunnan near Kunming, or the sand dunes and "desert university" in the Mogao Caves up at Dunhuang, the oasis town Turpan on the ancient Silk Road or the Heavenly Lake near Urumqi. Even many of the towns have so much interesting features, like the buried terracotta army in Xian, the incomparable Sunday Bazaar in Kashgar/Kashi, etc. etc. While we have seen a good many areas, there would be so much more to explore, unfortunately time is running out for us, but we are thankful for what we were able to explore. - This will be quite a lengthy series of posts, starting with this area in China and then moving on to the other locations I mentioned in the first set. I hope you will find time to look in as the travelogue progresses, I look forward to your participation - thanks again for your comment. Joe

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Jan 5, 2022 20:29:29   #
srfmhg Loc: Marin County, CA
 
Nice set Joe. I particularly like #5.

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Jan 5, 2022 22:40:48   #
weberwest Loc: Ferndale WA
 
srfmhg wrote:
Nice set Joe. I particularly like #5.


Thank you Mark, that Min river sure has plenty of interesting rocks in its at this time quite dry bed.

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Feb 6, 2022 21:36:02   #
mundy-F2 Loc: Chicago suburban area
 
weberwest wrote:
Sichuan (四川), alternatively romanized as Szechuan or Szechwan, is a landlocked province in Southwest China occupying most of the Sichuan Basin and the easternmost part of the Tibetan Plateau between the Jinsha River on the west, the Daba Mountains in the north and the Yungui Plateau to the south. Sichuan's capital city is Chengdu. Sichuan covers 486,000 km² and its population stands at 83 million. Sichuan neighbors 7 Chinese provinces, of which the sparsely populated Tibet Autonomous Region to the west is the second largest province of China by area. - It is commonly believed that the name Sichuan means "four rivers", and in folk etymology this is usually taken to mean four of the province's major rivers: the Jialing, Jinsha (or Wu), Min, and Tuo rivers. This interpretation is not universally accepted and it is thought that the name Sichuan actually derives from four ancient imperial administrative circuits during the Northern Song dynasty.

In antiquity, Sichuan was the home of the ancient states of Ba and Shu. Their conquest by Qin strengthened it and paved the way for the unification of China under the Qin dynasty. During the Three Kingdoms era, Shu was based in Sichuan. The area was devastated in the 17th century by Zhang Xianzhong's rebellion and the area's subsequent Manchu conquest, but recovered to become one of China's most productive areas by the 19th century. During World War II, Chongqing served as the temporary capital of the Republic of China, making it the focus of Japanese bombing. It was one of the last mainland areas captured by the People's Liberation Army during the Chinese Civil War and was divided into four parts from 1949 to 1952. It suffered gravely during the Great Chinese Famine of 1959–61 but remained China's most populous province until Chongqing Municipality was separated from it in 1997.

The Han Chinese people of Sichuan speak a unique form of Mandarin, which took shape during the area's repopulation under the Ming. The family of dialects is now spoken by about 120 million people, which would make it the 10th most spoken language in the world if counted separately. The area's warm damp climate long caused Chinese medicine to advocate spicy dishes; the native Sichuan pepper helped to form modern Sichuan cuisine, whose dishes—including Kung Pao chicken and mapo tofu—have become staples of Chinese cuisine around the world.

In 1950, the former province of Xikang was dissolved and its territory was later split between the newly established Tibet Autonomous Region and the Province of Sichuan. The western and northwestern part of Sichuan is made up of Tibetan and Qiang autonomous areas and this is the area that we were visiting on this trip.

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In this second segment, we are starting our bus tour with a rather large group of mainly Canadian and American Chinese visitors - I happen to be the only non-Chinese in the group. The guide's explanations were in Mandarin and Cantonese Chinese, of which I just have a very basic understanding and my wife Susan was providing the translation where appropriate. While the guide was providing the information, I was mainly on the lookout for "photographic opportunities".

Once we exited the city center of Chengdu, we followed the course of the river Min for the entire day, stopping at various scenic points as well as visiting a few towns on the way.

Please note that all of these pictures were taken out of the fast-moving bus window.


Notes
TRIP INFO: Set # 1 provides a brief introduction to this series. The link below lets you review this intro:
https://www.uglyhedgehog.com/t-724330-1.html

Thanks for visiting, I recommend viewing the downloads and look forward to your comments and questions.

.
Sichuan (四川), alternatively romanized as Szechuan ... (show quote)


Very nice.
Mundy

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Feb 6, 2022 23:54:00   #
weberwest Loc: Ferndale WA
 
mundy-F2 wrote:
Very nice.
Mundy


Thank you Mundy, glad you like this start of the actual tour and I look forward to seeing you as the tour rolls on.

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