Archive for the ‘Travel’ Category

Welcome to China

February 11th, 2010
BeijingBoy1985 asked:


China has one of the world’s oldest people and continuous civilizations, consisting of states and cultures dating back more than six millennia. It has the world’s longest continuously used written language system, and is the source of such major inventions as what the British scholar and biochemist Joseph Needham called the “four great inventions of Ancient China”: paper, the compass, gunpowder, and printing. Historically China’s cultural sphere has been very influential in East Asia as a whole, with Chinese religion, customs, and writing system being adopted, to varying degrees, by its neighbors Japan, Korea, and Vietnam. ======== Beijingboy1985’s E-mail: hsiaowei.sun@gmail.com

Tom Carter’s CHINA: Portrait of a People

February 10th, 2010
chinaphotographer asked:


Tom Carter’s CHINA: Portrait of a People is now available on Amazon.Com!!! Thank you for your support. amzn.com Photojournalist Tom Carter’s CHINA: Portrait of a People is the most comprehensive book of photography on modern China ever published by a single author. Over 600 pages and 800 images from the 33 provinces of the PRC. AVAILABLE NOW! www.blacksmithbooks.com ISBN-13: 978-988-99799-42 Published: Summer 2008 by Blacksmith Books, Hong Kong, in association with Haven Books www.tomcarter.org

Hong Kong, Gateway To China, 1938

February 7th, 2010
travelfilmarchive asked:


A tour of Hong Kong in the 1930s. Footage from this subject is available for licensing from www.travelfilmarchive.com

World heritages attract tourists during holiday

May 4th, 2009

Chinese tourists visit Buddhist statues at the Longmen Grottoes, a world cultural heritage, near Luoyang City in central China’s Henan Province, May 2, 2009, the second day of the three-day May Day holiday. China has a totality of 37 world heritages which attract many tourists in the holiday. (Xinhua/Cheng Qianjun)

Chinese tourists visit the Longmen Grottoes, a world cultural heritage, near Luoyang City in central China’s Henan Province, May 2, 2009, the second day of the three-day May Day holiday. China has a totality of 37 world heritages which attract many tourists in the holiday. (Xinhua/Cheng Qianjun)

Chinese tourists visit a Suzhou traditional garden, a world cultural heritage, in Suzhou City of east China’s Jiangsu Province, May 2, 2009, the second day of the three-day May Day holiday. China has a totality of 37 world heritages which attract many tourists in the holiday. (Xinhua/Hang Xingwei)

Chinese tourists visit the Mogao Grottoes, a world cultural heritage, near Dunhuang in northwest China’s Gansu Province, May 2, 2009, the second day of the three-day May Day holiday. China has a totality of 37 world heritages which attract many tourists in the holiday. (Xinhua/Zhang Weixian)

China has a totality of 37 world heritages which attract many tourists in the holiday.

Two of world’s smelliest flowers about to bloom

April 27th, 2009

One of two Titan Arum plants due to bloom at Kew Gardens in the next couple of days.

Its bizarre appearance and sheer size have long attracted curious visitors and avid gardeners alike. But anyone wanting to see this Titan Arum flower would be wise to keep their distance this weekend. For when it blooms – which experts predict should occur in the next few days – it will release not the fragrant scent of most flowers, but a revolting stench rather like rotting flesh. And to make matters worse, two Arums are due to flower at the same time – a first in Kew Gardens’ 250-year history. The plant – which is indigenous to Indonesia and also goes by the name ‘the corpse flower’ – blooms just once every six or seven years. Twelve of them are housed in Kew’s Princess of Wales Conservatory among hundreds of other tropical plants. At the Arum’s base is an outer layer of grooved leaves, which open to form a bell-shaped cup or deep red ‘spathe’. A band of cream flowers circles the base of the stem or ‘spadix’, which sits on a ring of larger, pink flowers. When the plants are ready to pollinate, the spadix heats up to release a pungent smell, which lasts for about three days. Flesh-eating beetles, attracted by the ‘fragrance’, crawl into the open cup while bees and other insects flock to its coloured base. Once inside, pollen is transferred from the flower to the insects, which become trapped in the chamber. The spathe then withers to allow the pollen-covered insects to escape and pollinate other Arums in the rainforest, or in this case the greenhouse. Phil Griffiths, Kew Gardens’ conservatory co-ordinator, said: ‘Most people miss the actual flowering when the smell has dissipated. ‘The smell is strong and pungent, as if you were in the tropics and had passed something dead and rotting by the side of the road. ‘It comes at you in waves – at first you can’t really smell anything, then it hits you.’ He added that the largest Arums at the gardens weigh about 200lb (90kg) and grow at a staggering rate of a quarter of an inch an hour. Four members of staff are drafted in to help when any Arum needs repotting. It guzzles liquid fertiliser and potassium each week to keep up its strength while bedded in roomy surroundings. Sir David Attenborough, who invented the name Titan Arum, was the first to capture its flowering on film for his BBC TV series The Private Life of Plants. He dropped the plant’s original name – Amorphophallus – perhaps because of the reference to male genitalia. (Agencies)