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Jan
02
2009

China photo:Robert Daboss

China photo from Robert Daboss

Photos from Guangxi

guangxi

The farmer in Guangxi

The girl in Guangxi

Share Your Dream
Jul
15
2008

Detian Falls in Guangxi, China

Detian Falls in Guangxi, China

This picture was taken at Detian Falls in Guangxi, China by Robert Daboss

这是一张Robert Daboss在中国广西德天瀑布照的图片

Share Your Dream
Jan
10
2008

Travel China Guangxi

Travel in China: Guangxi SAR

Guangxi, Li River
This is a photo taken by Jacco Bax, who is also this week’s China Photo Contest winner.

Guangxi SAR is an autonomous region located in the southern region of China, populated and administered predominantly by the Zhuang ethnic group. In Guangxi, “xi” is the character for West, linking this province to to nearby Guangdong province (”dong” means “east”). Other nearby provinces include Yunnan, its neighbor to the west; Guizhou, which lies to the north; and Hunan in the northeast. Guangdong borders its southeast region.

Vietnam is southwest and the Gulf of Tonkin is south of Guangxi. The largest city in the Guangxi SAR is also its capital, Nanning, located near the Yong River. Nanning is referred to as the “Green City” due to the vast tropical foliage there, with more than 3,000 plants finding a home in Nanning. Nanning is also key to China’s involvement in ASEAN, and the city recently hosted the China-ASEAN Expo. Nanning continues to be a key city for directing China’s involvement and commitment to ASEAN and its member nations.

The subtropical climate found in Guangxi, with its hot summers, rainy weather and pleasant autumns, is excellent for growing rice, sugar cane, tobacco, maize, sweet potatoes, peanuts and wheat, as well as many types of tropical fruit. Guangxi is China’s top producer of tin, manganese and indium, and has large stores of lime. The area, most notably near the seaport of Beihai, also produces some of the most beautiful pearls found.

This autonomous region is heavily populated by the Zhuang, the largest minority ethnicity in China with approximately 15 million individuals (roughly the population of Australia). Other ethnic groups that live in Guangxi include the Dong, Miao, Yao, Hui, Yi, Shui, and Gin people groups. As you might expect, there is also a great deal of linguistic diversity. You will hear languages such as Zhuang, Pinghua, and Cantonese spoken in addition to the standard Mandarin taught in schools. Because of the diversity of cultures living in Guangxi SAR, there is also a rich cultural heritage among the people groups. The Dong people hold a yearly firecracker festival, while the Miao celebrate with a reed flute festival.

Zhuang people have three red-letter days: a Devil Festival, a Cattle Soul Festival and a Feasting Festival. The Devil Festival, which falls on 14 July on the lunar calendar and usually in August on the Western calendar, is second only to Spring Festival in importance. In celebration, families prepare chicken, duck and five-colored glutinous as sacrifices to ancestors and ghosts.

Usually following the spring ploughing, The Cattle Soul Festival is a time that every family carries a basketful of glutinous rice and a bundle of fresh grass to the cattle pen. After a short ceremony, the cattle are fed the grass and half the rice. They traditional explanation holds that the cattle have lost their souls because of the whipping during the spring ploughing and this process calls back the lost souls.

The Feasting Festival, celebrated only by people who live near the Sino-Vietnamese border, carries a legend: a group of Zhuang soldiers, having repulsed the French invaders in the late 19th century, returned in late January and missed the Spring Festival. To pay tribute and celebrate the victory, their neighbors prepared a sumptuous feast that is celebrated on this day.

Mountains will play an important part in your itinerary schedule when you visit Guangxi SAR. Here you will see stunning karst landforms, which are made from water moving against limestone over time. Made famous by early writings of Chinese poets and featured in early Chinese paintings and landscapes, these soft waves of rock make up the mountains that surround Guilin, a beautiful city in Guangxi located on the west side of the Li River. Local guides in Guilin and Yangshuo are quick to point out that the back of the 20 yuan bill features the river and karst peaks of the region.

yangshuo mountains

(photo courtesy of Sophie Nye)

Guilin is also home to the historic Jingjiang Princes City. Featuring beautiful walls, its construction began in 1372 AD, and twelve generations of Jingjiang princes lived within its inner city. Along the Li River you will also find the Reed-Flute Rock, a cave with stalactites, stalagmites, and cave corals; the oldest existing canal in the world, the Lingqu Canal; as well as Elephant-Trunk Hill, which resembles a giant elephant drinking water and is the symbol of Guilin. Yangshuo, another fabulous mountain city, is a favorite hiking and backpacking destination and home to Chun Li and her Yangshuo Mountain Retreat. Yangshuo is also home to the Yangshuo Volunteer English Program, a team of teachers dedicated to empowering underprivileged students learn English and improve their standing in life.

longsheng guangxi
(photo from jackfrench)

Other historic cultural destinations include the Dragon’s Backbone Rice Terraces in Longsheng, reputed to be some of the steepest rice terraces to be found anywhere in the world; and the Chengyang Wind and Rain Bridge, located in Sangiang. A close examination of the trees and forests surrounding the trails in Longsheng will reveal old love charms carved into the trees and stone shrines decorated with red ribbons and built to honor ancestors.

I have traveled to Guangxi several times and will post some of my photos and adventures on the blog in a follow-up soon.

Share Your Dream
Oct
02
2007

Yangshuo China Adoption

Yangshuo China Adoption: A Daily China Travel Photo

中文

This begins week 2 of our featured photographers series. This week we will see pictures from Yauly, an Israeli photographer who has taken a number of pictures of China. Her first picture in our series is from her travels in Yangshuo:

yangshuo china adoption

Yauly had this to say about the photo:

“[This photo] was taken in a small village near Yangshuo. While walking there, we saw those two kids and waved to them to say hello. The young one was really scared of us, started to cry and ran away. On our way back she was fine and looked at us with curiosity, still hiding behind her friend. When we tried to understand why she was so frightened, we found out that a child from this village was adopted by foreigners and she thought we might take her away.”

To see your photos here, send them to censortive word or censortive word.

Read on »

Share Your Dream
Sep
03
2007

Guilin Mountains and the Li River

China Daily Photo: Guilin Mountains and the Li River

Today’s photo comes from Nathan Beauchamp-Mustafaga and was taken in Guilin Province. The photo features the Li River and Guilin’s famous and mysterious karst peaks.

guilin karst peaks

Please send your pictures for picture of the day to: censortive word or to censortive word

Share Your Dream
Aug
07
2007

Guangxi, Jiangsu, Macau: Daily China Photos

Today’s photos are from Guangxi, Jiangsu, and Macau.

今天的照片来自广西、江苏和澳门。

First, Nathan B.M.’s photo from Guangxi shows off the province’s famous karst peaks and one of the many rivers that cut valleys through the mountains:

首先,Nathan B.M.的照片摄于广西省,显示了该省著名的karst 峰和一条贯穿群山的峡谷河流。

Guilin karst mountains

More pictures after the jump…

Read on »

Share Your Dream
Jul
30
2007

Guangdong Province 广东省

The Chinese province of Guangdong is located in the southernmost part of the country. With its location on the South China Sea(南中國海), it is a natural entry point to South China. It is bordered by Jiangxi (江西) and Hunan (湖南) provinces to the north, Fujian (福建) province to the east, and Guangxi Zhuang autonomous region (广西壮族自治区) to the west. Guangdong province also claims 651 islands, many of which are located in the Pearl River Delta (珠江三角洲). Many of the rivers in the area feed into this delta and flow out into the South China Sea.

guangdong province map of china

The provincial capital, Guangzhou (广州), was known in the West as Canton. The word “guang” (广) means “expanse,” and “Guangdong” refers to “expanse east.” Guangond, together with Guangxi, are known as the “dual guangs” (两广). While Guangdong province got its name during the Ming Dynasty (明朝), the area had been a coastal trade area long before then. When the West began trading with China (via Portugese, Dutch, and British traders), Guangzhou and Guangdong province was a center of trade and the comprador (买办) system. The Opium Wars, begun as a result of the opium trade, flourished at Guangzhou and resulted in the loss of Hong Kong to British control. Guangzhou today retains its status as an important center for China’s international business and trade, and many of its famous businesses and areas, like the White Swan Hotel (白天鹅宾馆) and Shamian Island (沙面岛), highlight this internationalism.

 

Many Chinese immigrants who came to the United States and Canada in the 1800s left China from Guangdong province. While the majority of people who live in Guangdong are ethnically Han (), the largest single ethnic group worldwide, Guangdong does have a diverse multi-cultural makeup, with people from forty-two different ethnic groups all living in the province. Many Chinese dialects are spoken, though most people speak Mandarin or Cantonese.

 

[youtube]Enn_AjB6Iw8[/youtube]

Guangdong features a subtropical climate of high humidity and hot weather in the summer, so it is best to visit during the spring and fall months. Due to its geography and weather, Guangdong produces most of the area’s rice, tea and tropical crops. Less than a quarter of all the land in Guangdong is used to produce food, so the areas that are set aside for agricultural purposes are farmed intensively.

Light industry has brought an economic boom to Guangdong that has given the province the highest GDP of any province (over 12% of China’s total GDP, and reported by some sources as high as 33% percent of China’s GDP). Guangdong is also responsible for a total third of all the imports and exports occurring in China. Food processing, including sugar refining, as well as textile manufacturing and weaving, are all major industries here. Heavy industrial pursuits include shipbuilding and repair and machine manufacturing, among others.

 

Guangdong is famous for its Cantonese cuisine, and many of the foods that Americans and Canadians have come to think of as “Chinese food”—dim sum, fried rice, lo mein noodles, chop suey, bok choi, and wontons, for example—are based on foods and dishes that originated in Guangdong. While Prince Philip, the Duke of Edinburgh, is quoted as saying, “If it has got four legs and it is not a chair, if it has two wings and it flies but is not an aeroplane, and if it swims and is not a submarine, the Cantonese will eat it,” Guangdong food (广东菜) is truly one of the most enjoyable parts of south China. Because Guangzhou was a major trading port, international visitors through the years have introduced a wide variety of foods to the city, adding to the diversity within the cuisine. The freshest ingredients, mildly spiced, are favored, and the flavors are brought to their greatest impact with steaming, stir- and deep frying. Seafood is also often featured.

chinese buddhist temple of the six banyan trees

Visitors to Guangdong province can enjoy the scenic beauty of the Danxia(丹霞山), Luofu(羅浮山), and Dinghu(鼎湖山) mountains. Traveling to Guangzhou allows for scenic visits to Yuexiu Park (越秀公园), as well as the ancient Buddhist Temple of the Six Banyan Trees (刘榕寺). Many other beautiful temples are in Guangdong, including the Nanhua Temple (南华寺) located in Shaoguan(韶关). And for history and culture, the Guangdong Provincial Museum in Guangzhou offers examples of Chaozhou(潮州) wood carving, ceramic figures, old Chinese pottery and traditional Chinese calligraphy posters. A trip here means you can enjoy the best of Guangdong culture, ancient and modern.

Share Your Dream
Mar
09
2007

Link it Forward: Creating a Network for China

One of the many goals of the China Dreamblogue is to create a strong, pro-China internet presence in the blogosphere. To do this, we need your help. And as we create our pro-China network, we would also like to help the people who want to be part of this network by giving them a way to increase their SEO power and their ability to monetize their site. Sound complicated and difficult? The process is deceptively simple and powerful.

We’ve created an idea called link it forward. Similar to the internet memes and the Thinking Blog tag that recently moved through a number of English-language blogs about China, our idea will travel rapidly through pro-China blogs. In addition, this idea will help to create links–as many as four thousand–to your site through a trickle-down method.

There are five simple steps:

  1. Take this list of 8 blogs and put them in a post on your blog. The first three blogs, Onemanbandwidth, The China Dreamblogue, and Sinotrading, remain on the list.
  2. At the top of the moveable list, put a link to your blog.
  3. Remove the link from the bottom of blog.
  4. Send your updated list to at least five other people.
  5. If you want, create a new moveable list of five blogs you think deserve some links. Be kind and include the permanent list as well.

Perma-List:

The Moveable list:

The numbers work out well for you. You will have approximately five rounds on the list. On the first round, you’ll get five links. On the second, you’ll get 25 (each of the five people you sent the list to will get five more people to put your link on their site). The third round nets you 125, the fourth 525, and the fifth 2,625. Your grand total (should everyone follow Link it Forward) will be 3,305 links. And if you get linked to again by another blog, you can start the process all over again to earn another 3,000 links.

To monetize your blog or site please click on the links found on the front page of this blog.

 

 

China Dreamblogue的其中一个目标是在因特网上创建一个强大的,支持中国的互联网。实现这个目标,我们需要你的帮助。在我们建造我们中国的友好互联网的同时,我们将会帮助那些支持我们的人,把他们的博客推到网络排名的最前列。这个过程既简单又有效。

我们已经有一个构想,称为“链接在一起”(Link it Forward),与“网络媒母”(internet memes)相类似。“Link it Forward”( 链接在一起)会以很快的速度在支持中国的博客上移动。另外,这个构想可以使你的网站的链接数量增加几千个以上。

以下是六个简单的步骤:

  1. 按照以下的说明列两组博客的目录然后放到您的博客上。第一组名单是三个固定的博客:Onemanbandwidth, The China Dreamblogue, 和Sinotrading。这三个博客的连接必须永远的保留和不可改变。
  2. 在第二组上,把您自己的博客连接放在目录的第一位上。
  3. 把所有在第二组目录上的连接排名依次向下移动一位。即排第一的移到第二位,排第二的移到第三位等等(第五位的移到第一位)。
  4. 这就是说排第五的应该要完成一个循坏回到第五的位置上。
  5. 将你的更新了的列表发给至少5个其他博客。您发的越多,您就能获得更多的链接。如果您有一百个人,那就快点去做吧。
  6. 如果您想的话,还可以另外创建一个您认为有价值的列表。请也同样包括那个不变名单(即onemanbandwidth, china dreamblogue 和 sinotrading)

请记住,不要改动或者改变第一组名单和不要在第二组名单上加上第六个链接。同样,通过第一组名单所得到的广告收益将用作慈善用途。而从第二组“link it forward”上所得的收益将有您自己支配。我们会为您列举一些能够推算您自己网站价值的地方。

第一组(长期不变得目录):

Onemanbandwidth

The China Dreamblogue

Sinotrading

第二组(可更新的目录):

您的博客

您朋友的博客

如果理想的话,您大约会有比从前翻5倍的链接量。

第一个循环,您会得到5个链接。

第二个循环您会得到25个链接(跟您建立链接的那5个人每人会给您带来5个新的链接)

第三个循环您会有125个链接,第四个有625,第五个有3,125个。

如果每个人都按照Link it Forward的方法,您最后会得到3,905个链接。如果您同时又跟其他博客建立同种方法的链接,您将会得到另外3,000多个的链接。有了这上千个的 连接,您就能从Google Adwords(Google搜索引擎营销)那里得到相应的收益了。现在就请按本页底部的Google Adwords按钮来看一下您的网站的价值吧。

这是为了兴趣;这是为了提高中国博客在西方搜索引擎的排名;这更是为了中国的慈善事业出一分力(因为限定组中的3个博客将会把全部广告收益捐献给中国的慈善机构);同样也能增加中国博客在互联网上的知名度。

让我们一起link it forward(链接在一起)吧!

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