Vegetable vendor girls at the market in Pakse
Wat Phu Champasak
Debris of the Wat Phu
Young Lao girl guides us on the river
Khone Falls in Laos
Cleaning and repairing the big image of Lord Buddh…
Suan Hin Pha Ngam Park
Hmong kids
Railway trail to Mae Khlong
In the village called Kantaralak
Tham Piew - Cave with a tragic history
Little girl posing for a photo shot at Tiger Jumpi…
Tiger Jumping Gorge
Songzanlin Monastery
Dukezong village beside the Songzanlin Monastery
summerlook
Our Bai tourguide Daisy
A performance of Bai traditional dances
Gate to the center of Xizhou
On the way to Xizhou
Rich Bai ethnic culture in Xizhou
MARTINIQUE
Kitchen of Nai Sow Restaurant
Dragon costume at the Chinese New Year January 200…
Equestrian statue of Genghis Khan
Hmong girls dancing at Tsa Hauv Toj festival
Traditional Bhutanese farm house
Scene during sunset in Herat
In front of the Hiranya Varna Mahaa Vihar Temple i…
Tashigang city place
Sunset at Ko Lipe Island Pattaya Beach
NyiLa (pass) 3950 m in Lo Mantang
Mustang City, the hidden kingdom in Nepal
Watch vendor in his small shop
Father and son in Herat
Tsarang in Lo Mantang
The gate to board the train to Xining
Inside the dining coach
Headstream of the Changjiang River (Yangtze River)
We enjoy the food in the train coach
Arriving Xining railway station on the dot
At an intersection on the Sukhumvit Road in Bangko…
Mueang Pilok, Thailand
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Chinese New Year in Bangkok Jan. 2009
Colorful dragon costumes seen on Bangkoks streets during the Chinese New Year celebration. The tradition is a great way to reconcile forgetting all grudges, and sincerely wish peace and happiness for everyone.
In China, lion daces are generally performed by two people and can be further categorized into the Northern Chinese lion dance and the Southern Chinese lion dance. The Northern lion dance has its origins in imperial China as a form of entertainment . The lion is usually red, orange, or yellow in hue and the dance itself is quite acrobatic and occasionally features high risk stunts.
In China, lion daces are generally performed by two people and can be further categorized into the Northern Chinese lion dance and the Southern Chinese lion dance. The Northern lion dance has its origins in imperial China as a form of entertainment . The lion is usually red, orange, or yellow in hue and the dance itself is quite acrobatic and occasionally features high risk stunts.
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