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George Hellman Impressions
- 2004
A second trip to China? Yes,
indeed! This time we traveled to western China and the
Autonomous Region of Tibet.
The small group of adventurous
travelers led by Bob Cheung experienced fantastic scenery,
rarely seen places and peoples – places perhaps as beautiful
as any on this planet and people (ethnic minorities) with
cultures very different from the mainstream Chinese. Often
we were ourselves of as much interest to the local residents
as they were to us.
After you have been greeted by
the customers of a restaurant with silence followed by
nervous giggles a few times you begin to understand how
infrequently western travelers have been in some of these
locations. Our jump off point and travel nexus in China was
Chengdu.
From there we went to Kunming(
to the Stone Forest), to Lijiang (in the center of the
region inhabited by several ethnic minorities), to Lugu Lake
(where we visited the matriarchal Mosou people in the remote
mountainous region on the border of Yunnan and Sichuan
provinces), to Zhongdian (also known as Shangri La), to
Lhasa and Bayi City in Tibet( and to spectacularly beautiful
scenery on the trip between), to the Wolong Panda Reserve,
to Dujiang (site of an ancient irrigation project and Daoist
Temple Complex), and to the Sanxingdui Museum (site of a
bronze age civilization) before we returned to Chengdu for a
final dinner and departure back to the U.S.
Perhaps even more than with our
first trip to China selecting photos that represented the
diverse nature of all that we saw was a daunting task. So
again those that were selected may just be a random sampling
that seemed interesting when the 1000 or so that were taken
were reviewed (digital cameras make it so easy to take
pictures).
But China has so much to see
that it’s nearly impossible to grasp even after you’ve been
there.

Children playing in the narrow
lanes of Lijiang.

Members of the Naxi minority
dancing in Baoshan Village in celebration of Elder’s Day.

Even the new improved road from
Lijiang to Lugu Lake has a serpentine quality.

Buddhist monastery on an island
in the middle of Lugu Lake.

Buddhist monk walking on the
road outside of Lhasa.

View of Potala Palace in Lhasa.

Prayer flags at Mila Pass on
the road from Lhasa to Bayi City.

Glacier above Basong Lake – a
side trip on the Lhasa to Bayi City drive.

Tibetan house along the highway
(2 lane macadam) on the return to Lhasa.

Tibetan nomad encampment along
the Lhasa River.

Fu Fu, a 21-day old panda, at
the Wolong Panda Reserve.

What Fu Fu will grow up to be

Smiles are international –
local woman vendor met on a walk above the Panda Reserve.
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