Happy Chinese New Year!

Well, my friends, it is Chinese New Year (春節), I wish everyone happiness, peace, good health and prosperity. Have a drink and celebrate!

This photo is from Chinese New Year back from 20 year ago – 1992, nothing fancy, but a lot of good memories!

It was my first year in China and we went out to celebrate Chinese New Year to one of the local restaurants. As you know China invented gun powder and maybe for that reason or some other cultural reason they go really out of control with fireworks. Back then they were not fancy as far as color or flying abilities, but boy, they were so loud. When I first came to China, maybe on a second or third day after arrival I heard from far away what sounded like an automatic gun, AK47 or similar. I was puzzled to hear this sound, as I knew no one has guns there and definitely not going to shoot it in Beijing. A few days later I discovered that it was fireworks making those sounds. They made belts of them, by attaching each individual firecracker to each other, hanging it somewhere and then lighting it at the bottom. In a few seconds you have couple minutes of intense firepower. The kicker is that those belts came in different sizes – I mean, the power of individual firecrackers in them. I remember some of them being at least one inch thick, like little bombs. Tie them together and let fire one after another, that is some crazy fireworks!

So on Chinese New Year they went really nuts, those belts were hanging on the door handles, tree branches, air conditioners etc, and they lighted them up right around midnight, all at the same time.  Talk about deafening damage to your ear drums – I felt like I was going to be deaf after that for sure.

So anyway, I found this photo in my archives from 1992 Chinese New Year. Fireworks at its best.

ChineseNewYear1992

Hu Tong Door, Not really

In the past year I shared with you eight (check out Beijing category) different Hu Tong Red doors from Beijing neighborhoods. While this photo is not of the Hu Tong Red door, it was taken on one of the same walks and it is right next to the older Hu Tongs, and it has plenty of red in it.

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Beijing Hu Tong Red Door #8

Well, it is time to get one more of them out. I think this is the last one I have in my archives. This one was taken in a different Hu Tong than most of the other doors. It was somewhere near the Black Lake, somewhat northwest of the Forbidden city. We drove bikes around the town and went through this Hu Tong, I had to get on my breaks and snap this one out.

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The Bowl

Another view on big bowl in Forbidden City, Beijing. They had a few of them around there, positioned out of the main pedestrian routs on perimeter of the squares.

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Temple of Heaven

In the middle of the day this is one of the spots that I could take a picture of it not see any other tourists. It was unbelievably hot day with smoggy air. This picture shows blue sky but it done via some magic of software and combination of different exposures into one. It just looks much better this way.

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