Top Banner
TRANSPORTATION IN CHINA Photos from various cities in China 2008
25
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Transportation in China

TRANSPORTATION IN CHINA

Photos from various cities in China

2008

Page 2: Transportation in China

Shanghai: It is surprising what people can carry on motorbikes

Page 3: Transportation in China

Shanghai – looks like he’s going the wrong direction!

Page 4: Transportation in China

Left: Pedestrians mix in with

motorized traffic – and

construction – regardless of the

load.

Below: taxi anyone?

Page 5: Transportation in China

Babies get

transported

on backs

Page 6: Transportation in China

Getting to market – from

chickens to watermelons.

Page 7: Transportation in China
Page 8: Transportation in China

IN THE LOCKSWe spent five days aboard the Princess Jeannie, lower right. We had

company in the locks of the 3 Gorges Dam, above left.

Page 9: Transportation in China

Off to visit

Three Gorges

Dam in

Yinchang –

up some 200

steps. The

cable cars

weren’t

available the

first time we

left the

Princess

Jeannie!

Page 10: Transportation in China

The next time we disembarked, to visit Wanxian, the cars were working.

This is where we saw an open-air market and a museum with one of the

hanging coffins used by the Ba people.

Page 11: Transportation in China

Looking down from the cable car.

Page 12: Transportation in China

Pretty elegant living space for a couple of barges! Many

vessels had plants – and drying laundry -- on them.

Page 13: Transportation in China

Transportation up Shennong Stream at

the mouth of the Xiling Gorge in

Badong. Trackers poled and pulled us in

peapod boats, named for the shape.

They have a competitive spirit, and

raced one another.

Page 14: Transportation in China

These guys had their work cut out for them! Everyone grumbled about

the attractive, orange vests, but we all wore them.

Page 15: Transportation in China

A coal barge passes a city along the Yangtze River.

Page 16: Transportation in China

The small wooden boat creates a striking contrast with the city behind it.

Page 17: Transportation in China

This dragon boat carries passengers on

Kunming Lake in the Summer Palace, Beijing.

Page 18: Transportation in China

A high-speed hydrofoil on the Yangtze.

Page 19: Transportation in China

The marble boat built by Empress Ci Xi in 1893, using funds that were

supposed to build a navy. It sits in Kunming Lake at the foot of

Longevity Hill in the Summer Palace, Beijing.

Page 20: Transportation in China

OK, so I couldn’t resist

the image of a guy on

his motorcycle,

underneath the golden

arches. This is a real

gas-powered

motorcycle; many

people ride electric

scooters.

Page 21: Transportation in China

A farm vehicle (?) near Guilin.

Page 22: Transportation in China

Sometimes you just throw

a cab over your tricycle . . .

Page 23: Transportation in China

. . . Sometimes you just add a box to the back end.

Page 24: Transportation in China

Rickshaws are just for

tourists these days, and are

bicycle-powered. Still, hard

work on a hot day!

Page 25: Transportation in China

This farm woman has the most reliable

transportation – a water buffalo. It doesn’t

break down, and it makes fertilizer, too!