The only Drum&Bass sessions in Shanghai. Good music, good vibes.
DRINKS: OPEN BAR till midnight
Line-up:
Monk / Siesta / Shreddi from Netherlands / Skyline / Haze
Guest MCs
2100 hrs - Midnight = RMB60 (Open Bar)
After Midnight = RMB40 with 1 drink
One of the three "Golden Weeks" where many Chinese citizens go traveling.
January 29 is the first day of the the Dog (2006)
Treehouse peeps, thanx a million for putting the Linyi station in the train schedules.
Another question:
Do you know anything about travelling from the china mainland to Japan by boat/ferry?
I'm planning a trip for the springfestival with the first destination Harbin and afterwards I want to spend a week in Japan. I found a boat from Qingdao but that one doesn;t go to the Japan mainland. The other one I found goes from Shanghai. But maybe there is another way. Something more easy to go from the northern region towards Jap.
thanks for any usefull hints,
What are often-forgot, under-rated, or otherwise extremely useful things to bring along with you when you travel? Bonus points to things that are both useful and small/light. I'll start the list off here:
Hi I'm John Mckenna, I am from New Zealand and have lived in Shanghai China now for 3 years.
I own and operate www.Travel-the-Real-China.com my site provides experienced based Travel and Tour information on the wonders of Travel in China, the Real China, Ancient China, China at its very best.
Hi All,
my first post
I am planning for the second time to organize a SideCar Trip in China
We did ( 5 bikes, 9 people) Urumuqi => Kashgar last year, and it was amazing !!!
This year (may) i would like to do a trip in Yunnan, 7 bikes 13 people, 10 to 13 days
Starting in KM do you have any suggestion / advice for the trip, i am looking for fun roads (not highways) where we can find something off the beaten tracks. The bikes can do 150 to 300 km a day on fair roads.
any information on my XJ trip don't hesitate to contact me
from China you can check the website : http://bertie.2-minute-website.com/phy/fred/2005/vacation/0504xinjiang/index.html
So on the way past one of the massive construction projects in Kunming, I noticed ads on the construction debris wall for "Kunming's Old Street" (昆明老街) which promised to be a great cultural experience. Is Kunming trying to cash in on the successes that Dali and Lijiang have had in creating "old town" experiences? Will it work? Probably.
But good grief.
I'd like to share my observations about buying a house or land in or around Xianggeilla. The rules probably apply to some degree to other non-metropolitan areas in China, but I don't know for sure. If anyone has any insights, I'd love to hear them, since I might be going about things all wrong. =) A post on Lonely Planet's forums inspired this.
Land in villages is still allocated at the level of the villages. It's passed down from generation to generation, and there's no GPS to tell you were plot boundaries are, so people rely on things like rocks and trees as landmarks. Disputes don't come up since everyone in the village knows where all the boundaries are.
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