Sun-Ling and John have been traveling the earth since 2008 while blogging, eating vegetarian and vegan, and riding public transportation. We love uphill day hikes, 20th-century architecture, Roman ruins, all bodies of water, local markets, shopping for groceries, aqueducts, miradors, trip planning, blablacar, and more.
Search This Blog
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Most Recent Post
Melbourne: The Great Ocean Road
Weather looked the most favorable on our first day in Melbourne. We spent it on a bus tour, something we rarely do, with much skepticism, to...

Most Popular Posts of Last 30 Days
-
In order to guarantee a hassle-free speedy trip from from St Ignacio, Belize to Tikal in Guatemala we eschewed public transport and paid for...
-
John: We left Subotica, Serbia heading north to Hungary on an antiquated self-propelled one-coach train that barely made more than 20kms...
-
Our very first day in Argentina, we noticed that everyone seems to have some strange looking drinking apparatus that they are always fooling...
-
After a "Melaka City Tour" route on local bus #17 we arrived at Melaka Sentral Bus Terminal and in a few minutes - no time for a t...
-
A "must do" in Penang over Chinese New Year is seeing the lights at Kek Lok Si Buddhist temple. So on the 2nd day of the New Year,...
-
When we were in Bosnia, a good friend wrote, "You All are BRAVE! To be going to the places that you are. Mostar, etc. Not brave in ...
-
From Yining, China, we began a somewhat difficult two-day journey to Karakol, Kyrgyzstan via Zharkent, Kazakhstan. The easy route would hav...
4 comments:
Thank you for your update. I'm happy to hear you arrived safely! --Dayle
My daughter was adopted from Guizhou last summer. She was brought to us in Guiyang so we never got to visit the places she came from. She was born in Rongjiang but in foster care in Kaili. You have no idea how much your pictures mean to me. Thank you.
Julie
Julie,
Thank you for leaving such a wonderful comment.
Did you also see the Guizhou photos we have on flickr? Most are from the area of Kaili to Rongjiang. http://www.flickr.com/photos/meckleychina/sets/72157604620340919/
By the way, the people of Rongjiang city and the surrounding villages are very friendly.
John, thanks for the link. i really enjoy those photos. i wonder if those remote areas will be mordenized too quickly before i have a chance to see it the way it has been for a long time.
weiqing
Post a Comment