Autumn colors in XiangShan, BeiJing - the following week it snowed, but i did not bring a camera
Autumn colors in XiangShan, BeiJing - the following week it snowed, but i did not bring a camera
Autumn colors in XiangShan, at the time of the 18th National Party Congress
A weeping willow lake suppressed by a red lily pad at the time of the 18th Party Congress … my family photos are no longer accessible on the World Wide Web from China because they are censored.
Autumn colors in XiangShan, BeiJing - the following week it snowed, but i did not bring a camera
Lucas, the 9 tailed fox, 6 year b-day
Happy 6 year birthday to Lucas, the nine tailed fox!
Lucas, the 9 tailed fox, 6 year b-day
Happy 6 year birthday to Lucas, the nine tailed fox!
Lucas, the 9 tailed fox, 6 year b-day
Lucas, the 9 tailed fox, 6 year b-day
Happy 6 year birthday to Lucas, the nine tailed fox!
Valorie 100 day b-day -- Bai La Wan beach
Valorie 100 day b-day -- Bai La Wan beach
Valorie 100 day b-day -- Bai La Wan beach
Valorie 100 day b-day -- Bai La Wan beach
Valorie 100 day b-day -- Bai La Wan beach
Valorie 100 day b-day -- Bai La Wan beach
Valorie 100 day b-day -- Bai La Wan beach
Valorie 100 day b-day -- Bai La Wan beach
Zhouzhuang city history dates back about 2600 years to the Spring and Autumn Period of consolidation, between China’s feudal period and the Waring States periods of history. Zhouzhuang was ruled under the King of Wu and called Yaocheng. It was called Zhouzhuang after ZhouDigong donated more than 200 acres to the local Quanfu Temple during the Yuan Dynasty (1860). By the mid-Yuan Dynasty. Using its superior geographical advantage to do trade, Zhouzhuang became a distribution center of food, silk, ceramics, arts and crafts in the south of China.
Watering plants in the rain?
A cold windy morning walk with mom.
Early morning walking with Brian
Early morning walking with mom
Valorie, MaMa, Mom, Dad, BaBa, me, Daisy, & Brian
View from our apartment window
View from our apartment window - when I first came to China 20 years ago, the far side of the river was all just rice fields. Downtown Shanghai is actually on the this side of the HuangPu river, to the right, and not in this photo.