From Grits to Chopsticks

Southern Folks Living in Southwest China

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Lotus Pund

October 3rd, 2016 · 3 Comments · Uncategorized

(Our camera was stolen last week, so I’m posting a blog I had written and saved from earlier this summer).

During one of weekly afternoon breaks, we walked around “Lotus Pund Park”:Lotus Pund ParkThe Chinese people are amazingly skilled at placing a peaceful, small park in the middle of a city:Park in the CityThe park is named after the Lotus flower pagoda in the middle of the pond:Lotus towerLotus flower

People fish in the pond, even on a sunny afternoon:Big FishingPerhaps they’ll catch the “dragon necked turtle” (at least, that’s what we thought he looked like):Dino turtleFor those who wanted to stay out of the bright sunlight, they could also go “goldfishing” in the shade:GoldfishingOf course, there is plenty of shade for card players,Card Playersand the ubiquitous park musicians:Park Musicians cropped

Click here for a sample of their music: Park Music

While walking though the park, we found this unusual sculpture – it’s the first time I’ve seen a statue of a dead guy:Yes he is dead

The park actually had decent public restrooms, unless you are “deformed” and can’t move the bench stored in front of the special stall:Deformed PersonIn a city of 7 million people, we are thankful for places to escape the hustle and bustle:Old Man Sitting

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3 Comments so far ↓

  • laurie

    Elijah thinks that turtle looks funny!

  • S

    From an econ standpoint, wonder how they came by the land for these parks – perhaps they’re old, but given the pace of development, wonder if variations on eminent domain are frequently used.

  • admin

    Most of the parks are very old, obviously built before the land values bubbled up. In a city of 6+ million people, the parks are an essential quiet oasis that would be very difficult to remove.

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