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  • Thai Senior at Ban Bat Village or Monk Bowl Village where you will find Thai artisans making traditional alms bowls for monks who use traditional alms bowls to receive donations of food in the early morning.
    monk-bowl-village-15.jpg
  • Hoi An Market Vendor - most Vietnamese markets are very colorful and active humming with activity from morning till noon.  You'll find everything from herbs to fresh crabs and other produce.
    hoi-an-market-6.jpg
  • Indian men are famous for their moustaches and facial hair - and nowhere else in India is this cultivated more than in  Jodhpur, where it is almost raised to an art form.  This grisly character has interesting headwear as well.
    jodhpur-gentleman-3.jpg
  • Indian Handlebar Moustache - Indian men are famous for their moustaches, and nowhere else in India is this cultivated more than in Rajasthan, where it is almost raised to an art form.
    indian-moustache-1.jpg
  • Indian Handlebar Moustache - Indian men are famous for their moustaches, and nowhere else in India is this cultivated more than in Rajasthan, particularly Jodhpur, where it is almost raised to an art form.
    jodhpur-gentleman-4.jpg
  • Ban Baat is the only remaining village of three established in Bangkok by Rama I for the purpose of handcrafting bàht (monk’s bowls), the ceremonial bowls used to collect alms from the faithful each morning. As cheaper factory-made bowls are now the norm, the artisanal tradition has shrunk to about half a dozen families. You can usually observe the process of hammering the bowls together from eight separate pieces of steel, said to represent Buddhism’s Eightfold Path.
    monk-bowl-village-12.jpg
  • Tai Chi at Lou Lim Ioc Chinese Garden - Lou Lim Ioc Garden is a garden in Macau. The garden was built in 1906 by local merchant Lou Kau as part of his residence. It was later turned over to the Macau government in 1974 as a public park.
    lou-lim-ioc-garden-4.jpg
  • Damnoen Saduak a provincial district of Rajburi Province. Most people live along both sides of the canal fmany of them agriculturists.  Thanks to th emany canals in the area, the land is naturally fertile. Damnoen Saduak is most famous for its floating market which is routinely crowded with hundreds of vendors floating in their small rowing boats selling and buying or exchanging their foods, mostly fruit and vegetables brought from their orchards.
    bangkok-floating-market-1.jpg
  • Mr. Duy Viet, a poet, orchid farmer, former mayor of Dalat, and owner of the Stop and Go cafe tends his orchids, writes poetry, hangs out with coffee and tea drinkers and even strums the guitar on occasion. Female visitors to the cafe will receive an orchid placed behind their ear as a souvenir. All others will receive friendship.
    stop-and-go-cafe-1.jpg
  • Chinese Violin and Violinist in the park by Houhai Lake. Hutong life refers not only to the alleyways and courtyards of Beijing, but mostly to the neighborly way of life that is said to be disappearing.
    chinese-violin-1.jpg
  • Mr. Duy Viet, a poet, orchid farmer, former mayor of Dalat, and owner of the Stop and Go cafe tends his orchids, writes poetry, hangs out with coffee and tea drinkers and even strums the guitar on occasion. Female visitors to the cafe will receive an orchid placed behind their ear as a souvenir. All others will receive friendship.
    stop-and-go-cafe-3.jpg
  • The Stop and Go Cafe in Dalat may sound like a petrol station, but in fact it is one of the town's most artsy cafes.  Its owner, renowned Vietnamese poet Mr Duy Viet, hosts local artists, foreign travelers in his villa serving up fresh coffee, conversation and friendship 365 days of the year.
    stop-and-go-cafe-7.jpg
  • Mr. Duy Viet, a poet, orchid farmer, former mayor of Dalat, and owner of the Stop and Go cafe, lovingly caresses one of his orchids in his villa cafe. Female visitors to the cafe will receive an orchid placed behind their ear as a souvenir. All others will receive friendship.
    stop-and-go-cafe-4.jpg
  • Mr. Duy Viet, a poet, orchid farmer, former mayor of Dalat, and owner of the Stop and Go cafe tends his orchids, writes poetry, hangs out with coffee and tea drinkers and even strums the guitar on occasion. Female visitors to the cafe will receive an orchid placed behind their ear as a souvenir. All others will receive friendship.
    stop-and-go-cafe-2.jpg
  • The Kalingas are the indigenous people of the Kalinga area of the Cordilleras, the Philippines. Among the Kalingas there is a strong sense of tribal membership and filial loyalty that has resulted in frequent tribal unrest and the occasional war with neighboring tribes. Due to the mountainous terrain and warrior culture of the people, the Kalingas have been able to maintain their culture despite the occupation of the Spanish, Japanese and Americans.
    kalinga-1.jpg
  • The Kalingas are the indigenous people of the Kalinga area. They are generally known to be tall, dark complexioned and lissome with high bridged noses. Among the Kalinga people there is a strong sense of tribal membership and filial loyalty results in frequent tribal unrest and occasional outright war. Due to the mountainous terrain and warrior culture of the people, the Kalingas were able to maintain their culture despite the attempted occupation of the Spaniards, Japanese and Americans.
    kalinga-2.jpg
  • Cambodians traditionally wear a checkered scarf called a krama. The krama is what distinguishes Cambodians from their neighbors the Thai, the Vietnamese, and the Laotians. The scarf is used for many purposes - protection from the sun, for your feet when climbing trees, a hammock for infants, a towel or even as a sarong.
    cambodian-krama.jpg