for growing mushrooms. Nothing goes to waste.
We had local mushrooms in many of the dishes we ate
over the weekend, and they were delicious.
rice paddies, water buffalo, and barefoot peasants toiling in conical hats.
They still live that way.
there's remarkably little in the way of machinery.
Bamboo is used for everything. Telephone poles...
shovel handles. (Okay, those aren't bamboo, but we sawsome later that were, and this is a better picture.)
In the afternoon, we biked through still more little villages.
Then we went back to the lodge and relaxed before dinner--a delicious bbq: chicken, lamb, sausages. We met some interesting people: a couple Greek guys on holiday, and a young Australian/Swedish couple. Good conversations, good mojitos. And that was the morning and the evening of the second day.
P.
P.
2 comments:
Happy Holidays, guys. The guy with the pig on the back of the motor bike reminds me of Korea (circa 1962): when it was time for the piggy to go to market - they had to get him there alive because there was no refrigeration - the family would have a party to say goodbye. Everybody would get drunk, including Mr. Piggy, and when Mr. Piggy passed out, they would load him on the back of a bicycle and head for the butcher. The drunk driver weaving away.
These are the types of images that stay with us long after we've come home. The image of a drunken driver with a drunken pig on the back of a motorbike is priceless.
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