While Chinese tourists could be recognized by the large number of people in the groups, the Japanese are recognizable in the same way the Americans are in Russia - loud talking, gesticulation....via the Marmot, who linked to another long Russian photo essay from the countryside, with commentary in Russian.
As a rule, about half the food is very spicy. I.e. it burns so much that it is impossible to eat. Especially prevalent are Kim-Chi - some kind of vegetables with spices. Naturally everyone eats with chopsticks. I used to think that wooden chopsticks were hard to eat with. Boy, was I wrong! : The wooden ones at least catch onto the food, as opposed to the metal ones. However, by the end of the trip I was able to use the metal ones quite well. Although I wasn't holding them quite right (I couldn't hold them the way the [tourguide] girls did). Then, forks are handed out as well.
The food hardest too eat is the local noodles. They are very long, sticky, and cooked to form some type of a clot. Before you eat it, you need to break up the clot with the chopsticks (which supposes being good with them). Even after that, when you try to pick up some of the noodles, the rest of them try to follow :)...
Machines typical for village - GAZ (probably made in Northern Korea, not in Russia) and a lorry - with gas generator.
This car works with firewood, but I have to underline, that it's NOT a steam machine, but GAS-generator (Usual internal combustion engine, just re-made). It's not gasoline, of course, so the max speed is about 20-30 km per hour.
The firewood (at the right) are prepared for lorry. They're put by portions into the can (is seen in the back of a lorry) and slowly burn there.
We've seen such machines about five times in general....
The interesting fact - in Russia the local rivers usually have their names and the bridges have not. But here is the opposite situation.
There's a name of bridge aon the stone and also a date when it was built (1974). And the river is nameless.
01 August 2006
Wandering Russian Camera in North Korea
Russian photographer Peter Sobolev has posted a lengthy travelogue about North Korea, with commentary translated into English by Pavel Sokolov. You'll have to go there to see the photos, but here is a sample of the commentary.
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