Photographer's Note
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I took this photo in Yuanyang during my practice on digital. 3 months prior to my arrival, Maciej Tomczak had been here. Not only photographed the terraced fields, he even wrote an essay to share with us his experience. While his essay is going to be published on the Canadian magazine photolife soon, it appears here with authors permission. The title and its entire text are copyright. Please enjoy
The Art of Rice
The surreally gargantuan rice terraces near Chinese town of Yuanyang, Yunnan are easy to miss.
Surprisingly, guidebooks hardly mention the place. And when they do, it seems to be out of the need for completeness. The site is scantly promoted internationally a far cry from the fame of Ifugao terraces near Banaue in Philippines, the Hmong structures around Sapa in northern Vietnam or the terraces of Bali, Indonesia. Most package tours miss it too. The spot is still mercifully below the China National Tourism Administrations radar, though given the Administrations growing appetite for the new, picturesque mass retreats appealing to Chinas well-heeled east-coasters, the Yuanyangs obscurity may not last for long.
Yuanyang is quiet, but vulgar and uninspiring. The discovery of the towns fondness for canine cuisine may easily become its only discerning feature in a westerners travel blog. Coming here requires a lengthy, premeditated detour, west from the standard backpackers trail passing from Hekou a China/Vietnam border-crossing, to Kunming, Dali or Lijang towns where travellers congregate. One quickly looses any reservations about going the extra mile to get here though: collectively, the nearby rice terraces, curved in the Ailao Mountains by generations of Hani farmers must be among the most spectacular landscapes on the Planet!
Within a short hike or a public bus ride in virtually any direction from Yuanyang, there are over 100 square kilometres of intricately irrigated terraced fields of cultivated wet rice. At elevations of almost 2,000 meters, millions of groovy trays pepper the steep hills, some built on slopes approaching 70-degree gradient. At places, there may be 2,000-3,000 stacked pans sculpted on a single slope.
The Steps to Heaven were built by Hani settlers (now-sedentary Agha relatives) who have migrated to todays Yunnan from Qinghai-Tibetan plateau in the 7th century. Originally nomadic, Hani were progressively pushed out and up from fertile valleys of the Red (Honghe) River by Han Chinese expansions. Some two centuries ago, they settled in the highlands and began farming steep hillsides of Ailao Mountains, which are now home to most of some 1,250,000 Hani living in China.
(To be cont'd)
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Critiques | Translate
fahrik
(175) 2005-11-02 5:27
This is very very interesting photo, but you'd better not play so much with colors. That may have collapsed an outstanding picture.
pnphan
(3957) 2005-11-02 13:30
hinh dep qua chu thanh, vay ma ngam lau du bay gio moi cho ra
hinh nhu sensor cua chu bi do
ChrisJ
(171280) 2005-11-03 9:25 [Comment]
ishai
(4097) 2005-11-03 11:38
What a drama here,
It can be heaven or hell here, thanh
Its a quit interesting moment you capture with the outburst of the sun rays and the clouds
The reflection on the rice fields with the goldfish colors is marvelous
Well done
Ishai
fireflyz
(2097) 2005-11-07 13:53
Lovely scene Mr Thanh!
Amazing colors, nices composition and the reflection of sky on the water is great!
Regards,
Skye
Photo Information
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Copyright: Ngy Thanh (ngythanh)
(8458)
- Genre: Τοποθεσίες
- Medium: Έγχρωμο
- Date Taken: 2005-02-21
- Categories: Φύση
- Camera: Canon EOS 10D, Canon 75-300mm F\4-5.6 IS USM
- Έκδοση φωτογραφίας: Πρωτότυπη έκδοση
- Θέμα(τα): Yuanyang a best-kept secret /1/, Rice Fields "III" [view contributor(s)]
- Date Submitted: 2005-11-02 3:43