because I posted that the original theme left people out, and the host was kind enough to make an adjustment to include us.
However, all the shots that I have of nature around here are green and lush, because before the people moved in, this was a tropical rain forest. I don't feel that they fit in with the images of the arid desolation of the south-west.
I'm still hurting from having my entries deleted in the "Beer" mini-challenge. I hate beer because it kills people, but the challenge and its participants could not tolerate my point of view.
I hope that you can tolerate my city photos. This is the future of the great outdoors. 40 million people live within two hours drive of downtown Guangzhou. If you count Hong Kong and Shenzhen which are also two hours away, you have 60 million people. I live in this world, a world of concrete. This is the Great Outdoors to me.
This first photo is an exhibition photo. I include it to show you from where I took the photos. The curved triangular building is the IFC (International Financial Centre) building, and I took the other three photos from a lounge on the 70th floor.
The next photo is of the Pearl River and surrounding concrete. If it was a clear day it would be concrete to the horizon, but it's never a clear day. I'm not complaining. The pollution in the Beijing-Tianjin area where I used to live is ten times worse.
This next photo is looking down from the 70th floor of the IFC building, just to give an idea of how huge all the surrounding buildings are. The tallest building in Winnipeg would seem like a helpless little shack in this neighbourhood.
My third entry is the Canton Tower. Briefly, before the Burj in Dubai was completed, this was the tallest building in the world. Now it is number 4. I believe that the IFC building is one of the top ten tallest buildings in the world. Guangzhou has four of the top ten. Currently in China there are two projects underway to make a building taller than the Burj.
At night time, if you take a boat down the river, all these buildings are lit up and it's really very pretty. We destroy our world, and we make our own unsustainable world to replace it. This is the future of the Great Outdoors.
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John Dunn