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Monday, September 26, 2016

Kunming day 1; Cui Hu -lake and the city center

July 15, 2013.

We were arriving to Kunming (昆明) by bus. In the earlier post I mentioned a lot of spitting was involved inside the bus and also at the bus station. This is common in China, but it can be even worse than that. We saw someone do their big business right on the street and blow their noses to their hands, even the lady-like women! Our bus was stopped by the police three times. They checked passports etc. While waiting we saw photos of accidents at the police stand. Even trucks had gotten mangled into tiny pieces in the accidents! One truck had been put on show on the side of the road, so people would drive more carefully. The bus trip took nearly 9 hours. We stopped for food once at a roadside restaurant, where we gulfed down tofu, Chinese cabbage and rice with chopsticks like locals. We've used chopsticks for years so it didn't bother us there were no forks around. Again we were the only Western people on the bus and at the restaurant. 

At Kunming no taxi driver wanted to pick us up. How Chinese. Some non-taxi drivers were really interested in us though and offered us a ride. One of them was an older man who looked like he's on drugs and we were suspicious about him. After we saw that he had two women with small children in his car we decided to risk a ride with him. It might've been a family who offered us a ride, but we couldn't ask anything, 'cos they only spoke Chinese.

Later the man turned off the main road into a smaller alley...I hate when this happens, because it's so hard to follow where you're going when you're turning loads of small alleys, especially in China, where you might not have an internet available all the time (for a map), so we were a bit nervous of the whole situation. There was no need to worry though, as it turned out they were nice people who drove us straight to our hotel. Oh well, at least I was entertained by my imagination, getting some excitement from what otherwise was a very casual drive. The 16 km ride cost only five euros, which is good money for a local.

Kunming suburbs at night

July 16.
I tried to speak some Chinese again, but even though I listened carefully how the words are pronounced my speaking didn't get us too far. The locals might expect to hear us speak English and don't understand foreign Chinese pronounciation. So we ended up doing laundry ourselves at our hotel room, because our hotel could hardly help us with anything and we couldn't find a laundry place nearby. We were able to at least switch the room to a non-smoking one. The reception girls giggled when they tried to speak some English back. We were also able to get a taxi to Cui Hu -lake at Kunming center, where many tourists walked with a local guide. I was kinda jealous at them, because travelling with a local guide makes everything so easy here and you get more out of the places. We didn't have any travel books with us, we couldn't possibly carry them for the whole year with all the dive gear and whatnot, so we travelled with only few notes written down back at home or with tips from our travel buddies or the internet, whenever we had the connection.

Covers providing safety for the taxi drivers

Cui Hu (翠湖) -lake park is worth a visit, if you have the time in Kunming. The lakes inside the park are linked by traditional style bridges, there are islands with beautiful pavilions, various vendors selling local food and other things. The park is filled with beautiful trees, plants and flowers and you can watch pieces of performances from Chinese operas with the costumes and listen to folk music. And if you feel like you need an exercise you can join the groups in the park doing various styles of exercises. A lot of restaurants, hotels and shops are found from the edges of the park. We were in the park at working hours, when it was mostly filled with elderly people enjoying their time there.

Elderly people in their daily exercises at the park

A statue to Father of Seagull. Mr. Wu walked 10 km every morning to the lake to see and feed the birds that still appear here early every winter. He spent 50 % of his retirement pay on the birds, becoming so close friends with them, that the birds flew to him when he called them, and was named Father of Seagull by the people. His spirits set a model for man and nature living together in harmony.  

One of many performances in the park

One of many performances in the park

One of many performances in the park

Lotus pond

The few shops inside the park

Fresh juices



Fish House/Viewing pavilion, 观鱼楼.

Snacks of meat, tofu, etc.

Weeping willow trees

The park is quite big and you can spend hours there. We spent a few hours and later headed to an Italian restaurant closeby, where I ordered - or so I thought - a middle sized orange juice. What I got was a huge plate full of fruits though! This plate was actually on the drinks menu with three different prices, which I thought were the prices for different sized drinks. We ate most of it though and laughed that the plate was probably meant for a whole family. The waiters had good fun also watching us eat so much. We also had pizza with strange choice for toppings; broccoli and carrot. It wasn't very good, but it was the only vegetarian food they had.

Broccoli/carrot pizza by the lake

We spent the rest of the day in the city center and some people said hello to us. Again many locals photographed me, which is just normal in China, they love to photograph tourists. We tried to find some normal salted popcorn from the city and I found it, so my day was saved. Asians have various flavours in popcorn and the most common one you can find is the caramel flavour. Salted popcorn is hard to find here. We'd gotten so used to the smell of durian on this trip that it actually now smelled alright to our noses when we found it. Kari swore to try it someday, while I still felt hesitant about it.

Kunming office buildings

Fruits on wheels

Portable police office

Getting a massage etc at the city center

Caramelized fruit

Beautiful flowers at the center

Open air tai chi practise

No entry. The message is clear.

Next blog: Xishan Forest Park, Kunming, China.

Saturday, May 7, 2016

Dumbfounded in China

July 13th, 2013.

Three months into our year-long journey we had now arrived to our fourth country China, where we were going to stay the fourth month. China requires to have all hotels booked beforehand when you apply for a visa, so we had booked them. We cancelled all of them except the first one on arrival though, because our travel plans were very open in China. When we knew what we were going to do next we booked new hotels instead.

Soon after arriving to Jinghong we started searching for a taxi to get us to our hotel. As I mentioned in the last blog Chinese can be very rude (much more than citizens of other countries), which we've noticed from our earlier travels to China, and our first contact to a local person was going to be one of the most memorable and disgusting ones.

An older taxi driver lady was waiting for a customer near the bus station, so I walked over to her and showed her our hotel name written in English - in English, because we'd forgotten to print it in Chinese. As soon as I showed her the paper she started screaming at me full force like I had just stabbed her or something even worse! Before I could even respond to that she spat right at my feet, showed me her middle finger and an angry face. I was dumbfounded from such an angry response to a normal human communication. Sometimes you gotta wonder what goes on in some peoples heads. I didn't even ask her nothing, I just walked over and showed her the paper. Maybe she didn't like tourists at all. So this was our welcome back to China. What a nice start to our month long stay here.

It actually took us two hours to get to our hotel from the bus station as the taxis didn't want to deal with us, even though we were friendly, as usual. Some of them actually let us open the taxi door and speak to them, but as soon as they noticed we don't speak Chinese they got quite angry and showed us out! Finally a local young woman who noticed what we were going through, and who also spoke English, called a taxi for us and told the driver where we wanted to go. We couldn't thank her enough, she saved the day. The bus and taxi stations were actually quite close to our hotel, although on the other side of the river. We knew it's 3 km from the taxi stand to our hotel and we could've walked there, if our luggage wasn't so heavy. I had downloaded some Chinese language apps and maps to my tablet, but we couldn't use it now because it was out of power. Hopefully travelling in China wasn't going to be as difficult as this. Taking two hours to travel three kilometers is crazy and it depressed us a little that we didn't speak the language.

The taxi driver we got was an honest one and didn't charge us extra. He also behaved like a normal person, which was a relief after the first horrible contact with a local. Our hotel was very nice and seemed to be quite new. The workers didn't speak much English, but getting the room was no problem. The hotel was in a modern part of the city, where everything looked new and the people seemed wealthier from the average Chinese. Our hotel could've been in a worse neighbourhood, but we usually know what we're getting, as we follow some rules at booking hotels. If only we could've afforded such nice hotels as this throughout the trip.

Gate to the hotel and Dajin Buddha Pagoda area, where Xuanwei Ave.
and Menghan Road meet

Four Seasons Spring Inn is a good hotel,
but the staff hardly speaks English

Four Seasons Spring Inn

Today we decided to check out the hotels surrounding areas. We didn't have to walk much to find reminders of what some of the citys tourist attractions are; the main street Wanxiang Avenue in the Pagoda area is lined with amazing tall elephant and peacock statues on both sides. When Chinese do something they do it big, like the Americans. This was already evident when we crossed the border from Laos to China, the scenery immediately changed completely to huge buildings, parks, gateways and statues. Chinese and foreign tourists come to Jinghong to see its Elephant Valley Nature Reserve, where you can spot other animals as well, and the center of Jinghong has a Peacock Lake Park and Manting Park, which has a peacock aviary. We knew its quite hard to spot the elephants in the park, so we passed on that and later went to see the Peacock Lake Park.

Wanxiang Avenue with elephant and peacock statues leading to the Pagoda

One of the many peacock statues on the street

Jinghong (capital of Xishuangbanna) was for centuries the capital of the Sipsongpanna kingdom and is located near some of China's most important tea-producing mountains. Xishuangbanna is rich in nature, historical and cultural resources, noted for its folklore, rain forests, rare plants and wildlife. The main inhabitans are Dai people (thus the name Xishuangbanna Dai Autonomous Prefecture), and other ethnic groups include the Hani, Aini (Akha), Bulang, Lahu and so on. Bulang are only found in Yunnan. One of the tourist attractions here is to visit the ethnic villages.

The amount of electric motorcycles in this part of the city is unexpected. Kari was nearly hit with one, as we didn't hear it coming. Everyone was either driving those or what seemed to be brand new cars. Even Finland has worse cars on the streets! Like I mentioned earlier, people in this part of the city seemed wealthier from the average Chinese, so they probably can afford new cars. As we didn't know much about Jinghong we were happy to find at least one attraction; the Dajin Pagoda, which is located right at the end of the Wanxiang Avenue. Nowadays the attractions in China can be very expensive, even more than they are in the USA or Europe, but the Pagoda was free of charge.

Dajin Pagoda

Pagoda inside

Pagoda window detail

Dajin Pagoda

View to the city from Dajin Pagoda

The sun went down earlier here than in Laos, so we had to find a place to eat under the city lights. It wasn't an easy task, as all the signs are in Chinese. The restaurant we chose might've had its name in English too, but we don't remember its name and I can't find it from Google. The restaurant owner walked over immediately when we went in and wanted to say hello. She had just opened the business and everything looked nice. When you travel in China you'll soon notice that many want to have a photo taken with you, at least it was so with me, so the restaurant owner wanted to have a photo with me. Maybe because I'm blonde it was often me they chose for a pic from our group (we later got company to few places), but I'm just guessing.

We had some Western food, because the restaurant happened to have it on the menu, and we figured we're gonna have enough Chinese food on the rest of the trip anyhow. When we finished the dinner the owner wanted to offer us free cake! You never get anything free anywhere so we were baffled, but couldn't say no. Our first day in China was full of mixed emotions and events.

The mysterious restaurant

City lights

City lights

July 14th.
It was raining hard as we woke up on Sunday. Most of the year Jinghong is hot and humid and now it was a pleasantly warm and humid. We walked down to the restaurant for breakfast and decided to give first try to the Chinese notes we got from Julie. The notes clearly worked well, as the restaurant girls disappeared fast into the kitchen. We couldn't order exactly what we wanted, so we waited in suspense to see what they were going to serve us. What we got was a pretty typical Chinese dish; soup, which included Chinese cabbage, tomato and egg with rice. We had to pick out the egg from the soup, as we don't eat them as such and usually try to avoid them. Normally we would've passed the whole soup because it already included animal product, but because we weren't sure when we were getting our next meal we decided to just pick it out. Somehow the girls were able to explain to us that they had ran out of noodles. What are the odds that a Chinese hotel runs out of noodles! We also got cold bottled green tea instead of hot tea, but that was our mistake, we just picked something out from their drinks menu and it happened to be a cold drink.

Chinese notes written by our friend Julie

We wanted to rent bikes for the day, so I used the Google translator with our hotel staff. They had fun about it, I don't know whether it was because I had to use a device to "speak" with them or the translation was gibberish, but they finally understood me. They asked us to follow an older lady who took us to a rental company, but it was closed. Then the lady took us to another place, but because the deposit was as high as 1000,- (US dollars) and 50,- for a bike, we decided to walk to the city center instead. The rain didn't last long, so we had another nice and sunny day to walk around the city.

The Xuanwei Avenue outside our hotel area mostly had electronics, car parts and car service companies lined after another. We had to follow this dull road, with nothing to see, to the river. The Lancang River, also known as the Mekong River elsewhere, runs through the prefecture and passes through Laos, Thailand, Cambodia and Vietnam. We soon found our way to the Hanging Bridge crossing the river, and the views from the bridge were impressive. The bridge itself was already impressive, but the scenery mixed old and new; towering skyscrapers near the mountains and old boats and houses near the river.

A vehicle on Xuanwei Avenue

Hanging Bridge of Jinghong

Lancang/Mekong River and the growing city

Cruise ships on Lancang River

Sandbank message in big stones

Although we've travelled in Asia since 1999 I still find it a little bit tiring when most of the people stare at us. Sometimes I've played with the thought of dyeing my hair black when I travel to Asia just to blend in with the rest. So here we were again, walking around and everybody staring at us. I guess they had a good reason to wonder about us, because during our stay in the city we didn't see any Western people! It was a strange feeling we hadn't had in a long time and reminded us of our first trips abroad, when we didn't meet much foreign people in some places and none from Finland. We felt kinda lonely out here.

We met all sorts of people during our first days. At one store I met two young boys who had fun with me, they joked something in Chinese to me and laughed and I joked back in Finnish. They asked my name and when I asked theirs it was too much for them. They disappeared fast, calling my name many times between the store shelves. Some people yelled something to us, some were interested in us and some were helpful. At one street we noticed what seemed like a few strange men following us. They might've been thieves, as one of the bridges closeby had some kind of a warning sign in Chinese and also recommended holding hands with kids while on the bridge.

Binjiang (Bianjiang) Park starts on left

Jinghong center has a lot of technology shops (phones, computers) and fashion, but we passed them since we couldn't really buy anything during the trip. The city seemed like a nice place and we soon found the Peacock Lake Park (Kong Que Hu), where you can enjoy some water fun. Later we bought some cake, sweet stuff and juice from a local bakery, because we couldn't find a decent restaurant from the streets we walked in. Or then we just didn't spot any due to the Chinese signs, and we thought asking people was too much trouble then. Jinghong actually has a lot of restaurants and even a bar street right by the river, but I don't know how many of them serve vegetarian food. We decided to go back to the hotel for dinner, as we'd already walked around the city most of the day.

Peacock Lake Park

So much sweet stuff, all single wrapped in plastic!
What a sweet, yet terrible sight.

Did we come to Miami?

Mystery entrance 

More elephant statues in the city center

Even the way dividers are beautiful here

Fog machines to cool down your face

Gateway to somewhere

Crossroads. Asian people use umbrellas in the sun.

When we took a taxi we decided to just jump straight in when one of them stops, so the driver can't get away. Funnily this worked. We showed the driver our hotel card written in Chinese and also used our hands to show the way. He seemed to know where we were going, so we were relieved there was no hassle this time. When we stopped he asked for more money though than the meter showed. It wasn't supposed to cost that much, but we paid since he only asked for a euro.

We had a perfect timing, as the rain started again right when we stepped into the hotel lobby. The morning rain had dried up fast from the streets and so did the evening rain. Later when we ordered dinner I tried the Chinese flash cards from an app. The app worked well, although again the hotel didn't have everything we wanted, like tofu. We got rice and the vegetables were again just Chinese cabbage! Maybe they understood the vegetable part wrong, but it started to look like there isn't any other vegetable in China...Of course we knew there is, but we probably had a miscommunication. We also asked for chili sauce. My orange juice didn't come in a glass, they refused to sell glass only, so I bought the whole big carton of Minute Maid! At least they understood us now and left eggs out of our dinner. The workers had a lot of fun again when we used our computers and notes. Hey, whatever works, right?

Our dinner; tofu, rice and cabbage.

We stayed in Jinghong only two days and nights. It was our gateway to China from Laos, and we needed to move on to Kunming, which we had made actual sightseeing plans for. On the morning we were leaving Jinghong we had another misunderstanding with the hotel staff. We needed a taxi to the bus station where the busses leave to Kunming, and the staff booked us flight tickets to Kunming! We asked them to cancel them and decided to get a taxi ourselves from the street. The hotel staff were very friendly and tried their best to understand our notes and Chinese apps, but it seemed like they weren't helping us enough. Who knows what adventures we were heading into with them...

While waiting for our bus to leave we were watching the people at the station. Some bus driver was loading living ducks in bags inside the luggage holder (not inside the bus, but below where the big luggage goes to), some people were spitting and some blowing their noses right at their feet! It was nothing new to us, as we've seen this before in China, but it's still disgusting to see. The Chinese busses have many trashcans on the bus aisle and we didn't know how multifunctional they can be. Again people were spitting and blowing their noses into them and throwing diapers and all sorts of trash in there. They were full in no time. The smell in the bus was quite terrible; a mixture of various foods, sweat, baby poo...Although the busses in China are quite clean I can't recommend this type of travel for everyone.

Trashcans at bus aisle

We had travelled for twenty minutes, when we were stopped by the police. They checked each passengers passport or ID and luggage. Because it took a while one woman decided to now find a bathroom. Our bus left without her, but she was lucky, as her husband was in the bus and yelled at the driver to stop. We didn't get far and she ran to the bus. It was at this stop we saw the first foreigner so far. We should see more of them in Kunming, which is the capital of Yunnan and a tourism center with several universities, important economic, cultural, and educational institutions as well.

Stopped by the police

As our travels continued in China we noticed that the older people seemed to have some problems with tourists, one reason might be the language barrier, but quite a few of them seemed truly disgusted when they saw us and didn't hesitate showing it to us. Our friends who have travelled, and some of them lived in China, have experienced the same thing. But the good thing is the younger people are easy to talk to - they even seem interested in the Western people and came over to talk to us. Many of them greeted us in English here. Not everyone behaves badly here, there are all sorts of people in every country. But it would be nice if everyone treated you as a decent human being, not a walking wallet like they do in some places.

Monday, April 18, 2016

From Laos to China

July, 2013.

6,5 hours. It's not much at all in Asia in travel time. That's what it took to reach Luang Namtha from Luang Prabang with our minivan. Compared to travelling in Finland 6,5 hours is alright here. Somehow time doesn't feel the same everywhere, or maybe it's just the attitude towards the time and place. In Asia you don't want to stress yourself when you travel as much as 15 hours straight, because you know reaching places takes more time here - if you're not travelling by plane that is. And then again you'd reach the central part of Finland by now, which feels like a long way to go, half the country! But when you travel for hours everything's alright as long as the bus has a toilet or you make stops along the way. Because the minivan had no toilet we made two stops along the way.

It was raining the whole day, so the mountain road was in a very bad condition with landslide areas. Huge mud puddles had stopped some cars and people were pushing them. We got pretty close to pushing our car too, as the driver made some crazy moves straight into the huge puddles nearly capsizing the van, and even drove near the verge of the mountain road. We were driving about 15 km/h, because the road was so bad. We were afraid of more landslides, but luckily everything went well.

Our minivan was mainly packed with tourists. When some of them left the driver soon filled the seats by picking up random local people along the way in need of a ride. Our van was so crammed we could hardly move during the trip. This pick-up system seems to work much better than the Western transport system with timetables and bus stops and is used in many Asian countries. It has its disadvantages too, like the non-existent timetables and over packed cars. You never know when the bus will arrive and if there's seats left, so sometimes you might wait for a long time for a ride.

Luang Namtha is a very small city, which mainly attracts the trekking and nature lovers. We didn't have time for those, as we were supposed to be out of Laos in three days, so we just relaxed and stayed for two nights. Our hotel seemed like a nice place at first, but turned out it had a lot of mosquitos and that wasn't all. When I woke up one morning I noticed that the bed bugs had been eating my leg! We didn't bother to change the hotel, as we only had one more night before leaving LN.

The curfews in Laos also applied here. The hotel rules adviced tourists to be back in the hotel by ten p.m. At some places you can't enter the hotel anymore, if you arrive too late. People have literally slept outside because of this, even if they had a reservation and knew the hotel staff!

View from our hotel. We were surrounded by mountains again with nature everywhere.

Fish aquarium at our hotel

Laos also has a water festival.

We had a very interesting dinner in a Canadian owned restaurant called Forest Retreat Bamboo Lounge next to the Dokchampa hotel. I ordered a pizza with local vegetable toppings called a "jungle pizza". The waiter said the toppings change each day, depending on what they can find from the jungle. So we waited impatiently to see what they're going to serve me. After a thirty minute wait I had a pizza in front of me that looked like it had either fish or chicken on top of it, but it didn't smell like either of them. We asked the waiter what it was and he said the name for the vegetable, but we forgot what it was.
Steve tried it at first just in case it was meat, and turns out this veggie was hot! Then Kari tried it and made the same remark, now both guys turning more red from their faces each minute and laughing. This veggie was truly hot, as these guys can handle hot food! One might've thought this veggie was something suspicious, as the guys were having so much fun eating it. Jemma and me were laughing at the red guys, but they still wanted to eat more of it. As I can't handle hot food I let them pick that stuff out of my pizza and let them enjoy their weird fun. I then ate the rest of the pizza which was good, although expensive. The next day we returned to this restaurant, as Kari wanted to have his own jungle pizza, but they didn't have the same veggie anymore.

The restaurant charged extra from tea bags and cheese, as milk products aren't really used in Asia. Tea in Laos is a weird concept. You need to order the tea bag seperately unless you're having Lipton tea, which can usually be found everywhere. All the special local teas with mint, ginger, etc only include the herb and hot water, it's very plain. We also ate lunch in a local restaurant at the opposite side from the hotel. It was very popular, cheap and the food was good.

Forest Retreat Bamboo Lounge

LN had some dog packs roaming the streets. They were very friendly and streetwise and usually searching for food and playing with each other. There were also birds sleeping and nesting in our hotel, so we could watch them from close. The surrounding jungles bring a lot of birds to the city.

One dog pack on the main street

We missed the night market

Electric motorcycle

We had no complains ;)

On Saturday morning we left LN. Steve and Jemma also left to Thailand. We still got to hang out together for a while at the bus station, where we all waited for our busses to leave. We were very excited to go to China again, although a bit nervous how we will manage there again with just a few learned Chinese sentences Julie taught us and wrote on papers. Also knowing how rude the Chinese can be was not something we were looking forward to.

We took a local bus from LN to China, and it took 6 hours to get to our destination. We stopped three times on the way, first at the border of Laos in Boten city, which we reached in 45 minutes, then at the border of China and later elsewhere in China.

Boten city in Laos is about one kilometer from the border of China and has renminbi as the main currency. There's casinos, large hotels and shopping malls. The Boten Special Economic Zone (BSEZ), mostly funded by Chinese enterprises, transformed the undeveloped city. Because gambling is illegal in China the people cross the border to Laos to gamble. However, for the Lao people it is also illegal to gamble in their own country, so they also go elsewhere to gamble - if they have the money. Boten is considered as China, because Mandarin Chinese is widely spoken there and the majority of the population is Chinese.

Bus station in LN

Boten International Customs checkpoint. Are there other customs this fancy out there?

The Boten checkpoint's golden building is financed mainly by Chinese and cost over 400,000 euros to build. We've never seen anything like it at any borders. Asia never stops to amaze. This customs went fast and also the Chinese customs at Mohan port, although we did have to step outside of the bus with all of our bags and walk through the customs building with them. Before that I had to search a bathroom though and hope that the bus won't leave without us in the meantime. Because we couldn't understand what the bus driver was saying to the passengers we had to follow what everyone else was doing and now some passengers went to search the bathroom.

Mohan port in China, near Laos border.

We stopped for lunch for 45 minutes at a city in China I forgot the name of. The driver knew exactly where to find his lunch and disappeared fast out of sight, while we walked around and only saw one small shop that didn't have much to offer for us, so we just grabbed some small and unhealthy snacks. Our trip towards the city of Jinghong (Xishuangbanna prefecture, Yunnan) was full of beautiful sceneries. There were lush green forests everywhere, high hills and curvy roads. Everything looked well taken care of and clean.

By passing through the endless amounts of mountain tunnels China has our travel time shortened. The last half an hour of the trip was interesting, as we were only descending. Jinghong lies 558 meters above sea level and we descended from about 1,100 meters fast! It locked the ears like being in an airplane. The altitude differences were incredible, we could see such huge drops down from our street to other streets below us that it made your head dizzy. The other roads were so far down that they seemed to be on another planet. Because of these altitude differences in the high curvy mountain roads China has built frequent escape roads next to the main roads where a driver can steer his car in case of an accident. Seeing these roads eased our minds too, as the roads can sometimes feel really crazy. A river followed our road somewhere far below, sometimes escaping our eyes for ages and then coming back to view. The river was so far below, that it made us feel like we were driving on top of the world.

Lush green hills of Yunnan

Next blog: Jinghong (Xishuangbanna, Yunnan), China.

 

Briefly

Escaping the madness of the Western world, a couple that has travelled most continents takes a year off to search a new direction to their lives, the next destination staying open

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