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The last thing you would expect to find in an ever-expanding city like Beijing is Wildlife. But it's here!
The last thing you would expect to find in an ever-expanding city like Beijing is Wildlife. But it's here!
In Part 2 we get a foreign perspective from Terry Townshend, an environmental lawyer and bird blogger living in Beijing, on the importance of Beijing's wetland areas.
Li Li is the founding member of the Black Leopard Wildlife Conservation Station. He started his career in traditional Chinese painting.
So far China has bucked a global downward trend of diminishing camera sales, as smartphones include ever better photographic capabilities.
Simon Kubski co-founded We Impact, a company that promotes sustainable living in China.
In the early 1980s the rural projectionists formed an important part of rural China life. Once villages received access to electricity so television became popular and change accelerated after young villagers left for the cities.
Guillermo Munro, who signs his art with the name Memuco, is a Mexican-American painter currently living in Beijing.
Since the 11th century in Beijing, dynastic emperors built moats to defend their city walls, and it is a loop of these waterways that makes up the last of the five walks in this series.
In part five of Walking the Beijing Waterways, D J Clark starts near the international exhibition center where the Bahe river spills out into the northern moats and heads 12 km east out beyond the 5th ring road.
In part four of Walking the Beijing Waterways, D J Clark starts where the last walk finished, at the entrance to Yuyuantan Park under the old CCTV Tower in the far west of the city. It's the longest of the five walks and takes a full day to complete.
In part three of Walking the Beijing waterways, D J Clark takes off on a 13 km western walk that is broadly divided into two halves: a pleasant stroll through the vast grounds of the Summer Palace and a long straight walk south along the wide Jingmi Canal.