Archive for the 'City landscape' Category

Kumasi is a garden city, 05.2010

In May of this year we visited the town of Kumasi, Ghana. Interesting city, about half a million people lives there. The city is known for its market, which is the largest market in Ghana and on which goods are brought from all over the country. There are many banks and they are located in the most beautiful buildings. The rest of the city consists of private houses which are built usually of plywood or boards. Sometimes these houses are very small and do not even have windows. This is certainly surprising.
But the impression is smoothed by abundance of vegetation. Kumasi is a real garden city. Right on the streets grow bananas, palms, mango, papaya, orange trees, cacao trees, cassava and simply beautiful and unusual trees. Banana gardens are very popular, as a rule they adjoin the wealthier homes. Directly in the city you can see the mango and orange farms. Everyone in Ghana knows that Kumasi is a place of the fascinating, flourishing  trees and plants. We have never seen before such a green city!
Pictures of Kumasi and its surroundings (photos made by Jan Jansen and Elena Kaledinova):
Slideshow

Kumasi, Ghana, 05.2010
Lake Bosumtwi situated 30 km south of Kumasi
Lake Bosumtwi situated 30 km south of Kumasi
Lake Bosumtwi situated 30 km south of Kumasi
Coconut palm
Coconut palm
Coconut palm
Coconuts
Coconuts
Coconuts
Lake Bosumtwi
Lake Bosumtwi
Lake Bosumtwi


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Spring in Velp, Netherlands, 03.2010

spring-in-velp-netherlands

Online album

Kyshtym – splinter of old Urals

Most small towns in the Urals lost little by little their wholeness and originality, which in former times distinguished them from the settlements in the other regions of Russia. Formerly Kyshtym was immediately recognized as a factory town, where the labor traditions stood high esteem. The life was simple and unpretentious, but people had a gentle soul. They did not infringe on someone else’s property, but would give nobody their personal one.
Only little fragments of the former mining industrial past remained in Kyshtym. There are, of course, a few of authentic Ural houses decorated with wooden cornices and turrets on the roofs, carved decorations for windows, which are special and unique for each house. kyshtym_mv
Sure, the spirit of the old city is still alive. Mountain ash is still growing right by the houses. People are still  tinkering up old cars, reviving the ancient vehicles and even turning them into “cool cars”. In Kyshtym respect to religion and to the water remains intact. Not surprising: there are many lakes around Kyshtym. lake_nearby_kyshtym

More pictures of Kyshtym: http://mv74.ru/fotoreport/news.php?item.64.1