Portraits

Irrespective of modernisation, Prague has been totally ruined by tourism. It is not a joke when @Jonathan R said in the Prague thread that the best time to visit to avoid crowds of tourists is 1985.

The effects of mass over tourism and over development from domestic sources are different, and can only be managed by different civic approaches to development. Hong Kong and Bangkok receive the most visitors of any cities worldwide, but still have a lot of authentic elements, even if they have changed a lot (the first time I went to HK I stayed in the Kowloon Walled City, gone since 1994). But a majority of people in the city at any one time are still locals, and the local government and many companies and other real entities operate out of central HK or Bangkok. In Prague the combination of over tourism and a lack of preservation of use and purpose has made the ratio of tourists to locals, particularly in Prague 1, extremely skewed. Apart from Barcelona, no large city absorbs so many visitors in such a small area, and visitors outnumber residents more than 10:1 in Prague 1 year round. Smaller cities like Dubrovnik, Rhodes, and Venice have it even worse, ratio-wise. On a relatively recent occasion when I was in Prague, the newly re-opened Hotel Grand Europa had staff who did not speak Czech and the food they sell as 'Czech' is made up and did not exist even in the 1990s let alone 'traditionally'. Those, as a start, are reflective of astounding failures on the part of the city and Czech governments to manage the influx of tourists. The government has even moved out of the centre, and a vast majority of real businesses have moved out. Prague 1 is a sort of fake Disneyland for tourists.

Hong Kong is a perfect example of what I was talking about. You have been there so you know how small it is and how even smaller the historical areas which would be Wan Chai to Central in the island wide and TST to Mongkok on the peninsula side. You can walk it in 30 minutes. HK’s population went from 4 million in the mid 70’s to 8+ millions in less than 40 years. Thats more than the population of all of Sweden at the time. Where are they going to build to support such massive change? Outside of those mentioned older areas there were little infrastructure. The reason for the influx was the need for manual labor to support out sourcing factories. This was the era before Korea and Taiwan made plastic toys, shirts, plastic flowers and transistor radios. I lived there for 30 years as an American when I managed Asia operations for my employer and have seen all these countries modernize since the 90’s. I traveled everywhere with Rolleiflex and Leica and a bag of film. HK is still my favorite city.IMG_6450.jpeg
 
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Zorkiy 3m, JUPITER-3 50MM F1.5, 2021
 
If I have posted this I beg off with senility. I can no longer claim precocious senility. The photo is of the two women who were responsible for the really excellent fried fish, Albacore Tuna, at The Bowpicker in Astoria, OR. In summer the wait in line was an hour. This spot has been on the Disney channel and various travel channels. Folks drive down from Portland for the fish and chips. It is that good. The woman on the left is the daughter-in-law of the founder, Ron. The other woman is her partner in crime. The menu is simple: fish and chips and soda, period.

Yeah, the two were fun people. And great cooks.

 
Just another reason I left Mexico to come back home to the US: animal abuse. It is part of the culture and women are treated slightly better than animals. It is the "macho" culture. I liked Mexico a lot but could not stomach these things and it finally got bad enough that I came home.

This was at a fiesta for the saint associated with a remote mountain village in Baja California Sur.

 
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