WOW! Just so relaxing. Takes my imagination to the many villages that grow rice in my country too. Miss such scenery due to the travel restrictions that are in place since the pandemic.
Thanks for sharing your lovely trips with us too.Wish you many happy journeys to such beautiful locations always.
During the pandemic, I can only make virtual trips back to the places I have travelled 🙂
Sad reality for all of us 😥
Very true 😢
Really, this is a picture depicting the results of centuries and centuries of continuous labour by so many rural people! We can’t terrace steep slopes into food-growing paddies, control the water flows in and out of them and deal with erosion, too, without almost unimaginable amounts of work and expertise. Hats off for the photo, sir – and for the work of persistent peoples with great agri-cultural knowledge. UNESCO World Heritage Site?
This is an incredible image …
The birds eye view of the filed draws you to the landscape.
Thank you so much for sharing, Michael 🙂
Thanks for your kind comment 🙂
What an impressive view! I guess your visit was in summer, right? The fields are all green 🙂
Yes, correct 🙂
Exceptional – both in the reality of the existence of these terraces (how aan when they were built) and the wonderful perspective of this photo!
This makes the best use of the hilly terrain for agriculture, may have existed for centuries 🙂
Stunning view!
Thank you, Nora 🙂
WOW! Just so relaxing. Takes my imagination to the many villages that grow rice in my country too. Miss such scenery due to the travel restrictions that are in place since the pandemic.
Thanks for sharing your lovely trips with us too.Wish you many happy journeys to such beautiful locations always.
During the pandemic, I can only make virtual trips back to the places I have travelled 🙂
Sad reality for all of us 😥
Very true 😢
Really, this is a picture depicting the results of centuries and centuries of continuous labour by so many rural people! We can’t terrace steep slopes into food-growing paddies, control the water flows in and out of them and deal with erosion, too, without almost unimaginable amounts of work and expertise. Hats off for the photo, sir – and for the work of persistent peoples with great agri-cultural knowledge. UNESCO World Heritage Site?
Yes 🙂