陵水 River in the early morning.

Some mornings I go out for a short walk with my son and he throws a few small stones off the bridge into the river, and then we go and buy some 酸奶, yoghurt, for him to drink before breakfast. Yesterday I took a couple of photographs ....

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It was a beautiful morning here in Hainan, and I rested the camera on top of one of the stone uprights of the bridge. I took large sized images, thinking to crop pieces out of them, details that would load more quickly into a post. But then as I thought about writing, the opening of Finnegans Wake came to my mind:

riverrun, past Eve and Adam’s, from swerve of shore to bend of bay, brings us by a commodius vicus of recirculation back to Howth Castle and Environs.

It's not the place to unpack that here, but Joyce talks about the endless circling of water --- river to sea, sea to the clouds, which rain, rain, rain. But these pictures were taken looking back up the river, towards the source.

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A lot of the trees here are rubber trees. When rubber cultivation started here in the 50s, so as not to be dependent on the British in Malaysia, it was a considerable achievement, pushing the boundaries of possibilies further north. Rubber trees are tropical and ever-green. Hainan is sub-tropical, and so the rubber trees here lose there leaves, but not in the autumn, in the spring. The first time I witnessed this it was very surprising: the relative cool of the winter, and the damp, ends, it warms up, and then all the leaves fall off the rubber trees. Very strange.

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And then into the last picture, using the optical zoom, and when I looked at it this morning I saw these motorbikes, and what is surely a petrol driven water pump. For a patch of vegetables? There's plenty of water in this river.

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I've used the #travel tag with this post, because yesterday we bought tickets to fly to Morocco. We have a friend there, and also Chinese citizens can enter the country without visas (and stay for three months). So in these last few days in China, I will look on myself as a traveller, and try to capture some memories to share.

Thank you for reading.

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