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Thread: 2018 Year of the EARTH DOG

  1. #16
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    Year of the Dog - Top Dog Championship

    NEW: YEAR OF THE DOG – TOP DOG CHAMPIONSHIP
    犬王爭霸戰
    A Showcase Championships at the 10th Annual Tiger Claw Elite KungFuMagazine.com Championships. May 19-20 2018 – San Jose, California. This special Showcase Championship is exclusively for Dog Style Kung Fu. The winner will receive custom trophy and spotlight in Kung Fu Tai Chi magazine. More details to come.



    Thread: 10th Tiger Claw Elite KungFuMagazine.com Championship - May 19-20 2018, San Jose CA
    Thread: 2018 Year of the EARTH DOG
    Thread: Year of the Dog - Top Dog Championship
    Gene Ching
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  2. #17
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    Year of the Dog

    Gene Ching
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  3. #18
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    2018 Year of the EARTH DOG

    Yeah, this needs an indie thread here.

    BOOM!



    No bang, no buck: What China has to give up for clean air this Lunar New Year
    No delight of seeing fireworks, no income for firecracker sellers ... many Chinese cities have to forego tradition to protect the environment over the festive season
    PUBLISHED : Wednesday, 14 February, 2018, 1:17pm
    UPDATED : Wednesday, 14 February, 2018, 9:53pm
    Zhuang Pinghui



    Ning Jiang loved his fireworks. Every Lunar New Year, the Beijing resident enjoyed driving his daughter to a local fireworks stall. He would watch with delight as the girl picked out her favourite pyrotechnics, favouring those shaped as bees, butterflies or even princesses.

    But Ning preferred those smaller, basic firecrackers; the kind that always could be counted on to produce a bang so loud and so startling they would echo throughout the neighbourhood.

    “There are traditions for holidays for follow and one of mine is to fire firecrackers,” Ning told the South China Morning Post. “What is a New Year’s celebration without firecrackers?”

    More and more Chinese municipalities are about to find out.

    Government efforts to curb China’s dire smog problem have led to bans on fireworks in 444 cities across the country since last year.


    A worker processes pyrotechnic product at the Liuyang Standard Fireworks factory in Liuyang, Hunan province. Photo: Reuters

    With the fast approach of Lunar New Year – when the sound of fireworks usually echoes across Chinese towns and cities – this year, authorities have extended the bans further, including Beijing, Tianjin and the provincial capitals Hefei and Changsha.

    Last year, within four hours on the eve of Lunar New Year, Beijing’s level of PM2.5, a small, hazardous particle, soared from 75 to 647 micrograms per cubic metre, way beyond the upper limit of 500 on China’s air quality index, because of fireworks, according to the Ministry of Environmental Protection.

    On the eve of Lunar New Year in the previous year, the level of PM2.5 reached 700 micrograms per cubic metre, also because of fireworks.

    Nationwide, almost all 10 cities with the highest PM2.5 level during the Lunar New Year holiday from 2015 to 2017 hit their peak numbers on the eve and early morning of Lunar New Year. The high figures were caused mainly by fireworks.

    Ning is among those who have been willing to trade the combustible, albeit pleasurable tradition of fireworks for cleaner air.


    Fireworks remain popular in rural villages and smaller cities, where they are frequently used to mark occasions such as funerals, weddings and other celebrations. Photo: Reuters

    In recent years he has reduced his fireworks spending to 300 yuan (US$47) from as much as 5,000 yuan, following particularly bad winter air pollution from Lunar New Year fireworks in 2013.

    If China’s lovers of fireworks resisted the crackdown initially, it was understandable.

    China’s attachment to fireworks runs deep.

    Not only are fireworks something China invented (along with gunpowder) but they were viewed as a way to chase away Nian, a mythological beast that could only be kept at bay with loud explosions.

    The tradition of fending off evil spirits with firecrackers became embedded in the Lunar New Year celebration.

    Yet rising concern for the tradition’s impact on air quality after years of severe pollution has changed the mindset even of hard core fireworks enthusiasts like Ning and others who embrace the festival spirit of the holiday season.

    Indeed, more than 83 per cent of people who took part in a Beijing government survey at the end of last year said they would throw their support behind a possible fireworks ban.


    The tradition of keeping away evil spirits with firecrackers became embedded in the Lunar New Year celebration. Photo: Reuters

    Armed with this public endorsement, in December, the Beijing legislature announced that the capital would ban fireworks within the fifth ring road, which encircles the city about 10km (6 miles) from its core, and allow fireworks to be lit only in specified suburban areas and at specific times.

    Ning said he would miss the festival nights with their pyrotechnic explosions, but fully supported the ban.

    “It would be such a shame if we complained about the air quality and at the same time polluted the air in a big way,” he said.

    “Fireworks is part of the Chinese festival celebration tradition … but I will cut it to the minimum.

    “That’s the least we residents can do.”

    The latest bans add to an already difficult business climate for fireworks sellers.

    Fireworks remain popular in rural villages and smaller cities, where they are frequently used to mark occasions such as funerals, weddings and other celebrations, the fireworks sellers said.

    But demand had already been on the wane in larger cities, where there are restrictions on letting off fireworks outside the Lunar New Year period.


    Demand for fireworks has waned for some time in larger cities, where there are restrictions on letting off fireworks outside the Lunar New Year period. Photo: Reuters

    Younger consumers in the cities also see fireworks as old-fashioned, they said, and were less inclined to let their children play with them owing to a lack of space and safety concerns.

    President Xi Jinping’s anti-corruption drive also prompted government departments and state-owned enterprises to tighten the spending of public money, including lavish celebrations and the gifting of fireworks to employees for Lunar New Year.

    Sun Jianlong, who had been selling firecrackers for five years in a stall outside the third ring, about five kilometres from the city centre, left Beijing to go back to his Hebei home for an early holiday because he could not get a licence.

    “Selling firecrackers had been a difficult business these years but it was my income in winter,” Sun said. “I couldn’t make money this year.”

    Beijing first banned fireworks in 1993 after 544 people were injured by firecrackers and more than 200 letters were sent to the Beijing government demanding a ban.

    Yet the ban was difficult to reinforce and lawmakers proposed changing the ban to restrict use of firecrackers. That proposal led to a relaxation of laws in 2005 that allowed residents to set off firecrackers at certain time during Lunar New Year.

    The firecracker ban came back on the table in 2012 after air quality declined.

    This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as: sacrifices made in push for cleaner Lunar New Year air
    Thread: Firecrackers
    Thread: 2018 Year of the EARTH DOG
    Thread: China's Pollution problem
    Gene Ching
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  4. #19
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  5. #20
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    Johnnie walker® blue label year of the dog limited edition design

    JOHNNIE WALKER® BLUE LABEL YEAR OF THE DOG LIMITED EDITION DESIGN



    Celebrating this Chinese New Year, Johnnie Walker Blue Label announces the launch of Year of The Dog.



    This limited edition design is inspired by the Dog as a symbol of prosperity. This unique and intricate design tells the story of Johnnie Walker and his clever canine companion journeying around the world, bringing good fortune to all as they rejoice in the arrival of the new year.
    Personally I find Johnnie Walker a little overrated for the price. But I wouldn't say 'no' to a taste of this.

    Thread: 2018 Year of the EARTH DOG
    Thread: Let's talk Whisky!
    Gene Ching
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  6. #21
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    Our newest exclusive web article

    Gene Ching
    Publisher www.KungFuMagazine.com
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  7. #22

    Dog Songs

    Gong Xi Gong Xi Ni - 恭喜恭喜 - with dogs of course!



    Best Happy New Year Song Year of the Dog 2018
    "顺其自然"

  8. #23

    Dog Songs Again

    From Tutor Ming



    Year of the Dog: the song 狗年歌
    "顺其自然"

  9. #24

    Dog Songs and Again

    How does a dog bark in Taiwan? In China? Here's the answer

    Taiwanese Group Namewee

    It's 18+



    Like A Dog 狗一樣! 黃明志狗年賀歲歌曲 Namewee's Dog Year Song 2018
    "顺其自然"

  10. #25
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    What does 2018 hold for you?

    Gene Ching
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    And the winner of this year's CNY dogfight is...

    Detective Chinatown 2.

    ‘Detective Chinatown 2’ Defeats “Monster Hunt 2” On Day 3 Of Chinese New Year
    BY LINAN CHEN FEB 19, 2018


    “Detective Chinatown 2” Defeats “Monster Hunt 2” On Day 3 Of Chinese New Year

    The first three days of Chinese New Year saw box office earnings reach an accumulated 3.21 billion yuan ($501 million) with the weekend box office earnings totaling at over 500 million, breaking the record for highest weekend box office in a single market. Detective Chinatown 2 overtook Monster Hunt 2 as the box office winner on the third day of Chinese New Year. Action film Red Sea Operation followed right behind in third place, bringing in 179 million yuan ($28 million) on Feb. 18; the film is also highly rated on review sites, with a rating of 7.4/10 on Mtime. Monkey King 3 and Boonie Bears: The Big Shrink each gained about 60 million yuan ($9.3 million)

    Thread: 2018 Year of the EARTH DOG
    Thread: Monster Hunt
    Thread: Detective Chinatown 2 (唐人街探案2)
    Thread: Monkey King 3
    Gene Ching
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    Shaolin Kungfu and WuDang Kungfu Performance on CCTV Spring Festival Gala 2018

    Gene Ching
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    Who let the dogs out?

    Woof, woof, woof, woof, woof

    Chinese nuns once used to it to battle bandits, but has dog kung fu had its day?
    Martial arts master fears for the future of fighting style that might not look pretty but sure has plenty of teeth
    PUBLISHED : Sunday, 08 April, 2018, 5:49pm
    UPDATED : Sunday, 08 April, 2018, 6:42pm
    Stephen Chen
    https://www.facebook.com/Stephen.Chen.SCMP



    It might sound like the title of DreamWorks’ latest animated film franchise, but the ancient martial art of dog kung fu is a long way from being a blockbuster, according to one of China’s last masters of the fighting style.

    Li Weijun, who is the president of three martial art schools in Foshan, southern China’s Guangdong province, said that over the years he had taught various styles of martial arts to more than 3,000 students, Guangzhou Daily reported on Sunday.

    But these days, almost no one wanted to learn dog kung fu, he said.


    Li says he has taught martial arts to more than 3,000 people over the years but few these days are interested in learning dog kung fu. Photo: 163.com

    Despite its unusual name, legend has it that the fighting style was developed by Buddhist nuns from southeast China’s Fujian province as a form of protection against the bandits and wild animals they met on their travels.

    To most martial students, “the moves are not pleasing to the eyes”, but the technique was “extremely useful” in real combat situations, Li said.

    To truly master the art, students had to think and act like a dog, and in lesson one that meant learning how to take a blow, he said.

    “Above all you must drive fear out of your mind. Dog kung fu teaches you how to prepare for a counterstroke after being forced to the ground by your opponent.”

    By staying low, and making effective use of both hands and feet, a dog kung fu fighter was at his or her most dangerous from an inferior position, Li said.


    By staying low, and making effective use of both hands and feet, a dog kung fu fighter is most dangerous from an inferior position. Photo: 163.com

    Sadly, most people living on China’s mainland these days had little respect for dogs and so the style had fallen out of favour, he said.

    Now 46, Li said he learned the combat style from an old kung fu master who visited his village when he was just eight years old. He said he spent the next two years watching stray dogs on the street and copying the way they moved.

    According to the newspaper report, the martial arts master is not a man to be messed with. It takes him just 50 seconds to crack open 150 coconuts with his bare hands, it said.

    But you do not have to be a martial arts master to benefit from dog kung fu.

    One move enabled the practitioner to lock their opponent’s lower legs while lying on the ground, Li said.

    “So even the underdog has the chance to win.”
    Thread: Fujian Dog Boxing
    Thread: 2018 Year of the EARTH DOG
    Thread: Year of the Dog - Top Dog Championship
    Kung Fu Nuns & Shaolin Nuns
    Gene Ching
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  14. #29
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  15. #30
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    Death by dachshunds

    What a horrible way to die.

    PETS
    Oklahoma Woman Dies After Being Mauled by Pack of Dachshund Dogs
    MARIAH HAAS May 17, 2018 12:29 AM

    A woman in Oklahoma died after she was mauled by dachshund mixes allegedly belonging to a neighbor.

    On Thursday, 52-year-old Tracy Garcia was attacked by a pack of seven dogs — all weighing less than 40 pounds and shorter than knee-length — near her home on Banyon Road in Ardmore, Oklahoma, reports KXII News 12.

    “From what it appeared, about seven dogs had attacked her,” Carter County Sheriff Chris Bryant told Oklahoma News Four, adding that when authorities arrived on the scene, one of the dogs charged at them, and they ultimately had to shoot the canine.

    “Unfortunately, yes, we had to shoot one dog,” Bryant told the outlet. “It did charge our deputies and to protect our deputies, as well as the medical personnel, we did have to put down a dog.”

    The remaining six dogs were euthanized at their owner’s request, according to KXII News 12.


    Tracy Garcia
    Griffin - Hillcrest

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    According to the euthanasia technician, Amanda Dinwiddie, all of the dogs were standard dachshund – also known as sausage or weiner dogs – mixes, with six of the canines being a mix of dachshund and terrier, while the other was believed to be a border collie mix.

    “A predominant breed in these dogs is definitely standard dachshund,” Dinwiddie told KXII-12. “They have really noticeable characteristics like their knobby legs, knees, very short legged dogs and their coats.”

    Dinwiddie added that the dogs — three of which were females and the other four males — “ranged from probably a year to about three years” old.

    RELATED: 4-Year-Old Texas Boy Fatally Mauled in His Backyard by Family’s ‘Large Breed’ Dog

    In addition, Dinwiddie said that the dogs did not have any visible health concerns, but noted that they were all infested with fleas and ticks.


    KXII

    “This is a bad situation, a very unfortunate situation,” Carter County Sheriff Chris Bryant told KTEN News.

    “Our thoughts and prayers go out to the family of the victims,” he added. “This is just a bad deal all the way around.”

    According to KXII 12, Bryant says the incident, which is still under investigation, will be turned over to the District Attorney’s office for review.
    Gene Ching
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