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Islands of Hong Kong


Lamma Island 南丫島's Tung O Village in Yung Shue Ha where Chow yun Fat was born. His parents is still running a seafood restaurant called Shau Kee in the main village
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Lamma wind turbine, a commercial operation
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Fire hydrants on a walk path
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Lamma Pak Kok Ferry Pier
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Young folks are moving out of the island
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Pak Kok fields and houses
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A Lamma evening
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Islands of Hong Kong


Cheung Chau 長洲 lies 10km west of HK Island, off the southern shore of Lantau Island, and is administer by the Island District. The island, shaped like a dumbbell with hills at the northern and southern ends and the settlements concentrated in a flattened middle, has a population about 23,000. The island, once again, is devoid of vehicular traffic except mini polices cars and fire trucks because of its narrow lanes.

This onetime fishing village, called "Long Island" phonetically, has become a major tourist attraction, offering a mixture of sandy swimming beaches, seafood cafes, and traditional Chinese culture. Indeed it's one of the most favorite destinations for HK city dwellers and foreign tourists.


Cheung Cheu's location map
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The bustling center lies on a former tombola
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A reversed closer view
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Prepare yourself with some local etiquette
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A compact police car
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The fire station
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Cheung Chau Rural Committee Building
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Municipal Service building
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Islands of Hong Kong


Cheung Chau 長洲, a distant view, with Lantau Island southern shore in the background
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Jockey Clun Ming Fai Camp
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A public pier
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A 1898 view of the village
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Bo Yue Wan rocky shore
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The beach on Tung Wan (East Bay)
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View of the same beach from Warwick Hotel Chinese Cuisine
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Another beach
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Islands of Hong Kong


Cheung Chau 長洲, a Hung Shing Temple
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A Cheung Chau temple
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Pei Tai Temple basketball court
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A street scene, notice bicycles are the only form of machine aided transportation and are allowed in most streets. They are rented by the day
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A bay scene with FREE PARKING
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Perfect for a threesome
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Water scene
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The pace is slower in the outer islands
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Islands of Hong Kong


Cheung Chau 長洲 shore patrols
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A replica of 張保仔's pirate boat
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A scene on Sun Hing Praya Street
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Merchants on the same street
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Bela Vista Villa Resort
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Lutheran Village Resort
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Island supplies
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Hmm, very tranquil
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Islands of Hong Kong


Cheung Chau 長洲 famous Bun Festival, an old picture
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The buns
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The bun towers
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Da Jin Welcome gods
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Rice wine jugs for the gods 長洲太平清醮的神棚
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Islands of Hong Kong


Cheung Chau 長洲's bun scrambling competition
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Typhoon shelter
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An old theater
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Care Village
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Live seafood
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All seafood
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Islands of Hong Kong


Cheung Chau 長洲's Pak Tai Temple
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a Tian Hau Temple
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Beach houses (the nearer ones are under renovation)
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A U Right store
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A street scene
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Selling dry fish
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張保仔館 name after an infamous pirate that preyed these shores more than a century ago
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Cheung Bo Tsai Cave - the pirate's abode
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Lamma ferry crash inquiry to start next week, Justice Michael Lunn says


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Lamma ferry collision survivor, Chiu Ping-chuen (centre), attends the hearing of Commission of Inquiry into the disaster.


The commission of inquiry into October's deadly ferry collision off Lamma Island will start on Wednesday after the chairman rejected applications for an adjournment.

"There is no point in delaying the receipt of evidence," Mr Justice Michael Lunn said yesterday. "It would merely create unnecessary delay."

Director of Public Prosecutions Kevin Zervos had applied for an adjournment because premature release of information could affect the police investigation into the collision, which led to the deaths of 39 ferry passengers, and a possible criminal trial.

At a preliminary hearing this week Zervos sought a delay of testimony dealing with the causes of the collision until mid-January, when he said the Department of Justice is expected to have reached a decision on any prosecutions. Counsel for crew and owners of the Lamma IV and Sea Smooth, which collided on October 1, applied for a delay to early January to give them more time to study evidence.

Lunn said that, of seven arrested crew members from the two boats, three were suspected of manslaughter and four of endangering the safety of a person on a vessel. He did not elaborate.

He pointed out that Zervos had said only that there was a "possibility" of further inquiries by the police that "might be affected". Dealing with the effect on a trial, he said the judge would direct the jury to reach a verdict according to evidence presented in the court and ignore information received in any other way.

Lawyers for the owners and crew had asked for time to study material from the crash, particularly the electronic radar records and a report by British maritime expert Captain Nigel Pryke.

But Lunn said the most relevant part of the radar track occupied about five minutes. The report was already available, with the main part only nine pages.

The list of witnesses, 42, was revised to 37 as some passengers had said they were not available.

Counsel for the commission Paul Shieh Wing-tai SC will give his opening account on Wednesday, followed by opening statements by other counsel, if any, and witnesses' testimony.

Meanwhile, a man who lost a family member in the collision complained yesterday that most of the preliminary hearing had been held only in English, with no interpreter provided. Nevertheless, he said he would attend inquiry next week's hearing as he wanted to find out the truth.

"It is a struggle to attend the hearing as it might rekindle our memories of the incident," he said. "It is really a dilemma."

Lamma ferry crash inquiry to start next week, Justice Michael Lunn says | South China Morning Post
 
Islands of Hong Kong


Peng Chau 坪洲 is a small island, about 1km2, located east of Lantau Island and north of Cheung Chau. Ferries are the only transport to and from the island where bicycles are the only means of moving around. Here you experience small island lifestyle, accessibility to fresh seafood, and several temples, as well as some new buildings mix with old traditional village style houses.


A map of Peng Chau (in red)
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A view of Peng Chau from Lantau, Cheung Chau is off the picture to the right
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Peng Chau ferry Pier
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A public pier
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Pei Lei Road Bridge connects to Tai Lee Island, a small adjacent island
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A view of small Tai Lei Island 大利島 from Peng Chau with a housing estate and a typhoon shelter in Lantau on the background
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A street scene
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Need some work here
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Islands in Hong Kong


Peng Chau 坪洲 Tung Wan Beach 坪洲東灣海灘
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A small village on the far end of Tung Wan Beach
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A public toilet (typical in HK)
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A storefront church
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A sightseeing boat takes tourists to other islands
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A health clinic build on top of a huge granite rock
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Village houses hidden from trees with a mini soccer pitch field
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HK Finger Hill Trigonometrial Station
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Islands in Hong Kong


Peng Chau 坪洲 Kam Fa Temple 坪洲金花廟
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Peng Chau Seven Sisters Temple 仙姊廟
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Store front Gospel Church 坪洲福音堂
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Store front church 基督教宣道會坪洲堂
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Temple of Morality 道德善堂
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Yuen Tung Temple圓通講寺
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Holy Family School 聖家學校
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Choi Yuen Public School 菜園行公立學校 (actually it was a former farm estate)
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Islands in Hong Kong


Peng Chau 坪洲 Shan Tang Tsuen 山頂村義祠
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Peng Chau Market 坪洲街市
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Kam Fa Festival 壬辰年金花娘娘閏月寶誕的花牌(寶誕日:農曆四月十七日)
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Peng Chau Theater 坪洲戲院
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Kam Peng Estate 左為金坪邨,右為坪麗苑
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Closeup view of Kam Peng Estate
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The other end of Tai Lei Island, overlook Lantau ( the temple in the middle is the Trappist Heaven monastery)
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Tian Hau Temple
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Islands in Hong Kong


Peng Chau 坪洲 Old folkies people watching under a tree on a hot day
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Shh he looks mad
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Two kids on bikes LOL
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A Tian Hau procession
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Selling dried seafood
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A firetruck
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An ambulance
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A newer village
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Well folks, this is a mid size island life and it's slow. What islands like Peng Chau needs is to create more jobs so that more young peple can move back in.
 

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