The village of Kuk Po was once home to Hakka people from southern China but has been mostly abandoned in recent decades.
Tourists in Hong Kong are flocking to the 300-year-old village of Kuk Po, whose decaying mansions and reed fields offer a ...
Tourists in Hong Kong are flocking to the 300-year-old village of Kuk Po, whose decaying mansions and reed fields offer a ...
On January 29, people of Chinese ancestry all around the world will usher in the Year of the Snake, the sixth animal in the ...
According to legend, ‘Hakka Lei Cha’ was created by a healer to boost the strength and immunity of soldiers from one of the ...
Kuk Po, located near the city’s border with mainland China, offers locals and tourists an authentic rural experience.
The seaside village was once home to Hakka people from southern China but was mostly abandoned in recent decades, even as gleaming high-rises sprang up in nearby Shenzhen across the Chinese border.
The seaside village was once home to Hakka people from southern China, but was mostly abandoned in recent decades, even as gleaming high-rises sprang up in nearby Shenzhen across the Chinese border.
The seaside village was once home to Hakka people from southern China but was mostly abandoned in recent decades, even as gleaming high-rises sprang up in nearby Shenzhen across the Chinese border.
Kuk Po may not be known to everyone, but its more than 300 years of history are part of an effort to promote a different kind ...