Skyring
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Shiraz in Shiraz: Street feast
[h=1]Shiraz in Shiraz: Street feasts[/h][FONT=&][/FONT]
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[FONT=&]A hot and dry day. We had a few minutes before our bus returned through the Tehran traffic, and I scooted down to grab a couple of cold drinks, ignoring the fragrant smells of the food vendors.
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[FONT=&]The bus arrived, we tourists filed aboard, there was the ritual counting, and we moved off. I grabbed this snap of the al fresco food court, the cheery gent in the foreground looking up [/FONT][FONT=&]from[/FONT][FONT=&] his lunch.
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[FONT=&]Iranians live their lives on the streets. It somehow seems as if half the population are driving somewhere, half are strolling, and the remaining half are having a picnic of some sort. It’s a fun, colourful, entertaining lifestyle, and I have to chuckle at the misconceptions I once had of Iran as a dour land of religious fundamentalists, thanks to American media and political opinion pieces.[/FONT]
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[h=1]Shiraz in Shiraz: Street feasts[/h][FONT=&][/FONT]
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[FONT=&]Tehran
[/FONT][FONT=&]Iran
22 Apr 2017
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[h=3][FONT=&]Street feast[/FONT][/h][FONT=&]Just outside the National Museum is a park in the traditional Persian fashion: shady trees, fountains, running water, ambling paths and benches. And beside the park, on the footpath beside a busy street is a little street food domain, a half dozen stalls selling various hot and cold snacks.[/FONT][FONT=&]Iran
22 Apr 2017
[/FONT]
[/FONT]
[FONT=&]A hot and dry day. We had a few minutes before our bus returned through the Tehran traffic, and I scooted down to grab a couple of cold drinks, ignoring the fragrant smells of the food vendors.
[/FONT]
[FONT=&]The bus arrived, we tourists filed aboard, there was the ritual counting, and we moved off. I grabbed this snap of the al fresco food court, the cheery gent in the foreground looking up [/FONT][FONT=&]from[/FONT][FONT=&] his lunch.
[/FONT]
[FONT=&]Iranians live their lives on the streets. It somehow seems as if half the population are driving somewhere, half are strolling, and the remaining half are having a picnic of some sort. It’s a fun, colourful, entertaining lifestyle, and I have to chuckle at the misconceptions I once had of Iran as a dour land of religious fundamentalists, thanks to American media and political opinion pieces.[/FONT]
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