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Pansret Ingenørkompaniet (PING) i Telemark Bataljon ute på øvelse - Ingenørvogn lager stridsvogngrøft.
Foto: Jan Egil Kvam, Hæren
Lobsters a la Cart enjoy a game of ping pong as the Ping! Project launches in Birmingham today. The project aims to get 1 million more people playing sport in the run-up to the 2012 Olympic Games and will return to London and 2 further cities in 2012. Birmingham 08/07/2011. Picture: Ally Carmichael
Located on the northern side (near 42nd Street and 6th Avenue), locals enjoy a friendly table tennis match with paddles and balls provided free of charge. Equipment and time slots are managed by a park attendant. Monthly ping pong tournaments are held every first Wednesday of the month.
Ping doing a post stand on the Pilates ball while her rear legs are on a rocker board (fulcrum parallel to Ping's spine). PT Courtney is controlling the rocker board with her legs while spotting her rear. Taken at the UW Veterinary Care - University of Wisconsin-Madison Veterinary Medical Teaching Hospital in the Physical Rehabilitation Service.
Ngong Ping Cable Car is a 25 minute, 5.7km bi-cable ropeway beginning at Tung Chung, crossing Tung Chung Bay to reach the angle station on Airport Island and turning about 60 degrees in the air towards North Lantau. Visitors will enjoy some of the best views: vistas of the South China Sea, the rolling grassland slopes of North Lantau Country Park, a panorama of Hong Kong International Airport, view of the mountainous terrain of Lantau Island, Tian Tan Buddha (Big Buddha) and the 360-degree view of the Ngong Ping Plateau.
The Ngoong Ping Cable Car is how most people get to Po Lin Monastery and Big Buddha. At the end of the ride is Ngong Ping Village, built as a receiving point for the cable cars. It is not an authentic village, but an outdoor shopping area especially for tourists who come to Lantau Island to see the Big Buddha and the Po Lin Monastery.
The other way to get to the top is the Ngong Ping Trail connecting Tung Chung and Ngong Ping. The trail is used as the access for maintenance and rescue, with much of it directly under the path of the cable cars. After visiting Tian Tan Buddha and Po Lin Monastery some visitors like to do the 3-hour hike downhill towards Tung Chung.
الالوان المتوفرة لدينا
أبيض | وردي فاتح | ازرق فاتح | اصفر فاتح | أخضر فاتح | بنفسجي فاتح
مقاسات
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القميص مصنوع من القطن 95% و أيلاستان سباندكس 5% من
الماركات العالميه
التوصيل
مدة التسليم للمدن الرئيسية داخل المملكة من 3- 7 ايام
للمدن والمحافظات الأخرى من 4 - 8 ايام
خارج المملكة 7 - 10 ايام
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او
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Ngong Ping Cable Car is a 25 minute, 5.7km bi-cable ropeway beginning at Tung Chung, crossing Tung Chung Bay to reach the angle station on Airport Island and turning about 60 degrees in the air towards North Lantau. Visitors will enjoy some of the best views: vistas of the South China Sea, the rolling grassland slopes of North Lantau Country Park, a panorama of Hong Kong International Airport, view of the mountainous terrain of Lantau Island, Tian Tan Buddha (Big Buddha) and the 360-degree view of the Ngong Ping Plateau.
The Ngoong Ping Cable Car is how most people get to Po Lin Monastery and Big Buddha. At the end of the ride is Ngong Ping Village, built as a receiving point for the cable cars. It is not an authentic village, but an outdoor shopping area especially for tourists who come to Lantau Island to see the Big Buddha and the Po Lin Monastery.
The other way to get to the top is the Ngong Ping Trail connecting Tung Chung and Ngong Ping. The trail is used as the access for maintenance and rescue, with much of it directly under the path of the cable cars. After visiting Tian Tan Buddha and Po Lin Monastery some visitors like to do the 3-hour hike downhill towards Tung Chung.
Lobsters a la Cart enjoy a game of ping pong as the Ping! Project launches in Birmingham today. The project aims to get 1 million more people playing sport in the run-up to the 2012 Olympic Games and will return to London and 2 further cities in 2012. Birmingham 08/07/2011. Picture: Ally Carmichael