Sheila: Jenny this is the Wooden Pagoda and it’s what the oldest wooden building in China?
Jenny: This is 950 years old.
Sheila: 950 years old.
Jenny: Most of the parts are made of wood, so inside maybe there are some ants but because of these growths they eat the ants so as telling by all the good cost, I’m not wondering for insect bite.
Sheila: I was wondering why termites have not divulged?
We go to hot pot seems to be the big thing up here and it brings different items to the table you choose it then you can pick on in the center.
Jenny There is the ancient of the temple of the visit, the name is Jinci.
Sheila: What is that the name?
Jenny: Jinci.
Sheila: Jinci, I can’t say it.
Jenny: Jinci is the 900 years old.
Sheila: 900 years old, thank you.
What are these peanuts I think? Whenever you see a tree and in a circle, Jenny just told us it means the peace trees are over a thousand years old.
Jenny, all these figures are some things like that along the top, do they touch them up at all? It’s original hundreds and hundreds and hundreds of years old, 400 years old. Temples, are there all pavilions in this whole complex?
Jenny: Obviously like six or seven of them.
Sheila: Six or seven of them.
Male: He got a name?
Sheila: Does he have a name?
In every temple in China, there is always a drum and there’s always a vow and Jenny just explained the reason why they might be closer when there’s no flocks and the old days, so every morning and every evening they bang the drums and ring the bells, turns the tonic wise. Make sense if I walk out and doing it. This is the most important building that we’re going to see and inside our statues. So Shin is the mother?
Jenny: Yes.
Sheila: Get the whole temple is for her. This tree is sort of falling over and over handy is 3000 years old. This particular town temple is for infertility. We came here and said a prayer.
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