Hi ,
I was fascinated by my first viewing of Ding Ning in the Rio Olympics final . Just so happens China allowed western photographers into China only recently to film wildlife ( see BBC 'Wild China ' ) . There was some film of a wild Chinese fox , which remarkably , I could only describe as having a 'Chinese ' countenance or eyes - quite unlike any western European foxes .
Ding Ning , unlike most orientals , known for an ' inscrutable countenance ' has the very appearance of a Tibetan fox , and shows the archetypal attributes that westerners attribute to fox - like nature and deceptive psychology - the very attributes you don't see in a Western European fox , but do see in the eyes of the Tibetan fox - to see this likeness , go to Google images - Siberian fox - and look at some of the close - up eye - contact photographs ?
I was fascinated by my first viewing of Ding Ning in the Rio Olympics final . Just so happens China allowed western photographers into China only recently to film wildlife ( see BBC 'Wild China ' ) . There was some film of a wild Chinese fox , which remarkably , I could only describe as having a 'Chinese ' countenance or eyes - quite unlike any western European foxes .
Ding Ning , unlike most orientals , known for an ' inscrutable countenance ' has the very appearance of a Tibetan fox , and shows the archetypal attributes that westerners attribute to fox - like nature and deceptive psychology - the very attributes you don't see in a Western European fox , but do see in the eyes of the Tibetan fox - to see this likeness , go to Google images - Siberian fox - and look at some of the close - up eye - contact photographs ?