Dear blog, I've returned from my 黄山 trip, and I simply loved it.
The four of us (WY, John, Xiao Long) bumped into Kah Sing at the bus terminal,
haha, what a coincidence, and all of us took a 7 hour bus ride all the way to 汤口,
which is also 黄山's foot.
Our first day was spent there, and we visited the 翡翠谷,
one of the attractions being 情人桥 (nothing special really, just a lot of evidences
from couples who attach engraved locks along the railings.)
The water flowing down from 黄山 is so blue at this valley. Really nice.
And the cool weather just makes everything feel better.
From 汤口, we took a short bus ride to the starting point of 黄山.
To quicken the pace, we hitched the cable car to the trekking point.
(if we climb up, journey takes around 2 hours, cable car was 10 minutes!)
THE VIEW FROM THE CABLE CAR UPWARDS WAS AMAZING.
THE VIEW RIGHT THERE AT 黄山 WAS EVEN BETTER.
Our climb from there to many peaks on 黄山 was tiring,
but it was worth it! Different angles, different heights, but this place is...
an eye-opener. Though there were quite a lot of people due to mid-autumn holiday,
I didn't quite mind the fact that my dormitory was fully packed.
Ah, mid-autumn festival, cannot miss the moon, especially when we are staying
1680m above sea level. Fantastic view.
We did trek to 步仙桥, which was treacherous, because there weren't much
support on the way. And what's worse, to get there, we had to climb a lot of
stairs DOWN. (and think about the way back... A LOT OF STAIRS UP!)
But oh yea, we eventually got there.
By the way, James Cameron's Avatar was filmed there!
And no kidding, when I think back on the battle between blue creatures and humans,
yes, the backdrop of the battle was definitely 黄山, no doubts about that.
I didn't went up 光明顶 catch sunset, because my calves were killing me.
And though the guys tried, the sunset was pretty much obstructed by the fog.
Day one of climbing was just chiong-ing through a lot of stairs, that's why my
calf muscles contracted till they hurt every step I climb.
But, like I said, worth it. And I'm thankful for the guys, haha, they had to
wait for me at every resting stop. Best of all to them for carrying my load.
GOOD WEATHER + LITTLE CLOUD COVER = PERFECT SUN RISE
Ah, the crowd went AHHHHHHHH AWWWWWWW, and we just sat there and
took in everything we saw. My first time watching sun rise!
From there, we continued the climb towards 莲花蜂.
The highest peak, standing at 1864m above sea level.
(光明顶 was 1860m, and I almost crawled there on Day One)
By this time, I was really tired, calves were burnt out,
and I was mentally drained because I pushed myself too much on Day One.
So! I left the guys to finish 莲花蜂 (HAHA, they were tired too, but stay strong, right)
while I head back down to help them buy cable car ticket.
Even going down is tiring, because my legs felt jelly.
Yes, I regretted not getting on top of 莲花蜂, but I was totally drained.
Just too burnt to carry on. BUT, I really regretted, because the guys had a great time there.
Ah well. But WY bought me this medal souvenir, engraved with my name,
HAHA, the medal says that I've conquered 莲花蜂 at 1864m. Thanks sister.
So! I highly recommend everyone to go 黄山.
People say, go 黄山 China is enough to see most of China's beauty.
Let me divert back to Shanghai now, because the wind is howling,
just like the time when typhoon was here. It's really loud out there.
Temperature has gone down, and I think it will continue to go down.
Getting cooler, around 18 degrees tonight, and I like it!
Next stop in China, Inner Mongolia! =)
omg so cool!!! :>
ReplyDeleteI KNOW RIGHT?! :)
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