Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Hotel accommodation - Is Jiuzhaigou fun?

Is Jiuzhaigou fun?

Jiuzhaigou is located in Zhangzha Town, Jiuzhaigou County, Aba Tibetan and Qiang Autonomous Prefecture, Sichuan Province. It is a branch ditch of Baihe River in the upper reaches of Baishuigou, named after nine Tibetan villages (also known as Jiuzhai in He Yao). Jiuzhaigou is more than 2000 meters above sea level, and there are virgin forests everywhere. There are 108 lakes in the ditch, which is known as the "fairy tale world".

Huohuahai, also known as Spark Pool, is 2 187 meters above sea level and 9 meters deep. It is located between Shuanglong Sea and Wolong Sea in Jiuzhaigou, Aba Prefecture, Sichuan Province, with clear water like a mirror. Haizi is surrounded by forests, and the lake is hidden in thick green, like a glittering and translucent jade.

Nuorilang Waterfall is located in Jiuzhaigou, Sichuan Province, China, with an altitude of 2365 meters, a width of 270 meters and a height of 24.5 meters. It is one of the large calcified waterfalls in China and the widest waterfall in China. In Tibetan, Nuorilang means male god, and it also means gigantic, so Nuorilang Waterfall means majestic waterfall.

Bonsai Beach, also known as "Bonsai Sea" or "Jiazhucuo" in Tibetan, is the first beach landscape in Jiuzhaigou. After the Lotus Leaf Village, I came to a shoal, which is the bonsai beach. The whole scenic spot is like a huge bonsai. The slope of calcified beach in bonsai beach is gentle. Rhododendron, willow, pine, cypress, Yanagi Takayama and various shrubs stand in the water, forming various natural bonsai. These bonsai are natural, without artificial creation and carving, but they show a higher level of artistic conception with their unparalleled harmonious and natural beauty.

Zharu Road is located on the sixth winding stream, surrounded by pine trees and two peaks, which is the dividing line between the road around the mountain at the mouth of the ditch and Zharu Road in the ditch. The architectural features of Zharu Bridge are Tibetan temple style, all made of logs, and it is a small wooden bridge with a bridge pavilion. The bridge body, columns and fences on the bridge are all primary color wood, and even the top cover is primary color sawdust, which is simple and natural.

Baojing Cliff is like a ditch. There is a huge stone cliff in the ditch, which rises into the sky with a flat surface and looks like a big screen from a distance. This is Baojing Cliff, also known as Devil Cliff. According to legend, this cliff is a precious mirror erected by Zhayi Zhaga, the Lord of Wanshan Mountain in Jiuzhaigou, which suppresses a harmful devil below and makes him never turn over.

Jiuzhaigou Festival:

Jiuzhaigou, a wooden building with Tibetan villages, is named after nine Tibetan villages in the ditch. The primitive and quaint villages are scattered in the mountains surrounded by green trees, which is even more quaint and quiet. According to Tibetan tradition, wooden buildings are generally three floors.

Tibetans who are good at singing and dancing in China are a nation who can sing and dance, and Tibetan villages in China are the hometown of singing and dancing. It is this singing and dancing environment that breeds the lively nature of Jiuzhaigou people, coupled with the genetic genes left by ancestors who can sing and dance, and people fall into the whirlpool of singing and dancing as soon as they arrive here.

People who persuade people to go to Jiuzhaigou often encounter persuasion. Every household in Tibet has a fragrant and sweet highland barley wine with extremely low concentration. When drinking, the host picks up the filled wine, first dips the middle finger in the wine, and bounces it up, down and up respectively to show respect for heaven, earth and parents, and then invites the guests to raise their glasses together. If the guest is too polite to drink or drink less, the host will pick up the glass and sing a song to persuade him to drink.

Tibetan Opera Tibetan Opera is another form of square singing and dancing in Tibetan culture, which is characterized by performers wearing masks. According to legend, it was created by Tang Dongjiebu, a famous monk in the15th century. In Tibetan opera, actors can't play animals on the stage, so there are many animal masks in Tibetan opera. These animals are all dressed in the colors of gods, showing a totem worship of Tibetans.