Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Hotel accommodation - Huayuan chadong hotel

Huayuan chadong hotel

We took the shuttle bus from Liye Ancient Town to Chadong Ancient Town via Garden. When we arrived, it was already afternoon. We chose an inn by the river to stay, ordered a wooden bucket meal and sent it to our room. We looked at the scenery outside the window, ate dinner, lay down and rested, and waited for the rain to stop!

If it doesn't stop raining, swim in the rain. In the drizzle, the banks of Qingshui River look like a hazy landscape painting. Walking along the wooden plank road by the river is like walking into a flowing picture. Only Feifei's drizzle falls on my face with the wet wind, reminding me that this is a living reality. Hongan is more beautiful from the tea cave.

The ancient town of Chadong is the prototype of Border Town written by Shen Congwen. Qingshui River winds all the way from Guizhou, flows into Shipu River from Chongqing West at the tea cave, winds all the way again, and finally flows into Youshui. Cui Cui, a girl with dark skin and clear eyes written by Shen Congwen, has now become a white sculpture, standing in the middle of the water. The sandbar where it is located is called "Cui Cui Island", which is already a paid scenic spot, and there are scenic spots to ferry. Many people mistake Shen Congwen's hometown, Fenghuang Ancient City, as a "border town". Many years ago, I went to visit the ancient city of Fenghuang, and the tour guide introduced Phoenix in this way. In fact, the real border town is the tea cave.

Between Chadong and Hong 'an, there is a highway bridge-Tea Hongqiao, which crosses Qingshui River and connects Hunan and Chongqing provinces. The bridge belongs to Hunan, and it is bounded by the bridgehead here in Hong 'an. Standing on the bridge and looking out, Chongqing is on the left, Hunan is on the right, and Guizhou can't be seen behind. About 200 meters up the bridgehead path at the southeast gateway of Chongqing, there is a triangular pavilion named "Chicken Smells the Three Provinces Pavilion", and there is a stone tablet on the side of the pavilion, engraved with the words "One foot crosses three provinces" and "Three provinces smell chickens crow". The so-called "one foot across three provinces" refers to the place where the museum is built and the intersection of three provinces and cities.