Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Tourist attractions - Minle county scenic spot

Minle county scenic spot

Biandukou Ecological Leisure Tourist Area, Chaohai Lake Ecological Holiday Tourist Area, Haichaoba Forest Park, Minle Park, Shengtian Temple, etc.

1. Biandukou Ecological Leisure Tourist Area: Located in the southeast of Minle County, in the hinterland of Qilian Mountain, it has been the throat of Gansu and Qinghai and an important passage of the Silk Road since ancient times. Its main landscapes include thousands of hectares of rape flowers, plateau pastures, Dadou Bagu, stone Buddha rock paintings, princess tombs, black wind tunnels, Zhuge monuments and so on.

2. Chaohai Lake Ecological Holiday Tourist Area: Located in the southwest of Minle County, 0/9 km away from the county seat/kloc. The tourist area is 15 km long from north to south, 2 km wide from east to west, with a total area of 30 square kilometers and an altitude of 2400~3 100 m.

3. Haichaoba Forest Park: Located in Qilian Mountain National Nature Reserve, Gansu Province, it is 0/0 km away from Minle County, Gansu Province. 1998 was approved by the provincial forestry department as a provincial-level A-level forest park, and was listed as a provincial-level A-level natural scenic tourist area by the provincial tourism bureau in 2000.

4. Minle Park: Minle Park is located on the east bank of the Yangtze River at the western end of the county. The park is small and ingenious, and the scenery is compact and elegant; Seiko design, original. There is beauty in the south of the Yangtze River and glory in the north. The whole park has a natural layout because of the situation.

5. Shengtiangong: Located in the northwest corner of Minle County, it was built in the fourth year of Yongle in the Ming Dynasty (1406). Since the temple was built 600 years ago, it has experienced many vicissitudes and ups and downs. Tongzhi of the Qing Dynasty was destroyed by soldiers in four years, and Sun Lan, general manager of the flood in Guangxu in thirty-two years, was rebuilt, and was destroyed again in the Cultural Revolution. The three surviving halls are now county-level cultural relics protection units.