Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Travel guide - In which scenic spot in Guangxi is a toilet built on a 100-meter cliff?
In which scenic spot in Guangxi is a toilet built on a 100-meter cliff?
The toilet built on the 100-meter cliff in the Guangxi scenic spot is in the Baishi Mountain Scenic Spot in Guiping, Guangxi.
On January 29, the toilet built on the edge of the cliff in the Baishi Mountain Scenic Area in Guiping, Guangxi aroused heated discussion among netizens. The toilet in the video is made of two iron guardrails, with a 100-meter cliff behind it. The photographer said that in the end, for safety reasons, he still refrained from going to the toilet. In response, Baishishan Scenic Area responded that there was nothing to be afraid of. The toilets had guardrails and the facilities in the scenic area had yet to be developed.
It is reported that Baishi Mountain is located in Baishi Village, Matong Town, Guiping City, 35 kilometers away from Guiping City. It is the 21st cave among the 36 caves in China. Temples and temples began to be built on the mountain during the Song Dynasty. After the Ming Dynasty, it became a tourist attraction with both Taoism and Buddhism. Ge Hong, the famous Taoist theorist, medical scientist and alchemist of the Jin Dynasty, once practiced here.
Extended information
The main attractions of Baishi Mountain Scenic Area:
1. Wall-Facing Monk?
When tourists climb the mountain, they will reach the foot of the mountain and see the cliffs. There is a stone under the cliff, about two feet high, shaped like a human standing, facing the stone wall, wearing a monk's hat and cassock. It is called the "wall-facing monk" in the county annals.
2. Shousheng Temple?
At the foot of Baishi Mountain, it was formerly known as Sanbaodian, also known as Shoushengyuan, and is commonly known as the Great Temple. Construction started in the third year of Jiazhe of Song Dynasty (1058 AD) and took ten years to complete. In front of the temple, there is an archway carved with cinnabar stone, which is seven meters high and six meters wide. It is engraved with the three characters "Shousheng Temple" and the lifelike statues of the Eight Immortals given by Zhao Xu, the emperor of the Song Dynasty in the first year of Xining (1068). The front seat of the temple is the Sanbao Hall, the back seat is a majestic pavilion, and the left and right are the living room and monk's quarters.
3. Stone carvings of Baishi Cave Sky?
The cliff behind Shousheng Temple is thousands of feet tall. There are four characters "Baishi Cave Sky" engraved on it. Each word is about one square foot. It is the name of the county's elite in the late Ming Dynasty. Written by Yang Dajie. It is said that he spent more than ten years of hard work in order to write these Daeyu. Afterwards, he specially wrote a "Ji Xing Poem": "In the eighteenth year of the Ming Dynasty on the cliff, many generals and surnames were erected in front of the cliff. The mountain spirit had its own colorful writings, and asked me to write wildly to fill the cave." Take a closer look at "White Stone Cave" The four-character writing is so vigorous that it does have the flavor of "crazy writing".
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