Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Travel guide - "One-day Tour of Rhododendron in Hundred Miles" China's first tourism promotion meeting after the Japanese earthquake-Toyama Tourism Briefing was held in Beijing.

"One-day Tour of Rhododendron in Hundred Miles" China's first tourism promotion meeting after the Japanese earthquake-Toyama Tourism Briefing was held in Beijing.

Zhang Xilong, director of China National Tourism Administration, made a speech when the Dalian-Toyama route of China Southern Airlines extended to Beijing. The Toyama sightseeing delegation headed by Governor Ishii of Toyama Prefecture led a tourism-related person from Toyama Prefecture Government to visit China in May, and held a tourism briefing in Beijing Changfugong Hotel in May 1 1. This is the first time that a Japanese local government has held a tourism promotion conference in China after the Great East Japan Earthquake. This means that Japan's post-disaster tourism recovery is in full swing. Toyama Prefecture is located in Honshu Island, Japan, along the coast of the Sea of Japan, with different scenery in four seasons. It has a unique and magnificent natural scenery, and rich products have created the richness here. The Beijing Tourism Briefing in Toyama Prefecture introduced Gaoshan Road in Heibu of Lishan Prefecture and its surrounding famous tourist attractions, aiming at enhancing the tourism popularity of Toyama Prefecture and promoting the recovery of Japanese tourism as soon as possible after the earthquake.

Meeting place Lishan Heibu Gaoshan Road Lishan Heibu Gaoshan Road is a mountain road with a total length of about 86 kilometers from Lishan Station of Toyama Local Railway to Fanze, Nagano Prefecture. You can visit by bus, cable car and aerial ropeway. It snows heavily here in winter. Thick snow walls were formed on both sides of the road, reaching more than 20 meters when going to the United States. April-May is the best viewing season every year, and visitors will be amazed when they walk in it. Wushan is located in the southwest of Toyama Prefecture. Most of the houses here are three-story and four-story palm trees (thatched herringbone roofs). In order to prevent snow, the roof is inclined by 60% and no nails are needed. Because of its unique landscape, it has been designated as a world heritage.