Beyond the Crowds: An 8-Day Journey Through Anhui’s Hidden Treasures

April 10, 2024 | The moment I stepped off the train at Chizhou Station, the air tasted different – crisp with mountain freshness and tinged with woodsmoke from distant villages. My mission? To explore Anhui beyond the postcard-perfect Huangshan, diving into landscapes that made poets swoon and villages time forgot.

Days 1-2: Chizhou’s Emerald Waters & Sacred Peaks

At Guniujiang Scenic Area, jade-green water rushed over smooth stones like liquid gemstones. No entrance fee! Just pure, unfiltered nature. I followed mossy trails past tiered waterfalls, dipping my hands into water so cold it stole my breath. That evening at Nuoxian Town, I traded ¥50 for steaming street food culinary art – sticky rice wrapped in bamboo leaves and wild herb dumplings, watching masked dancers perform ancient Nuo rituals under paper lanterns.

Cost BreakdownTimeTips
Guniujiang: Free3 hours hikingWear waterproof shoes!
Nuoxian Dinner: ¥50EveningTry “stinky mandarin fish”
Jiuhuashan Cable Car: ¥160Full dayVisit Dizang King statue at sunset

Days 3-4: Heavenly Pillars & Vertical Stairs

Tianzhu Mountain (¥110 off-season) left me breathless – literally. The Baibu Cloud Ladder lived up to its reputation: near-vertical stone steps carved into granite cliffs. My knees trembled as I ascended, rewarded by views of the 1489.8m Tianzhu Peak piercing the clouds. At Penglai Peak, I sat where Li Bai once penned verses, watching hawks circle below my dangling feet.

  • Route Taken: Dalongwo Cable Car → Mysterious Valley → Tianchi Peak → Qinglong Ridge (dragon’s spine trail!) → Liandan Lake
  • Pro Tip: Stay at Tianzhu Homestay (¥200/night) for sunrise views without crowds
  • Regret: Skipping the newly reopened East Gate route with its sea of azaleas

Days 5-6: Copper Coins & Forgotten Villages

In Yongquan Town (铜陵), I exchanged cash for antique copper coins at the old money shop. With jangling pockets, I “bought” rice cakes from wooden stalls in Jiangnan Taste Street. At night, fiery iron molten flowers exploded over the lake like golden rain – an intangible cultural heritage show that left sparks in my memory.

“Yangchan Earth Buildings appeared like terracotta mushrooms growing from the hills – 367 sun-baked dwellings untouched by time.”

The next morning at Yangchan Village, I wandered among 300-year-old earth buildings where elderly women sorted tea leaves in doorways. No ticket booth, just a ¥30 shuttle from Dingtan Village. My host Mrs. Zheng served bitter local greens with stories of Ming Dynasty refugees – “We Zheng people have been hiding here since wars tore China apart.”

Days 7-8: Ink Dreams & Silent Retreats

Chengkan Village (¥95 entry) unfolded like a living ink painting. At Luodongshu Temple, I gaped at four golden nanmu pillars worth ¥300 million each! Later, making edible “ink cakes” with a calligrapher, I understood why locals say: “Eat Chengkan’s ink, gain wisdom.”

My final stop: Xuan Paper Town in Jingxian. For ¥50, I entered a white architectural wonderland celebrating China’s paper-making heritage. Watching artisans hand-pulp bark in turquoise pools, I dipped my own sheet – fragile yet enduring, like this journey through Anhui’s soul.

  • Unexpected Joy: Chasing fireflies through Yongquan’s “Memory of Jiangnan” forest
  • Worth Every Yuan: Jiuhuashan’s tofu braised in tea oil (¥68 at Chuzi Xiashan)
  • Skip This: Overpriced “ancient” bridges near Chengkan

Final Thoughts: Anhui’s magic lies beyond Huangshan. It’s in the ¥10 bus rides through cloud-piercing roads, grandmothers pressing wild herb buns into your hands, and villages where time moves to the rhythm of bamboo rafts. Total cost for 8 days? Under ¥3500 – including impulsive copper coin shopping sprees.

8 thoughts on “Beyond the Crowds: An 8-Day Journey Through Anhui’s Hidden Treasures”

  1. MountainMama42

    Those earth buildings at Yangchan look magical! How strenuous is the shuttle ride from Dingtan? My knees aren’t what they used to be 😅

    1. hollyTooommymy

      @MountainMama42 The shuttle is surprisingly smooth – paved mountain roads with only mild curves. Took about 25 minutes. The village itself is flat walking!

  2. WanderlustJules

    Planning a solo trip! How safe did you feel traveling between villages? And was ¥3500 including accommodations?

    1. hollyTooommymy

      @WanderlustJules Extremely safe! Locals were incredibly helpful when I got lost near Tianzhu. Yes ¥3500 covered everything – stayed in family-run guesthouses averaging ¥180/night

  3. TeaLeafExplorer

    That stinky mandarin fish tip has me intrigued! Did you try it? And how strong is the “aroma” really? 😷

  4. Just did Baibu Cloud Ladder last week – your warning about waterproof shoes saved me! Added tip: start BEFORE 7am to avoid tour groups. That vertical climb is no joke!

  5. CopperCoinHunter

    Visited Yongquan after reading this! The antique coins are actually replicas (disappointed 😞) but the molten flower show was SPECTACULAR. Worth staying just for that!

    1. @CopperCoinHunter Ah! Should’ve clarified – the “antique” coins are indeed replicas but historically accurate. That midnight flower show still haunts my dreams though 🌟

Leave a Reply to WanderlustJules Cancel Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *


Scroll to Top