Speedy Kunpeng Trail Sections 7-8 | Speeding through Shenzhen's urban balconies, racing towards a bright future

Day 1 Guangzhou → Shenzhen → Kunpeng Trail Sections 7 & 8 → Guangzhou

07:00

Meet and sign in at Exit B of Kecun Subway Station

07:30

Depart on time; the team leader will explain the itinerary and precautions to everyone in the car

09:30

Arrive at the starting point in Shenzhen, warm up thoroughly, and set off up the mountain!

The Yinmeitang Crossing Line is the dragon vein of Shenzhen, the central axis of the city core, winding like a giant dragon. Tanglang Mountain is at the head, towering into the clouds, while the dragon's body slowly extends to the Yinhu Mountains.

6:00 PM

Arrive at the destination and wait for the group behind you to gather, then board the bus back to Guangzhou (if you leave the group on your own and return, you must inform the tour leader)

9:00 PM

Return to Guangzhou city, ending the pleasant journey~

Hiking: 21-22 kilometers of hiking, with a cumulative climb of 1300-1600 meters. The road conditions are rich and it is easy to resupply and retreat.

Kunpeng Trail: The main route of Shenzhen's hiking trails, starting from Feiyunding, a natural and cultural attraction on Fenghuang Mountain in the west, to Dayanding, a geological wonder on Qiniang Mountain (formerly known as "Dapeng Mountain" in Xin'an County Annals) in the east. It is approximately 200 kilometers long and is divided into 20 sections, crossing mountains, forests, lakes, streams, and coasts. The terrain is flat in the west, complex in the middle, and dense in the east. It connects more than ten major peaks, seventeen natural country parks, eight large lakes and reservoirs, ten historical and cultural sites, thirty-five urban viewpoints, and nine key urban development areas... It connects mountains, reaches the sea, penetrates the city, and connects fun things.

The two words "Kun" and "Peng" come from Zhuangzi's "Xiaoyaoyou": "In the North Sea there is a fish named Kun. Kun's size is unknown, how many thousands of miles it is. It transforms into a bird named Peng. Peng's back is unknown how many thousands of miles across. When it soars in anger, its wings are like clouds drooping from the sky... When the Peng migrates to the South Sea, it strikes the water for three thousand miles and soars up to ninety thousand miles."