A feast for the eyes and senses
Winter festival in suburban Beijing thrills visitors with magnificently-lit ice sculptures
Dragons dance. Soldiers salute. Children frolic. Swans swim, tulips blossom and women with batwings poise to take flight. These scenes — and hundreds more — are frozen in time and water, as winter has literally taken shape at the Longqing Gorge Ice Lantern Art Festival in suburban Beijing.
Indeed, the hundreds of figures carved from snow and water among a rainbow’s worth of multicolored lights and over 2,000 lanterns shaped like corn cobs, caterpillars and starfish conjure an almost psychedelic vim.
That is not to mention stone statues of hippos, athletes and sages that occupy the grounds year-round.
The fantastical human-made ice sculptures are nestled among natural rock formations that contort the geological park’s topography.
People visit the area throughout the year to explore its jutting karsts and yawning caves, and to float on boats that ply its underground rivers. They also ride a massive mountainside escalator shaped like a dragon (long qing translates as “dragon celebration”) that has become an icon on the iconic destination.
Longqing’s landscapes have endowed it with such nicknames as the “Little Three Gorges” and the “Little Li River”, in reference to the celebrated scenic area in the Guangxi Zhuang autonomous region. And its winter festival is hailed as the “Little Harbin Ice Festival”, in reference to the annual event in Heilongjiang province’s capital, which is one of the largest of its kind in the world.
The festival actually shines brightest at night, when the ice burns with
blazing multihued lights, creating a truly otherworldly aura.
After sunset, illuminated Chinese characters, pagodas and facsimiles of the Great Wall can be seen high on the mountaintops. And video promos for the 2022 Winter Olympics, which China will host, are projected on a sheer cliff side.
Some of the objects, figures and structures seem almost ironic, such as ice skaters and hotpot sculpted from ice, and snowmen made of strings of lights standing next to lanterns made of snow.
Penguins fashioned from snow waddle at the foot of a 40-meter-high frozen waterfall, which is arguably the seasonal festival’s main natural attraction.
The festival ranked among the 10 most popular short-distance-trip destinations nationwide during the recent Spring Festival holiday, according to China’s largest online travel provider, Trip.com.
Topical themes this year include the Year of the Ox, the 2022 Winter Olympics and the 100th anniversary of the Communist Party of China’s founding.
Many visitors to the event also stop
in the nearby Yongning ancient town to visit its temple, church and iconic 1,300-year-old Yuhuang Pavilion.
The settlement was a thriving commerce hub in the Ming (13681644) and Qing (1644-1911) dynasties, when it attracted businesspeople from around the country to set up shops.
Travelers stroll along its main pedestrian street, where townspeople vend local produce and folk crafts, and pop into eateries to try specialties such as boiled tofu and “fire spoon” pastries — dough disks that diners stuff with pig-head pork or donkey meat.
An unlikely, yet much beloved, figure of the community is an elderly farmer who rides a two-wheeled cart drawn by a goat wearing sunglasses, a Peking Opera headdress, multiple facemasks, smiley-face balloons and pinwheels.
Indeed, the scene may seem surreal. But it is just a warm-up for the always fantastical — and sometimes wacky —winter wonderland that is the Longqing ice fest.