Camping overnight on the Great Wall of China unrestored section mist mountains
🌏 Asia · East Asia
🇨🇳

Best Things to Do in China

Sleep on a forbidden section of the Great Wall, ride camels on the Silk Road, scale the Avatar mountains, and watch the world's greatest skyline light up across the Huangpu River.

China is one of the most extraordinary countries on Earth — a civilisation 5,000 years old that contains within it some of the most dramatic landscapes, most staggering archaeological sites, most extraordinary feats of engineering, and most diverse food cultures imaginable. From the wild, unrestored sections of the Great Wall stretching into mountain mist to the bullet trains that blur the countryside at 350km/h to the Avatar pillar mountains of Zhangjiajie, China operates at a scale and depth that rewards the traveller willing to go beyond the standard tourist circuit.

1

Camp Overnight on the Great Wall of China

🧱 Hiking · Moderate · April–October
Camping overnight Great Wall China mist mountains forbidden section

The Great Wall of China stretches over 21,000 kilometres across mountains, deserts, and plains — and most visitors see the same heavily restored sections at Badaling or Mutianyu. But away from the tourist sites, wild and unrestored sections of the wall crumble dramatically across remote mountain ridges where no crowds reach and no restoration has softened the ancient stonework. Camping overnight on these forbidden sections is the experience that separates those who have truly encountered the Great Wall from those who visited it.

Watching the sun set from ancient battlements with the wall disappearing into mist-covered mountains in every direction, in complete silence, with no other humans visible — it is an experience that is difficult to articulate and impossible to forget. The wall at dawn, when the mist fills the valleys below and the ancient stones glow in early light, is one of those moments that recalibrate your sense of history. This is what the Great Wall actually is: not a tourist attraction, but one of the most extraordinary things human beings have ever built.

How to Camp on the Great Wall

Great Wall Adventure Club organises overnight camping trips on wild, unrestored sections of the wall near Beijing — typically the Jiankou and Gubeikou sections which are among the most dramatically ruined and most beautiful. Small groups, experienced local guides, and all equipment provided. Book well in advance as places are limited.

Best Sections
Jiankou or Gubeikou
From Beijing
2–3 hours by car
Season
April–October
Difficulty
Moderate
Group Size
Small (guided)
Total Wall Length
21,000+ km
📋 Planning Tips
Book through Great Wall Adventure Club well in advance — overnight spots fill quickly. Bring warm layers regardless of season as mountain nights are cold. Sturdy hiking boots are essential on the unrestored sections where stones are uneven and crumbling. The Jiankou section is the most photogenic; Gubeikou is less steep. Either produces an unforgettable night.
⭐ Emily's Take
One of my favourite memories is camping overnight on a forbidden section of the Great Wall with my parents — no crowds, no tourists, just the wall stretching into the mountains as the sun went down and the Milky Way coming out above the ancient battlements. The kind of story we'll tell for the rest of our lives. If you go to China and don't do this, you've missed what the Great Wall actually is.
Camp overnight Great Wall China adventure tour
Camp Overnight on the Great Wall — Wild Section
Sleep on the ancient battlements of an unrestored Great Wall section — no crowds, mountain mist, and one of the most extraordinary nights in China.
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2

Tiger Leaping Gorge Trek, Yunnan

🥾 Hiking · Moderate · April–June, Sept–Nov
Tiger Leaping Gorge Yangtze River Yunnan China deep canyon

Tiger Leaping Gorge is one of the deepest river gorges in the world — the Yangtze (Jinsha River) cuts between Jade Dragon Snow Mountain (5,596m) and Haba Snow Mountain (5,396m) in a chasm that drops nearly 3,900 metres from peak to river. The two-day high trail hike above the gorge is one of China's great trekking experiences, passing through dramatic mountain scenery above villages of the Naxi people with views that open and close as the trail winds around each ridge.

The gorge itself is named for a legendary tiger that crossed the river at its narrowest point — about 30 metres across — by jumping from a mid-river rock. At the base, the compressed Yangtze thunders through the narrow channel with a force that is audible from the trail above. The trail is steep in places, particularly the famous 28 Bends near the start, but the reward — views of the snow-capped peaks above, the river below, and the scale of the gorge walls stretching ahead — is among the finest in China.

Getting to Tiger Leaping Gorge

Tiger Leaping Gorge is near Lijiang in Yunnan province — about 90 minutes by bus from Lijiang old town to Qiaotou (the trailhead). Lijiang is connected by high-speed train and flights from Kunming, Chengdu, and Guangzhou. Most hikers complete the high trail in two days, staying at one of several guesthouses in the middle section. The low road along the gorge bottom is a separate, less-recommended experience.

Gorge Depth
~3,900m peak to river
Trek Distance
~22km (2 days)
Gateway
Lijiang, Yunnan
Best Season
Apr–June, Sept–Nov
Difficulty
Moderate
Nationality
Naxi people region
📋 Planning Tips
Hire a guide in Qiaotou or book a guided tour through Viator — the trail is generally well-marked but a local guide adds cultural context and knows the best viewpoints. Bring waterproofs, trekking poles, and more water than you think you need. Avoid July–August when summer rains make the trail muddy and landslide-prone. Guesthouses on the trail (Halfway Guesthouse is the most popular) book up in peak season — reserve ahead.
⭐ Why It's Worth It
Tiger Leaping Gorge is what happens when the Yangtze is forced through a gap barely wider than a city street by two mountains that rise almost four kilometres above it. The scale is completely impossible to convey in photographs — you have to stand on the trail and look down to understand it. The two-day hike above the gorge is genuinely one of the great mountain walks in Asia, and the guesthouses halfway through serve the best simple Chinese food you'll eat on the trip.
Tiger Leaping Gorge trek Yunnan China guided tour
Tiger Leaping Gorge Trek — Yunnan
Two days above one of the world's deepest river gorges — the Yangtze compressed between 5,000m snow peaks in China's most dramatic mountain province.
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3

Yangshuo Parasailing over the Karst Landscape

🪂 Adventure · Easy · Year-Round
Yangshuo parasailing karst towers Li River Guilin China

The karst landscape of Yangshuo and Guilin is one of the most visually distinctive on Earth — hundreds of steep limestone pillars rising from flat paddy fields and mirror-flat rivers in a panorama that has inspired Chinese ink paintings for a thousand years. From ground level it is extraordinary. From the air, on a paramotor or parasail above the towers, the landscape takes on a completely different dimension: the geometry of the peaks, the silver curves of the Li River, the emerald green of the paddy fields between them.

The Yangshuo parasailing experience takes you up above the valley in a harness attached to a paramotor, reaching heights where you can see the full pattern of the landscape — dozens of karst towers disappearing into the distance, the river winding between them, and the ancient villages at their bases. The flight lasts 15–30 minutes and is operated by experienced pilots who know the local air conditions well. No previous experience is required.

Getting to Yangshuo

Yangshuo is 70km south of Guilin — about 1.5 hours by bus or 4 hours by Li River cruise (which is an experience in itself, drifting through the karst landscape by boat). Guilin has a major airport with direct connections from Beijing, Shanghai, and Chengdu. Yangshuo itself is a lively small town with excellent restaurants, cycling routes between the karst towers, and some of the most beautiful river scenery in China.

Flight Duration
15–30 minutes
From Guilin
70km / 1.5 hrs
Experience Needed
None
Season
Year-round
Landscape
Karst towers, Li River
Difficulty
Easy
📋 Planning Tips
Book through Viator in advance — the most popular flight times (early morning and late afternoon for the best light) fill up quickly. Wear comfortable clothes and closed shoes. The Li River cruise from Guilin to Yangshuo is worth doing as a separate experience — the 4-hour boat journey through the karst landscape is one of the most beautiful river journeys in Asia.
⭐ Why It's Worth It
The Yangshuo karst landscape is one of those places where you think you understand it from photographs and then you arrive and realise that the scale — hundreds of limestone pillars covering the entire horizon — is completely beyond what any image conveys. Seeing it from above removes the last limit on that scale. The aerial view of the towers and the river from a paramotor is one of the most beautiful things you can see in China.
Yangshuo parasailing karst Li River Viator China
Yangshuo Parasailing — Karst Towers & Li River
Soar above one of the world's most beautiful landscapes — hundreds of karst towers and mirror-flat rivers seen from the air above Yangshuo.
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4

Zhangjiajie Via Ferrata — The Avatar Mountains

🏔 Extreme · Hard · Year-Round
Zhangjiajie pillar mountains Avatar China mist forest

Zhangjiajie National Forest Park in Hunan province contains over 3,000 quartzite sandstone pillar mountains rising from a forested plateau — some reaching over 200 metres in height, many narrow enough at the top that trees grow from their flat summits. The landscape directly inspired the floating Hallelujah Mountains in James Cameron's Avatar, and in person the resemblance is uncanny: mist drifts through the pillars, the forest below is a deep unbroken green, and the scale of the formations is completely outside ordinary experience.

The via ferrata routes on Zhangjiajie's pillar walls are among the most dramatic in the world — iron rungs bolted into sheer quartzite faces, with the forest canopy hundreds of metres below and other pillars at eye level. The park also features the world's highest glass-bottomed bridge (430m above a canyon) and the world's longest cable car. But the via ferrata, where you are clipped onto the mountain itself and hauling your body up rungs while the forest falls away beneath you, is the experience that most viscerally rewards the vertigo.

Getting to Zhangjiajie

Zhangjiajie has its own airport with direct flights from Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou, and Chengdu. The park entrance is 30km from the city. Allow at least 2 full days to explore properly — the park is large enough that a single day only scratches the surface. Via ferrata equipment and guided routes are available through operators inside the park.

Pillar Count
3,000+ sandstone pillars
Glass Bridge
430m above canyon
Airport
Zhangjiajie Hehua (DYG)
Season
Year-round (mist: autumn)
Inspired
Avatar (2009)
Difficulty
Hard
📋 Planning Tips
Arrive early in the morning before clouds burn off — misty conditions at dawn are when Zhangjiajie is at its most spectacular. The Tianzi Mountain area and the Avatar Hallelujah Mountain (officially renamed after the film) are the most dramatic sections. The glass-bottomed bridge requires a separate ticket and advance booking. Autumn (October–November) offers the best combination of autumn colour, mist, and reasonable crowds.
⭐ Why It's Worth It
Zhangjiajie is one of those places where you feel like you've stepped into a landscape that shouldn't exist — 3,000 sandstone pillars rising from a green forest plateau with mist drifting through them. The via ferrata takes the visceral quality of that landscape to another level: clinging to iron rungs on the face of a pillar with the forest 200 metres below you and another pillar at eye level. It is one of the most genuinely extraordinary natural environments in the world.
Zhangjiajie via ferrata Avatar mountains tour Viator China
Zhangjiajie Via Ferrata — Avatar Mountains
Scale the iron-runged faces of the pillar mountains that inspired Avatar — 3,000 sandstone towers rising from mist-filled forest in Hunan province.
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5

Ride Camels on the Original Silk Road — Dunhuang

🐪 Cultural · Easy · April–October
Bactrian camel ride Dunhuang Silk Road Singing Sand Dunes China

Dunhuang sits at the junction of the northern and southern routes of the ancient Silk Road in the Gobi Desert of Gansu province — for 2,000 years the last major oasis before the desert crossing into Central Asia, and the last stop on the road back from it. Every major caravan that crossed between China and the Mediterranean passed through Dunhuang. The Singing Sand Dunes (Mingsha Shan) that flank the oasis — rising to 250 metres and stretching for 40km — are named for the sound the sand makes when the wind moves across it.

Riding a Bactrian camel across these dunes, with the crescent-shaped Crescent Lake (Yueyaquan) glittering impossibly at the base of the dunes and the desert stretching to the horizon, is the most direct connection available to the Silk Road experience. The same landscape, the same mode of transport, the same sound of sand moving in the wind — 2,000 years of continuity available to any visitor willing to make the journey to one of China's most remote and most rewarding destinations.

The Mogao Grottoes — Dunhuang's Other Wonder

Combine the camel ride with a visit to the Mogao Grottoes — 735 Buddhist cave temples carved into a cliff face over a period of 1,000 years, containing some of the finest Buddhist art in existence. The grottoes require advance booking through the official Dunhuang website; visits are strictly controlled. Together, the dunes and the grottoes make Dunhuang one of the most extraordinary day programmes in China.

Dune Height
Up to 250m
Mogao Grottoes
735 Buddhist cave temples
From Xi'an
~5 hrs by high-speed train
Season
April–October
Province
Gansu, Northwest China
Difficulty
Easy
📋 Planning Tips
Book Mogao Grottoes tickets in advance through the official website — daily visitor numbers are strictly capped and tickets sell out weeks ahead in peak season. The camel ride should be booked on arrival at the dunes. Dunhuang is easiest reached by flight from Xi'an, Lanzhou, or Urumqi. Stay at least 2 nights to do both the dunes and the grottoes properly. Sunset on the Singing Sand Dunes is one of the most spectacular in China.
⭐ Why It's Worth It
Dunhuang is China's most remote major attraction and therefore one of its most rewarding. The Silk Road travellers who crossed these same dunes carried silk, spices, and ideas between civilisations for 2,000 years — and the landscape is entirely unchanged. Riding a Bactrian camel across the Singing Sand Dunes with Crescent Lake below and the desert stretching to the horizon produces a specific feeling of historical immersion that very few experiences in the world match.
Silk Road camel ride Dunhuang Mogao Grottoes tour Viator
Silk Road Camel Ride — Dunhuang, Mogao Grottoes & Crescent Lake
Ride Bactrian camels across the Singing Sand Dunes of Dunhuang — the ancient Silk Road gateway, the Crescent Lake oasis, and 1,000 years of Buddhist cave art nearby.
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6

Ride the World's Fastest High-Speed Trains

🚄 Cultural · Easy · Year-Round
China CRH high-speed bullet train 350kmh

China operates the world's largest and fastest high-speed rail network — over 45,000 kilometres of dedicated high-speed track with trains operating at up to 350km/h. The Beijing–Shanghai route (1,318km) takes 4.5 hours by the fastest service; a flight between the same cities takes the same total time once you factor in airport procedures. The Beijing–Xi'an route, covering 1,000km through mountains and loess plateau, takes about 4.5 hours. The experience of watching China's landscape blur past at 350km/h — plains, river valleys, mountain tunnels, city skylines — is genuinely exhilarating in a way that air travel simply isn't.

The trains themselves are clean, comfortable, and punctual — China's high-speed rail has one of the world's best on-time records. First class seats are wide and spacious with good legroom; second class is entirely adequate for journeys of a few hours. The station architecture is typically spectacular — many of China's high-speed rail stations are among the largest buildings in the world. Using the train to move between cities on a China itinerary is both the most practical and the most experiential way to travel.

Key High-Speed Rail Routes for Visitors

Beijing–Shanghai (4.5h), Beijing–Xi'an (4.5h), Shanghai–Hangzhou (45min), Xi'an–Chengdu (3.5h), Guangzhou–Hong Kong (47min). Tickets are bookable through Trip.com, the official 12306 app, or through tour operators. Book in advance for peak travel dates — national holidays see extreme demand.

Top Speed
350 km/h
Network
45,000+ km
Beijing–Shanghai
4.5 hours
Xi'an–Chengdu
3.5 hours
Season
Year-round
Difficulty
Easy
📋 Planning Tips
Book tickets in advance through Trip.com or a travel agent — the official 12306 app requires a Chinese phone number. Arrive at the station 30 minutes before departure for the security check. Your passport is required for ticket purchase and boarding. Avoid travelling during Golden Week (1 October) and Chinese New Year when trains are booked out weeks ahead. Window seats on the left side of northbound trains get the best mountain views on the Beijing–Xi'an route.
⭐ Why It's Worth It
Riding a Chinese high-speed train at 350km/h is one of those experiences that makes you feel genuinely in the future. The smoothness is disorienting — at that speed you expect vibration, but there's almost none. The landscape blurs past. The station you departed from is 200km behind you and you haven't felt the time pass. It is not just the most practical way to travel between Chinese cities; it is an experience worth planning your itinerary around.
China high speed train CRH bullet train ticket tour
China High-Speed Train — 350km/h Between Cities
The world's fastest and most extensive high-speed rail network — Beijing to Shanghai in 4.5 hours at 350km/h through the Chinese landscape.
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7

Shaolin Temple & Kung Fu Lesson with a Master

🥋 Cultural · Moderate · Year-Round
Shaolin Temple kung fu lesson master China

The Shaolin Monastery in the Song Mountains of Henan province is the birthplace of Chinese martial arts — founded in 495 AD, and the place where the monk Bodhidharma (Da Mo) is said to have developed the physical exercises that became kung fu as a way of strengthening the monks' bodies for meditation. For 1,500 years the monastery has trained warrior monks in a tradition of physical and spiritual discipline that produced the most famous martial arts school in history. It is still functioning today — young students train in the courtyards every morning.

A private tour from Zhengzhou (the nearest major city) combines the monastery visit — including the ancient stone pagoda forest where abbots are buried, the sacred cypress trees, and the training courtyards where monks still practise — with a hands-on kung fu lesson taught by an actual Shaolin master. The instruction is genuine: your teacher is someone who has spent years in the tradition, and the basics of stance, movement, and focus that they impart in an hour give you a felt understanding of the art that watching demonstrations cannot.

Getting to Shaolin Temple

Shaolin Monastery is 80km southwest of Zhengzhou — about 1.5 hours by car. Zhengzhou is a major high-speed rail hub with connections from Beijing (2h), Xi'an (2h), and Shanghai (4h). The Viator tour includes private transport from Zhengzhou, entry tickets, and the kung fu lesson with a master — the most complete way to experience Shaolin without navigating the logistics independently.

Founded
495 AD
From Zhengzhou
80km / 1.5 hrs
From Beijing
2 hrs by high-speed train
Season
Year-round
Include
Kung fu lesson with master
Difficulty
Moderate
📋 Planning Tips
Book the private tour well in advance — the combined monastery visit and kung fu lesson fills up fast. Wear comfortable clothes and flat shoes for the kung fu lesson. The monastery can be crowded with domestic tourists on weekends — weekday visits are significantly more atmospheric. The pagoda forest (where over 240 stone pagodas mark the graves of past abbots) is one of the most remarkable ensembles of religious architecture in China and deserves at least 30 minutes of careful attention.
⭐ Why It's Worth It
Taking a kung fu lesson from a Shaolin master in the birthplace of the art — with monks training in the courtyard behind you and 1,500 years of martial history in the stones around you — is one of those experiences where the context makes the activity. The lesson itself is genuinely instructive; the setting makes it extraordinary. Shaolin Monastery is one of the places in China where the history doesn't feel curated or performed — it is alive and ongoing.
Shaolin Temple kung fu lesson master Zhengzhou Viator China
Shaolin Temple & Kung Fu Lesson — Private Tour from Zhengzhou
Visit the 1,500-year-old birthplace of martial arts and take a hands-on kung fu lesson with a Shaolin master in the training courtyards.
Book on Viator →

8

Xi'an Muslim Street Food Walking Tour

🍜 Food & Drink · Easy · Year-Round
Xi'an Muslim Street food tour lantern lit alleys hand-pulled noodles China

Xi'an's Muslim Quarter (Huimin Jie) is one of the most extraordinary food destinations in China — a dense network of lantern-lit alleyways in the old walled city where the Hui Muslim community has lived and cooked for over a thousand years. The food here reflects Xi'an's position as the eastern terminus of the Silk Road: hand-pulled noodles (biangbiang mian), cumin-spiced lamb skewers, pomegranate juice, persimmon cakes, and roujiamo (Chinese-style "hamburger" of braised pork in flatbread) sold from stalls that crowd both sides of every narrow street.

Walking through the Muslim Quarter at night, when the lanterns are lit and the stalls are at maximum activity and the sound of noodle-pulling and the smell of cumin fills the air, is one of the most immersive food experiences available in Asia. A guided food tour takes you to the best stalls — including the vendors who have been pulling noodles in the same spot for decades — and provides the historical context that makes the Quarter's food culture even more fascinating.

Combining with the Big Goose Pagoda

The evening Viator tour combines the Muslim Street food walk with the North Square of the Big Wild Goose Pagoda, where a spectacular musical fountain show lights up the square after dark — one of the largest musical fountain displays in Asia. Xi'an is easily reached by high-speed train from Beijing (4.5h), Shanghai (6h), or Chengdu (3.5h).

Must Eat
Biangbiang noodles, roujiamo
Community
Hui Muslim — 1,000+ years
Best Time
Evening (most atmospheric)
Season
Year-round
City
Xi'an, Shaanxi province
Difficulty
Easy
📋 Planning Tips
Go hungry — a proper Muslim Street food walk involves 8–10 stops and you should eat at every one. The guided evening tour is the most complete experience as it includes the Big Goose Pagoda fountain show. The Muslim Quarter is busiest and most atmospheric after 7pm. Book the Terracotta Army for the same Xi'an visit — the two experiences together make Xi'an one of the most rewarding cities on any China itinerary.
⭐ Why It's Worth It
Xi'an's Muslim Quarter at night is one of those places where the sensory overload is entirely positive — lanterns, noodle-pulling, cumin smoke, pomegranate juice, and the sound of a thousand conversations in alleys barely wide enough for two people to pass. The food is genuinely extraordinary — biangbiang noodles as wide as belt leather, roujiamo that has been made the same way since the Tang Dynasty, lamb skewers that beat any kebab you've ever had. Do not skip this.
Xi'an Muslim Street food walking tour evening Viator China
Xi'an Muslim Street Food Tour — Evening Walk
Hand-pulled noodles, cumin lamb, and pomegranate juice in the lantern-lit alleys of Xi'an's ancient Silk Road Muslim Quarter — plus the Big Goose Pagoda fountain show.
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9

Visit the Terracotta Army, Xi'an

🏛 Cultural · Easy · Year-Round
Terracotta Army Xi'an China 8000 clay soldiers First Emperor burial site

The Terracotta Army is one of the greatest archaeological discoveries in human history — approximately 8,000 life-size clay soldiers, horses, chariots, and officials buried in three large underground pits near the tomb of Qin Shi Huang, the First Emperor of China, around 210 BC. Each figure is unique: different facial features, hairstyles, rank insignia, and expressions distinguish soldiers from officers from kneeling archers from chariot drivers. The craftsmen who made them — an estimated 700,000 workers over 38 years — created individual portraits in clay at a scale never seen before or since.

The scale of Pit 1 — the largest excavated pit, 230 metres long, containing over 6,000 figures in precise military formation — is genuinely overwhelming in person. Photographs cannot convey the experience of standing at the edge and looking across row after row of soldiers stretching to the far wall. Pit 2 and Pit 3 contain cavalry, command units, and officials. An estimated 80% of the buried army remains unexcavated — archaeologists continue to work on the site today.

Visiting the Terracotta Army

The site is 37km east of Xi'an city centre — about 1 hour by bus (tourist bus number 5 from Xi'an Railway Station) or 45 minutes by taxi. The Viator tour includes skip-the-line entry tickets and a guide who explains the history and ongoing excavations in detail — essential context for understanding what you're seeing. Allow 3 hours minimum for a proper visit.

Figures
~8,000 (80% unexcavated)
Built
~210 BC (38 years)
Discovered
1974 by farmers
From Xi'an
37km / 1 hour by bus
UNESCO
World Heritage Site
Difficulty
Easy
📋 Planning Tips
Book skip-the-line tickets in advance — queues at the entry gate can be 45–60 minutes without pre-booked tickets, particularly in summer. A guided tour is strongly recommended: the site requires context to understand fully, and the ongoing excavation work and conservation science are genuinely fascinating. Combine with the Muslim Quarter food tour for a full Xi'an day. Allow time for the on-site museum which houses restored figures in detail.
⭐ Why It's Worth It
The Terracotta Army is one of those sites where your understanding of what it is — intellectually — is completely overwhelmed by the experience of standing in front of it. 8,000 individual clay soldiers in perfect formation, each with a different face, buried for 2,200 years to guard an emperor's afterlife. The scale of ambition, the scale of human labour, and the scale of the achievement are all beyond ordinary comprehension. It is one of the most important things you can see in China.
Terracotta Army Xi'an ticket skip line Viator China
Terracotta Army — Skip-the-Line Tickets, Xi'an
Stand before 8,000 life-size clay soldiers buried 2,200 years ago — one of the greatest archaeological discoveries in history, still being excavated today.
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10

See the Shanghai Skyline at Night

🌆 Cultural · Easy · Year-Round
Shanghai skyline night Bund Pudong Oriental Pearl Tower illuminated

The Shanghai skyline at night is one of the great urban spectacles in the world — the Pudong financial district's cluster of illuminated towers, viewed across the Huangpu River from the Bund, combines architectural ambition, neon scale, and the specific beauty of reflected light on dark water in a panorama that has no equal in Asia. The Oriental Pearl Tower's spheres, the Shanghai Tower's twisted glass form (the world's second-tallest building at 632 metres), the Jin Mao Tower's pagoda silhouette, and the Shanghai World Financial Center's distinctive trapezoid void all contribute to a skyline that was almost entirely built in the past 30 years.

The Bund itself — the 1.5km waterfront promenade of colonial-era European buildings on the western bank — provides the foreground for the best views of Pudong across the river. At night the buildings are fully lit, and the photography light is extraordinary from about 8pm onwards. A guided photography tour takes you to the best vantage points, manages the logistics of moving between locations as the light changes, and ensures you capture both the skyline as a whole and the architectural details that make it distinctive.

Beyond the Skyline

Shanghai is a world-class city that rewards extended exploration — the French Concession's tree-lined streets and independent restaurants, the Yu Garden and the Old City, the contemporary art districts of M50 and the Bund's gallery floors, and a food scene that spans Shanghainese xiaolongbao to every international cuisine imaginable. Allow at least 3 days.

Tallest Building
Shanghai Tower — 632m
Best View
The Bund, from 8pm
From Beijing
4.5 hrs high-speed train
Season
Year-round
Best Light
8–10pm (all towers lit)
Difficulty
Easy
📋 Planning Tips
The Bund is free to walk and accessible by metro (East Nanjing Road station). For the best photography, arrive at the Bund promenade by 7:30pm and stay until at least 9pm as the light continues to evolve. The guided photography tour takes you to rooftop and riverside positions that are not obvious to first-time visitors. The Shanghai Tower observation deck (118th floor) offers a daytime bird's-eye view of the entire city — book in advance.
⭐ Why It's Worth It
Standing on the Bund at 9pm watching the Pudong skyline light up across the river is one of those experiences where you feel genuinely in the most extraordinary city on Earth. The scale, the ambition, the beauty — Shanghai's skyline is what the 21st century looks like when a civilisation decides to build something. It is the most spectacular urban panorama in Asia and among the most spectacular in the world.
Shanghai skyline photography tour Bund night Viator
Shanghai Skyline Photography Tour — The Bund at Night
Capture the world's most spectacular urban skyline from the Bund — the Oriental Pearl, Shanghai Tower, and Pudong's towers fully illuminated across the Huangpu River.
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11

Chengdu Panda Breeding Research Center

🐼 Wildlife · Easy · Year-Round
Giant pandas Chengdu Panda Breeding Research Center China

The Chengdu Research Base of Giant Panda Breeding is the world's most successful giant panda conservation programme — housing over 200 pandas in large naturalistic enclosures across a bamboo forest park on the northern edge of Chengdu. The base has been instrumental in raising the giant panda's conservation status from Endangered to Vulnerable, with a breeding programme that produces cubs for reintroduction to wild habitats. Visiting is genuinely one of the most joyful experiences in China.

Giant pandas in person are larger than expected, more mobile than their reputation suggests, and completely unbothered by the presence of visitors observing them through glass and from viewing platforms. The nursery enclosures, where cubs from the latest breeding season tumble and play while their mother lounges in bamboo, are the highlight — watching a two-kilogram panda cub attempt to climb a wooden structure and failing repeatedly while its mother ignores it entirely is pure joy. Red pandas — the smaller, fox-like relative — roam the same grounds and are equally charming.

Planning Your Panda Visit

The base is 10km north of central Chengdu — 30 minutes by taxi or public bus. Open daily; pandas are most active in the morning before 10am when temperatures are cooler. A guided tour provides context about the breeding programme and conservation science. Chengdu itself is an excellent city with outstanding Sichuan cuisine, a relaxed teahouse culture, and easy high-speed rail connections to Xi'an (3.5h) and other major cities.

Panda Count
200+ giant pandas
Status
Vulnerable (was Endangered)
From City
10km north of Chengdu
Best Time
Morning (most active)
Also See
Red pandas
Difficulty
Easy
📋 Planning Tips
Arrive at opening time (7:30am) — pandas are most active in the morning and the park is significantly less crowded before 9am. Book a guided tour through Viator for transport from central Chengdu and a naturalist guide who knows where the most active enclosures are. Combine with a Sichuan cooking class or a hotpot dinner in Chengdu for a full day — Sichuan cuisine in its home city is one of the great food experiences in China.
⭐ Why It's Worth It
Giant pandas in person are simultaneously more impressive and more ridiculous than you expect — large, powerful animals who spend 14 hours a day eating bamboo and the remaining 10 hours doing panda things with a profound air of not caring what you think about it. The cubs are impossibly endearing. The red pandas are the unexpected bonus. Chengdu's Panda Base is one of those rare wildlife experiences where the conservation story, the animals, and the joy of watching them all align completely.
Chengdu Panda Breeding Center tour Viator China
Chengdu Panda Breeding Research Center
Get within metres of giant pandas and cubs at the world's most successful panda conservation facility — plus red pandas in the bamboo forest grounds.
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🗓 Best Time to Visit China

China is enormous and the best time varies by region. Here's a general seasonal guide:

🌸 Spring (March–May) Excellent across most of China. Wildflowers in Yunnan. Tiger Leaping Gorge opens up. Zhangjiajie misty and beautiful. Avoid Chinese New Year (Jan/Feb) when transport is overwhelmed.
☀️ Summer (June–August) Hot and humid in most cities. Avoid Golden Week (1 October approaches). Tiger Leaping Gorge can be rainy and landslide-prone July–August. Dunhuang and the northwest are excellent. Pandas year-round.
🍂 Autumn (Sept–November) The best overall season. Excellent weather across the country. Zhangjiajie in autumn colour is spectacular. Tiger Leaping Gorge conditions are perfect. Avoid Golden Week (1 October) for travel.
❄️ Winter (Dec–February) Cold in the north (Beijing, Xi'an). South and Yunnan remain mild. Crowd levels are lowest outside of Chinese New Year. The Great Wall in snow is extraordinary. Pandas year-round in Chengdu.

Frequently Asked Questions — China Travel

Can you really camp overnight on the Great Wall?
Yes — on wild, unrestored sections away from the tourist sites, overnight camping is possible with specialist operators like Great Wall Adventure Club. These sections carry a sense of genuine adventure. You sleep on the actual battlements, watch the sun set over mountains with no other visitors, and wake to the wall stretching into the mist. It is one of the most extraordinary overnight experiences in China.
Is Tiger Leaping Gorge difficult to hike?
The two-day high trail is a moderate hike of approximately 22km with some steep sections — notably the 28 Bends near the start. Good fitness is required but no technical skills. The trail is well-marked with guesthouses at regular intervals. Best season is April–June and September–November when the trail is dry and visibility is best.
What is the Terracotta Army and why is it significant?
The Terracotta Army is approximately 8,000 life-size clay soldiers, horses, and chariots buried with China's First Emperor around 210 BC. Each figure is unique with individual facial features and rank markings. Discovered by farmers in 1974 near Xi'an, it is one of the greatest archaeological discoveries of the 20th century and a UNESCO World Heritage site. An estimated 80% remains unexcavated.
How fast are China's high-speed trains?
China's high-speed trains operate at 300–350km/h. Beijing to Shanghai (1,318km) takes 4.5 hours; Beijing to Xi'an takes about 4.5 hours; Xi'an to Chengdu takes 3.5 hours. China has the world's largest high-speed rail network at over 45,000km. Trains are clean, punctual, and comfortable.
When is the best time to visit China?
April–May and September–October are the best overall times — pleasant temperatures, low rainfall, and good visibility for mountain landscapes. Avoid Golden Week (1 October) and Chinese New Year when domestic tourism creates extreme crowds. Summer is hot and humid in most of eastern China.
Do you need a visa to visit China?
It depends on your nationality. China has expanded its visa-free policy significantly — citizens of France, Germany, Italy, Spain, and several other countries now enjoy 30-day visa-free access. US, UK, Australian and Canadian citizens generally still require a visa. Check the current policy carefully before travelling as it changes frequently.

🇨🇳 Practical Tips for China

China uses the Chinese Yuan (RMB/CNY). WeChat Pay and Alipay dominate payments — international visitors can now link foreign credit cards to WeChat Pay, which is essential for many transactions. Cash is increasingly difficult to use. Download a VPN before arriving in China — Google, WhatsApp, Instagram, and most Western social platforms are blocked. Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou, and Chengdu are the main international gateways. High-speed trains are the best way to travel between cities. Mandarin is the official language; English is spoken in tourist areas and hotels. The emergency number is 110 (police) and 120 (ambulance). Tap water should not be drunk — use bottled. China is a safe destination for tourists but petty theft occurs in crowded tourist sites. A physical or e-SIM local Chinese data plan is strongly recommended for navigation and translation apps.
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