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Tianmenshan

Tianmenshan is a unique mountain just south of the city of Zhangjiejia, in the central province of Hunan.

It’s intense.


There is two cable cars up. one that goes to the very top, and one that goes to the heaven gate - a massive hole in the mountain pictured above.

We bought our tickets late, so we were apparently going in the opposite direction of most people, starting at the lowest point. This would be a bit of a blessing, because as I came to find out, everywhere in China is absolutely crowded.

I’ve seen pictures of those walkways in China that look like they are just bolted to the side of a cliff, but didn’t realize how true that was in person. It really is just thousands of feet straight down, and a crumbly concrete path jutting out the side.

At the base of the ‘windgate’, the hole in the mountain, there is a huge set of stairs called the “999 steps”. After climbing up the stairs there is the longest set of escalators I have ever seen that goes up right through the center of the mountain. Yes, escalators. It felt endless to the point where I couldn’t remember a time before I was on the escalator, and could imagine there would be a time when I got off.

Chinese people seem to love escalators. Anywhere an escalator can be, it’ll be there.

The top of the mountain is like a table. It is flat with cliffs on all sides.


Top of Tianmenshan

I thought the mountain would be a nice nature spot. It is a high adrenaline theme park.

The top of the mountain has many attractions to see, most of them involving being on the edge of tall cliffs.

There are a seemingly endless amount of cliffside walks, with glass floors, tall viewing platforms, bridges, and cable rides over massive caverns.

At the very back of the mountain, seemingly deserted by everyone, was a buddist temple.

It was more what I wanted to see in China, and had a history. It was serene to be in such a calm place on top of such an extreme mountain.

They had one of the real buddha’s “pearls”. These are little stones that were found in the buddha’s ashes when he was cremated. It is supposed to show that he was godlike, or something. Kai said she thinks they are kidney stones.

It was my favorite thing to see in China up to that point, and remains there.

It was getting dark, so we took a chairlift back to the summit, then got on the cable car down.

Had no idea just how long it was. It went all the way down from the top, through valleys, over ridges and villages. We eventually saw the city and it just kept going and going right to the center.

We eventually found out that this was actually the longest cable car in the world, over 7 miles long.

After such a long day, we still needed to take a taxi for an hour to Zhangjiejia, so we could explore the National Park the following day