Lijiang River, Guilin, Guangxi (漓江,桂林市,广西省)

The Li River or Lijiang River is a river in Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region, China.

The Li River originates in the Mao’er Mountains in Xing’an Сounty and flows in the general southern direction through Guilin, Yangshuo and Pingle. In Pingle, the Li River merges with two other streams and continues south as the Gui River, which falls into the Xi Jiang, the western tributary of the Pearl River in Wuzhou.

The upper course of the Li River is connected to the ancient Lingqu Canal with the Xiang River, which flows north into the Yangtze. In the past this made the Li and Gui Rivers part of a highly important waterway connecting the Yangtze Valley with the Pearl River Delta.
The 437-kilometer course of the Li and Gui Rivers is flanked by green hills. Cormorant fishing is often associated with the Lijiang (see bird intelligence). Its unusual karst topography hillsides have often been compared to those at Halong Bay, Vietnam.

Along the 100-kilometer stretch of the Li River, mountain peaks rise into the sky and is one of China’s most famous scenic areas, featured in many scroll paintings. Features include:

Reed-Flute Rock: a limestone cave with a large number of stalactites, stalagmites, stalacto-stalagmites, rocky curtains, and cave corals.
Seven-Star Park: the largest park in Guilin.

Mountain of Splendid Hues: a mountain consisting of many layers of variously colored rocks.

Elephant-Trunk Hill: a hill that looks like a giant elephant drinking water with its trunk. It is symbol of the city of Guilin.

Lingqu Canal: dug in 214 BC, is one of the three big water conservation projects of ancient China and the oldest existing canal in the world.
Other attractions include: Duxiu Peak, Nanxi Park, the Taohua River, the Giant Banyan, and the Huashan-Lijiang National Folklore Park.

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