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Please leave the crimson leaves alone
The cold front that swept through Beijing last Thursday turned
the Fragrant Hills in the western part of Beijing into the splendid fall
colors of yellow, orange and crimson. The hills will be ablaze, almost
fully red, as another chilly wind heads from the north this weekend.
But Fragrant Hills is not the only place to enjoy the crimson leaves in
Beijing.
The municipal government launched a project called “Colorful Leaves”
seven years ago. Under the project, maple and two different species of
smoke trees have been planted at more than 10 sites in the mountainous
areas in Beijing, covering about 20,000 hectares of slopes.
These days, the popular scenic sites, such as the Badaling and Mutianyu
sections of the Great Wall, the Ming Tombs area, the Miyun Reservoir and
the Yunju and Hongluo Buddhist temples, are also naturally decorated
with the autumn colors of bright yellow, orange and red.
People who drive along the highways between Beijing and Zhangjiakou,
along the Huaifeng and Migu roads will also be surprised by the colorful
leaves all over the hills.
However, many people still go to the Western Hills as they make it an
annual ritual to pay homage to the flaming smoke trees there.
No wonder the park management is hosting a cultural festival, expecting
thousands of visitors to turn up.
To avoid possible traffic jams, the Beijing traffic management authority
has made public a detailed temporary traffic control scheme, restricting
the number of trucks and vans entering the park roads leading up to the
hills. Some of the roads will be turned into one-way drives.
The authority has also declared that the parking lots in the vicinity
will only accommodate fewer than 3,900 cars at one time, while between
4,000 and 5,000 vehicles on average are expected to arrive at the foot
of the hills daily during this late autumn season.
They advise that it is better for travelers to go to the hills by bus or
by chartered tourist buses.
The idea of a cultural festival is wonderful in attracting visitors
while the provisional traffic management scheme will make it easier to
visit the hills.
What is missing, however, is a stricter but practical ecological scheme
to protect the trees from harm, despite the signs everywhere asking
visitors to be civil and not to pick the leaves.
Some people have complained in their blogs that they were dismayed to
see hikers picking leaves and even cutting twigs over the weekend. Some
trees by the hilly roads have been stripped of almost half of their
leaves.
One blogger wrote that an elderly man told him the trees in the Fragrant
Hills suffer such damage almost every day at this time of the year.
I believe there is a lot more the park management should do to protect
and preserve the trees. They should limit the number of visitors. They
should also enlist the help of volunteers - college students for
instance - to patrol along the mountainous paths, reminding people that
it is not civil to pick the colorful leaves.
I do not think it would be enjoyable to see damaged trees and people who
do not genuinely love the trees.
—The Daily Mail, China Daily news exchange item |