Chang Kong Cliff Road is a cliff hiking road in China. The cliff walkway is reached by climbing steep stairs.[1] It is located in Shaanxi Province, China, at the edge of Mount Hua.[2]
The Cliff road is believed to have been created in the 13th century, during the Yuan Dynasty, by followers of He Zhizhen, the first master of the Mount Hua Sect of Taoism.[3] The monks were seeking immortals who were believed to dwell in the mountains.[4]
The walkway is made of wooden boards,[5] nailed together[6] and installed on a series of iron pegs driven into the sheer mountain cliff thousands of metres above the ground.[7] Some sections of the walkway are only 30 cm wide. [8] Some sections are cut into the cliff rock.
The walkway is popular with visitors,[9] but, because a number of fatalities have occurred,[10] tourists and others wanting to negotiate the walkway are required to wear safety harnesses.[11][12] The walkway is traveled even in winter[6] and, in order to arrive in time to view the sunrise, many choose to traverse it at night.[4] After setting out, a walker must continue to the end, because the narrowness of the path prohibits two-way traffic.[13]
References
- ↑ "China's insane cliff path: the Chang Kong Cliff Road". news.com.au.
- ↑ "China's insane cliff path leads to ... what, exactly?".
- ↑ "Chang Kong Cliff Road of Mount Hua" - People's Daily Online.
- 1 2 "Chang Kong Cliff Road Walk on 700-year old Wooden Boards". Female Magazine.
- ↑ "World's scariest walkway? Tourists brave Chang Kong Cliff Road in China". BBC Online.
- 1 2 "Sheer madness - tourists take the toughest trail around mountains!". Reveal.
- ↑ "Wish you were sheer: Tourists brave terrifying hiking trail on the edge of Huashan mountain". Metro.
- ↑ "These Breathtaking Cliffside Walkways Will Give You Vertigo". IO9.
- ↑ "Chang Kong Cliff Road, il percorso più pericoloso del mondo (video)". Viaggi News.
- ↑ "10 treacherous trails with gorgeous views: Chang Kong Cliff Road, China.". Mother Nature Network.
- ↑ "Chang Kong Cliff Road:Haushan Mountain." Archived October 6, 2014, at the Wayback Machine. The Zone.
- ↑ "Trekking High". Free Online News, 1 June 2013.
- ↑ "Breathtaking trail: tourists trek up Mt. Huashan along ancient wooden boards". CN News.