Guifeng Mountain
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Updated April 15, 2024
Time to enjoy the enchanting red leaves in Guangdong | GDToday
## Guifeng Mountain (Guifengshan), Jiangmen: what it is and why it’s worth the climb
Guifeng Mountain (圭峰山, Guifengshan) is a mountain and scenic area in Xinhui District, Jiangmen, Guangdong, in the Pearl River Delta. It’s widely described as a national 4A tourist area / attraction, and it’s commonly framed as a “forest park” experience—wooded trails, lakes, and viewpoints—rather than a single summit-and-done peak.
Your coordinates (22.554841, 113.027343) place it in Jiangmen, matching that Xinhui/Jiangmen context.
## Quick facts you can plan around
– Location: Xinhui District, Jiangmen (Guangdong, China) China Guide
– Height: sources vary; commonly cited around 545–546 m
– Designation: described as a national 4A attraction/forest park
– Landscape: a park-style mountain area with multiple developed spots (not just one trail)
### Accuracy note on elevation (important)
You’ll see different elevation numbers depending on the source (for example, Wikipedia cites 545 m while another travel site cites 437 m China Guide). For a publish-ready piece, the most defensible phrasing is “around 545 m” (with a citation), and avoid presenting a single exact number as uncontested.
## What you’ll actually do there
Think of Guifeng Mountain as a cluster of scenic nodes connected by park roads and walking routes. A few of the most consistently referenced points:
### Yutai Temple (玉台寺)
This is one of the headline cultural stops associated with Guifeng Mountain in major English-language travel coverage. China Guide
Outdated-data flag: some sources describe a construction era for the temple and list architectural details and fees; those specifics can drift or be oversimplified, so treat them as “check locally” details if you include them. China Guide
### Jade Lake (玉湖)
Often presented as a core leisure area—lake views, walking paths, and a classic “park day” vibe. China Guide
### Palm Art Garden
Reported as a niche cultural craft stop connected to local palm-leaf art traditions. China Guide
### The “bigger park” feel: peaks + lakes
Another write-up frames Guifeng National Forest Park as having three peaks and four lakes, reinforcing that you’re visiting an area with multiple sub-sights rather than a single mountain viewpoint.
## Best time to go (without guesswork)
If you want one seasonally specific reason that’s consistently mentioned: autumn color. At least one travel guide explicitly highlights red autumn leaves and specifically mentions trident maple stands as the driver of that color season. China Guide
Practical reality check:
– Leaf timing varies year to year, even within the same region.
– If you publish a “best month” claim, you should verify it against a current local source close to the trip date (park notice, local tourism post, or recent visitor reports).
## How to get to Guifeng Mountain from Jiangmen/Xinhui
One concrete transit detail you can publish (with a citation):
– A travel guide notes Bus No. 3 from Xinhui Bus Station, getting off at Guifeng Mountain. China Guide
Outdated-data flag: bus routes and stop names can change, sometimes without clean English updates. If you’re producing a long-lived article, add a line encouraging travelers to confirm the route in a current mapping/transit app on the day. China Guide
## What to pack (the unsexy stuff that saves the day)
This is a forest-park mountain experience, so the most useful packing list is boring—and that’s the point:
– Footwear with real grip (stone steps + damp patches can be slick after rain)
– Water + a small snack (park areas can be large; you don’t want to ration hydration)
– Light rain layer if humidity or showers are in the forecast
– Sun protection (hat/sunscreen) even on hazy days—UV still gets through
– Offline map (downloaded) if you’re moving between viewpoints and lake areas
## Inclusivity and on-the-ground comfort
– Temples and cultural sites often have posted etiquette (quiet zones, photography restrictions, shoulder coverage rules) that can vary by site. If you’re visiting Yutai Temple, follow local signage and staff guidance. China Guide
– If you’re traveling with mobility limitations: Guifeng is described as a multi-area park with roads and lakefront leisure zones, which may offer more accessible options than a strict summit hike—though you should confirm accessible routes onsite.
## Outdated or hard-to-verify details you should handle carefully
A travel guide page lists specific admission fees for attractions inside the park and references other nearby attractions with prices. Fees change; if you publish those numbers, you’ll need an update cadence. China Guide
Also, some sources include detailed wildlife lists; unless you can corroborate that with a higher-authority conservation/park reference, it’s smarter to describe the area generally (forested habitat, birdlife) without naming species.
## Bottom line
Guifeng Mountain works best as a half-day to full-day nature-and-culture loop: forested scenery, lakeside walking, and at least one major temple stop, all within the Jiangmen/Xinhui area. The planning sweet spot is simple: go early, expect multiple sub-areas, and treat any posted prices or transit details as “verify before you go,” not eternal truth.
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