Current location - Health Preservation Learning Network - Health preserving recipes - Is the Taoist temple in Jinyun Mountain open to the outside world?
Is the Taoist temple in Jinyun Mountain open to the outside world?
Shao Long Temple and Baiyun Temple in Jinyun Mountain, Chongqing are located in Chongqing Jinyun Mountain National Nature Reserve and are usually open to the public.

Shaolong view is the largest orthodox Taoist view in southwest China, and it is also a Taoist health-preserving view with a long history.

Baiyun Temple, located in Shijiao Town, Qijiang District, Chongqing, is the highest peak of Yingshan, with an altitude of 1085 meters, facing Gujian Mountain across Qijiang River. Baiyun Temple, 80km away from downtown Chongqing, is a famous Taoist shrine in southwest China.

The health care project in Shaolongguan has been closed. Visiting Taoist temples suggests staying in hotels and guesthouses in Beibei District of Chongqing, or traveling with a group.

Brief Introduction of Chongqing Jinyun Mountain National Nature Reserve

Jinyun Mountain is located on the bank of Wentang Gorge of Jialing River in Beibei District, Chongqing, and was called Bashan in ancient times. It is a "anticline" mountain created by the "Yanshan Movement" 70 million years ago. The white clouds in the mountains are like fog, smoke and non-smoke, majestic and stagnant, and full of weather. Clouds are colorful in the morning and evening. The ancients called "more red and less white" "Jinyun Mountain", hence the name.

Jinyun Mountain, the Three Gorges of Jialing River and Hechuan Fishing City have been designated as national natural scenic spots. Jinyun Mountain has a total area of 76 square kilometers and an altitude of 350 m -95 1 m. Jinyun Mountain has pleasant scenery and rich plant resources, and is known as Jinyun in the north and stalagmites in the south. There are eight ancient temples, including Jinyun Temple, Wenquan Temple, Baiyun Temple, Shao Long Temple, Fuxing Temple and Shihua Temple, as well as places of interest such as Stone Zhaobi in the late Tang Dynasty, Stone Archway in the Ming Dynasty and Stone Carvings in the Song Dynasty. There are the ruins of Sino-Tibetan Buddhist College (1932) and the remains of ancient villages such as Shizifeng Village and Qinglong Village. It is also a Buddhist resort with a history of 1500 years. There is the former site of the Southwest Bureau's leading office in the mid-1950s (He Long Courtyard, Xiaoping's former residence). There are new Taoist cultural parks and scenic spots, such as Baiyun Temple and Shao Long Temple. The scenic spot holds the Jinyun Mountaineering Festival and the Wulin Conference of "Jinyun on Sword" every year.