The city of Dandong, with an unspoiled ecosystem and vast intertidal mudflats, offers a perfect stopover for migratory birds. (Photo/China Daily)
Demand for the local Shenxian-yuan baijiu (Chinese white liquor) springs from Dandong's water quality. Visitors to the AAAA-rated Tianqiao Gully National Forest Park can tour its plant, where the spirit is made using traditional processes in ancient-style buildings at the foot of the mountain range.
The location is touted as an "oxygen bar" nurtured by the exhalations of bonsai-like maples that cling to crags and entice autumn crowds. Some locals say that chain smokers don't cough there.
It was preserved as the Qing Dynasty (1644-1911) imperial hunting grounds. Ski runs and a lodge were completed a year ago.
Rustic farmhouses exude cornfields as they clamber up slopes and pack the cracks between peaks.
It's a similar panorama at the Fenghuang, or Phoenix, Mountain, where hillside hamlets prelude protruding peaks clutched by gnarled pines punctuated by ancient edifices.
Ecology encounters history at Fenghuang, whose appellation hails from a legend involving Tang Dynasty (AD 618-907) emperor Li Shimin.
The highlands were known as the Black Bone or the Bear Mountains until a general saw an owl swoop from a cave-an ominous omen. So the emperor visited. He instead saw two phoenixes flutter from the cavern-an auspicious totem.
Ancient buildings testify to the mountains' position as various faiths' place of pilgrimage.
The Three-Religion Pavilion, for instance, affirms to its importance to Buddhism, Confucianism and Taoism. The structure stands uphill from a still-operational ancient Taoist center and Buddhist temple.
Only the fittest hikers can conquer the tough, final slog to Fenghuang's 836-meter-high apex within a day.
A stretch that makes the trek physically easier but psychologically harrowing is a glass platform soaring hundreds of meters in the air. (Seriously, don't look down.)
Fenghuang's topography is anthropomorphically rendered as Buddha statues, dragons and turtles, with a folktale to explain each shape.
So are the summits of Dandong's Hushan (Tiger Mountain), so named because it resembles a crouching tiger upon which rode Buddhism's goddess of mercy, Guanyin. She's also silhouetted as a nearby mount.
The Ming Dynasty (1368-1644) Great Wall's easternmost endpoint crowns Hushan. Dandong' surviving 2-km stretch of the bulwark peaks at 146 meters high.
Given Dandong's ecological offerings, the colorful concept of "come for the red, stay for the green" may just be the city's golden tourism ticket.