The booking wall verified
These sell out or block foreigners if you arrive unprepared — the dates, the official link, and whether your passport works.
Mount Jianglang Danxia scenic area (江郎山), Jiangshan
✓ 2026-06-13- Release
- Real-name entry with your passport; reserve ahead on weekends and in holiday peaks, when the narrow stair between the spires backs up
- Price
- —
- Foreigners
- Passport works
Like most Chinese AAAAA parks, entry is real-name, so you reserve or buy with your passport as ID through the official scenic-area channel (its WeChat or Alipay mini-program, Chinese-first) or at the gate; foreigner-bookable listings also appear on the big OTAs. The interface is Chinese-first, so the simplest path is to have your hotel reserve with your passport details. Don't assume an English-language window at the gate.
officialBookingUrl set to null and prices left null on purpose: we could not verify a single clean official ticketing domain for the scenic area during this pass, and we won't publish an unconfirmed admission figure — reconfirm the current fare at booking. This is the headline: Mount Jianglang (Jianglangshan) is a Danxia landscape inscribed on the UNESCO World Heritage List in August 2010 as a component of 'China Danxia', and it carries China's top AAAAA scenic rating. The signature feature is the 'Three Spires' (三爿石) — three colossal near-vertical rock pillars in a 'river-character' row; the tallest, Langfeng, reaches about 817 m. The classic walk threads a steep, vertiginous stone stairway up the slot between the spires — narrow, exposed and not for anyone uneasy with heights or tight spaces. The park sits in Jiangshan, about 40 km from Quzhou city (roughly 25 km from Jiangshan town per the scenic-area listing); Jiangshan has its own station on the Shanghai-Kunming line, so many people base in Jiangshan rather than Quzhou for this one. The same valley holds Qingyang, an old Mao-clan village at the foot of the mountain.
Source: official ticketing · re-checked monthly
Confucius Temple of the Southern Lineage (孔氏南宗家庙)
✓ 2026-06-13- Price
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- Foreigners
- Passport works
A walk-up gate ticket in normal periods; bring your passport as ID. No advance booking needed outside major holidays. It's in central Quzhou, so it pairs naturally with a half-day in the old town rather than a trip out to the mountains.
officialBookingUrl null and prices null: gate sale (and OTA listings) only, with no dedicated official ticketing domain we could verify, and we won't invent an admission figure. This is Quzhou's deep-history draw: the Kong (Confucius) family's southern seat. When the Song court fled south from the Jurchen in the 1120s-30s, a senior branch of the Kong lineage — direct descendants of Confucius — followed and settled in Quzhou, founding the 'Southern Lineage' family temple to mirror the great Confucius Temple back in Qufu, Shandong. It is, in effect, the southern counterpart to Qufu, and the reason Quzhou bills itself a 'City of the Sage'. The complex is restored rather than untouched-ancient, but the lineage story and the ritual setting are the genuine article. Expect a calm, low-key visit rather than a crowd-magnet.
Source: official ticketing · re-checked monthly
Gengong Foguo root-carving park (根宫佛国 / 根博园), Kaihua
✓ 2026-06-13- Price
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- Foreigners
- Passport works
Real-name entry, so buy or reserve with your passport at the gate or through the official scenic-area channel (Chinese-first mini-program); OTA listings exist too. No special foreigner process beyond carrying your passport.
officialBookingUrl null and prices null — no clean official ticketing domain verified this pass and we won't publish an unconfirmed price; reconfirm at booking. Gengong Foguo (literally 'Root Palace, Buddha Country', also called the Root Art Museum / 根博园) is a sprawling AAAAA park in Kaihua county built around monumental root carvings — huge sculptures and Buddhist figures shaped from tree roots and stumps, a craft Quzhou is known for. It's a manufactured, modern attraction rather than a historic site, and reactions split: some find the giant root Buddhas genuinely impressive, others find it kitschy. It's out in Kaihua, a fair drive from Quzhou centre, so treat it as its own half-day, not an in-town stop.
Source: official ticketing · re-checked monthly
Nianbadu ancient town (廿八都古镇), Jiangshan
✓ 2026-06-13- Price
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- Foreigners
- Passport works
Generally a walk-up gate ticket for the scenic-town core, with your passport as ID; some lanes are free to wander. No advance booking needed in normal periods. It's deep in southern Jiangshan near the Zhejiang-Fujian-Jiangxi border meeting point, so it works best combined with Mount Jianglang on a Jiangshan-based day with a hired car.
officialBookingUrl null and prices null — gate-sale/OTA only, no official ticketing domain verified, no invented figure. Nianbadu ('Twenty-eight Du') is an old garrison-and-trading town tucked in the mountains where three provinces meet, historically a waystation on the route between Zhejiang and Fujian. It's known for an unusual mix of dialects and surnames left by passing soldiers and merchants, and for well-preserved old streets and gate-houses. Like most Chinese 'ancient towns' it carries some tourist polish, but the setting and the border-crossroads history are real. Far from Quzhou city — realistically a Jiangshan-area add-on rather than a standalone trip.
Source: official ticketing · re-checked monthly
Landing & registration
The first-24-hours facts: hotels, police registration, and whether your card works.
- Hotels take foreigners
- Mixed — check first
- Foreign card via Alipay/WeChat
- mixed
- Police registration
- Quzhou is a smaller western-Zhejiang prefecture city that sees few independent foreign travellers, so foreign registration is genuinely hit-or-miss away from the bigger properties. Mid-range and chain hotels in Quzhou city centre, and near Quzhou high-speed railway station, are the safest bet for registering a foreign passport with the police; small guesthouses out in Jiangshan near the Mount Jianglang gate, or in country towns like Nianbadu, may not be set up for it. Note that the marquee sight — Mount Jianglang — is in Jiangshan, a separate county-level city about 40 km southwest of Quzhou's centre (the scenic-area Wikivoyage listing puts it roughly 25 km from Jiangshan town), so plan where you sleep around which sights you're doing. Confirm the property takes foreign passports before you pay, carry your original passport as your ID for every gate ticket and for hotel check-in, and keep some cash on you: mobile pay (a foreign card linked to Alipay or WeChat Pay) works in the city but signal and acceptance get patchier out at the scenic areas and on rural buses.
Eat like a local
What to order, where locals actually queue, and the food-street traps to skip.
Quzhou's calling card is 'three heads and one paw' (三头一掌): rabbit head, duck head, fish head and duck paw (webbed foot), each braised and stir-fried in a blunt, mouth-numbing wall of chilli and spice. This is not mild Jiangnan cooking — Quzhou is famous across China for some of the fiercest heat in the east, closer in spirit to Hunan or Sichuan than to the sweet, delicate Zhejiang food people expect from the province. The rabbit head in particular is the local obsession: you gnaw the small bones for the spiced meat, beer in hand. If you take chilli well, this is the eating experience to seek out; if you don't, brace yourself.
The local default is properly, seriously spicy — chilli woven through the braise, not sprinkled on top — so toning it down is a real conversation, not a formality. 'Bu yao la' (no chilli) or 'wei la' (mild) is understood, but be aware that with the three-heads-and-a-paw dishes the spice is the dish, and stripping it out leaves something flat. If you're heat-shy, you'll do better ordering around them: Quzhou and the wider Quzhou countryside also turn out plenty of simpler local fare — freshwater fish, bamboo shoots, mountain vegetables, tofu and braised pork — that doesn't depend on the chilli onslaught. Pair the fierce plates with rice or a cold beer, and pace yourself.
Quzhou sees few foreign tourists, which is good news at the table: the food scene is solidly, unselfconsciously local, and the best rabbit-head and spicy-braise joints are busy neighbourhood places rather than anything aimed at visitors. Skip the polished restaurants attached to the scenic areas, where you pay more for a tamer version, and follow the crowds to a packed local spot in the city. Point at what looks good, use a translation app for the menu, and expect to eat very well and very cheaply. Out in Jiangshan and the country towns the cooking leans the same way — hearty, spicy mountain fare rather than refined provincial Zhejiang cuisine.
The honest layer
The part a tourism board will never print.
Mount Jianglang, the UNESCO 'China Danxia' spires that put Quzhou on the map, is in Jiangshan, a separate county-level city about 40 km southwest of Quzhou's centre, and roughly 25 km out from Jiangshan town itself. Jiangshan has its own stop on the Shanghai-Kunming high-speed line, so if the mountain is your main reason for coming, it often makes more sense to base in Jiangshan than in Quzhou. Either way, budget a hired car or DiDi for the last stretch to the gate, and don't assume you can knock out Jianglang, the Confucius temple in the city, and the root park out in Kaihua all in one day — they're scattered across the prefecture.
Jianglang's signature is the 'Three Spires' (三爿石), three enormous near-vertical rock pillars standing in a row, the tallest around 817 m. The classic route threads a steep, narrow stone stairway up the slot between two of them — genuinely vertiginous, exposed in places, and a tight squeeze when it's busy. It's the thing people come for, and it's spectacular, but if heights or confined climbs unsettle you, know that going in. The gap is famous enough that a wingsuit flier once flew through it; on foot you take the stairs, slowly, often behind a queue on weekends. Go early, go on a clear day, and you'll get the views that justify the trip.
The Confucius Temple of the Southern Lineage is Quzhou's quiet headline in the city itself. When the Song court fled south from the Jurchen invasion in the early 12th century, a senior branch of the Kong family — Confucius's direct descendants — came with them and settled here, building a southern family temple to parallel the famous one in Qufu up north. That makes Quzhou a genuine second 'home of Confucius', and the temple a calm, historically real stop. But manage expectations: it's a restored ritual complex, not a sprawling ancient quarter, and Quzhou is a workaday city, not a polished tourist destination. Come for the story and the low crowds, not for spectacle.
Quzhou sits on the Shanghai-Hangzhou-Kunming high-speed corridor, so reaching it by train from Hangzhou (and onward Jiangshan) is straightforward and fast — that's the easy part. The friction is local: the marquee sights are spread across the prefecture (Jianglang and Nianbadu in Jiangshan, the root park in Kaihua, the Confucius temple in the city), public transport between them is slow and indirect, and English is thin on the ground. Plan around hired cars or DiDi for the out-of-town legs, pick a base that matches your priority sight, and lean on a translation app — you'll see far more in a day that way than trying to chain rural buses.
Straight answers
Where exactly is Mount Jianglang, and how do I get there?
It's in Jiangshan, a county-level city administered by Quzhou, about 40 km southwest of Quzhou city centre and roughly 25 km out from Jiangshan town. Both Quzhou and Jiangshan sit on the Shanghai-Kunming high-speed line, so the easy way in is the train from Hangzhou; from Jiangshan's station you'll want a DiDi, taxi or local bus for the last stretch to the scenic-area gate. Because the mountain is closer to Jiangshan than to Quzhou, many travellers base in Jiangshan if Jianglang is their main goal.
What is Mount Jianglang actually famous for?
It's a Danxia (red-sandstone) landscape inscribed on the UNESCO World Heritage List in August 2010 as part of 'China Danxia', and it holds China's top AAAAA scenic rating. The signature feature is the 'Three Spires' (三爿石) — three colossal near-vertical rock pillars in a row, the tallest about 817 m — and the classic walk climbs a steep, narrow, exposed stone stairway up the slot between two of them. It's a striking but vertiginous climb; go on a clear day and start early to beat the weekend queue on the stairs.
What's the Confucius temple in Quzhou about?
Quzhou is home to the Confucius Temple of the Southern Lineage (孔氏南宗家庙), the southern seat of the Kong family — Confucius's direct descendants. When the Song court fled south from the Jurchen invasion in the early 12th century, a senior branch of the lineage moved to Quzhou and built a family temple here to parallel the great one in Qufu, Shandong. It makes Quzhou a genuine second 'home of Confucius'. The complex is restored rather than untouched, and the visit is calm and low-key — it's in the city centre, an easy half-day.
Is Quzhou food really that spicy, and can I get my passport-bookable tickets sorted?
Yes — Quzhou is famous for some of the fiercest spicy food in eastern China, built around 'three heads and a paw' (rabbit head, duck head, fish head and duck paw) in a heavy chilli braise; it's far hotter than the mild Zhejiang cooking most visitors expect, and 'mild' or 'no chilli' is a real request you'll want to make if you're heat-shy. On tickets: the scenic areas run real-name entry, so you reserve or buy with your passport as ID through the official Chinese-first mini-programs or the big OTAs — the simplest path is to have your hotel book with your passport details. Carry your original passport as your ID at every gate, and reconfirm current admission prices at the time of booking.