Adventure travel grows in popularity among Chinese


Luo Hong, 52, founder of leading Chinese bakery chain Holiland, has journeyed to Africa 53 times, to the Arctic four times and the Antarctic twice, photographing wildlife and nature to raise public awareness of environmental protection.
When he first visited South Africa in 2001, the locals asked him: "Are you Japanese?" They were shocked when he answered he came from China as few Chinese tourists visited Africa at that time.
Things are different now. "This year, when I had a meal in a barbecue restaurant in Kenya, the locals sang the popular Chinese folk song Jasmine Flower in Chinese. I was very happy," he recalled.
Luo opened a personal photography museum in Beijing in 2016, which has received around 15 million visitors. His adventurous journeys have taken him through many dangerous places and extreme climates, but he never stopped.
Han said: "Seeking adventure is one of the best ways to satisfy people's spiritual needs. The popularization of adventure travel reflects China's improved national strength and people's better life.
"With a more affluent life, a growing number of Chinese will be keen to chase thrills the world over."
Xinhua
- Xi, Tokayev attend ceremony of exchanging cooperation documents
- Zhuhai checkpoints leading to Macao, Hong Kong register 100 million trips
- What the Shenzhou XX astronauts are doing after over 50 days in space
- Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei logistics index hit 52.17% in Q1 of 2025
- Science Talk: Is Red Sun threat rumor or reality?
- 6 remain missing after fireworks factory blast in Hunan, 1 dead