On March 11, a national dragon dance parade was held to celebrate Longtaitou Festival at Laolongtou scenic spot, the eastern starting point of the Ming Dynasty Great Wall, in North China’s Hebei province.
Longtaitou Festival falls on the second day of the second month in the Chinese lunar calendar, and signifies the beginning of spring and the farming season. Longtaitou, literally meaning "dragon raises its head", indicates that animals have awoken from hibernation and the spring rains are set to come.
On February 24, the "Dancing with Chinese Dragons" parade was held in Huizhou city, Southeast China's Guangdong province. Dragons of various styles danced to the rhythmic resonance of drums and gongs as they paraded through major venues in Huizhou. Eighteen of them belong to the country's national intangible cultural heritage and two came from Hong Kong and Macao. There were also 31 provincial intangible cultural performances from Guangdong.
The multimedia international communication program "I discover Jinpu" is now live! The letter "i" sounds like "love" in Chinese and represents "information/index" in English, echoing the theme "discover".
For the first episode of "I Discover Jinpu", we have prepared questions for our guests to help the audience gain a deeper understanding of the Dalian Artificial Intelligence Computing Center and its role in the fields of agriculture and human resources. Dive into the video to explore further.
There's a popular saying in China, "No banquet is complete without alcohol." It's true that alcohol has long been an essential part of traditional Chinese customs. Jinzhou Yuanqu Baijiu inherits traditional manual brewing techniques and develops its own unique flavor through generations of meticulous refinement by brewers.