What does it mean to "chase the wind and catch up with the moon, and spring mountains are everywhere?"

The whole sentence is "Don't stay in pursuit of the wind and the moon, there are spring mountains everywhere". The original sentence comes from Tian Xin's "On Huaxia" in the Ming Dynasty, and is borrowed from Ouyang Xiu's "Walking on the Sha": "Spring Mountain is everywhere, and pedestrians are even outside it."

The poem means: Work hard, not afraid of dangerous roads, and not stop for the scenery along the way.

if you aim at the top, don't be obsessed with the scenery on the mountainside.

struggle, both the sun and the moon, to create a colorful future. Hard work will eventually pay off, and the spring mountain is at the end of Pingwu.

"Spring Mountain" here should refer to the target; "Chasing the wind and the moon" should refer to the process of struggle.

The poem means: Work hard, not afraid of dangerous roads, and not stop for the scenery along the way.

if you aim at the top, don't be obsessed with the scenery on the mountainside.

struggle, both the sun and the moon, to create a colorful future. Hard work will eventually pay off, and the spring mountain is at the end of Pingwu.

"Spring Mountain" here should refer to the target; "Chasing the wind and the moon" should refer to the process of struggle.