Yan 'an Ganquan Valley Grand Canyon

Ganquan Yucha Grand Canyon is known as "the wonder of natural ground fissures on the Loess Plateau". It is said that there was a strong earthquake in northern Shaanxi about hundreds of millions of years ago. The loess mountains were separated by cracks, with the upper width and the lower width, and gradually formed after hundreds of years of rain erosion. The location of the canyon is remote. From Xiasiwan to the canyon, you have to transfer to the local bus and take a dirt road of more than ten kilometers. The road is uneven and very bumpy. There are many abandoned caves by the roadside. The driver told me that it was the government's policy of benefiting the people. Most people move from dangerous caves to safe houses. About 1 hour, the bus stopped at a hospital.

There are several caves on the north side of the courtyard, and curtains are hung on the south gate. Curiosity drove me into the cave to see if I looked like a person living in a cave.

There is a shelf in the northeast corner. There are water shoes of various colors and sizes on the shelf, which is a necessary item for entering the canyon (there is water at the bottom of the canyon). Pay five yuan rent, choose a pair of blue water shoes, and set off for the canyon.

When you walk into the canyon, the canyon walls are uneven and smooth as waves pass by you. Whether you look down or up, the color you see from every angle is different! The rocks with blurred colors, like flowing scrolls, are also moving and static, which is amazing. The valley wall is steep, like a knife cutting an axe. Only one person can pass sideways in a narrow place, and even a slightly fatter person will get stuck. Ganquan Yucha Grand Canyon is magnificent and charming, comparable to American Antelope Valley.

After visiting the canyon, I went back to the yard and saw two fellow villagers knitting baskets. They are very skilled and ask permission to take pictures of them. One of them is very talkative and wants to find a wife for the other, provided that only the ladies who come with us are willing to stay, and they are only allowed to cook and wash clothes at home and are not allowed to do farm work in the slope. I thought this might be the best treatment for local women. I was joking with them. Neither of them can cook. The two of them looked at me doubtfully. I explained that when the women there are hungry, they will order takeout, and then people will send the food home. They say that they are at a loss, and the regional differences, urban-rural differences and cultural differences really make people live in different worlds.