Spectacle on the river
The annual Qiantang River tidal bore, which is expected to be seen this year during the National Day holiday week, attracts tens of thousands of people from home and abroad. [Photo by Pan Jincao/China Daily] |
As early as the 4th century BC, China's famous philosopher Chuang Tzu (Zhuang Zi) described the huge tide as follows: "The waters in the Qiantang River will roll on, raising waves as high as mountains and towers, creating a thunderous roar and gathering up a force that threatens to engulf the sun and the sky."
A famous poet Su Dongpo in Northern Song Dynasty (960-1127) wrote:
"What on Earth can hope to create a spectacular sight,
Like the tides on the eighteenth of August at night."
Tide watching on the Qiantang has been a popular activity for centuries, dating back to the Han Dynasty (206BC-AD220).
It had also become a well-established event on the social calendar for both ordinary people and the royal court by the time of the Southern Song Dynasty (1127-1279).