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Winter cherry blossoms create unexpected spectacles

By LI MUYUN and ZHU YOUFANG in?Changsha and LI YINGQING and YAN YUJIE in Kunming | chinadaily.com.cn | Updated: 2026-01-14 21:33
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An unusual winter display of cherry blossoms draws visitors to Taifu Mountain in Linli county, Changde, Hunan province. [Photo by Pang Yuqi / chinadaily.com.cn]

Cherry blossoms have recently created stunning winter spectacles across two regions in China, offering scenes of rare natural beauty and unexpected wildlife encounters.

In Central China's Hunan province, crowds of visitors were drawn to Taifu Mountain in Linli county, Changde city, where cherry blossoms, typically seen in spring, have burst into bloom in an unusual winter display.

Experts attributed this unseasonal flowering to the recent unusually warm and dry weather in the area. About one-fifth of the cherry trees on the mountain were in bloom, with the flowering period expected to last up to three months.

This phenomenon captivated both residents and visitors. Over the past 10 days, the Taifu Mountain scenic area has welcomed more than 10,000 visitors, with weekend peaks exceeding 2,000 arrivals, according to the scenic area's management office.

With a forest coverage rate of 97.3 percent, the mountain's unique microclimate provides favorable conditions for diverse plant life, attracting more than 210,000 visitors in 2025, the office reported.

In Southwest China's Yunnan province, the winter cherry blossoms in the Jingdong area of Wuliang Mountain National Nature Reserve attracted Indochinese gray langurs, who feast on the flowers with their families, captivating photographers, as reported by the Chuncheng Evening News.

Recently, Run Ning, a photography enthusiast, captured a rare sight of hundreds of Indochinese gray langurs, a national first-class protected animal, foraging together in Jingdong county of Pu'er city.

Some langurs lounge casually on branches, gazing around, while others chase and play with each other. At times, they pick petals, and at other moments, they groom themselves leisurely, painting a vibrant picture amidst the winter cherry blossoms.

According to the latest survey data, over 3,000 Indochinese gray langurs, distributed across 61 groups, now inhabit the Jingdong area of Wuliang Mountain National Nature Reserve, marking an increase of 18 groups and more than 1,000 individuals compared to a decade ago.

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