The Highest-Altitude Oxygen Bar in Central China: Have You Ever Visited Baiyun Mountain's 80,000 Square Meters of Forest?
The golden autumn season is truly captivating. In the pure world, people embrace the autumn wind, kiss the blue sky, linger among falling leaves, and wander through the woods, enjoying the unrestrained, pure happiness of nature.
Luoyang Baiyun Mountain, once named one of China's "Most Beautiful Places" by Chinese National Geography, is located in Song County, Luoyang. The Forest Oxygen Bar is one of the five leisure areas of Baiyun Mountain, featuring 80,000 square meters of Huashan pine and larch forests. This is the highest-altitude and largest natural oxygen bar in Central China.
Some say: every twist in the landscape is a line of poetry. Baiyun Mountain is a perfect example of a hundred-mile landscape that unfolds like a painting. Poems inscribed on stones along the roadside add elegance to the climb and bring a sense of historical exploration and discovery.
Famous writers such as Wang Anyi, Jia Pingwa, Su Tong, and Zou Jingzhi have visited Baiyun Mountain. The scenery left them with beautiful memories, and they contributed inscriptions to the landscape.
Take a deep breath, and a refreshing sensation permeates your entire body. Before you lies the serene beauty and splendor unique to mountainous regions, giving this forest oxygen bar a sublime and enchanting quality.
The mountain path winds onward, and the peaks grow denser. The autumn colors shift from light to deep as you walk. Strolling through the tranquil and elegant forest, ripe hues paint the treetops. The warm autumn sun slants through gaps in the leaves, casting a golden glow. The branches, illuminated by sunlight, appear dappled and soft, creating a play of light and shadow throughout the woods.
The air here is fresh, rich in negative oxygen ions, quiet and pleasant, and remains largely in its original ecological state, untouched by overdevelopment. The constant chirping of birds gives the place a sense of a hidden paradise.
Pausing in the forest and gazing into the distance, one feels as if their heart is washed clean, calm and bright. The fresh air lifts the mind far from the noise and vanity of the world. The trees, standing gracefully and firmly, inspire a sense of faith, spirit, and warm affection.
As the angle changes, the colors of the forest keep shifting, like a mischievous girl whose next appearance you can never predict—in the blink of an eye, she changes her outfit again.
Perhaps because our ancestors came from nature, our primal instincts are released here, bringing a sense of return and belonging. No matter your circumstances, once you immerse yourself in the green mountains and clear waters, that feeling of release, that unbridled joy, along with the impulse to be close to nature, becomes irresistible.
Mountain streams weave repeatedly along the paths of the oxygen bar, with small, delicate stone arch bridges standing over them. The ground is covered with green plants and autumn leaves. The nearby hills present a palette of dark green, deep brown, light yellow, and crimson.
Baiyun Mountain has such magic—whether it's the towering trees, the dazzling flowers, or the refreshing air—that after returning to daily life surrounded by concrete and steel, the dream of being close to nature lingers, ripples in the heart, and the call of nature can still be felt: a wisp of mist, a stretch of green hills, a beam of bright sunlight, a pool of autumn water, a blanket of blooming flowers—all combine into an irresistible magnetic pull, drawing the soul inward, deeper and deeper.