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The Unbending Spirit of “Big Cannon and Small Cannon”

Some people love the canyon in spring, when peach blossoms bring soft color and new life.

Some prefer summer, when the Taihang Sky Road rises through deep green shade.

Others enjoy autumn, when Wangxiang Rock is wrapped in warm golden tones.

But some visitors love the canyon most in winter.

The First Days of Winter

Quiet, Pure, and Beautiful

Early winter shows the canyon in its most natural form.

The trees have dropped their leaves, frost covers the dry grass, and ancient cypress and pine trees stand strong along the red cliffs.

Here and there, a bit of green appears, small touches that brighten the quiet landscape.

The path winds upward like a silver ribbon around the peaks.

In the streams and gullies, the first ice begins to form, creating beautiful winter shapes carved by nature.

A clean, crisp winter scene slowly opens before you.

A Different Kind of Peace

In winter, the canyon is calm and spacious.
Without the busy crowds, it feels deeper, quieter, and more elegant.

Climbing Wangxiang Rock in this season always brings a special feeling a mix of grand views and the timeless power of the land.

When sunlight reflects off Taihang Lake, turning the water into shining gold, you feel the peaceful beauty of mountains and sky all around you.

True, Simple Nature

The winter canyon is honest and pure.
It sets aside the noise of the past seasons and shows its true, untouched form, simple, natural, and free of decoration.

About the Taihang Grand Canyon

Where Is It

Located in Linzhou, Anyang (Henan Province), the Taihang Grand Canyon is a National 5A Scenic Area and National Geopark, covering around 89 square kilometers.

Key sights include Peach Blossom Valley, Wangxiang Rock, the Taihang Sky Road, and natural rafting areas.

It is known as one of the most beautiful northern landscapes in China.

How to Get There

  • By Bus:
    Linzhou South Bus Station → Taihang Grand Canyon
    Take the Linzhou → Shibanyan Town tourist bus.
  • By Car:
    Jinggang’ao Expressway → transfer to Nanlin Expressway toward Linzhou
    → exit at Taihang Grand Canyon
    → follow Yingbin Avenue to the scenic area.

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The Unbending Spirit of “Big Cannon and Small Cannon”

Hey there! My name is Big Cannon and Small Cannon, and yes — I was once quite the star.

I’m made of two sturdy wooden poles, each as thick as a bowl. The longer one is called Big Cannon, the shorter one Small Cannon. Iron rings and chains link us together. I’ve been lying quietly behind this glass case for decades now, my metal rusted, my wood darkened with age.

Visitors often stop and ask, “What were these used for? And why such a fierce name?”
I smile silently. After all, few people today know that I was born in Lin County, created by the workers themselves during the construction of the legendary Red Flag Canal in the 1960s.

 

A Tool Forged by Need

Back then, Lin County was poor and mountainous. To build the aqueducts and stone arches of the Red Flag Canal, workers needed to move huge blocks of stone — each one long, wide, and impossibly heavy. There were no cranes, no forklifts, and even if there had been, they couldn’t climb the narrow trails of the Taihang Mountains.

So the people relied on something stronger than machines: their unity and ingenuity.
When two men couldn’t lift a stone, four tried. When four couldn’t, eight joined in. And that’s where I came in — a simple, handmade lever of survival.

Don’t be fooled by my rough shape. I was crafted carefully, chosen for my tough grain and solid core. The team leader ran his hand along my wooden scars and said, “This one’s got bones of steel.” Then they fitted me with iron rings and chains, making sure I could bear the full weight of the mountain stones.

Carrying More Than Stone

When the work songs echoed through the valley, I carried the stones — or rather, they carried me, with the stones resting across my shoulders. Dozens of strong young men, their backs bent and faces shining with sweat, marched step by step up the rocky slope. Their arms trembled, their shirts soaked, but no one complained, no one stopped.

Every rock they carried brought the dream of the Red Flag Canal a little closer to reality.

Years passed. My wood has warped, my chains rusted. But the spirit of those workers — their songs, their sweat, their unyielding determination — still lingers deep within my grain.

 

The Weight of a Dream

Last autumn, a little girl stared at the grooves in my wood and whispered,

“Mom, how heavy do you think this old stick could lift?”
Her mother smiled and said,
“When people work together, nothing is too heavy. Even half a mountain can be lifted.”

And that, my friend, is exactly what we did.

The Red Flag Canal was not just carved into rock — it was carved into the hearts of the people of Lin County. And I, the humble Big Cannon and Small Cannon, will forever remember the day when ordinary hands achieved an extraordinary miracle.

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