Green Lake Park
(Cuihu Park)
The
Green Lake Park, situated at the western foot of Wuhua
Hill, is a scenically beautiful park inside the city.
By the end of the Yuan Dynasty, it was still a swampy
field for growing vegetables, lotuses and rice, hence
the name "Vegetable Lake". The water-level
of Dianchi Lake was then so high that it was connected
with the Green Lake. That is why we have the couplet:
"Dianchi Lake spreads five hundred li; the Vegetable
Lake merges with it." As there were nine mouths
of springs beyond the Bamboo Island in the northeast,
the lake was also called "The Nine-Dragon Pond".
It now covers fifteen hectares of land. Since 1985,
the red-pecked seagulls from Siberia have been spending
the winter months on Green Lake.
There used to be a scenically
beautiful island at the centre of the lake. In
the year 1382, Mu Ying, the Garrison Commander,
started building the capital of Yunnan Province
in Kunming, and the Green Lake was enclosed within
the brick walls of the city. A military structure,
called "the Liu (Willows) Barracks",
was built, which was later changed into a villa
for the Mu family. In 1692, Wang Jiwen, the provincial
governor, built the Biyiting (literally Green
Ripples Pavilion), commonly called Haixinting
(a Pavilion in the Centre of the Lake). Two long
banks divide the Lake into four parts. Embraced
by willow trees along the banks dotted with a
variety of lotuses, with the delightful contrast
between the weeping willows and the lotuses, the
lake offers a scene of freshness, serenity, and
beauty, hence the graceful name "The Green
Lake". The main attractions include lotuses,
fish, willow trees and pavilions. Ling Shiyi,
a Cantonese in the Qing Dynasty, wrote in a couplet:
Fishes teem in the ten-mu lotus pond; over half
the city poplars and willows are caressing pavilions."
It is a superb description of the scenery.
The Haixinting Pavilion is at
the centre of the Lake. On the north and south
stand imposingly two octagonal pavilions with
craved beams and painted rafters and beautiful
glazed tiles and elegant eaves. Inside the Haixinting
there are two courtyards, where all kinds of shows
are held throughout the four seasons: flower shows,
lantern shows, fish shows and picture shows. Flowers
and trees are growing luxuriantly in the yards.
On the west of the pavilion are buildings for
fish-watching. There is a two-storey pavilion
on which hangs a horizontal board inscribed with
four characters meaning "Drunk in spring
in the abode of immortals" and facing north
is a fish-watching pavilion. The lake, its banks
and the pavilions are wonderfully arranged, and
the painted corridor alongside the lake and the
zigzag bridge are well connected. All the buildings
have yellow and green glazed tile roofs, with
corners seeming to fly and beams and rafters colourfully
painted, typifying Chinese classical park designs.
On the Fish-Watching Pavilion there is a couplet
written by Huang Kuiguang, a scholar from Fujian
in the Qing Dynasty: "There stands a pavilion
that flanks the lake, taking upon one tenth of
its area; at leisure I'll come to drink alone
under the moon and immediately become one of the
three." The other two refer to the moon and
his own reflection in the pond. This couplet has
been chosen many times as one of the most famous
couplets depicting landscapes in China.
East
of the pavilion there is a big tree-surrounded garden
consisting of three tiny peninsulas which form a garden
within the garden. In the garden Chinese flowering crabapple
trees bloom like red clouds, camellias and azalea give
off sweet scent and weeping willows bow gently. On the
lake float small boats presenting a scene of bursting
life.
On the Gourd Island in the southwest,
there are rows of palm trees dotted with groves
of banana herbs, under which is a carpet of green
grass. The Nine-Bend Bridge zigzags in the lake.
Here is an eye-catching sub-tropical scene for
the tourists. On the northeastern corner is the
Bamboo-Groves Island. Along the banks are bamboos
and azaleas intertwined with vines. Around the
Nine-Dragon Pond is a big garden, where people
enjoy the potted landscape and celebrate the Spring
Festival. On the Children's Playground, located
on the southwestern side of the lake, the dragon
rollicking in the water, the flying merry-go-round
rotating in the air, and the miniature train rushing
round and round give children fun and make them
laugh.
Every winter, thousands of red-beaked
sea gulls from the north migrate to the scenically
beautiful Green Lake Park. These sea gulls swooping
over the water and scrambling with one another
for crumbs of food, make the park even more glamorous.
Early in the morning, hundreds
of people, men and women, young and old, come
to the banks of the lake to practise boxing, jogging,
singing, and sword-dancing. It is full of life
everywhere. In the evening, people come to have
a stroll, to enjoy the scenery, or to chant antiphonal
singing, amidst willows on the lake banks, feeling
carefree and contented.
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