It obviously felt a lot cooler in the morning, but the sun was sultry after showing up. Today I wanted to visit the imperial mausoleum in the far suburbs. The imperial mausoleum is scattered and has to be taken by motorcycle. It is very old and vicissitudes. I have been hiking along Xianghe Road, and I met a group of Hue beautiful women on the riverside next to the bridge, "Yadai" similar to China's cheongsam.
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It obviously felt a lot cooler in the morning, but the sun was sultry after showing up. Today I wanted to visit the imperial mausoleum in the far suburbs. The imperial mausoleum is scattered and has to be taken by motorcycle. It is very old and vicissitudes. I have been hiking along Xianghe Road, and I met a group of Hue beautiful women on the riverside next to the bridge, "Yadai" similar to China's cheongsam.
Shaozhi Changling is relatively well preserved, but it is indeed much smaller than its imperial tombs. Now this imperial tomb is still under repair. The tickets are much cheaper than other imperial tombs. If you don't have time, you can give up it and choose other more representative visits. the Magician
thanks for the guidance who tell me a story about the King Thieu Tri. I will keep that glory in mind.
Blown away. Recommended by a local friend. They picked us up, loaded us up with water, gave us a fantastic service (foot bath, body scrub, body wrap, full body massage - 2hours for US $30),and there was a yummy Ban Mi dinner for us at the end, included in the price! Owner bent over backwards for us, so lovely. Will definitely be going back
Shaozhi Changling is a bit small compared to other imperial mausoleums in Hue, and it is also a bit dilapidated. There are not many repairs. It has no walls. The emperor who lay on the ground has only been in office for seven years. He has not thought of building a mausoleum for himself. The descendants built such a mausoleum according to his preferences in life.