Hong Kong is one of the world's most significant financial centres and commercial ports. It is home to the seventh-highest number of billionaires of any city and has one of the highest per capita incomes in the world. A highly developed territory, Hong Kong ranks fourth in the world for Human Development Index (HDI).
A traveller transiting through Hong Kong airport hardly knows none of the above, but I knew I have a couple of hours spare waiting for an onward flight. So I thought to go shopping.
Whilst looking through the windows I was hit with a dose of reality: I had no easy change to spare for shopping- and it made me feel sad. In my kalungkutan I thought of you.
Pero, dahil wala ka sa kalungkutan ko, naghanap ako ng kasayahan. Napadpad ako sa Lung Kwu Tan.
The village has a few hundred years of recorded history, but I left kalungkutan and came to Lung Kwu Tan to find kasayahan not history lessons. I came to look for endorphins, the natural feel-good ‘high’ that apparently one gets from exercise. But instead of endorphins I found this natural lookout for watching the rare and endangered Chinese white dolphins.
It was warm that day in Hong Kong, and I was the only fool hiking up to the lookout. My senses didn’t feel the endorphins and my eyes could not see dolphins. Then I stumbled on a huge rock, I found the Fato of Lung Kwu Tan!
There are some great monoliths around the world, but this has to be in the top three greatest rocks, at least on this side of Lung Kwu Tan. Here's Fato of Australia and Fato of Bontoc.Lung Kwu Tan is an area located on the southwest of Castle Peak, the highest granitic hill in Hong Kong.
They say that dolphins may be observed from the shores so I waited and observed for a very long 120 minutes, but the white dolphins did not show up.
A secondary objective of my visit to Lung Kwu Tan was to look for the Chinese Francolin, a species of game bird that inhabits shrubby areas and especially common in the hilly regions of the southeast of mainland Asia. Well, I hate to disappoint my uncle Vancolin so I won’t tell him I did not find his favourite bird…
And in my search for Francolins- never mind…
Here is some history instead:
In May 1943 during the period of Japanese occupation, a guerilla leader Liu Chunxiang led a team of six defenders against the Japanese. Liu and his guerillas included local boatman Leung Hak. Leung, his wife, two daughters and one son, all lost their lives in the resistance against the Japanese invaders. In May 2023 80 years on from the invasion, the Chinese government dedicated a cenotaph in honour of the heroes of Lung Kwu Tan.
A visitor from Chong-Li-An can only pay his respects to the noble heroes and their land of Lung Kwu Tan.
I hope to explore some of these places on foot someday: Sliced Bread Rock, Mong Hau Shek Teng and Yuet Nga Valley.