Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional customs - What are the ancient villages in Guangdong that are specially recommended?

What are the ancient villages in Guangdong that are specially recommended?

The first time I passed a deep well, I found it by accident when I started cycling. This classmate and I broke into a concierge outside. I didn't feel too special at first glance. As a road name controller in a sense, I only remember the road name with the word "about" and the heavy night. The second time I passed the other side, I was building many buildings, shops, buildings and bridges. Maybe I plan to develop tourism resources. I was very worried about the future of Shenjing, and finally I aimed here. Shenjing village, formerly known as "Jinding", is quite imposing. It's been open for seven or eight hundred years. Later, it was renamed because of a deep well in the village, and was occasionally ridiculed as "nerve", but there was no ice in the deep well. Coordinates: Changzhou Town, Huangpu District, Guangzhou. A remarkable feature of the deep well is that it is located on the cheung chau island at the mouth of the Pearl River, and its geographical location determines its communication with the outside world. Ferry is the main mode of travel for residents. Generally, you can go from Xinzhou Wharf to Shenjing Wharf, or from Yuzhu Wharf to Changzhou Wharf, and then walk from cheung chau island or take the bus on the island to Shenjing Village. If you don't try the ferry here, it's like you've never been there. Choose a sunny day, the river is wide, and the comfort of wearing clothes when the wind is strong on the ship is indescribable. You can see military shipyards and Yi fishing boats along the way. I made a special trip with my friends, and the navigation range of the map is limited, so I can only rely on the original way of asking for directions. The villagers who lead the way along the way include shopkeepers, men riding motorcycles, aunts of sanitation workers, elderly people in ancestral halls, park administrators and so on. From the conversation, we can hear that they are "indigenous" villagers here. They enthusiastically show us the way, but they are also curious about our obvious tourists' exploratory eyes. It is probably difficult for local people living here to understand what kind of place they live in, what is precious and what is special in the eyes of others.