Adventure travel grows in popularity among Chinese
Climbing, skydiving and paragliding are sources of wonder for 64-year-old Ding Zhendong, a retired editor from North China's Inner Mongolia autonomous region.
"Real life begins after retirement," Ding said. He first tasted adventure tourism in 2015 when he drove a minibus with a friend from Inner Mongolia to the Tibet autonomous region.
Despite difficulties during the trip, the adventure was worthwhile for Ding thanks to the stunning landscape and thrilling experience. Since then, he has driven to Tibet by four different routes and visited the Arctic and Antarctic.
"Adventure helps me learn the limits of my body and boosts my physical strength. Now more retirees are joining our expedition team," he said.
Ding is among a growing number of Chinese who want more than relaxation from their travels.
- Chinese researchers score breakthrough in general artificial intelligence logical reasoning
- Central division of Heilongjiang Border Sports Games opens
- Foreign trade fuels Xinjiang's regional GDP growth during 14th Five-Year Plan
- Chinese PLA aerobatic team's J-10 jets arrive in Singapore for airshow
- Zhanjiang deepens ties with Hainan, integrates into New Western Land-Sea Corridor
- Gansu leads China in museums per capita
































