With its location five kilometers northwest of the downtown of Guilin, the
Reed Flute Cave is a brilliant cave marked on almost all travel itineraries. The
cave got its name from the verdant reeds growing outside it, with which people
make flutes. Inside this water-eroded cave is a spectacular world of various
stalactites, stone pillars and rock formations created by carbonate deposition.
Illuminated by colored lighting, the fantastic spectacle is found in many
variations along this 240-meter-long cave. Walking through the serried stone
pillars, tourists feast their eyes on changing spots, feeling they are in a
paradise where the Gods live.
Tourists enter the cave and then take a U-shaped sight-seeing route to
see different spots, whereupon they exit it from another cave quite near the
entrance one. One trip lasts about one hour. It is a Chinese habit to give each
formation a legendary or poetic name such as Crystal Palace, Dragon Pagoda,
Virgin Forest, Flower and Fruit Mountain and other interesting names. For some
of these names, you need to use your imagination, but the story behind each is
quite fun. It's a pleasure to listen to romantic or fairy tales whilst
appreciating the fantastic stone formations. Both the stories and the lighting
add mystery to the scene. Although there are different kinds of lighting inside,
you are not supposed to take photos unless you are a professional photographer,
because the light inside is not sufficient for exposure. At some spots, such as
the Crystal Palace or Flower and Fruit Mountain, special photography is offered
at 20 yuan for one picture. (They use special equipment to provide enough
illumination.) Some 70 inscriptions on the cave wall are said to be travelogues
and poems derived from the Tang Dynasty, which made the cave a popular tourist
site at that time.
A park is built for the cave with zigzag path, elegant pavilions, ponds,
bridges, plants and other garden structures.