ROUTE 95

Silk Road Snapshot — 7 Days / 6 Nights

🗓️ 7 Days / 6 Nights

Journey through the heart of China from Lanzhou to Dunhuang, traversing 3 cities across 7 days. Each stop reveals another facet of a civilization five millennia deep — ancient walls, sacred temples, misty mountains, and bustling markets where tradition and modernity flow together like the rivers that shaped this land.

Lanzhou (1) Zhangye (3) Dunhuang (2)
95
Route 95
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📅 Day-by-Day Itinerary

Day 1
Arrival in Lanzhou
Lanzhou · Cultural Heartland
Lanzhou Heritage
Experience the rich cultural heritage and historical significance of Lanzhou. Explore ancient temples, museums, and iconic landmarks that showcase centuries of Chinese civilization and artistic achievement.
Lanzhou Old Town
Wander through the atmospheric old quarter of Lanzhou, where traditional architecture, local markets, and time-honored teahouses preserve the rhythms of daily life that have endured for generations.
Lanzhou Scenic Area
The natural landscapes surrounding Lanzhou — mountains, rivers, and ancient forests — offer breathtaking vistas that have inspired poets and painters across the dynasties.

Cultural Highlights

🍜 Signature Dish: Local Specialty Noodles (地方特色面) — Hand-pulled noodles served in a rich broth flavored with regional spices and herbs, topped with slow-braised meat and fresh vegetables. Each province has its own signature noodle style reflecting centuries of local culinary tradition.
🎨 Artifact: Regional Folk Art (地方民间艺术) — Traditional handicrafts unique to this area, passed down through generations of artisan families. The techniques — whether paper cutting, woodblock printing, or textile weaving — encode local mythology and seasonal customs.
🎵 Music: Regional Folk Song (地方民歌) — Traditional songs passed down orally through generations, accompanying agricultural labor, festivals, and courtship rituals. The melodies and lyrics vary by village, creating a rich tapestry of local musical identity.

🚄 Transport Options

Rail (Number) Flight (Number) Depart from Hotel Arrival
G7106 InUse CA2556 12:30 lunch, then Train G7106 at 14:00 17:15 Zhangye
Day 2
Discovering Zhangye
Zhangye · 张掖 · Rainbow Mountains of the Silk Road
Zhangye Danxia National Geopark 张掖丹霞地貌
Rolling hills of layered sandstone painted in stripes of red, orange, yellow, green, and blue by iron and trace mineral deposits over 24 million years. The effect is so vivid it appears digitally altered. UNESCO Global Geopark — the most photographed geological formation in China after Zhangjiajie.
Giant Buddha Temple 大佛寺
Housing China's largest indoor reclining Buddha — 35 metres long, built in 1098 during the Western Xia dynasty. The clay figure reclines inside a wooden hall that has survived nine centuries of earthquakes and wars. Marco Polo reportedly visited in 1274.
Mati Temple Grottoes 马蹄寺石窟
Buddhist cave temples carved into a 300-metre cliff face in the Qilian Mountains. The 70+ caves span from the Northern Liang (397 CE) through the Ming dynasty, with murals showing the evolution of Buddhist art along the Silk Road. The 'Horse Hoof Grotto' contains a hoof print attributed to the Tibetan king's celestial horse.

Cultural Highlights

🍜 Signature Dish: Zhangye Sun-Dried Noodles (张掖炒炮) — Small tube-shaped pasta stir-fried with lamb, vegetables, and Hexi Corridor spices — a Silk Road fusion of Chinese noodle technique and Central Asian flavor. The 'chao pao' name imitates the sizzling sound of the wok.
🎨 Artifact: Danxia Geological Art (丹霞地质艺术) — The Rainbow Mountains are a 24-million-year geological canvas — Cretaceous sandstone layered with iron oxide (red), limonite (yellow), and chlorite (green). The formations are both natural wonder and inspiration for Chinese landscape painting's most vivid color palette.
🎵 Music: Hexi Corridor Folk Songs (河西走廊民歌) — Work songs of the Hexi Corridor farmers and herders — melodies shaped by the vast desert landscape, wide open skies, and the loneliness of the oasis frontier. The songs carry across the flat terrain like the wind itself.
Day 3
Exploring Zhangye
Zhangye · 张掖 · Rainbow Mountains of the Silk Road
Zhangye Danxia National Geopark 张掖丹霞地貌
Rolling hills of layered sandstone painted in stripes of red, orange, yellow, green, and blue by iron and trace mineral deposits over 24 million years. The effect is so vivid it appears digitally altered. UNESCO Global Geopark — the most photographed geological formation in China after Zhangjiajie.
Giant Buddha Temple 大佛寺
Housing China's largest indoor reclining Buddha — 35 metres long, built in 1098 during the Western Xia dynasty. The clay figure reclines inside a wooden hall that has survived nine centuries of earthquakes and wars. Marco Polo reportedly visited in 1274.
Mati Temple Grottoes 马蹄寺石窟
Buddhist cave temples carved into a 300-metre cliff face in the Qilian Mountains. The 70+ caves span from the Northern Liang (397 CE) through the Ming dynasty, with murals showing the evolution of Buddhist art along the Silk Road. The 'Horse Hoof Grotto' contains a hoof print attributed to the Tibetan king's celestial horse.

Cultural Highlights

🍜 Signature Dish: Zhangye Lamb Rib Soup (张掖羊排汤) — Slow-simmered lamb rib broth with hand-torn flatbread, green onion, and chili oil — the warming staple of the Hexi Corridor's cold winters. The lamb — grazed on Qilian Mountain herbs — has a distinctive sweetness.
🎨 Artifact: Mati Temple Murals (马蹄寺壁画) — Cave murals spanning 1,600 years of Buddhist art — from the austere Northern Liang period through the elaborate Tang dynasty to the ritualistic Ming era. The murals document the Silk Road's role in transmitting Buddhist iconography from India to China.
🎵 Music: Yugur Minority Music (裕固族音乐) — The Yugur people — descendants of the ancient Uyghurs who settled in the Qilian Mountains — preserve a unique musical tradition combining Turkic throat-singing elements with Chinese pentatonic scales and Tibetan Buddhist chanting.
Day 4
From Zhangye to Dunhuang
Zhangye · 张掖 · Rainbow Mountains of the Silk Road
Zhangye Danxia National Geopark 张掖丹霞地貌
Rolling hills of layered sandstone painted in stripes of red, orange, yellow, green, and blue by iron and trace mineral deposits over 24 million years. The effect is so vivid it appears digitally altered. UNESCO Global Geopark — the most photographed geological formation in China after Zhangjiajie.
Giant Buddha Temple 大佛寺
Housing China's largest indoor reclining Buddha — 35 metres long, built in 1098 during the Western Xia dynasty. The clay figure reclines inside a wooden hall that has survived nine centuries of earthquakes and wars. Marco Polo reportedly visited in 1274.
Mati Temple Grottoes 马蹄寺石窟
Buddhist cave temples carved into a 300-metre cliff face in the Qilian Mountains. The 70+ caves span from the Northern Liang (397 CE) through the Ming dynasty, with murals showing the evolution of Buddhist art along the Silk Road. The 'Horse Hoof Grotto' contains a hoof print attributed to the Tibetan king's celestial horse.

Cultural Highlights

🍜 Signature Dish: Gansu Pulled Noodles (甘肃拉面) — The Hexi Corridor is the cradle of China's pulled noodle tradition. Zhangye's version uses high-altitude wheat flour and alkaline Qilian spring water, producing noodles of exceptional elasticity and chew.
🎨 Artifact: Hexi Corridor Silk Road Relics (河西走廊丝路文物) — Zhangye's museum holds Silk Road artifacts — Roman glass beads, Sogdian silver coins, Tang dynasty silk fragments, and wooden slips bearing Han dynasty military dispatches — evidence of the Hexi Corridor as civilization's most important trade route.
🎵 Music: Silk Road Camel Bell Music (丝路驼铃) — The rhythmic jingle of camel bells — once the soundtrack of every Silk Road caravan — is recreated in Zhangye's cultural performances. The metallic, meditative sound evokes centuries of trans-continental trade.

🚄 Transport Options

Rail (Number) Flight (Number) Depart from Hotel Arrival
D7795 InUse 3U8652 12:30 lunch, then Train D7795 at 14:00 16:30 Dunhuang
Day 5
Discovering Dunhuang
Dunhuang · 敦煌 · Gateway to the Silk Road
Mogao Caves 莫高窟
492 cave temples carved into a cliff face over a millennium (366–1368 CE), containing 45,000 square metres of murals and 2,415 painted clay sculptures. The caves preserve a complete visual record of Buddhist art, architecture, music, and daily life across ten dynasties — the richest repository of medieval art anywhere in the world.
Mingsha Mountain & Crescent Moon Spring 鸣沙山月牙泉
The 'Singing Sand Dunes' rise 250 metres above a crescent-shaped spring that has survived in the desert for over 2,000 years. When wind shifts the sand, the dunes produce a deep humming tone — a phenomenon recorded in Chinese literature since the 4th century. Camel rides at sunset offer a visceral connection to the Silk Road caravan experience.
Dunhuang Night Market 敦煌夜市
The Shazhou Night Market recreates the atmosphere of a Silk Road bazaar: dried fruits from Turpan, hand-knotted carpets, jade from Khotan, and Dunhuang's own specialty — apricot leather and sun-dried raisins. The market's architecture evokes Tang dynasty trade houses with wooden lattice facades and lantern-lit courtyards.

Cultural Highlights

🍜 Signature Dish: Dunhuang Donkey Meat Noodles (敦煌驴肉黄面) — Thin yellow noodles topped with braised donkey meat in a rich sauce flavored with Silk Road spices — cumin, dried chili, and star anise. The saying goes: 'Dragon meat in heaven, donkey meat on earth.' A Dunhuang staple since Tang dynasty caravansaries.
🎨 Artifact: Mogao Cave Murals (莫高窟壁画) — 45,000 square metres of paintings spanning a millennium — the most complete record of Buddhist artistic evolution. The murals depict Pure Land paradises, Jataka tales, celestial musicians, and intimate scenes of Tang dynasty trade, fashion, and daily life.
🎵 Music: Mogao Cave Music Reconstruction (莫高窟乐舞复原) — Musicologists have reconstructed Tang dynasty instruments — pipa, konghou harp, jiegu drum — depicted in Mogao murals, reviving Silk Road melodies silent for a thousand years. Cave 220's 'Paradise Concert' mural shows a 28-piece orchestra performing music that blended Chinese, Indian, Persian, and Central Asian traditions.
Day 6
Exploring Dunhuang
Dunhuang · 敦煌 · Gateway to the Silk Road
Mogao Caves 莫高窟
492 cave temples carved into a cliff face over a millennium (366–1368 CE), containing 45,000 square metres of murals and 2,415 painted clay sculptures. The caves preserve a complete visual record of Buddhist art, architecture, music, and daily life across ten dynasties — the richest repository of medieval art anywhere in the world.
Mingsha Mountain & Crescent Moon Spring 鸣沙山月牙泉
The 'Singing Sand Dunes' rise 250 metres above a crescent-shaped spring that has survived in the desert for over 2,000 years. When wind shifts the sand, the dunes produce a deep humming tone — a phenomenon recorded in Chinese literature since the 4th century. Camel rides at sunset offer a visceral connection to the Silk Road caravan experience.
Dunhuang Night Market 敦煌夜市
The Shazhou Night Market recreates the atmosphere of a Silk Road bazaar: dried fruits from Turpan, hand-knotted carpets, jade from Khotan, and Dunhuang's own specialty — apricot leather and sun-dried raisins. The market's architecture evokes Tang dynasty trade houses with wooden lattice facades and lantern-lit courtyards.

Cultural Highlights

🍜 Signature Dish: Lamb Skewers (烤羊肉串) — Fat-tailed lamb threaded on iron skewers and grilled over charcoal with aggressive cumin, chili flakes, and salt — the quintessential Silk Road street food, unchanged since Sogdian merchants introduced it to Chinese palates 1,300 years ago.
🎨 Artifact: Dunhuang Manuscripts (敦煌遗书) — In 1900, Taoist monk Wang Yuanlu discovered a sealed chamber (Cave 17) containing 50,000 manuscripts, paintings, and textiles dating from the 5th to 11th centuries — including the world's oldest dated printed book, the Diamond Sutra (868 CE). Written in Chinese, Tibetan, Sanskrit, Sogdian, and Khotanese, they document the Silk Road's multilingual reality.
🎵 Music: Pipa Behind the Moon (反弹琵琶) — The iconic Mogao image of a dancer playing the pipa lute reversed behind her back while dancing — a feat of artistic and physical virtuosity. This single image has become Dunhuang's global symbol, reproduced on stamps, logos, and the city's airport terminal.
Day 7
Departure — Farewell to Dunhuang
Dunhuang · 敦煌 · Gateway to the Silk Road
Mogao Caves 莫高窟
492 cave temples carved into a cliff face over a millennium (366–1368 CE), containing 45,000 square metres of murals and 2,415 painted clay sculptures. The caves preserve a complete visual record of Buddhist art, architecture, music, and daily life across ten dynasties — the richest repository of medieval art anywhere in the world.
Mingsha Mountain & Crescent Moon Spring 鸣沙山月牙泉
The 'Singing Sand Dunes' rise 250 metres above a crescent-shaped spring that has survived in the desert for over 2,000 years. When wind shifts the sand, the dunes produce a deep humming tone — a phenomenon recorded in Chinese literature since the 4th century. Camel rides at sunset offer a visceral connection to the Silk Road caravan experience.
Dunhuang Night Market 敦煌夜市
The Shazhou Night Market recreates the atmosphere of a Silk Road bazaar: dried fruits from Turpan, hand-knotted carpets, jade from Khotan, and Dunhuang's own specialty — apricot leather and sun-dried raisins. The market's architecture evokes Tang dynasty trade houses with wooden lattice facades and lantern-lit courtyards.

Cultural Highlights

🍜 Signature Dish: Apricot Leather (杏皮水) — Sun-dried apricot paste rolled into thin sheets and reconstituted as a sweet-tart drink. The Dunhuang oasis has cultivated apricots for millennia; caravans carried dried apricot leather as a lightweight, calorie-rich provision for desert crossings.
🎨 Artifact: Flying Apsara Figures (飞天) — Dunhuang's signature motif: celestial beings soaring through painted skies without wings, their scarves and ribbons creating the illusion of flight. Over 4,500 flying apsaras appear across the caves — a fusion of Indian gandharva, Greek Nike, and Chinese xian (immortal) traditions that occurred only on the Silk Road.
🎵 Music: Silk Road Ensemble (丝路乐团) — Modern ensembles in Dunhuang perform reconstructed Silk Road music using period instruments: the Persian tar, the Indian sitar, the Chinese erhu, and the Central Asian dombra — the same instruments that once shared stages in Tang dynasty Chang'an.

📸 Journey Reflections — Photographs You'll Treasure Forever

As you depart, carry with you not just photographs but the weight of lived experience across 3 cities and 6 nights.

📷 Lanzhou: The unforgettable sight of Lanzhou Heritage — a moment etched in memory.
📷 Zhangye: The unforgettable sight of Zhangye Danxia National Geopark — a moment etched in memory.
📷 Dunhuang: The unforgettable sight of Mogao Caves — a moment etched in memory.

再见中国 — Zàijiàn Zhōngguó. Until we meet again.

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