Guizhou HSR spring ride

DiscoverGuizhou posted a 12‑second 'front-row seat to spring' from the Liupanshui→Anshun high‑speed rail line, showing misty mountains and railside spring scenery (x.com). The clip is framed as scenic rail travel — useful inspiration if you're scouting routes for landscape train photography in China (x.com).

DiscoverGuizhou is the province’s English-language tourism platform with a dedicated site and active social channels, including a YouTube channel under the DiscoverGuizhou handle. (iloveguizhou.com (iloveguizhou.com); youtube.com (youtube.com)) The rail line shown is the Anshun–Liupanshui high‑speed railway, which opened on July 8, 2020 and was built to a design speed of 250 km/h over a 125 km alignment. (railjournal.com (railjournal.com)) The line’s construction included about 89 km of tunnels and bridges and it serves eight stations, with China National Railways initially scheduling multiple EMU connections that tie Liupanshui into the national high‑speed network. (railjournal.com (railjournal.com); globaltimes.cn (globaltimes.cn)) The route runs across the Wumeng mountain area and through Guizhou’s karst and plateau landscapes, linking the region around Anshun (home to Huangguoshu Waterfall) with Liupanshui’s Wumeng grasslands and plateau scenery referenced in local travel guides. (ourchinastory.com (ourchinastory.com); travelchinaguide.com (travelchinaguide.com)) Timetables show direct high‑speed services between Anshun West and Liupanshui run roughly 24 times daily, with the first departure around 07:48, the last about 22:52, and the fastest trips taking about 47 minutes—useful scheduling data for planning sunrise or golden‑hour shots from a window seat. (trip.com (us.trip.com)) Provincial tourism channels regularly cross‑post short seasonal clips; a recent DiscoverGuizhou TikTok spring video registered about 2,427 likes, reflecting audience interest in short-format scenic footage from Guizhou. (tiktok.com (tiktok.com)) Spring in Guizhou (March–May) is the region’s peak time for rapeseed, azaleas and other hillside blooms mentioned in travel guides, which explains the prevalence of misty‑mountain and railside floral imagery in recent short videos. (chinahighlights.com (chinahighlights.com))

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