travel
China Elevator Stories
Jingyuetan Park and Beiputuo Temple in Changchun, Jilin Province (China Travel)
This forest park in Changchun is suited for all lovers of nature.
09/05/2026

Ruth Silbermayr
Author
This park offers a cool retreat on hot summer days and allows its visitors to take a forest bath for 30 yuan (this is the entrance fee to the park).
A walk along the crescent-shaped lake in its center can take up to a few hours, and the scent of the essential oils that evaporate from the trees smells just like a freshly opened bottle of cedar or similar tree-bark essential oils.
The forests have smaller walkways, and a few entrances signal to visitors where they can enter the forest to take a forest bath.
Forest baths were first made popular in Japan, where city dwellers sometimes take them to do something beneficial for their health.
For nature lovers, a walk across the lake to Beiputuo Temple is both relaxing, and visitors can catch some of the much-needed vitamin D after a long winter in Northeast China, if this is where they are located.
Some doctors recommend taking Vitamin D against Covid-19, and though I have no idea if this is helpful or not, I believe it can’t hurt to catch a little sun and breathe in the fresh scent of tree oils evaporating right there in the forest.
I personally always think it’s better to get the real thing than the synthetic one, and since I have also caught Covid-19 a few times and am constantly dealing with stuff I caught from my students, I thought a little sun couldn’t hurt. If you don’t visit a park with an entrance fee, this kind of Vitamin D is also free, and it may even get you a little tan for summer.
This is something most Chinese avoid at all costs, but I am not afraid of the sun and have always been a summer person who enjoys going outside into the sun (unless it is truly too hot, such as in many parts of China in summer; I am talking about normally hot Austrian summers here).
The scent coming from the coniferous trees is very fragrant, and for people who love natural scents, it may well be worth the 30 yuan entrance fee.
I visited on a Friday around noon between two classes and only had about two hours time. I recommend taking at least 4–5 hours, so you won’t be in a hurry to head back to the city.
I didn’t initially realize the temple was located in a park; this is where I originally wanted to go, and I thought I would simply arrive at the entrance to the temple, not at the entrance of the park and then still need to walk to the temple.
But it was worth it, considering that the air was really fresh and the weather was very nice—cool because of the shade of the trees and the fresh breeze coming from the lake, but not too cold, with a lot of sun.
For tourists, I only recommend visiting if you are truly a lover of forests, trees, and nature, but national parks located outside of cities may be more suitable, such as the Arxan Mountain Range (which is perfect to visit around the first week of October).
In May, Jingyuetan Park is still cool enough to allow for a pleasant stroll, as the weather in Northeast China can get quite hot in summer.
Beiputuo Temple is located on a small hill in the park and had no extra entrance fee when I visited.
It is a lovely small temple, with a golden Buddha statue in its center.
One can only reach it by entering the park first, and can then either walk to the temple (which takes about 50 minutes from the closest park entrance) or take a golf cart for about 20 yuan each way.
Address (Jingyuetan Park): No. 5840 Jingyue Street, Nanguan District, Changchun, Jilin Province, China
Have you ever visited Jingyuetan Park in Changchun?