China Welcomes a Chilly Year of the Dragon By Ben ShpigelFeb. 10, 2024
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China Welcomes a Chilly Year of the Dragon
Ben ShpigelWriting about the Chinese New Year The Lunar New Year — the most important holiday in many Asian countries — begins on Saturday, when in roars the year of the dragon.
Here is how the holiday is going in China →
Getty Images/Getty Images
The season is a typically heavy travel period, with millions of people trekking to their hometowns ahead of the holiday. For many years, it produced the world’s largest annual migration.
During the coronavirus pandemic, fear of lockdowns, quarantines and other rules deterred many from traveling. This year was supposed to mark a return to normal.
Andres Martinez Casares/EPA, via Shutterstock
China’s aviation regulator said it had scheduled 2,500 extra international flights ahead of the holiday, and transportation officials said that they expected 480 million rail trips during the 40-day travel surge, a nearly 40 percent increase from last year.
But snow and freezing rain this week disrupted travel, causing hundreds of rail and flight cancellations. The National Meteorological Center issued warnings for snowstorms and blizzards in several provinces and cities in central and eastern China.
Agence France-Presse — Getty Images
By Saturday, though, the skies had mostly cleared, and festivities for the year of the dragon — a particularly auspicious one in the Chinese zodiac — had begun.
China Daily, via Reuters
Read more about the Lunar New Year:
Severe Weather Disrupts Travel in China Ahead of Lunar New Year
For Gen Z-ers Celebrating Lunar New Year, Hot Pot Offers a Sense of Home
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China Welcomes a Chilly Year of the Dragon
Ben ShpigelWriting about the Chinese New Year The Lunar New Year — the most important holiday in many Asian countries — begins on Saturday, when in roars the year of the dragon.
Here is how the holiday is going in China →
Getty Images/Getty Images
The season is a typically heavy travel period, with millions of people trekking to their hometowns ahead of the holiday. For many years, it produced the world’s largest annual migration.
During the coronavirus pandemic, fear of lockdowns, quarantines and other rules deterred many from traveling. This year was supposed to mark a return to normal.
Andres Martinez Casares/EPA, via Shutterstock
China’s aviation regulator said it had scheduled 2,500 extra international flights ahead of the holiday, and transportation officials said that they expected 480 million rail trips during the 40-day travel surge, a nearly 40 percent increase from last year.
But snow and freezing rain this week disrupted travel, causing hundreds of rail and flight cancellations. The National Meteorological Center issued warnings for snowstorms and blizzards in several provinces and cities in central and eastern China.
Agence France-Presse — Getty Images
By Saturday, though, the skies had mostly cleared, and festivities for the year of the dragon — a particularly auspicious one in the Chinese zodiac — had begun.
China Daily, via Reuters
Read more about the Lunar New Year:
Severe Weather Disrupts Travel in China Ahead of Lunar New Year
For Gen Z-ers Celebrating Lunar New Year, Hot Pot Offers a Sense of Home
1 of 7 1 of 7
Item 1 of 7
1 of 7 1 of 7