Hong Kong’s East Dam welcomes 1,400 visitors daily over first four days of Easter

Hong Kong’s East Dam welcomed about 1,400 visitors daily over the first four days of the Easter break despite adverse weather, conservation authorities said. The Agriculture, Fisheries and Conservation Department recorded 18 enforcement actions for littering and illegal camping at Sai Kung East Country Park. Authorities vowed to explore long-term management strategies for popular sites.

Hong Kong’s East Dam welcomed about 1,400 visitors daily over the first four days of the Easter break, from Good Friday to Easter Monday, despite adverse weather, the Agriculture, Fisheries and Conservation Department (AFCD) said on Tuesday.

The department recorded 18 cases of law enforcement action at Sai Kung East Country Park for offences including littering and illegal camping during that period. “The AFCD will continue to explore long-term management strategies for popular attractions within country parks,” it wrote on social media.

Drawing on past experiences, the AFCD will consider optimisation methods such as introducing a reservation system or charging fees. The country park significantly overlaps with the Hong Kong UNESCO Global Geopark, lauded by the United Nations for its diverse ecological resources and including Sharp Island.

The AFCD deployed about 90 staff members each day to the country park, Sharp Island, and Lantau Island’s Shui Hau to patrol and educate visitors on keeping the locations litter-free.

Relaterede artikler

Illustration depicting massive passenger travel during China's Qingming Festival, with crowded highways, family tomb visits, busy trains, and tourists amid spring blooms.
Billede genereret af AI

China logs 845 million trips during Qingming Festival holiday

Rapporteret af AI Billede genereret af AI

China recorded an estimated 845.38 million passenger trips during the three-day Qingming Festival holiday, up 6 percent year on year, according to the Ministry of Transport. Memorial services saw nearly 19.29 million visits, while tourism revenue surged in multiple provinces. The overlap with school spring breaks fueled long-distance family travel.

An environmental group has called for long-term measures to tackle overtourism in Hong Kong's scenic Sai Kung district after the number of tents at campsites reached more than nine times capacity on the second day of Lunar New Year, though authorities say the situation is “under control”. Greenpeace reported counting 585 tents at Ham Tin Wan and Sai Wan the previous day, exceeding the 50-tent limit at each site.

Rapporteret af AI

Hong Kong authorities are stepping up crowd and environmental controls at nature sites ahead of the Lunar New Year break to prevent repeats of past overcrowding incidents, as the city prepares for 1.43 million mainland Chinese visitors. Secretary for Culture, Sports and Tourism Rosanna Law Shuk-pui stated that the government is adopting a more proactive approach to managing visitor flows this year.

Traffic at the Hong Kong-Zhuhai-Macau Bridge hit peak levels in the first two days of the holiday, with passenger flows exceeding 192,000 and vehicles surpassing 30,000, leading to checkpoint queues sometimes over an hour. Ringo Lee Yiu-pui, honorary life president of the Hong Kong, China Automobile Association, said on Monday it marked one of the busiest periods in recent years.

Rapporteret af AI

Hong Kong has replaced the Easter Bunny with cats, featuring giant installations and murals across the city that delight visitors and residents. This taps into the booming ‘cat economy’, with a massive ginger cat greeting arrivals at Hong Kong International Airport and three inflatable felines at West Kowloon Cultural District.

The Hong Kong Tourism Board will allocate 75 per cent of its resources to overseas markets this year to diversify visitor demographics and attract more overnight high spenders. Executive director Anthony Lau Chun-hon noted the difficulty in convincing day-trippers from nearby mainland Chinese cities to stay overnight. The board plans to launch a global campaign by the end of April.

Rapporteret af AI

Edwin Lau Che-feng, founder of The Green Earth, has warned of a shrinking space for green advocacy in Hong Kong. The 68-year-old activist, who resigned from his director role last August, reflected on his 36-year career, citing the government's abrupt pause of a waste-charging scheme as the biggest blow.

 

 

 

Dette websted bruger cookies

Vi bruger cookies til analyse for at forbedre vores side. Læs vores privatlivspolitik for mere information.
Afvis