Labahe - getting there
On my 2013 trip to China I had visited the Labahe Nature Reserve to look for Red Pandas. Labahe is possibly the best place in the world to see Red Pandas but there is a very narrow window of about one month in winter when they are "easy" (late October to mid November, when a certain tree has lost its leaves but is in fruit, so the pandas are in those trees feeding on the berries). The pandas are still in the forest the rest of the year of course, but are much less easy to find because they aren't feeding in exposed places.
You can read about my 2013 visit to Labahe here if you wish:
Chlidonias Goes To Asia, part three: 2013-2014
I hadn't been planning on returning to Labahe on this trip, partly because it was outside the Red Panda season, but mainly because it wasn't straightforward to get there without a car and I had been planning to use my time for going to Balang Shan to look for pheasants. However, Balang Shan was out now - I had found a thing online about the state of Sichuan birding sites for 2025 and it said that the particular place at Balang Shan where the pheasants were seen was now off limits. Since 2013 (when I went to Balang Shan as well) they have built a great long tunnel along the road up there, and the "old road" was then deserted and really good for walking along for birding purposes. But there was some sort of fatal accident and the authorities had posted guards to stop any access.
The main pheasant I wanted to see at Balang Shan was the Chinese Monal, and the document said that at Labahe they have finished their cable-car to the top of the mountain and that Chinese Monals could be seen from the boardwalk up there. So Labahe went into my itinerary in place of Balang Shan.
There were a couple of other animals of particular interest to me at Labahe as well. First was the Lady Amherst's Pheasant. Most birders who go to Labahe see these everywhere. I didn't see any in 2013. Most birders who go to Dali also see these everywhere. I didn't see any there either.
The second animal was the Golden Snub-nosed Monkey, which of course I have had no joy with but an awful lot of frustration. The website for Labahe says that they can be seen here, and apparently "often" near the lower cable-car station. Fingers crossed then!
To get to Labahe I had to go by bus from Jiuzhaigou to Huanglongjiuzhai (where the train station is), then by train to Chengdu, then on another train to Ya'an, then by bus to Tianquan, and then finally from there to Labahe by whatever means of transport was the current method.
I hadn't booked the Chengdu to Ya'an train in advance because I wasn't sure I'd even catch my first train when I left Jiuzhaigou. Before booking any trains I had checked with the girls at the hotel reception what time the earliest bus was from Jiuzhaigou to Huanglongjiuzhai and they said 6am, and that they could book it for me. So I went and checked the train schedules to Chengdu and booked one for 9.04am which had one seat left for about NZ$40. It's two hours from Jiuzhaigou to Huanglongjiuzhai station, so that was plenty of time.
After I had booked the train I went back for them to book the bus - except now they said it would pick me up at 7am. That was on the Sunday when I'd had an annoying day in Jiuzhaigou so I just went "yeah okay whatever". I'd see what happened on the day. The worst that would happen would be I'd miss the train and lose the $40 I'd spent on the ticket, but then just catch a later train (or bus if all the trains were full);
maybe I'd have to stay overnight in the town and catch a train the next morning.
The girls said it was 50 Yuan for a bus or 70 Yuan for a small car - the difference is only about NZ$4 so I chose the car because it would be quicker - and then they said to pay them the next afternoon. When I came back from Jiuzhaigou that day I went to pay them and they hadn't even booked it yet. So they did that and now the time was back to 6am again.
I wasn't overly confident that a car would even be there in the morning but it arrived at 6am, and it took about 1.5 hours to the train station (about half an hour quicker than a bus).
Now that I knew I was definitely catching that first train I booked the next leg to Ya'an while I was sitting in the Huanglongjiuzhai station. I had been thinking that, in theory, I could get to Labahe in one day - about 1.5 hours by train from Huanglongjiuzhai to Chengdu, then 1.5 hours by train to Ya'an, then another 1.5 hours by bus to Tianquan, then however long to Labahe from there (probably another 1.5 hours given that every other distance covered was taking 1.5 hours).
I did get most of the way. The train to Chengdu was at 9.04am, getting into Chengdu at 10.45am, but the next train I could get to Ya'an wasn't until 1.12pm. I arrived in Ya'an at 2.40pm, crossed the road to the bus station where I got a bus at 3.30pm, and arrived in Tianquan at 5pm.
It was zero degrees in Huanglongjiuzhai, 32 degrees in Ya'an, and 25 degrees in Tianquan.
Everything online had told me that there was no bus to Labahe. At the bus station in Tianquan I nevertheless asked whether there was a bus, thinking the answer would be no, but I was immediately told there was a bus at 9am! There was a guy working there who spoke okay English, but I showed them the whole "Labahe National Nature Reserve" in Chinese so that there was no misunderstanding, and he said yes. Last time I went to Labahe (in 2013) the "bus to Labahe" was actually a bus to a neighbouring area and they handed me over
en route to the car of a passing staff member. So I'd see tomorrow what the situation was currently.
The Tianquan bus station is on the other side of a lake to the town area where the hotels are. I had a look on Trip and just booked the closest hotel to the station, the Tianquan Lakeside Cloud Hotel which was 122 Yuan. Japan and Taiwan have ruined my budget-brain. Earlier in China if a hotel was even 100 Yuan that was too expensive, but after Japan suddenly 100 Yuan seems really cheap for a hotel.
Tianquan seems quite birdy. From my hotel window in the morning I could see a Black Bulbul (of the white-headed variety) and Oriental Greenfinches in the trees outside, and some Red-rumped Swallows over the lake. When I went out to get some breakfast I came across a Forest Wagtail in a tree by the lake.
It had been a hot walk from the bus station when I arrived the previous afternoon so even though it was only ten or fifteen minutes I was going to catch one of the little tuktuk-type taxis back in the morning so that I wouldn't arrive there all sweaty. When I got up, however, it was only 14 degrees so I just walked.
Getting to Labahe turned out to be quite straightforward in hindsight, although it did have some seemingly confusing parts in the moment.
I went to the ticket counter and showed the lady the Chinese name for Labahe, and she pointed to a business card for a bus (i.e. not a regular bus). I said I couldn't call the number because I don't speak Chinese, so she called and said to wait. After five minutes or so another lady arrived and through her phone translation app told me that she couldn't take me to Labahe today because her car was being repaired, but she could arrange a "transfer" to the ticket gate. Back in 2013 that was the case for buses anyway - they weren't really going to the reserve itself, but they could drop you at the junction for the entrance road (which is still something like 22km from the park's visitor centre and accommodation). It would cost 80 Yuan, she said. I'd been half-expecting to be taking a taxi today, which would probably be several hundred Yuan, so 80 was fine. I had completely forgotten that yesterday the English-speaker at the bus station had told me the bus was 35 Yuan.
The lady led me into the bus station to one of the waiting mini-buses. The English-speaker from yesterday came along, and said that because it was just me alone the price was 80 Yuan, but on the weekend it would be 35 Yuan because there are a lot of people going there then. That made sense. Then I said how the lady had told me that her car was broken and he kind of scoffed and said that was a lie, she just didn't want to bother taking only one person all that way. Fair enough - at least I was getting there!
The bus left at 9am and drove through the town picking up other passengers going to where-ever the end destination of this bus was. I had the feeling I was being ripped off (which isn't something that normally happens in China, unlike constantly in southeast Asia!), especially when I made sure I looked at what the guy next to me was paying when he put the amount into his WeChat to pay - 15 Yuan! However, at about 10.20am the bus pulled up at a junction and there was a car waiting to take me to Labahe. The lady had said it was a transfer, but I'd thought that was just a translation thing which didn't necessarily mean transfer. So, no rip-off after all. On the other hand, when I came back from Labahe I only paid 20 Yuan to get all the way back to Tianquan...
Here's a photo to break up the post - Asian House Martins collecting mud to build nests.
The road to Labahe follows a river (probably the La Ba River) for several kilometres to a big car-park and building where the entry tickets are purchased (just 50 Yuan). This was new since 2013 - back then there was just a guard post by the road because the reserve wasn't a big tourist site. Another change is that it is now called the Giant Panda National Park La Ba River Area. All the signs along the way from Tianquan say Giant Panda National Park. Or maybe it's the Erlang Mountain National Forest Area, which is on other signs at the park.
I had to spend quite some time here in phone-translated discussion with the staff. In 2013 there were chalets in the reserve next to the visitor centre (which is 15km further on from this entrance building), which were 200 Yuan at the time, and then there was an expensive hotel about a kilometre further on. One of the girls at the ticket entrance said that the rooms at the visitor centre were there but might be full, but the other girl said that there was only two hotels - the expensive one (the Luming Hotel) and another one 4.5km further up the road from the Luming (called Lanshuijing Hotel on Trip, but on the signs at the park called the Blue Crystal Hotel which may or may not be the same place). But in any case, I would need to have the accommodation booked before they would let me progress.
I said that I hadn't been able to find the hotels on Trip, but in fact the Luming Hotel was there, I had just missed it because I was looking at distances and it said that the hotel was 8.8 miles (14km) away from Labahe. So I booked it on the spot for the next four nights, even though it was Japanese prices (436 Yuan per night, which is over NZ$100 - that price is an averaged-out rate because I was staying on the Saturday as well; the weekday price was 419 Yuan, and the Saturday price 488 Yuan). I was just pleased I was actually getting into a reserve in China after the issues I'd encountered earlier in the year! The hotel is pretty nice, but really the room is just the same as most of the NZ$20 rooms I've had in China and is hugely overpriced.
The next day I enquired at the visitor centre inside the park about the chalets - just for interests' sake - and was told that they were being renovated, so there currently were only the two expensive hotels available. Interestingly I later found another one a couple of kilometres up the road, called the Baigelin Mountain Villa, which is individual cabins scattered across either side of the road, but it seemed to be entirely unoccupied with not a single light on when I went through the middle at about 9pm one night while spotlighting. This place turned out to be listed on Trip as well (with no English name), and might actually be the same place as the Lanshuijing Hotel and / or Blue Crystal Hotel because it is pinned at the same place on the Trip map, and in one of the reviews it said as much. It's pretty confusing. Anyway, whether there are one, two, or three additional hotels, the over-priced Luming Hotel is still the least expensive of them and it is the closest one by some distance to the entrance of the scenic area.
There were more visitors at Labahe than I expected but not really many in total. Today was Wednesday and I'd be here until Sunday, so it would be interesting to see what Saturday will be like.
With the logistics now out of the way, I'll continue in the next post with what I did and saw on this first day...