Introduction to the Upside Down Lotus: The Upside Down Lotus Peak is also called the Lotus Terrace. It has a green wall and a stone peak that is split like an axe. There is a square platform on top. Beside the platform, there are stalagmites standing, several feet high. Five stones stand apart, each with its own height. Support, shaped like a lotus. Legend has it that in the Yuan Dynasty, the monk Feng Feng sat on the peak for three days and nights to subdue the Sand Devil. When he fell from exhaustion, the peak turned upside down to support the monk. This peak got its name from this. On the square platform, there was the "Western Nunnery" in ancient times, and later the "Chuanyun Pavilion" was built.

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