About Fujian

Fujian is a province on the southeast coast of China, with more than 35.35 million people live in 124,000 square km area, and borders Zhejiang to the north, Jiangxi to the west, Guangdong to the south and face the Taiwan thru Taiwan Strait.
Actually, the name of Fujian came from the Tang Dynasty. In 733 A.D., for enhance the border defense, Tang took each word from Fu Zhou and Jian Zhou, and named Fu Jian Jinglueshi(the title of the military governor) to govern the Fujian province, and that was the first time the Fujian came into being in history.

Fujian Province is mostly mountainous, as a Chinese saying says "Eight parts mountain, one part water, and one part farmland" . In the north, the Wuyi Mountains form the border between Fujian and Jiangxi. Meanwhile, Fujian is the most forested provincial level administrative region in China. It has a 62.96% forest coverage rate in 2009. Besides, the highest point of Fujian is Huanggang Peak in the Wuyi Mountains, with an altitude of 2157 m.

The 180-km-wide Taiwan Strait separates the Fujian from Taiwan. Some of the small islands in the Taiwan Strait are also part of the Provinces, and some other small islands are in the control of Taiwan Government, such as the islands of Quemoy and Matsu.

Get Inspirations

Having no idea how to start your China homeland tour? Don't worry! You can get inspirations from our hand-picked private tour, or join the group tour with other families, even let us to customize a trip for you.

15 Days Fujian Children Reunion Heritage Tour

Destinations: Beijing, Xian, Chengdu, Guilin, Fuzhou, Guangzhou

  • We can arrange the visiting to all the orphanages in Fujian Province
  • Famous places like Great Wall/ Giant Panda/ Terracotta Amy are all covered
  • Private guide/ vehicle and diver offer you valued sevice
  • No forced shopping activities
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Small Groups: 2024 LTC Heritage Tours-A

Beijing-Xian-Chengdu-Guilin-Yangshuo

Summer Schedule: Jun 10th, Jun 24th

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Customize Your Own Return Trip

It is another option for those who want a more flexible time frame to work with as well as independence in where you want to go. We'd be happy to guide you regarding any of our programs. Read more...

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Tips for a China Orphanage Visit

When you plan to have a China return trip, you'd better prepare a gift for other children in the orphanage. You can ask our travel consultant about the details and buy some gifts several days before your trip or you can buy that after your arrival in China if you're inconvenient for the excessive baggage. The guide from LeadtoChina will give you proper suggestions and help you to buy these. If you're confused about what items the SWI need, here are some good examples: snacks, or a basket of fruit, backpack, books or other school supplies. You are also suggested to buy fans and air conditioning in summer in some poor SWI. Most of the SWI will give you a present in return for memory.

Many families care about the donation, and if you want to do this, we suggest you to exchange the donated money for RMB and show this to the director of the SWI. Some SWI will issue a donation certificate to you but not every SWI will do this.

According to the size of the SWI and the frequency of the families' return, the visit can be the most important thing for the staff or a small part of the orphanage's routine work. You can talk to your child about the actual situation you've known to let them make enough preparations. You'd better tell them what will happen and what to do if things are not the same as they expected. They should keep a flexible attitude towards life and enjoy the process instead of following a certain model to start as things are not exactly what we think and this is very important. One more important point which is often ignored is that most of the orphanage children always have various special needs. It is better to consider this before visiting and your child should know that some children in the SWI have physical or mental disability. All these can provide a better atmosphere for the children with special needs in the orphanage during your return visit.

If you'd love to invite the orphanage director to lunch, please don't forget other people in the SWI as they are usually the director's assistants. If you want to invite the caregiver or nanny, you'd better extend the invitation through the director to request the consent out of courtesy. Our guide can help you to do this and convey your invitation accurately and politely. What's more, some of the orphanages will offer you free lunch but many SWI will charge you for about 100 USD as lunch fee. You can inquire about this through your trip consultant before travelling.

At last, some Chinese individuals act turgidly in front of you for not losing face. But most people follow traditional Chinese values, modesty and gentleness. Bearing this in mind can help you deal with problems in different situations successfully during your return visit.

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