Rich in both rice and and humans, the land was a mecca for bandits, warmongers and kidnappers. Kaipingers built watchtowers called Diaolou from which they could shoot arrows through slit windows and pour boiling oil from ornate balconies – which were also great for enjoying a gin and tonic whilst thinking up names for surrounding mountains such as “horse toppling from the dragon”.
Kaiping was the centre of early Chinese overseas emigration, followed decades later by cash loaded success stories returning from the various gold rushes with a love of baroque which they used to decorate their fortress homes.
A rare taste of Old Guangdong, Kaiping is the perfect cycling destination – easily accessed from Hong Kong, Guangzhou, Shenzhen, Zhuhai and Macau.