视频说明
Riding through the countryside of Qionghai on a Brompton feels less like a cycling trip and more like tracing fragments of family history across old villages, ancestral homes, and forgotten roads.
From narrow coconut-lined lanes to quiet ancestral halls hidden between old houses, every turn in Qionghai carries a sense of connection to the past. Unlike the fast-paced coastal tourist zones of Hainan, the inland villages around Qionghai still preserve a slower rhythm — elderly villagers chatting under banyan trees, old tiled homes with fading Chinese couplets, and generations of clan stories that never made it into official records.
For many overseas Chinese families across Southeast Asia, Hainan was once the starting point before migration to places like Singapore, Malaysia, Thailand, and beyond. Searching for one’s clan roots in Hainan is not just genealogy — it is reconnecting with identity.
And somehow, doing it on a compact folding bike makes the journey even more personal:
slow enough to absorb the atmosphere,
quiet enough to hear village life,
and adventurous enough to wander off the planned route.
What starts as a cycling trip slowly turns into something deeper:
a search for where your story truly began.