Children from China's Guangxi embark on snowy adventure in NE China-Xinhua

Children from China's Guangxi embark on snowy adventure in NE China

新华网

Editor: huaxia

2026-01-15 16:56:53

Children watch penguins at an ice-and-snow themed park in Changchun, northeast China's Jilin Province, Jan. 14, 2026.

A group of preschool children, bundled up in bright orange down coats, has embarked on a trip to northeast China, a region renowned as a snowy wonderland in winter. They came from south China's Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region, over 3,000 km away, with a daytime temperature currently above 20 degrees Celsius.

As Guangxi is closely linked with sugar oranges, which has a peel color exactly the same as the down jackets worn by the children, these little intrepid travelers have been affectionately referred to as "little sugar oranges" by online communities. Wherever they go, they set off a craze on cyberspace and have accumulated a flood of followers curious about their adventure in the north. (Xinhua/Yan Linyun)

A child plays at an ice-and-snow themed park in Changchun, northeast China's Jilin Province, Jan. 14, 2026.

A group of preschool children, bundled up in bright orange down coats, has embarked on a trip to northeast China, a region renowned as a snowy wonderland in winter. They came from south China's Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region, over 3,000 km away, with a daytime temperature currently above 20 degrees Celsius.

As Guangxi is closely linked with sugar oranges, which has a peel color exactly the same as the down jackets worn by the children, these little intrepid travelers have been affectionately referred to as "little sugar oranges" by online communities. Wherever they go, they set off a craze on cyberspace and have accumulated a flood of followers curious about their adventure in the north. (Xinhua/Yan Linyun)

Children play at an ice-and-snow themed park in Changchun, northeast China's Jilin Province, Jan. 14, 2026.

A group of preschool children, bundled up in bright orange down coats, has embarked on a trip to northeast China, a region renowned as a snowy wonderland in winter. They came from south China's Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region, over 3,000 km away, with a daytime temperature currently above 20 degrees Celsius.

As Guangxi is closely linked with sugar oranges, which has a peel color exactly the same as the down jackets worn by the children, these little intrepid travelers have been affectionately referred to as "little sugar oranges" by online communities. Wherever they go, they set off a craze on cyberspace and have accumulated a flood of followers curious about their adventure in the north. (Xinhua/Yan Linyun)

Children play at an ice-and-snow themed park in Changchun, northeast China's Jilin Province, Jan. 14, 2026.

A group of preschool children, bundled up in bright orange down coats, has embarked on a trip to northeast China, a region renowned as a snowy wonderland in winter. They came from south China's Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region, over 3,000 km away, with a daytime temperature currently above 20 degrees Celsius.

As Guangxi is closely linked with sugar oranges, which has a peel color exactly the same as the down jackets worn by the children, these little intrepid travelers have been affectionately referred to as "little sugar oranges" by online communities. Wherever they go, they set off a craze on cyberspace and have accumulated a flood of followers curious about their adventure in the north. (Xinhua/Yan Linyun)

A drone photo shows children playing at an ice-and-snow themed park in Changchun, northeast China's Jilin Province, Jan. 14, 2026.

A group of preschool children, bundled up in bright orange down coats, has embarked on a trip to northeast China, a region renowned as a snowy wonderland in winter. They came from south China's Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region, over 3,000 km away, with a daytime temperature currently above 20 degrees Celsius.

As Guangxi is closely linked with sugar oranges, which has a peel color exactly the same as the down jackets worn by the children, these little intrepid travelers have been affectionately referred to as "little sugar oranges" by online communities. Wherever they go, they set off a craze on cyberspace and have accumulated a flood of followers curious about their adventure in the north. (Xinhua/Yan Linyun)