Kanas Geopark: The Valley System Behind the Famous Lake
People say ‘Kanas’ and mean the lake, but the lake is just the postcard of a much larger protected valley — the Kanas Geopark, a UNESCO-listed sweep of Altai forest, river, and Tuvan settlement. Understanding it as a system changes your visit: you stop rushing the one overlook and start walking the valleys, where the real quiet lives.
The geopark covers the lake, the Three Bays, the villages of Hemu and Baihaba, and the forests between — a single connected landscape best explored over two or three days.
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The Forest and the River
The dominant tree is Siberian spruce, dark and straight, carpeting the slopes above the water. In autumn it goes gold against the green of the larch and the blue of the river — the famous Kanas color triad. Boardwalks and trails run along the Kanas River and up to overlooks; the Fish-Watching Pavilion (观鱼台) climb above the lake is the classic panorama, steep but worth it for the full-length view.

The Villages
Hemu is the timber-cabin village famous for its birch groves and sunrise smoke — photographers’ favorite, and reachable by shuttle or a long scenic drive.
Baihaba sits near the Kazakhstan border (permit required) and is quieter, a working Tuvan settlement rather than a viewpoint.
Both offer yurt or cabin stays and a look at Tuvan life — throat singing, horse culture, and a way of living that predates the tourism. Stay a night if you can; the villages at dawn are the real Kanas.

Why Autumn Is the Headline
Late September to early October is the narrow window when the birch and larch turn and the weather is still decent. It’s also the busiest — the scenic area caps entries, and the road from Burqin jams. Go the first week of October if you can; the second gets cold fast. Summer is lush and crowd-free by comparison; winter is closed-and-snowy except for a few ice-festival visits.
Planning the System
Base in the scenic area or Burqin town. Use the park shuttle for the lake and bays; hire a car or join a transfer for Hemu. Allow 2–3 days for the geopark proper, more if you add Baihaba. It’s the north’s deep wilderness — worth more time than the single-overlook rush most tours allow.
