What catches my attention to this sign, which isn't really all that badly translated, is that there is no water near here. The seaside is a good 15 mins away at least. The spot there isn't really suitable for fish in either. This where the public from my job drops me off and I jump in a taxi. Where the school is too far out to hail a cab and I don't use Didi (China Uber) so I save a few bucks on the bus.
I can only imagine that this sign, being built in 2006, is a left over from when when this entire area was off limits to foreigners. Lv Shun has a strong military presence, such as a main hub for their Navy. Today, anyone can go there but it doesn't really have anything to see or do except for an old Japanese prison that is now a museum. Maybe I will check it out one day now that it's actually closer than my home.
So in the map you can see where I work how it's in the hills, where the bus takes me and also where Lv Shun is located. Somewhere in those hills is a cherry farm that attracts thousands of people in the spring who want to picnic and take photos of the blossoms, a Japanese tradition also, maybe his plantation was put during the war. I have been to that and I will post that another time.
Anyways. That's my day. Not too bad eh.