Is Dalian Heqigu Cemetery legal?

Legal.

Heqigu Cemetery in Dalian is a public welfare cemetery designated by Dalian Municipal Government on 20 14. The cemetery is located two kilometers away from Ingeshi Botanical Garden, with convenient transportation and strong gathering atmosphere. The natural and elegant environment, unique geographical feng shui, the combination of nature and humanity, funeral and ecology have made Heqigu garden-style cemetery.

He Qi Valley Ecological Cemetery is surrounded by water on all sides, with the leeward facing the sun, hidden wind and gathering air. The main mountain is tall and straight (Qinglong) and the sand mountain is beautiful. The original ecological forest of 1,000 mu of pines and cypresses is lush, with thick red soil, fragrant grass, spring water, birds singing and flowers fragrant, evergreen all the year round, and century-old trees are precious, with abundant habitats. Cemetery is mainly composed of etiquette axis, tomb area and farm. The whole cemetery is surrounded by mountains, with springs inside, reservoirs on the side, highways nearby, and mountains on both sides. Qinglong White Tiger and Suzaku Xuanwu are four complete caves, which are real dragon caves for gathering wind and gas. He Qigu's overall terrain is in the shape of leaves, which should be the roots of fallen leaves and endless.

He Qi Valley Double Cave provides funeral supplies and services, as well as a set of decorations: two lions, two vases and a censer. The management fee is charged at 1% of the tomb. The cemetery is a public welfare cemetery approved by the Land and Resources Bureau, Civil Affairs Bureau, Forestry Bureau and other departments. The company has a shuttle bus every day to facilitate sacrifice. The cemetery is surrounded by mountains, with a spring inside and a reservoir next to it. Surrounded by mountains, the four gods, Qinglong, Baihu, Suzaku and Xuanwu, gather together. It is a real dragon cave where the wind hides and the gas gathers! The whole cemetery is in the shape of leaves, which means that the fallen leaves return to their roots and are endless!