Longpan Park is located in Kenting, Pingtung County, Taiwan, and serves as a breathtaking natural gallery where coastal erosion formations meet tropical shoreline beauty. The park’s most striking feature is the "Longpan Cliff," a sheer rock face rising over 100 meters high, its rust-red strata resembling a giant axe cleaving through the ocean. At the cliff’s summit lies the "Longpan Cave," draped in thick vines and shaped like a coiled dragon; waves crashing at its entrance scatter golden light across the water during sunset, creating shimmering reflections that dance like scattered coins. Along the intertidal zone, a series of sea caves—like scars etched into the earth—add to the drama: the "Three-Layered Cave" forms an endless loop reminiscent of a Möbius strip, while the "Wind Cabinet Cave" features honeycombed walls that hum with low, mournful tones as wind passes through them. This dramatic landscape offers not only visual splendor but also a profound sense of geological time and elemental power.