On June 8th, 1935, the Central Red Army broke through the enemy's defense lines of Lushan and Baoxing, and then crossed the first snow-capped mountain on the Long March-Jin Jia Mountain. Most of the Red Army come from the hot and humid southern subtropical region. Many people have never seen a snow-capped mountain before, let alone climbed it. When I first saw the Snow Mountain, it was really spectacular. Snow-covered, white-covered, snow-covered, snow-covered, the whole world is snow. I can really get up, but I don't feel beautiful at all. Dajinshan is called Fairy Mountain by local people. They told the Red Army that only immortals could climb the Great Golden Mountain. If you can open your mouth on the mountain, the mountain god will strangle you. In a word, Dajinshan is an incredible mountain. Birds can't fly in the past, and people had better stay away, but the fearless Red Army has to fight against fate.
In front of Dajinshan, you can see the heavy snow covering the top of the mountain from the foot of the mountain. It seems that this large area of snow is not far away. At first, people didn't realize that they had to climb so high. After months of marching, food was insufficient and people were exhausted. Climbing the mountain seemed to go well at first, but then it suddenly entered the world of ice and snow. Snow-capped mountains make people unable to open their eyes and have no road. People slide on the ice, fall down, stand up, feel weak all over, and some lie in the arms of snow-capped mountains forever.
On June 12, the vanguard of the Central Red Army finally climbed over several snow-capped mountains and joined forces with the vanguard of the Red Fourth Army on the way north.
After the two main forces joined forces, the Red Army Headquarters divided the Red Army into left and right armies: the left army was led by Zhu De, commander-in-chief of the Red Army, and Zhang, general political commissar, and went north through Aba; The army on the right was led by former enemy commanders Xu and Chen Changhao, and the squad went north on the right. Subsequently, the right army entered the vast Maoergai prairie, which was another great challenge in human history. Smedley, an American revolutionary writer, summarized this gruesome and terrible zone in her book The Great Road: "The grassland is located on the high ground at the border of Yunnan and Tibet, stretching for hundreds of miles as far as the eye can see, and it is all a swamp area without roads.
After walking day after day, the Red Army could see nothing but endless weeds. Below the weeds was a swamp with mud as deep as several feet. A large area of weeds has grown on the dead haystack. Whether it has been like this for hundreds of years is anyone's guess. There are no trees, no birds flying, no insects chirping, and not even a stone can be found. There is nothing here but endless weeds, which are destroyed by storms in summer and covered with heavy snow in winter. The sky is always covered with dark clouds, which sets off the earth into a ghastly hell. "When the Red Army stepped out of the grass, there was only a ragged and scrawny army left. Thousands of people are coughing, but it can still defeat warlord troops from division to division. It can be called the most tenacious, determined and politically conscious veteran in the world and an unparalleled strong team in history.