What's the significance of the trip to Zhong Ya?

The significance of the bell bud tour is as follows:

The three-year trip to Kyushu is a traditional Japanese act of keeping promises, which originated in Japan in the 8th century. It means to promise to achieve a certain goal, and at the same time tell others your wishes and ambitions, so that others can witness their efforts and glory.

Specifically, the bell bud tour refers to the collection and planting of this herb. Bell buds are considered to contribute to physical and mental health and longevity, so they are regarded as very precious. Three-year tour of boll buds is a commitment to complete the planting and collection of boll buds within three years and send the results to an important person or organization.

Traditionally, people who want to travel to Berbad will first learn the necessary knowledge and skills from a mysterious teacher. Then, they will leave their hometown one after another, travel around, find the most suitable land and climate for planting bell buds, and begin to practice the technology and knowledge they have learned.

Finally, those who have successfully completed the journey of Zhong Ya can get the honor and respect they have been longing for for for a long time and become successful people in society.

The story content of "Journey to the Bell Bud":

Lingya is a 17-year-old girl who lives in a quiet town in Kyushu. One day, she met a young traveler named Cao Tai, who was "looking for the door". With his footsteps, Jing Ya came to the ruins of the mountain, where she found an old door standing alone. Zhong Duo seemed to be attracted by something and reached out to the door. ...

It is said that disaster will come to this world from the other side of the door, so Mrs. Cao wandered around as a "closed teacher" who locked the door.

"Zhong Ya, I like it." "As for you, it's in the way." As soon as the minister spoke, the grass turned into a chair! That's a chair with a missing leg that Berbad used when he was a child. In order to catch the minister, Mrs. Cao Ran came out in the form of a three-legged chair, and Ling Lei followed in a hurry.

Soon, doors across Japan began to open one by one. Led by an incredible door and a kitten, Lingya began a "closed trip" to Kyushu, Shikoku, Kansai, Tokyo and the Japanese archipelago. On the way, Lingya got a lot of help. When she arrived at her destination, she found a forgotten truth there.