| Date | Sunrise | Sunset | Day length |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 January 2026, Thursday | 7:20 AM | 5:32 PM | 10h 12m |
| 2 January 2026, Friday | 7:20 AM | 5:33 PM | 10h 13m |
| 3 January 2026, Saturday | 7:20 AM | 5:34 PM | 10h 13m |
| 4 January 2026, Sunday | 7:20 AM | 5:34 PM | 10h 14m |
| 5 January 2026, Monday | 7:20 AM | 5:35 PM | 10h 14m |
| 6 January 2026, Tuesday | 7:20 AM | 5:36 PM | 10h 15m |
| 7 January 2026, Wednesday | 7:20 AM | 5:37 PM | 10h 16m |
| 8 January 2026, Thursday | 7:21 AM | 5:37 PM | 10h 16m |
| 9 January 2026, Friday | 7:21 AM | 5:38 PM | 10h 17m |
| 10 January 2026, Saturday | 7:21 AM | 5:39 PM | 10h 18m |
| 11 January 2026, Sunday | 7:21 AM | 5:40 PM | 10h 19m |
| 12 January 2026, Monday | 7:20 AM | 5:41 PM | 10h 20m |
| 13 January 2026, Tuesday | 7:20 AM | 5:42 PM | 10h 21m |
| 14 January 2026, Wednesday | 7:20 AM | 5:42 PM | 10h 22m |
| 15 January 2026, Thursday | 7:20 AM | 5:43 PM | 10h 23m |
| 16 January 2026, Friday | 7:20 AM | 5:44 PM | 10h 24m |
| 17 January 2026, Saturday | 7:20 AM | 5:45 PM | 10h 25m |
| 18 January 2026, Sunday | 7:20 AM | 5:46 PM | 10h 26m |
| 19 January 2026, Monday | 7:19 AM | 5:47 PM | 10h 27m |
| 20 January 2026, Tuesday | 7:19 AM | 5:48 PM | 10h 28m |
| 21 January 2026, Wednesday | 7:19 AM | 5:49 PM | 10h 29m |
| 22 January 2026, Thursday | 7:18 AM | 5:49 PM | 10h 30m |
| 23 January 2026, Friday | 7:18 AM | 5:50 PM | 10h 32m |
| 24 January 2026, Saturday | 7:18 AM | 5:51 PM | 10h 33m |
| 25 January 2026, Sunday | 7:17 AM | 5:52 PM | 10h 34m |
| 26 January 2026, Monday | 7:17 AM | 5:53 PM | 10h 36m |
| 27 January 2026, Tuesday | 7:16 AM | 5:54 PM | 10h 37m |
| 28 January 2026, Wednesday | 7:16 AM | 5:55 PM | 10h 38m |
| 29 January 2026, Thursday | 7:15 AM | 5:56 PM | 10h 40m |
| 30 January 2026, Friday | 7:15 AM | 5:56 PM | 10h 41m |
| 31 January 2026, Saturday | 7:14 AM | 5:57 PM | 10h 43m |
Wuhan sits at the confluence of the Yangtze and Han rivers, giving it open water horizons in multiple directions. The surrounding hills in Wuchang and Hanyang add elevated vantage points above the river and city skyline.
The hilltop terrace on Snake Hill opens at 7:30 AM with eastern views over the Yangtze and city skyline. Entry is 80 RMB; arriving shortly after opening avoids the main crowd.
Moshan Hill overlooks East Lake to the east, with unobstructed water views from the summit. Admission to the Moshan area is 15 RMB; allow about 15 minutes to walk up from the gate.
The 28 km loop path around East Lake has flat, open sections on the eastern shore aligned with sunrise. Bikes can be rented at stations around the lake for roughly 15-20 RMB per hour.
The pedestrian path on the eastern side of the bridge faces upriver toward the rising sun. Access is free and the walkway is open around the clock.
Upper level windows face west across the Yangtze toward Hankou. The tower closes at 6:30 PM in winter, later in summer.
This 4 km promenade on the Yangtze's north bank is west-facing with open sky above the river. Free entry; the closest metro stop is Jianghan Road station.
The crest of Guishan in Hanyang gives open westward views over the surrounding districts. Free to enter; the hill is a short walk from Guishan metro station.
From the western walkway, the view runs downriver over the Yangtze toward Hankou. The Hankou waterfront sits almost directly west from this vantage point.