Become a Virtual Tourist Member Today!  Sign Up for Free | Sign In
Lhasa Local Customs
Search:

Home » Travel Guides » Asia » China » Tibet » Lhasa » Local Customs

Lhasa Hotels

Real reviews from real travelers.

Lhasa Local Customs

Learn the local customs of Lhasa. Tips and photos posted by real travelers and Lhasa locals.
Lhasa Map
Sort By:  Most Recent | Best Rated
Tibetans are very religious
  • Tip Rating:
  • mim95
  • By mim95 on December 19, 2005
  • Lhasa Page by mim95
  • Devoted pilgrims in Lhasa - Lhasa
    Devoted pilgrims in Lhasa
    by mim95, 1 more photos
    Lhasa is the religious center of Tibet. Many Tibetans would visit Lhasa whenever possible during their lifetime. They follow the various traditional pilgrimage routes in the city. Some of them walk the route, some do a series of rituals which involve the whole body to the ground! They are the most religious people I've ever seen.

    You are likely to encounter these devoted pilgrims on the streets around Johkang, which is one of the most popular pilgrimage routes.

    Leave a Comment

    Not Helpful 1 2 3 4 5 Very Helpful

    Visiting Lhasa?

    Read reviews about Lhasa Hotels

    Real Reviews from Real VirtualTourist Members.

    The Bathing Festival ("Mu Yu Jie")
  • Tip Rating:
  • Confucius
  • By Confucius on September 23, 2006
  • Lhasa Page by Confucius
  • In the afternoon Tibetans go to the Lhasa River - Lhasa
    In the afternoon Tibetans
    go to the Lhasa River
    by Confucius,
    4 more photos
    If you're in Lhasa during September then try to ask local Tibetans when the Bathing Festival occurs. The Bathing Festival, known as "Mu Yu Jie" in Chinese, is actually not known by some Chinese living in Lhasa (especially taxi drivers) so you'll need to get reliable information from local Tibetans.

    The Tibetans celebrate this festival by bathing in the Lhasa River when Venus makes an early autumn appearance in the evening sky. They believe this is the best time for cleaning when the river is at its purist. You will see plenty of naked ladies but Tibetans use this occasion to wash clothes as well. I even saw dogs and bicycles getting a bath. (See related travelogue.)

    The best place to observe the bathing festival in Lhasa is west of the Lhasa Bridge behind Tibet University. Go to Tibet University and use the west exit to access this area. Use your best judgement when photographing bathing Tibetans. If some choose not to have their picture taken then it won't take long before you find others who don't mind.

    You might also get invited to join the Tibetans in the river, and so it would be a good idea to wear a bathing suit. The weather during early September is usually still quite warm, but the river water is very cold. Most Tibetans don't actually jump deep into the river, instead they wade by the shore and splash water onto themselves.

    Leave a Comment

    Not Helpful 1 2 3 4 5 Very Helpful
    THE LOCAL SATELLITE DISH
  • Tip Rating:
  • mavl
  • By mavl on February 20, 2007
  • Lhasa Page by mavl
  • Lhasa Local Customs
    by mavl
    when going around lhasa (even within the monasteries), don't be surprised to come across one of these. from afar, it looks like a portable satellite dish - which really surprised me, tibet may be more developed than i thought after all.

    it's actually a kettle heating device.

    i've never seen anything like it anywhere else, as a matter of fact. ingenious, huh?

    great photography subject.

    Not Helpful 1 2 3 4 5 Very Helpful
    Pilgrimage
  • Tip Rating:
  • grets
  • By grets on October 29, 2005
  • Lhasa Page by grets
  • Pilgrims - Lhasa
    Pilgrims
    by grets,
    4 more photos
    Pilgrimage is not just a matter of walking to a sacred place and then leaving again. There are a number of activities that must take place to focus the concentration of the pilgrim. The act of kora, or circumambulation of the object of devotion, is one of the main pursuits. Auspicious numbers are three, 13 or 108 koras, with sunrise and sunset being especially auspicious times. Pilgrims will show devotion through prostration (chaktsal), which follows a sequence: placing your hands in a namaste (prayer-like) position, touching your forehead, throat and heart, getting down into a half-prostration and then lying flat out on the ground with arms outstretched. A particularly devout pilgrim will make his entire journey in this way, moving only the length of his body each time, marking his progress by a conch shell.

    Offerings are likely to be made during a pilgrimage, such as kathaks (white ceremonial scarves) given to lamas or holy statues as a sign of respect. At altars, offerings such as yak butter, tsampa, fruit, money and seeds are left. Offerings of printed prayers or tsampa are thrown into the air at holy mountain passes, bridges and peaks. Sacred rocks, earth, water or herbs are collected and taken back to those who were unable to partake in the pilgrimage.

    Leave a Comment

    Not Helpful 1 2 3 4 5 Very Helpful
    Carpet making
  • Tip Rating:
  • grets
  • By grets on October 29, 2005
  • Lhasa Page by grets
  • Weaving - Lhasa
    Weaving
    by grets, 4 more photos
    At Tibet Potala Carpet Company, not far from Drepung Monastery, we were shown the whole process of carpet making, from the basic wool, through the carding and spinning to the weaving of the carpets. At the end was the obligatory souvenir shop, where you could buy carpets and rugs in every size, colour and pattern, as well as a few other souvenirs.

    Leave a Comment

    Not Helpful 1 2 3 4 5 Very Helpful

    Visiting Lhasa?

    Read reviews about Lhasa Hotels

    Real Reviews from Real VirtualTourist Members.

    Different areas of Tibet
  • Tip Rating:
  • sugarpuff
  • By sugarpuff on October 2, 2006
  • Lhasa Page by sugarpuff
  • Lhasa Local Customs
    by sugarpuff
    In different regions of Tibet, Shannan or Changtang, rural or pastoral areas, eastern or western Tibet, the customs are varied. As a Tibetan saying goes: "Different lamas teach in different ways; different inhabitants have different sayings and different nature cultivates different folkways". The nomadic herders living on the highly-elevated, frigid and sleeted grasslands in northern Tibet wear hides and furs, eat beef, mutton and milk products, and live in yak woollen tents. The farmers living along the Yarlung Zangbo River Valley and the mountain dwellers in the Himalayas wear wool tweed clothing, eat tsampa (roasted highland barley flour), and reside in stone or earthern houses, while the the inhabitants in forested regions dwell in bamboo and wooden houses.

    Most of the places we went to were all earthen or stone houses, many of them so much more beautiful than half the buildings they have in Beijing thats for sure! And the ones in the countryside had yak or horse (couldnt tell the difference!) p** on the walls. I'm not sure what that was for? Extra warmth? Make the walls more solid? But fun to see all the same!

    So the folk culture in the pastoral areas of northern Tibet is known as the 'yak culture', while the rural areas are known as the 'highland barley culture'.

    Leave a Comment

    Not Helpful 1 2 3 4 5 Very Helpful
    Politics and Responsible Travel
  • Tip Rating:
  • budapest8
  • By budapest8 on September 2, 2005
  • Lhasa Page by budapest8
  • Don't try and talk politics to local people if they don't want to.
    Tibetans can get 20 years in prison for this. It is a counter revolutionary crime. For example Yulu Dawa Tenzin was jailed for 20 years specifically for talking of independence with a foreign tourist. Even if people do want to talk, this may be due to a misplaced idea that you are a journalist or similar. Be sensitive to this.

    There was a story a few years ago: Someone in India encouraged people to go to Tibet and "collect evidence" Acting on this, a tourist tried to record an interview with a nun in a muslim-owned tea-house opposite the Snowlands Hotel. The ever present police-spy called his masters and a police raid was staged. The poor nun was dragged away to [I assume] imprisonment and torture. The tape recorder was snatched for evidence and the feckless tourist was left to ponder on it all, free to go home...but doubtless unable to sleep at night.

    Inspite of stories such as the one above, some people are alarmingly eager to tell you of their plight. In doing so they are taking a great risk, but are also putting a certain burden onto the listener: It might be flattering to have someone risk torture just to talk to you, and it might make a good adventure story for the folks back home, but the person is telling you all this in the hope that you will actually do something. The subleties of the political situation can be hard to grasp. Ask yourself what is really going on. On the surface, things look almost normal. Life goes on. It is not easy if you don't speak so much Tibetan. Before you go, read up on Tibet, its history and politics. This is far better than reading it when you get back, wondering what it was all about.
    As a tourist you are very very unlikely to be endangered if there should be a demonstration.

    Leave a Comment

    Not Helpful 1 2 3 4 5 Very Helpful
    The people
  • Tip Rating:
  • seratonin
  • By seratonin on September 27, 2002
  • Lhasa Page by seratonin
  • Tibetian - Lhasa
    Tibetian
    by seratonin
    When you`re travelling trough Tibet, you wil certainly meet the local people. In Lhasa itself, we`ve met Tibetians speaking English, so it is very interesting to accept an ivitation for drinking a yak butter tea with them (altough that tea is sometimes a disgusting thing :-0... ).
    More difficult was the conversation with the people we met overland. Unfortunately there is often a language bareer ... But you will find ways to deal with that...

    Leave a Comment

    Not Helpful 1 2 3 4 5 Very Helpful
    Praying
  • Tip Rating:
  • tompt
  • By tompt on September 6, 2004
  • Lhasa Page by tompt
  • Lhasa Local Customs
    by tompt
    As Lhasa ia a main pilgrim destination you will see many people praying. Praying can be done in several ways. You can turn your prayerwheel, sending your prayers to heaven. Or recite a mantra like Om mani padme hum. Also you can kneel to laying down on the ground. The people you see in the picture are praying in front of the Jokhang.

    Leave a Comment

    Not Helpful 1 2 3 4 5 Very Helpful
    Festivals 2007-2008
  • Tip Rating:
  • sugarpuff
  • By sugarpuff on August 5, 2007
  • Lhasa Page by sugarpuff
  • Tibetan New Year - February 18th 2007 / February 7th 2008

    Butter Lamp Festival - March 4th 2007 / March 26th 2008

    Saka Dawa Festival - May 31st 2007 / June 18th 2008

    Shoton Festival - August 12th-18th 2007 / August 30th-September 5th 2008

    Bathing Festival - Middle ten days of September 2007 / Last ten days of September 2008

    Ghost-Exorcising Festival - February 5th 2008 / February 23rd 2009

    Leave a Comment

    Not Helpful 1 2 3 4 5 Very Helpful
    More Lhasa Tips
    Overview
     
    Hotels and Accommodations
    Tips: 46 - Photos: 49
    Things To Do
    Tips: 198 - Photos: 334
    Nightlife
    Tips: 10 - Photos: 12
    Transportation
    Tips: 37 - Photos: 39
    Restaurants
    Tips: 35 - Photos: 59
    Shopping
    Tips: 8 - Photos: 17
    Off the Beaten Path
    Tips: 50 - Photos: 81
    Tourist Traps
    Tips: 9 - Photos: 7
    Warnings or Dangers
    Tips: 30 - Photos: 19
    Local Customs
    Tips: 42 - Photos: 53
    Packing Lists
    Tips: 9 - Photos: 7
    Sports Travel
    » Add a tip now
    General Tips
    Tips: 71 - Photos: 83

    Best Lhasa Travel Deals

    Lodging Hotel
    Up to 50% off Hotels at Expedia. No Expedia change or cancel fees!

    Find a Local Hotel
    Let Switchboard Help Find a Local Hotel in the New York Area.

    Top Hotel Deals
    Find Amazing Hotel Discounts Lhasa Hotels

    Newark NJ Hotel
    Brand New Facility & Shuttle Bus 11 Minutes from the Newark Airport!

    Shanghai Centre APARTMENT
    Conveniently located in Shanghai. Providing luxury aprtotel services.

    Sponsored Links

    More Lhasa Travel Deals

    China Hotel+Free Transfer
    Book Discounted Hotels & Get Free Airport Transfers Throughout China.

    Hong Kong Hotels-Low Rate
    Lowest Online Rate Guarantee Book at Langham Place Hotel Site.

    Lhasa Hotel Deals
    Fees Cut on Every Hotel! Dare To Compare Total Price, Save on ORBITZ

    Sponsored Links

    Lhasa Hotels





    About VirtualTourist |  10 Great Things to Do On VirtualTourist |  Contact Us |  Press Center |  Help |  User Agreement |  Privacy Statement
    Virtual Tourist® ©1994-2009 VirtualTourist.com, Inc. All Rights Reserved.