Get in
[edit]Roads to the north are sealed, while the southern part to Shangrila is rubble and dirt, with construction work at both extremities of the road (2017). Despite the bumpy side, the road is however very scenic, passing a pass at around 4500m, and offering views on rocky peaks and deep gorges.
By bus
[edit]The Bus Station is at the southern end of town. The ticket-office is through the side-entrance of the building on your right hand side when facing uphill. Be sure to buy your advance-ticket on arrival, because buses can get crowded in summer. In low season it's ok to buy your ticket just before you leave, but the ticket office opens very shirt time before the bus leaves, especially in the morning. Buses arrive from Shangrila (6–9 hours, ¥85, departs daily at 08:00), Kangding (12–14 hours, ~¥160, departs daily at 06:00).
Departure times are as of November 2007 and both buses tend to leave earlier and fill up quickly! It is possible to buy tickets to Litang on the bus going to Kangding at06:00, around ¥70 (2017). It's a scenic 4-5 hour ride.
Get around
[edit]You can easily visit the town on foot.
See
[edit]- Bsampeling Monastery. Newly built, the structure nevertheless conveys the typical Tibetan flair, with monks lingering around the ground and ravens flying over the bell-fitted tiers of the main temple. Perching to the slope at the foot of the temple are the housings of the monks, little cubicles beautifully decorated. Inside the temple there are some beautiful murals depicting the Buddhist way. You are not allowed to take photographs of holy relics. Behind the temple there is a small cemetery with prayer-flags and white ribbons adorning every bush. To go there, follow the main road north out of the new city. After you passed a filling station, turn left to the trail leading uphill. You should reach there within 30 minutes. To return to the town, you can alternatively take a path just below the walls of the signal tower. Following the water-canal you have more nice views of the town and can descend to it whenever you feel like. ¥15, you can see the surroundings of the temple free of charge.
- In 2000 there were still the remains of a monastery in the centre of town - covering most of the town, with people perambulating with prayer wheels around the perimeter wall.
Do
[edit]- Hike to the villages north of Xiangcheng
- Hike to Bamu-Mountain.
- Teach English and play with kids in a family owned language school (even for just 1 day)
Stanley, a 30-year-old Tibetan guy, speaking very good English, has opened a private (but cheap) school in 2015 where kids goes during weekends and holidays to improve their English (seems that the teachers in public school are not very good). He is very nice and it's a great opportunity for him to meet English-speaking travelers in a not-touristy town where he and Angel, another young teacher lady from the school, are the only ones speaking English. As well, as great opportunity for you to meet an English teacher & Tibetan guy, learn about the culture, and interact with kids (between 6 and 10) in his small school. Stanley will certainly invite you for food and might even pay for your accommodation if you stay 1 or 2 days playing and teaching English to the kids. You can contact him by phone : 18123441020 or by email : [email protected]
- Join the locals for a night of karaoke!
- There is an internet coffee in a restaurant/hotel on top of the main street. It must be on the third floor. Looks like the place belongs to the local Police force so don't be surprised to see many of them playing games, drinking and smoking. They won't bother you.
Buy
[edit]Small shops downtown provide typical Tibetan clothing and jewellery.
Supermarkets on main-street sell food and toiletries, you can also buy bottles of beer and decent Chinese wine to make up your own nightlife.
Eat
[edit]Plenty of small restaurants are to be found on the main road. Look out for Muslim-specialties where the restaurant sign bears Arabic writing, green color and dried meat and yak carcasses are displayed in front of the shop.
Drink
[edit]There is not much nightlife in town. To have a beer, simply visit a restaurant.
Sleep
[edit]Budget
[edit]Bamu Tibetan Guesthouse is a bit harder to get into now, the gate to the bus station seems to be permanently locked. If you go out of the bus station and turn left at the first road, there is a sign over a driveway on the left in colourful Chinese. This driveway will take you to an apartment building and the guesthouse. The woman there wouldn't do cheaper than ¥35-40 a night for a dorm bed (October 2016).
You can get a dorm bed at a place on the same road as the bus station for ¥25. Lamu, the woman who owns it, will probably try to advertise it at the bus station as you arrive. If you turn left and continue up the street for about 100 m, past the large hotel on the right, there is a concrete stairway in the middle of the building on the left. This will take you to Lamu's place. She speaks very limited English but is exceptionally goodhearted and will help you find a place to eat as well as buy cheap (cheaper than quoted at the ticket office) bus tickets if you ask.
- Bamu Tibetan Guesthouse (just behind the bus station: do not leave the bus station through one of the gates but walk 100m straight uphill between the buildings passing by the ticket-office and some single-storey buildings. Go through a small gate in the compound's wall and enter through another one into the guesthouse's court.). The Bamu is in a terrific old cubicle-style building with lavishly decorated interior. There is access to the roof terrace providing lovely views of the town and the valley. The usual no-water squat-toilets are found in a small building at the back of the house. There is one shower for everybody, with warm water from 19:00 until it is used up, so queue early. In the evening after dark the door of Bamu looks closed, but it can be opened from outside - it isn't necessary to yell or knock. On the righthand side of the door, not on the door, is a tiny iron 'thing' that can be moved to the right. Very basic English is spoken or no English at all. Dormitory ¥20, doubles ¥50.
- Some more hotels are to be found in the new town on the main street. Just leave the bus-station and head straight on. Among those, Xiang Bal Seven Lakes Hotel charges ¥60-80 for a standard double with bathroom (hot water 24 hrs, quite clean).
- As of Nov 2008, the city experiences some electric cuts. Most of the guest houses don't have their own generator so expect "very" cold room and no hot water.
- Found a single room for ¥30 (shared bath-room & hot water) in a small hotel in the downhill dead-end street just on the opposite side of the main road when you go out of the bus station. There are actually two hotels in this street, this is the smallest one, the first on your left. In the other one, which is more decent & cleaner, can have a double for ¥60 if you bargain (June 2017)
Stay safe
[edit]People around Xiangcheng supposedly still own firearms left over from the guerrilla war against the Chinese invasion in the 1950s. In July 2007 a dispute about mushroom-collecting grounds between two villages in the district turned into a gunfight with more than 10 persons killed (story read on South China Morning Post).
Go next
[edit]Going south to Yunnan and Shangri La, if you are on your own (car, bike) try the S217, a rough piste through the mountains. Nearly no traffic but fantastic landscape. This road is sometimes closed few kilometers after Xiangchang at the end of the asphalt portion. If so you'll have to take the main road.
Public buses
[edit]Buses for Shangri La depart daily from 6am at the Bus Station. The ticket office is open in the morning before the bus leaves but in Summer it is probably better to buy your ticket the day before (after 2pm). Don't expect any help from the ticket ladies!