Kunming · Dali · Lijiang · Shangri-La — the official trip guide for our group of 26. Everything you need before, during, and between stops.
China Southern all the way. Good news: China and the Philippines share the same time zone (UTC+8) — zero jet lag. The layovers are the real test of patience.
Tap any day to expand. Chips show meals covered by the package (Breakfast / Lunch / Dinner), bus time, altitude, and where free time opens up.
Roughly 15 hours of coach travel across the week — the price of seeing four cities. The trick: treat bus days as recovery days, not lost days.
D1 arrival hop. Short and painless.
D4 · Broken up by Tiger Leaping Gorge — the best "rest stop" in China.
D5 · Longest scenic haul. Downhill all the way — literally.
D6 afternoon · Expressway run into the Spring City.
D7 · Short hop to Changshui. 14:30 lobby, 16:00 headcount.
Outbound / return. Lounge, headcount, board.
Highest sleeping altitude is Shangri-La (D4, ~3,200 m) — that night matters more than the 2-hour summit visit. After D4 it's downhill and easier every day.
Airports, hotels, and every point of interest on one map. Tap a card in the carousel to fly to it — or tap a pin to find its card. The dashed line is our city-to-city route.
Four hotels, four check-ins, three check-outs mid-trip. Translation: pack like a pro. Twin-sharing throughout; see the rooming list.
Tail end of the rainy season: warm days, chilly nights, and a real chance of brief showers that clear into sun. Pack for four climates in one bag — the 3-layer system below solves it.
Mild days, cold-ish nights. Showers likely, usually brief. D1–D3 home base.
Wind chill at 4,506–4,680 m feels near freezing even in September. Down jacket territory.
Coldest city of the trip. Fleece by day, down at night. Plateau sun is deceptive.
Pleasant and breezy by Erhai Lake. Light jacket for the evening.
The "Spring City" earns its name. Easiest weather of the week.
Moisture-wicking tees. Seniors: silk or Heattech-style thermal undershirts — thin, warm, no bulk.
Zip-up fleece or sweater. Lives in your daypack; doubles as a pillow on the 5-hour bus days.
One packable down puffer (Snow Mountain + Shangri-La nights) and a light windbreaker/rain shell for showers.
Anti-slip sneakers ONLY — cobblestones are slick. Compact umbrella, sunglasses, SPF50+ (plateau UV is fierce), lip balm, cap.
The layer logic per day, drawn out — built around what's actually in a Filipino closet plus the few pieces from Uniqlo/Decathlon and the Lijiang shops. Swap colors freely; keep the layers. Seniors: add the thermal base under everything from D3 to D5.
Cotton tee + light zip hoodie, jogger pants, sneakers — 10 hours of transit demands comfort.
Long-sleeve top + light cardigan, stretchy pants, sneakers. NAIA + plane aircon is the coldest part of the day.
White tee under a mustard chore jacket or flannel, jeans, anti-slip sneakers.
The flowy mustard or red dress moment (leggings under if chilly) + cream cardigan. Anti-slip soles — Old Town stones are polished smooth.
Heattech base + fleece + down puffer, thick pants (or leggings under jeans), beanie, gloves, thick socks.
Same full stack — pants only today, no skirts on the cableway. Beanie + gloves are not optional at 4,506 m.
Heattech + collared shirt + fleece, long pants. Puffer comes out again after sunset.
Shoulders and knees covered for Songzanlin — long pants + a big wrap scarf (warmth + respect + photo prop in one).
Tee + fleece (your bus pillow), comfiest joggers, easy shoes.
Soft knit top + leggings or travel pants, scarf that doubles as a bus blanket.
White linen-type shirt, chinos, sunnies — the S-bay backdrop does the rest.
The flowy white or red dress + denim jacket. Wind + lake + Cangshan mountains = the trip's best candid shots.
Tee + jeans, sneakers, light jacket for the plane. Manila mode.
Blouse + jeans + cardigan for the airport aircon. Comfy wins — you land at 2:25 AM.
These are climate averages — real forecasts appear ~10 days out. From Sep 3, check live: Lijiang · Shangri-La · Dali · Kunming
Read this once before the trip and once on the plane. The altitude card below is the one part of this guide worth memorizing.
Lijiang: Lijiang People's Hospital · Shangri-La: Diqing Prefecture People's Hospital · Dali: Dali Prefecture People's Hospital · Kunming: First People's Hospital of Yunnan.
Fastest route in practice: tell the tour guide + hotel front desk — they call ahead and arrange transport. Ambulance: 120.
1) Stay put at the last landmark for 10 minutes — don't wander. 2) Message the group chat. 3) Call the coordinator. 4) Last resort: show any taxi your hotel card photo. Ritual: photograph the hotel card (Chinese side) at every check-in, and screenshot your roommate's number.
Outside hotels and malls, squat toilets are the norm and paper is rarely provided. Carry tissue + wet wipes + hand sanitizer everywhere. Some scenic-area toilets charge ¥1 — keep coins/QR ready. Hotels are all Western-style, no worries there.
Bring your own: personal meds (in hand-carry!), paracetamol, motion-sickness tablets for D4–D5 mountain roads, band-aids, loperamide. Seniors: bring your BP monitor if you use one at home, and a copy of your prescriptions.
The six frames worth planning for — with the time of day that makes each one work. Tap "more shots" on any card to browse real examples.

Climb Lion Hill in Lijiang Old Town for grey-tiled rooftops rolling toward Jade Dragon Snow Mountain. The city's definitive frame.
More shots →
Red lanterns over the canals right after sunset (~19:30). Shoot from a bridge with the water reflecting the lights — phone night mode handles it fine.
More shots →Everyone queues for the elevation-marker stone — get your group shot there, then walk 20 m past it for the same glacier backdrop with zero strangers.
More shots →Turquoise lakes + white travertine falls. Shoot slightly downward from the boardwalk to kill the crowd, and put a red/mustard outfit against that water.
More shots →
The "Little Potala Palace" mirrored in Lamuyangcuo Lake — best from the lakeside boardwalk viewpoint near Conggulong Village. Golden roofs light up in afternoon sun.
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The lakeside corridor's famous curve — wind-rippled water, Cangshan range behind. Wide shot from the boardwalk; a flowy outfit + the lake breeze does the rest.
More shots →Sample photos hot-linked from Wikimedia Commons (CC-licensed by their photographers). If an image doesn't load on hotel Wi-Fi, the "more shots" links still work.
Yunnan's big three, plus what to eat while you're there. Budget guide: ¥2,000 (~₱16,000) comfortably covers snacks, coffee, extra oxygen cans, 2–3 mid-range pasalubong, and your D7 own-account meals.
Flaky pastries filled with edible rose petals — Yunnan's signature. Everyone gets a free box at Tongrentang on D7. Buy extras there too; airport prices are 2× and staler.
Best: Kunming D7Yunnan's famous fermented tea, pressed into cakes/bricks. Ages like wine, travels like a hockey puck. "Ripe" (shou) is the smooth crowd-pleaser; buy from a proper tea shop, not a street stall.
Lijiang · Dali · KunmingLijiang is famous for handmade silver. Look for the S925 stamp, expect to pay by weight, and haggle politely in Old Town shops (start ~60–70% of quoted).
Lijiang Old Town D2Kunming's legendary rice-noodle ritual — boiling broth arrives, you build the bowl yourself. Eat it in its home city on the D6 free evening.
Kunming D6The Shangri-La specialty — rich, warming, exactly what 3,200 m weather calls for. Usually part of the D4 group dinner; go back for seconds.
Shangri-La D4Crispy Bai-style flatbread, sweet (rose sugar) or savory (scallion + pork). Best eaten hot off the griddle in Xizhou itself, ~¥10–15.
Xizhou D6Three windows are genuinely yours this trip. Here's how to spend them well — grouped by energy level, because bus days take their toll.
China runs ~99% cashless, and half the internet you're used to is blocked on local Wi-Fi. Ten minutes of setup before leaving Manila saves the whole week.
Do this at home: install Alipay, link your PH Visa/Mastercard (Tour Pass / international card flow), verify with your passport. Test a ¥1 transaction if possible. Street vendors, taxis, temples — everything scans QR.
Bring a small amount of RMB cash (~¥300–500) for the rare cash-only stall and emergencies. ¥1 ≈ ₱8
eSIM (Airalo/Holafly) highly recommended — roaming data tunnels past the firewall, so Facebook, Google, WhatsApp, and Viber work with no VPN. Hotel Wi-Fi needs a VPN (LetsVPN/Astrill) — install before departure; you can't download it inside China.
Guide + driver tips are RMB 20 per person per day — ¥140 (~₱1,120) for the week. The coordinators will collect once; have it ready in cash.
Recommended extras budget: ¥2,000 (~₱16,000) per person — snacks, coffee, oxygen cans, pasalubong, D7 meals.
China: 220 V, Type A/C/I sockets. Most PH plugs fit Type A directly. Bring one universal adapter per room pair.
China requires a 3C/CCC mark printed on the power bank itself for all domestic flights — and we fly three of them. The catch: PH-bought power banks usually carry CE/UL marks, which China does NOT accept — no 3C oval logo = confiscated at security, even small ones, even famous brands.
Check tonight, not at the airport: flip your power bank over and look for the oval logo with three C's, printed or engraved on the body (box/sticker doesn't count), plus a legible capacity label showing Wh. Limits: ≤100Wh (~20,000mAh) OK, max 2 per person; 100–160Wh needs airline pre-approval; checked luggage: never.
One more trap: security also scans model numbers against China's recall list — several popular ROMOSS models are banned even with a 3C mark.
No 3C mark? Leave it at home. Buy a certified one in China instead — Xiaomi/Huawei stores and even airport convenience shops sell them cheap, and it doubles as pasalubong-grade tech. In-flight use of power banks is prohibited on Chinese carriers — charge at the hotel.
The package excludes personal travel insurance. Buy a single-trip policy before departure covering medical + trip disruption, and check it covers high-altitude sightseeing up to ~4,700 m (standard policies generally do — it's trekking/mountaineering that's excluded, which we're not doing). Keep the policy number in your phone.
Group visa is escorted by TangGo — but your passport is your responsibility at every checkpoint. Complete the China arrival/health declaration if requested (paper on the plane or the customs WeChat mini-program). Coming home: PH customs bars fresh fruit and meat products — tea, flower cakes, and packaged snacks are all fine.
English is rare outside hotels. These + your phone's translate camera cover 95% of situations. Tone-deaf pronunciation is fine — context saves you.
Nǐ hǎo 你好 — Hello
Xièxie 谢谢 — Thank you
Duōshǎo qián? 多少钱 — How much?
Tài guì le! 太贵了 — Too expensive!
Cèsuǒ zài nǎlǐ? 厕所在哪里 — Where's the toilet?
Zhège 这个 — This one (point!)
Bú yào là 不要辣 — Not spicy
Hǎochī! 好吃 — Delicious!
Shuǐ 水 — Water
Tīng bù dǒng 听不懂 — I don't understand
Wǒ duì … guòmǐn 我对…过敏 — I'm allergic to …
Jiùmìng! 救命 — Help! (emergencies only)
Same pairs at every hotel — memorize your roommate, they're your buddy-system partner for headcounts too.
✈ Kaye Ann and Rolando depart early on Sep 17 (D5). For the Dali and Kunming nights (D5–D6), rooms re-pair: Kim & Daryl share one room and Hermelyn & Twinkle the other. All other rooms unchanged.