Photo Essay: Yee Peng Floating Lantern Festival, Chiang Mai image

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The Chiang Mai regulars rave about the Yee Peng (or Yi Peng) floating lantern festival that takes place each year, and after attending the event last weekend we are now amongst the converts. It was one of the most incredible, beautiful sights we have ever seen.

Yee Peng is an ancient, traditional Lanna festival that takes place in northern Thailand to pay respect to Buddha. Chiang Mai has the biggest celebration.

After arriving hours early to take our place in the field, and waiting eagerly in the hot sun, the ceremony began with Buddhist chanting and meditation led by monks in saffron robes. It was peaceful and beautiful, but I’ll admit that by the end of the hour-long religious ceremony we were restless, having already waited for four hours. Finally we were instructed to light our candles mounted on stands throughout the field. The field was illuminated with the soft glow of thousands of flickering candles.

Waiting to release lanterns at Yee Peng
Candle at Yee Peng

Then it was time to light our paper lanterns or Khom Loy. At 90 cm in diameter they weren’t the easiest things to handle between the two of us (especially as I was taking photos with one hand), and our awkwardness alerted the event staff who came to help us and make sure we didn’t set the whole thing on fire.

Simon lighting lantern at Yee Peng

Once the lanterns are lit you hold them for a few minutes and wait while they fill with hot air and inflate.

Inflated lanterns at Yee Peng

The field fills with huge inflated lanterns, everyone eagerly awaiting the signal to release them.

Inflated lanterns waiting for release at Yee Peng

Then, it’s time. Thousand of lanterns are released at the same moment into the night sky.

Release of lanterns at Yee Peng

Above us, all around us, we are surrounded by glowing, floating lanterns. That one moment is one of the most magical and surreal we have ever experienced.

Yee Peng lantern release

The sky fills with lanterns. As a reader on our Facebook page commented, like luminescent jelly fish in the deep ocean.

Yee Peng floating lanterns, Chiang Mai

They float upwards surprisingly quickly.

Yee Peng festival

The initial release is the most spectacular, but we didn’t want it to end, so were glad that there are a few more lantern releases.

We lit our second lantern.

Us releasing our lantern at Yee Peng

And watched it join the others in the sky.

Second lantern release at Yee Peng

Just when we thought the event couldn’t get any more spectacular, fireworks exploded amongst the lanterns.

Fireworks at Yee Peng, Chiang Mai
Fireworks at Yee Peng

As the lanterns drifted further away into the black sky they looked like orange stars.

Yee Peng lanterns drifting away

Once the final lanterns are released the jubilant mood becomes more serene. Candles flicker and gently illuminate the field while lanterns gleam overhead. A praying family reminds us that this is a religious event, a time to pay respect to Buddha.

Praying family at Yee Peng

How to Attend Yee Peng

If you would like to attend Yee Peng in future years here are some practical details.

The biggest Yee Peng (also written as Yi Peng) festival takes place in Chiang Mai every year around the end of October or November. The exact date depends on the moon cycles which the Lanna calendar is based upon. The floating lantern festival happens at around the same time as the nationwide Loy Krathong Festival which will take place around 10th November in 2011.

Yee Peng happens near the Mae Jo University about 20 km north of Chiang Mai. We drove there on a moped (which you can hire for 150 Baht/$5 a day) but you need to be fairly confident in driving on the highway and in the traffic after the event.

Alternatively you can take a songthaew (covered pick up truck that functions as a shared taxi) from the Warorot Market in Chiang Mai. It is best to arrange for a driver to pick you up afterwards  as it isn’t always possible to find a shared songthaew back.

Entrance to the festival is free. There are plenty of food stalls, and you are only allowed to use lanterns purchased inside the event (100B/$3).

The ceremony starts at 6pm. We arrived around 3pm but this was too early – 4.30pm or 5pm would have been fine.

65 Comments

  1. Your pictures of the event look great! My boyfriend and I are traveling to CM this October/November on our RTW trip and will be there for the lantern festival. We cannot wait, it has been on our bucket list for quite some time. I see you went to the free local event instead of the $100 tourist event. We would like to do the same while we are there – there is minimal information on the local event online while there is an abundance of information on the tourist event. Was it hard to find out information about the local event once you were in CM? Did you find it hard to find lodging because of how many people are in town for it? Any advice you have would definitely be helpful! Thanks!

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    • We’d definitely recommend the free event although be prepared for large crowds. The exact date isn’t released until nearer the time. Keep googling it and the date does get published online eventually. The free event could be a week or two apart from the paid event.

      It will be busy in town so it might be a good idea to book in advance but there are tons of guesthouses so it shouldn’t be a major problem.

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  2. Hi there, I am trying to plan a trip for this festival this year and was wondering if you could help me with recommendations on where to stay (somewhere close to the festival). Thanks so much! It looks amazing

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    • You can just stay anywhere in Chiang Mai old town and then get a taxi or scooter out to the festival. I don’t know if there’s much accommodation right near by.

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    • Your photos are fantastic, can you share what focal length lense i should bring along for the lantern shooting? Thanks

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  3. hey, love your pics..;)
    i’m planning to attend the festival with my family this year, but the tickets for the international festival are already sold out.. so i think we’re gonna attend the festival with locals.. thanks for your article, it helps me a lot to get the information..x)
    anw, is there any limited capacity for the free festival? or is it freely opened for public? when did you get the info of the exact date in 2011? because it’s not announced yet for 2013.. and how much did you pay for the songthaew driver? thanks in advance..^^,

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