When in 1930 David Hummel came to the Tebbu people, he was met by rows of bronze pitchers of all sizes from small to large, displayed on shelves over the fireplace. Over the generations, they'd been collected and represented the prestige objects of the house. Their practical use was serving guests food or drink in. The bronze pitchers were Chinese in origin. Today, it's rare to see them.
At the end of the 1950s, the new communist regime in China ran a campaign in the region in order to suppress the local culture.
The Tebbu Tibetans live in the long valleys north and south of the Yangtze River's northernmost tributary, Bailong Jiang. In the north, the over 5,000 meter-high peaks of the Min Shan Mountains separate their wooded valleys from the almost treeless landscape of the Yellow River.
At the top of the Bailong Jiang valley, you are close to the Tibetan highlands, and Tebbu Tibetans live mainly from livestock – yaks, horses, sheep and goats.
Further down, you find a Chinese population and Tebbu Tibetans that are farmers. The Drakana valley's population live in a transitional zone and combine agriculture down in the valley with animal husbandry up in the mountains.