Tibetan Mountain Temple Pacifica

3.69 из 5
(68 отзывов)

Tibetan Mountain Temple Pacifica

Tibetan Mountain Temple Pacifica

Rated 3.69 out of 5 based on 68 customer ratings
(68 customer reviews)

Tibetan Mountain Temple Pacifica for women and men of Pacifica

SKU:  70d1a0590259 Perfume Category:  . Fragrance Brand: Notes:  , , , , , .
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Description

Tibetan Mountain Temple by Pacifica is a Woody fragrance for women and men. Tibetan Mountain Temple was launched in 2007. The fragrance features patchouli, orange, vetiver, ginger, violet and incense.

68 reviews for Tibetan Mountain Temple Pacifica

  1. :

    3 out of 5

    Why oh why is this one discontinued????? If I am not mistaken I believe it was Pacifica’s very first fragrance.

  2. :

    3 out of 5

    Tibetan Mountain Temple is by far the best Pacifica fragrance, so of course they discontinued it. That’s how the perfume industry works. 🙁
    Love this. Love the ginger and orange combination. Smells fresh and herbal, like the health food aisle at a grocery store. If this were a sound, it would be sitar music. If it were a Beatle, it would be George Harrison.
    (Sorry, this does NOT at all smell like church incense, not even vaguely)
    Pacifica fragrances tend to remind me of places/Beatles:
    Tibetan Mountain Temple = health food store or antiques store where they sell that orange oil furniture polish. Also George Harrison.
    Himalaya Patchouli Berry = head shop. Also John Lennon.
    Persian Rose = grandmother’s closet full of hatboxes. Also Paul McCartney.
    No Ringo yet…

  3. :

    3 out of 5

    Ok, this is going to sound weird, but this scent reminds me of antiques for some reason. My parents were antiques dealers when I was a kid and I used to go around with them buying and selling, so I “played” with a lot of old objects and this feels like some old incense burner that a hippy bought and stored potpurri in for years, and I love it – old wood, incense, orange peels, etc. There’s a sourness in antique wood that makes me swoon when I smell it, and I think the citrus, patchouli, vetiver, and incense activate that deep-rooted sense memory for me when I wear this. It’s insanely nostalgic and definitively esoteric vis a vis my love for it. I get why some people dislike it, it’s not a sophisticated product with the highest potency or quality of ingredients, but it’s thoroughly enjoyable, at least for me, and it works with my chemistry.

  4. :

    4 out of 5

    Oh how I love this fragrance. It’s spicy, warm and different from many of the choices out there right now. The ginger, incense and patchouli give this a very bohemian vibe. I hope they will keep this offering for quite awhile.

  5. :

    5 out of 5

    I was very surprised that the notes do not include clove or cinnamon – that’s much of what my nose tells me: it smells pleasantly like a nice comforting chai tea at first, with a bit of ginger to liven it up (and when I compare it to tea, I don’t mean tea notes in perfume – I mean an actual cup of tea). The pachouli and incense develop after awhile, which I really appreciate: they don’t jump out and hit you in the face when first applying. It has good lasting power, but stays very close to the skin.
    definitely a fall/winter scent for me, but one of my favorites.

  6. :

    4 out of 5

    Opens with a bright, warm orange and ginger, then evolves to that chai tea note people are talking about. I detect licorice root although it’s not listed in the notes. Dries down to a churchy incense, then a faint grassy vetiver remains. Two spritzes to my chest and abdomen lasted all day on me. Sits close to the skin. I appreciate Pacifica fragrances because they’re vegan, cruelty-free, affordable, and subtle. I feel less like I am wearing something, more like I just smell good. They are complex enough to be interesting, simple enough to layer. I can’t wait to try more!

  7. :

    3 out of 5

    Sweet, milky chai tea. This is super cozy…a cold day indoors, complete with a good book and your favorite fleece blanket.

  8. :

    5 out of 5

    Oh this is so interesting! It smells like the safflower oil that you can get at a Chinese pharmacy to treat minor injuries with a hint of pumpkin spice candle. I even got my bottle of safflower oil out to compare, but Tibetan Mountain Temple is nowhere as pungent as the medicinal oil itself. I say if you are interested in smelling the Far East but can’t stand most “oriental” scents because of the heavy dose of vanilla or amber, this may be something you can try. The sweetness really makes this scent easy to get into, while the cool incense keeps it interesting.

  9. :

    3 out of 5

    Its a cross between a yoga studio and your kitchen the day before thanksgiving-think ginger and clove. spicy which makes it atypical for the Pacifica line. A nice change if you enjoy a spice and can be worn in the evening as well.

  10. :

    3 out of 5

    This comes across to me as much lighter and friendlier than a lot of these reviews suggest. Whenever I smell it, it reminds me of something you’d wear to a live screening of Punk’d back in the day (in other words, amusingly pretentious, veering toward hipster, and lucky if she doesn’t hit your car on the way out of the show.)
    It’s possible I’m over thinking this one, but I love its ‘can barely pin it down’ complexity.

  11. :

    3 out of 5

    I was recently in Tibetan mountain temples; this does not evoke the memory. It misses having enough smoke an incense. The chai description seems apt, with orange, ginger, and clove.
    Updating 3 hours later that incense does emerge on the dry down. The orange and clove fade and cut lumber and fine incense notes predominate. Redeems the name and the scent a bit.

  12. :

    3 out of 5

    I don’t think this scent will be for everyone. For one, it’s quite sweet. For another, while I do get the incense, this smells more like gingerbread then anything else. Or perhaps like a spicy holiday candle. Not really what I would personally think a Tibetan temple to smell like. I actually consider this to be a spicy gourmand more then anything. This is a wonderful scent for the holidays, I adore it.

  13. :

    3 out of 5

    disgustingly, revoltingly bubblegum sweet; if you can call this an incense

  14. :

    3 out of 5

    Slightly burnt gingerbread, with a cup of lapsang souchong tea nearby. Stays very close, but lasts for hours and hours. I enjoyed wearing this lovely and distinctive scent once, but it is not something that I would want to smell like on a regular basis.
    Edit: I kept wearing this each time I went to Whole Foods, so I finally bought one. It doesn’t count as a perfume purchase if you buy it with grocery money, right?

  15. :

    4 out of 5

    Pacifica claim vetiver and Indonesian patchouli are the base of this Tibetan mountain temple. It’s a headfake. What we have got here is black tea, cinnamon bark, ground clove, ginger, and black peppercorn. In other words, a rather nice Masala chai.

  16. :

    3 out of 5

    Blind purchase and utter disappointment. It is a linear “shaving cream” scent on my skin. No smoke. No vetiver. No patchouli. No depth. Just ginger and violet and together they smell like old fashioned shaving cream.

  17. :

    4 out of 5

    I am reviewing the perfume spray.
    I get why people say it smells like chai but I am not as convinced, at least with the spray. I think is equal parts clove and citrus and some ginger at first then you get subtle smokiness throughout as it dries down. I don’t get why cloves is not listed as an ingredient here or on the Pacifica website – there is such a strong whiff upon spraying it!
    When I first bought this scent I smelled something familiar that I could not put my finger on…then I remembered! A few years ago, my Chinese mom visited the Asian store to pick up some special dried orange peel (a sort of medicinal snack that helps sore throats). This perfume smells EXACTLY like the peel, which come to think of it, had a spicy clove scent as well.
    It also smells like a yoga studio I visit. The natural cleaner they use on the floors smells exactly like this – and that is a compliment because the aroma adds to the atmosphere. I feel relaxed and contemplative.
    I do like the scent but now my conflict is that I am used to smelling it around me, not on me. Even if you don’t have my issue, I think some people will find this challenging to wear – to me this is not a common every day sort of scent.

  18. :

    3 out of 5

    Lots of spices like the sort you would put in pie. Chai tea is also a good description. It doesn’t have a lot of incense but the spices are very strong. Delicious and warm for colder months… Very gourmand sweet spices.

  19. :

    5 out of 5

    Camping fires and Cola.
    That’s what I get from this, sounds like a weird mix but for some reason it works.
    A week out bush, smelling of eucalyptus fire smoke and sipping on a cola.
    Dries down to a lovely sweet, creamy, slightly incense fragrance which lasts about 6 hours and wears close to the skin. Delightful couldn’t stop smelling the trail on my arm.
    I love it!!

  20. :

    4 out of 5

    LUSH has a scent called “Breath of God”. This here, TMT by Pacifica, is more deserving of that title!
    The best way to describe this is: your sitting at a sunny , brisk, slightly chilly, ski resort in the mountains. Your on the outdoor patio (made of slate and natural rocks) ……..and your eating Greek or Indian food!
    Something in this frag smells like ethnic food of some sort! This is a cool (literally AND figuratively) slightly sweet NON-FLORAL smell. If it had a color it would be pale gray-blue. I have never been let down by a Pacifica frag. I cannot believe some people on here have given this a bad OR over-simplified reviews. Thinking of making this my signature scent! Blind Buy OK! or just go to Whole Foods where these are always on display and smell for yourself! For Twenty Two dollars this smells more like an unaffordable “niche” cologne!

  21. :

    3 out of 5

    Tried to determine what was so strong in here…thought it was lavender. Intense incense. Stays with you a long time!!!

  22. :

    4 out of 5

    I really wanted to like this perfume after reading reviews, but it’s not for me. I like the spicyness, but the ginger note is very prominent and overpowering and I don’t like ginger. If you do, you’ll probably enjoy this though. It lasts longer than some of the other Pacifica perfumes I’ve tried.

  23. :

    3 out of 5

    This smells exactly like ginger cookies to me, nothing really incense or temple like, though after wearing it for a while the strong ginger cookie smell faded a bit and perhaps there was a little bit of incense in the mix, but maybe that’s a bit of a stretch. Anyway, if you don’t mind smelling like cookies, you might like this, I tried it on a cold winter’s day and it did perk me up a bit and made me feel cozier, I felt like it was Christmas and couldn’t stop smelling my arm when I walked down the street. I then went and bought some ginger cookies because it was making my mouth water.

  24. :

    4 out of 5

    I am an incense addict and thus I am drawn to perfume with notes of it. Sadly, in most perfume, an ‘incense’ note means a talcum accord, a baby powder-esque smell. Not here. I know Shalimar is a smoky concoction done very well, but for those looking for a less expensive Bohemian sort of perfume, you have found it in Pacifica. It smells like a heady spice-infused incense shop, or as its nonironically dubbed- a traditional Buddhist temple.

  25. :

    4 out of 5

    I was wearing this when my 22 y/o daughter said I smelled of a bookstore with candles and incense burning and people drinking teas. Interesting, maybe Tibetan Mountain Temples have libraries.
    I really like this little perfume. I smell the ginger and orange and light patchouli. It last a long time on me and the dry down is pure Yum.
    The Pacifica bottles are cute and my group of three hold their own next to other bigger bottles of perfume. I will repurchase this one

  26. :

    3 out of 5

    Very very very strong … smells like mass at a Polish Catholic church

  27. :

    4 out of 5

    I adore this fragrance. I get so many compliments on Tibetan Mountain Temple. It reminds me of my ‘hippie’ days at Appalachian State University. Amazing sillage and longevity. I must admit, I love super spicy, incensy fragrances…this one takes care of both amply. I have already bought many bottles just in case it is discontinued…and I will continue to stock up.

  28. :

    5 out of 5

    I have this perfume in a solid form. It smells like spices, cinnamon, pumpkin, cookies, food… Not the smell I’d wanna wear on my body.

  29. :

    3 out of 5

    notes of tea and cookies.
    warm and spicy and very pleasant.
    I could eat this stuff.
    (not really, but you know…)

  30. :

    3 out of 5

    Here’s how this breaks down on me: the first minute or 2, I get smoky, incense and spices with some sweetness from the cloves. For the next 15, straight up gingerbread, with 10 minutes or so of sweet vanilla at the end, if I practically stuff my wrist into my nostril.
    That being said, those 27 minutes are glorious! It smells different than I thought, sweeter. I’m surprised by how much I love it. And love it, I do!
    I do have the solid, and I’m hoping that’s the excuse for the instant disappearing act. I plan to buy the spray in hopes of prolonging the experience.
    Update: I recently went for the spray version as well. I don’t love it nearly as much as the solid. it seems a bit more incense-heavey, less sweet. I wasn’t looking for gingerbread sweetness originally, but that turned out to be my favorite part, and the spray lacks that. Something to note, if you are looking into this scent.

  31. :

    4 out of 5

    When I first took a sniff of this in the tin (I have the solid version), I instantly thought Chai tea as well. However once worn the scent does change a bit. It IS spicy and smoky and very relaxing, makes me think of a romantic camping trip, cuddling by the campfire. There is definitely a lot of spice going on, ginger, allspice, and cloves with a hint of orange peel. As the fragrance wears on the spices become less obvious and the vetiver, patchouli, and musk become more prominent, but not in an obnoxious way. This fragrance seems to have more staying power than other Pacifica types I have tried so far.

  32. :

    4 out of 5

    Oh my, this one is heavenly. It’s not heavenly in the spritual sence the name implies, but just… delicious. It started, for me, with those crisp little ginger snap cookies that can be had for almost nothing from the dollar store… not much to them, but they are so… crisp, and perfect. So, ginger snaps, and then almost immediately, Djarum clove cigarettes. The ones I smoked in high school, because they crackled and the paper was black and they smelled good. The next phase is the one that varies a ton, for me. On its own, the clove cigarette- ginger snap thing mellows and sticks around with a bit of chai, for about 2 hours, until the show is over completely. Layered with Nemat’s vanilla musk, it becomes a bakery full of all things spicy such as carrot cake, pumpkin roll with yummy cream cheese goo (I swear, a bit of vanilla causes both pumpkin and cream cheese goo to be present, vivid as day)my huband mentioned date bread, and so on. With egyptian musk, the whole thing is soaped up and the tea element shines, like sitting wrapped in a towel apres shower with a steaming cup of chai. To think, this magic tiny tin set me back a whole $11 is just unreal. This is definitely love.

  33. :

    3 out of 5

    This doesn’t smell like tea to me, as some others have said (I think L’Occitane’s white tea scent is great, for example). What’s interesting is how there seem to be two major “layers” to it. It’s almost like there is a gourmand element behind a kind of screen or “hard” incense. I’ve never smelled a scent with this kind of construction before. My guess is that a lot of people focus on one or the other element/layer. In any case, it smells reasonably natural and has good longevity and projection. The patchouli is mild and this isn’t super sweet, though the gourmand element is obvious to me, unlike the patchouli. Vintage Messe de Minuit (second formulation) is somewhat similar, but the elements in that one are much more blended together, though the note separation is good, and it has a richer feel to it overall. I’m no expert on Tibet, and the incense here might be similar to what is common there, but this isn’t a smoky or animalic incense, so I doubt it, though I’d be curious to know!

  34. :

    4 out of 5

    This I LOVE. Sorry, I just love it. I go through bottles of it, but mainly just to wear at home by myself. It does smell an awful lot like chai tea, but it does also have a slight cedar/vetiver scent that is pure — not fake smelling, and is balanced with a tiny bit of citrus. These compliment the “chai” spice, and make it *sigh* so much fun to wear. It is very sweet. I think the only real issue with this perfume is the name. The manufacturer must have been reaching for something earthy and exotic to sell consumers on the fact that this is spicy. However, this will appeal to those who like sweet scents and a little bit of earthy woods, with some spice up front.
    The smell is romantic, and instantly transports you to a late summer, early fall night. It’s sweetness balanced with the woodsy gives it a cozy feel, while the spice gives it an assertive sass appeal. Love.
    I love that Pacifica is a more natural-based type scents. These are also more blendable with other scents, if there is something more you want to express about yourself by using two or three scents, perfumes from natural essences are the way to build your own personalized mark.

  35. :

    5 out of 5

    I honestly have no idea what a Tibetan mountain temple smells like but if it’s anything like a snickerdoodle cookie this perfume is spot on.

  36. :

    4 out of 5

    I’ve never been in a Tibetan temple so I can’t say if this perfume smells like one or not, however it is very exotic. To me this smells exactly like orange peels, right after they’ve been peeled from an orange. Add some strong, fresh ginger and bits of cloves and this is what you get. It’s not something you would want to eat that’s for sure, but rather it reminds me of some incense sticks I used to have. This is a great fragrance for a winter day, cozy and warm yet very fresh and clean like a walk in the woods.

  37. :

    4 out of 5

    I agree with everyone else saying that this smells nothing like a Tibetan temple. No rich incense, no meditation inspiring woods. It’s a benign chai-like perfume that makes Starbucks Chai Latte smell like a fiery, pungent brew.

  38. :

    3 out of 5

    CHAI TEA ALL THE WAY!
    Tibetan Mountain Temple is a nice scent. I have a solid of it.
    I dont know how better to describe it than a really good Chai scent with a bit of yummy yet creamy orange.
    This is a really great company. Natural brand and a really good price.

  39. :

    3 out of 5

    I think they must drink a lot of apple cider at this Tibetan temple, as it mostly smells like cloves and cinnamon to me, even though these notes are not listed. Like others, I don’t get any orange. There is a strong medicinal camphor-like opening note that fortunately goes away soon. Less fortunately, this doesn’t seem to have any staying power on me, so while I do like it, I won’t be seeking it out.

  40. :

    3 out of 5

    Tibetan Mountain Temple doesn’t fit its name – I was expecting something resinous, with strong incense, but instead, this is tamely sweet chai with a dose of cloves. Once you get past the name, it’s quite pleasant – you could probably get away with wearing it to work.
    On the other hand, if you’re looking for a chai-spice perfume of depth and quality (and provided you like the smell of cardamom), I think Olympic Orchids Cafe V is much more interesting…or Estee Lauder’s Cinnabar.

  41. :

    4 out of 5

    This is identical to a chai tea latte on me. It’s nice and all, but not what I expected from something named “Tibetan Mountain Temple”, and not really what I wanted. I’m not into foody scents personally, and I don’t get any of the orange to balance out the downtown vegan coffee shop smell.

  42. :

    4 out of 5

    Pacifica has this all wrong. Honestly I have been inside a Tibetan temple and this smell nothing like it. Try thick, dense, juniper/piney campfire incense, stale cooked butter, and dusty old woodwork?
    This is nothing more than the chai bar at my local Whole Foods. Oranges? Violets? Not Tibet at all!
    New Age marketing has been forgotten with the 20th Century. Pacifica needs to reinvent itself with more relevant offerings.

  43. :

    5 out of 5

    This review is for the solid perfume:
    This scent is, in two words, a chai creamsicle! There’s a nice creamy orange note to start, and after a while this sits back and lets the chai spices come through. A little milky sweetness rounds out the gingery spice–smells like a mix of nutmeg, clove, and cardamom, with maybe a faint touch of cinnamon in there too.
    Gradually things begin to shift toward vetiver, and a nice whiff of smoke joins the incense vibe. On me this is a skin scent, and I’m not sure I’d want it much louder (it’s sweet enough that just a whisper is perfect for me). A really mellow and comforting scent!

  44. :

    4 out of 5

    I think that this smells like a mountain temple in the summer. There are flowers blooming somewhere, their smell carried on a warm breeze. The incense is coming from inside the temple and you are touring the orchard. The orange smell is that of the tree fruit and some fallen fruit, not juicy. The warmth from the vetiver is an embrace, a touch, the holding of hands with the person next to you. The total smell is comforting, exotic (not in the floral or fruity sense), and olden-days spiritual.
    Great for every room, amazing on some people’s skin. On a few people it smells like Christmas or almost stale and needs either an addition of something floral or something aromatic/aquatic. It is a scent that I love and return to over and over. I have to layer it on myself, often with a men’s aquatic scent or jasmine/lavender or iris. This makes it more feminine on me.

  45. :

    3 out of 5

    the solid version of this perfume is long lasting and projects the scent, which surprised me for a solid perfume. It’s one of my most complimented scents.
    Note: i cannot compare this to the spray version for i’ve only tried the solid

  46. :

    5 out of 5

    I love this for a day where I want to feel earthy and… cozy. It reminds me of chai tea although not in a literal way. It’s warm and earthy spices are inviting and homey without feeling like you smell like grandma’s kitchen at Thanksgiving. To me, it’s definitely a fall and winter scent, appropriate for day or night, with an appropriate (read: medium level) of sillage and is plenty long lasting. I can usually pick up the lingering remnants of smell after a full day. It definitely has it’s place in my perfume wardrobe.

  47. :

    4 out of 5

    this smells amazing on its own or when sprayed on top of les fleurs de france: lavande.

  48. :

    3 out of 5

    Tibetan Mountain Temple is the perfect combination of intoxicating and relaxing. It’s sensual and alluring, but not overtly sexy. Wearing it makes me feel as though I’ve spent a long, languorous day drinking exotic tea and burning incense.
    Heavy on the clove and ginger, not floral in the least (thank goodness) and lingers to envelop my skin with warm spiciness. Definitely a favorite.

  49. :

    5 out of 5

    If I could just switch the patchouli with tobacco, I’d be set. Wonderful orange notes, great woody floor boards complimented with violet breeze that keeps it cool, light and energetic.

  50. :

    4 out of 5

    Warm and spicy. Perfect for Christmas!

  51. :

    3 out of 5

    This sample I liked–I’d love to see it in a body cream but that’s not offered. It’s incense/patchouli but not overwhelming, just nice.

  52. :

    3 out of 5

    In a word, this scent is cozy. I was amazed at how it changed over time. Just lovely.

  53. :

    4 out of 5

    I bought the solid perfume and while I like it a lot, I think I’d prefer the spray. It’s incensey alright, but not too serious about it. It’s a fun fragrance but unfortunately the lasting power and sillage are bare minimum on me. I really like it though!

  54. :

    3 out of 5

    The first time I wore this scent my son told me it made him “weak in the knees” it was so intoxicatingly delicious. I wear this like comfort food – when it is cold and foggy here at the beach where we live, in, you guessed it, Pacifica! This one is soothing but not a serious fragrance. I do enjoy inhaling the scent on my wrist throughout the day and also like it at bedtime.

  55. :

    3 out of 5

    LOVE this scent. Slightly minty, incense-y, warm and cool. Love it summer, spring, fall and winter. 🙂

  56. :

    4 out of 5

    I’m not into this at all. I was expecting smoky incense, but all I got was intense gingerbread. I would love fresh ginger, but the dry powdered ginger is way too strong, weird, and Christmas for my taste.

  57. :

    5 out of 5

    A really enjoyable orange-ginger-clove scent. Quite warm, incensey and spicy. I’m not sure if I would wear this scent on me (perhaps I might prefer it in a candle or other home scent), but I do really like it.

  58. :

    5 out of 5

    Love, love this. I searched a long time to find a perfume that is a little spicy a little sweet and a little masculine. I wear this every day.

  59. :

    5 out of 5

    Smells a lot like Serge Lutens Arabie! I agree with Trax. Pure Christmas!

  60. :

    5 out of 5

    Starts out with a potent peppery ginger kick. That eye opening ginger eventually develops into this warm and spicy chai tea scent. Not foody tea, but earthy. Towards the end the ginger becomes very crisp and clean and less spicy, and it mingles nicely with the final smooth musky incense/patchouli notes. I love the development of this scent. It really changes as it wears through the day. From invigorating to soothing. It becomes a peaceful scent.
    This is the longest lasting Pacifica scent I have tried. The sillage is gentle but satisfying. For a different effect, I really like layering this with Mexican Cocoa, smells like a ginger dark chocolate bar – yum!

  61. :

    3 out of 5

    Crude mixture – rough, scratchy and dissonant. The combination of the dusty, dried orange peel and the poorly blended spices (mostly an arid ginger) make for a somewhat uncomfortable experience.
    Used judiciously, this might be an exotic room spray, but unfortunately on my body it’s a scrubber.

  62. :

    4 out of 5

    Spicy, warm and cozy,wears like a lambswool blanket..

  63. :

    3 out of 5

    A crude, albeit favorable comparison, I liken it to an emulsion of cinnamon and monkey balm. Even though there is no menthol or cinnamon in the notes, it does deliver a smiliar accord. If you’re not familiar with monkey balm (properly named White Monkey Holding Peach Balm), it’s a Thai muscle linament very similar to clove-heavy tiger balm, only white instead of orange, and sweeter.
    This for me is deeply transcendental. I will sleep tonight and inhale deeply.

  64. :

    3 out of 5

    Beautiful, deep, mysterious. There is a simple elegance to this scent. Immediately you get the ginger and I also get a bit of clove. Very uplifting and intriguing, it brings a sense of comfort and peace. When a cool winter wind blows you can smell this warming scent lingering on your skin. I get a image of a warm fire gathering or caravanserai. A fragrance love to treasure…

  65. :

    4 out of 5

    Smells like a roomspray I once had for Christmas. Oranges, ginger and cloves. That is what I get from this. Pure christmas, no temple or incense associations for me.. It is strong, first Pacifica I have tried that borders on an edp feel 😉 Stays and stays. Too much roomspray for me, so even if it is beautiful I won’t be purchasing..

  66. :

    3 out of 5

    I fell in love with this one. It is rich and varied, with warm ginger, spicy orange zest and enough wood to keep it from smelling like Christmas. The incense notes are suggested, and there’s a feeling almost of black tea on my skin that is just delicious. I like this one very much and will be purchasing a full bottle.

  67. :

    3 out of 5

    Climbing to the Ascending Himalayan mountians of Kaliash your destination
    to reseach the ancient rituals of long ago holy men who Worshiped the Hindu
    Lord Shiva and he Beloved wife Parvati
    and when you almost reached the top
    you see the golden glow of the sunset
    and your greated by the Sadhu with there long locks chanting a alien language you never heard before.
    you here beautiful ringing of bells allround you almost set you in a trance. The intoxicating scent of incense floating to the mountians.
    the colors all around you
    and you see the most beautiful stature
    of the Lord Shiva with his black eyes
    Glazing at you.
    This perfume gives me that vibe.

  68. :

    3 out of 5

    Smells just like a temple with lots of incense. It didn’t work for me.

Tibetan Mountain Temple Pacifica

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