Do Pi

The style is a combination of Hung Gar, Cai Li Fo, Jow Ga and Hop Gar. Some of the sets of this style include Drunken Eight Immortals and Drunken Fan, Lohon Kau Da, Lohon Kuen, Tei Saat Kuen.

Do Pi, "style of the way", is a southern style of Kung Fu founded by the late Grandmaster Chan Dau in the Yung Kay district of Canton in the late 1930s. Chan was a student of Yu Mui (Hung Gar), monks at a nearby Buddhist monastery (Hop Gar), Jow Lung (Jow Ga), and Tam Sam (Buk Sing Cai Li Fo). He established a school in Canton and later at the Sham Shui Po district of Kowloon, Hong Kong. The tradition continues today in Hong Kong, by Chan Dau's son, Chan Ching (Lai Chi Kok & Shek Kip Mei St. in Sham Shui Po district) and one of Chan Dau's prominent disciple, Paul Chan in Toronto, Canada.

Wikipedia no longer publishes a Do Pi page and there was some discussion regarding merging Do Pi with the Cai Li Fut page. However this is not the case today. There is little information regarding Do Pi, however the Northern Legs Southern Fist Chinese Martial Arts web page has more detail.

https://www.nlsfmokwoon.com/kung-fu

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Do_Pi_Kung_Fu