Showing posts with label Giang. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Giang. Show all posts

Friday, December 17, 2010

Drifting through the delta

Phu Tu Island in Phu Quoc offshore Kien Giang Province
If central Vietnam is my favorite place to travel and learn about history, the Mekong Delta region is where I am touched by the hardship that these people endure.

My journey starts from Dong Tam Snake Farm in Tien Giang Province. It is one of the country’s largest snake-farms where venom is produced for local use and export. The center also has other rare animals such as bears, monkeys and golden turtles.

Down the river to An Giang Province, I had time to visit many places such as Ba Chua Xu Temple, built in 1820 at the foot of Sam Mountain, Chau Doc District, where people pray to Ba Chua Xu for better crops and lives. From Sam Mountain visitors can see the Vietnam and Cambodia border and That Son Mountain Range where there are many old pagodas.

I also had a chance to see artisans weaving brocades in Cham Chau Giang craft village. And visited Dong Thap to see the tomb of Sinh Sac, the father of Uncle Ho.

A seller at Cai Rang Floating Market in Can Tho City at dawn Photos: Dang Khoa
Then I left for Kien Giang Province, a must-see for all travelers to the delta. I went first to Ha Tien Town and looked around Mui Nai Beach, Thon Van Stone Cave, Chong Islet and many historical and cultural relics.

From the center of Ha Tien Township, I stopped at the royal tombs and temples of the Mac Cuu family at Binh San Mountain. They were the family who first settled the town 300 years ago. The mountain was nice to trek around then I cooled off at some of the temples and the ancient Phu Dung Pagoda

If you go to Kien Giang Province, you shouldn’t miss the boat ride to Phu Quoc Island, to see the peaceful tropical paradise and float in the warm turquoise waters of the Gulf of Thailand.

I came back via Can Tho City, checked out Cai Rang Floating Market – listening to the cries of sellers drifting along the canals and rivers.

In Can Tho, I also watched a performance of don ca tai tu (southern opera singing).

Related Articles

Drifting through the delta

Phu Tu Island in Phu Quoc offshore Kien Giang Province
If central Vietnam is my favorite place to travel and learn about history, the Mekong Delta region is where I am touched by the hardship that these people endure.

My journey starts from Dong Tam Snake Farm in Tien Giang Province. It is one of the country’s largest snake-farms where venom is produced for local use and export. The center also has other rare animals such as bears, monkeys and golden turtles.

Down the river to An Giang Province, I had time to visit many places such as Ba Chua Xu Temple, built in 1820 at the foot of Sam Mountain, Chau Doc District, where people pray to Ba Chua Xu for better crops and lives. From Sam Mountain visitors can see the Vietnam and Cambodia border and That Son Mountain Range where there are many old pagodas.

I also had a chance to see artisans weaving brocades in Cham Chau Giang craft village. And visited Dong Thap to see the tomb of Sinh Sac, the father of Uncle Ho.

A seller at Cai Rang Floating Market in Can Tho City at dawn Photos: Dang Khoa
Then I left for Kien Giang Province, a must-see for all travelers to the delta. I went first to Ha Tien Town and looked around Mui Nai Beach, Thon Van Stone Cave, Chong Islet and many historical and cultural relics.

From the center of Ha Tien Township, I stopped at the royal tombs and temples of the Mac Cuu family at Binh San Mountain. They were the family who first settled the town 300 years ago. The mountain was nice to trek around then I cooled off at some of the temples and the ancient Phu Dung Pagoda

If you go to Kien Giang Province, you shouldn’t miss the boat ride to Phu Quoc Island, to see the peaceful tropical paradise and float in the warm turquoise waters of the Gulf of Thailand.

I came back via Can Tho City, checked out Cai Rang Floating Market – listening to the cries of sellers drifting along the canals and rivers.

In Can Tho, I also watched a performance of don ca tai tu (southern opera singing).

Related Articles

Thursday, December 16, 2010

Drifting through the delta

Phu Tu Island in Phu Quoc offshore Kien Giang Province
If central Vietnam is my favorite place to travel and learn about history, the Mekong Delta region is where I am touched by the hardship that these people endure.

My journey starts from Dong Tam Snake Farm in Tien Giang Province. It is one of the country’s largest snake-farms where venom is produced for local use and export. The center also has other rare animals such as bears, monkeys and golden turtles.

Down the river to An Giang Province, I had time to visit many places such as Ba Chua Xu Temple, built in 1820 at the foot of Sam Mountain, Chau Doc District, where people pray to Ba Chua Xu for better crops and lives. From Sam Mountain visitors can see the Vietnam and Cambodia border and That Son Mountain Range where there are many old pagodas.

I also had a chance to see artisans weaving brocades in Cham Chau Giang craft village. And visited Dong Thap to see the tomb of Sinh Sac, the father of Uncle Ho.

A seller at Cai Rang Floating Market in Can Tho City at dawn Photos: Dang Khoa
Then I left for Kien Giang Province, a must-see for all travelers to the delta. I went first to Ha Tien Town and looked around Mui Nai Beach, Thon Van Stone Cave, Chong Islet and many historical and cultural relics.

From the center of Ha Tien Township, I stopped at the royal tombs and temples of the Mac Cuu family at Binh San Mountain. They were the family who first settled the town 300 years ago. The mountain was nice to trek around then I cooled off at some of the temples and the ancient Phu Dung Pagoda

If you go to Kien Giang Province, you shouldn’t miss the boat ride to Phu Quoc Island, to see the peaceful tropical paradise and float in the warm turquoise waters of the Gulf of Thailand.

I came back via Can Tho City, checked out Cai Rang Floating Market – listening to the cries of sellers drifting along the canals and rivers.

In Can Tho, I also watched a performance of don ca tai tu (southern opera singing).

Related Articles

Drifting through the delta

Phu Tu Island in Phu Quoc offshore Kien Giang Province
If central Vietnam is my favorite place to travel and learn about history, the Mekong Delta region is where I am touched by the hardship that these people endure.

My journey starts from Dong Tam Snake Farm in Tien Giang Province. It is one of the country’s largest snake-farms where venom is produced for local use and export. The center also has other rare animals such as bears, monkeys and golden turtles.

Down the river to An Giang Province, I had time to visit many places such as Ba Chua Xu Temple, built in 1820 at the foot of Sam Mountain, Chau Doc District, where people pray to Ba Chua Xu for better crops and lives. From Sam Mountain visitors can see the Vietnam and Cambodia border and That Son Mountain Range where there are many old pagodas.

I also had a chance to see artisans weaving brocades in Cham Chau Giang craft village. And visited Dong Thap to see the tomb of Sinh Sac, the father of Uncle Ho.

A seller at Cai Rang Floating Market in Can Tho City at dawn Photos: Dang Khoa
Then I left for Kien Giang Province, a must-see for all travelers to the delta. I went first to Ha Tien Town and looked around Mui Nai Beach, Thon Van Stone Cave, Chong Islet and many historical and cultural relics.

From the center of Ha Tien Township, I stopped at the royal tombs and temples of the Mac Cuu family at Binh San Mountain. They were the family who first settled the town 300 years ago. The mountain was nice to trek around then I cooled off at some of the temples and the ancient Phu Dung Pagoda

If you go to Kien Giang Province, you shouldn’t miss the boat ride to Phu Quoc Island, to see the peaceful tropical paradise and float in the warm turquoise waters of the Gulf of Thailand.

I came back via Can Tho City, checked out Cai Rang Floating Market – listening to the cries of sellers drifting along the canals and rivers.

In Can Tho, I also watched a performance of don ca tai tu (southern opera singing).

Related Articles

Tuesday, November 30, 2010

Mekong Delta to greet 19 million visitors

Mekong Delta to greet 19 million visitors

The Mekong River Delta expects to receive 19 million visitors this year,
200,000 more than last year, according to the regional tourism agency,
the Mekong Delta Tourism Association.


Of this
figure, the number of foreign visitors is estimated to increase by 20
percent over last year, reaching 1.46 million.


An
Giang, Kien Giang, Ca Mau, and Can Tho City will top the list of most
visited provinces in the delta, the association said.


The tourism sector in the region has attracted increasing numbers of
visitors since many tourism companies have introduced different kinds of
tours.


Travel companies in Can Tho, An Giang, Kien
Giang and Hau Giang, for instance, have strengthened the development of
waterway tours and festival tourism, among other products.


Meanwhile, companies in Ca Mau, Bac Lieu and Soc Trang provinces have
promoted eco-tourism to mangrove forests, and tours that include
festivals and other cultural activities of the Khmer people.


In Tien Giang, Ben Tre, Vinh Long and Tra Vinh, waterway tourism,
visiting orchards and traditional villages, historical vestiges and
other community-based tourism have been strongly developed in the past
time.


Provinces in the delta have also invested in
upgrading infrastructure including airports, roads and bridges, making
it more comfortable for visitors.


To further promote
tourism, the delta plans to set up a center for tourism promotion and
build a tourism portal to provide updated and accurate tourism
information.


Travel companies will strive to launch more tourism products and improve the quality of their services.


The region is famous for its diverse ecosystems.


Its major attractions include: orchards on the Thoi Son Island in Tien
Giang province; coconut gardens in Ben Tre province; the ecosystem in
flooded cajeput forests of the Dong Thap Muoi area, Tra Su cajeput
forests in An Giang Province; and coastal mangrove forests (bird
sanctuaries, nature reserves, national parks, biosphere reserves) in Can
Tho, Dong Thap, Bac Lieu and Kien Giang provinces./.

Related Articles

Monday, November 22, 2010

Between rocks and beautiful spaces



It’s a pain in your calf, your thighs and what not, but boy, is it worth it!




Rocky terrain: High up among the mountains, a unique garden


Driving through rugged, rock-strewn mountain slopes is hard work, and made more difficult when the narrow path ahead is hidden among clouds.


We had been climbing all morning, up the rocky slopes that seemed to stretch into eternity.


A bumpy two-hour motorbike ride later, we finally reached the top. Spread out beneath us was a breathtaking view of the Ngoc Hue River snaking through the valleys below.


It was a clear day in early October, and we were in the Dong Van Stone Plateau, recognized as part of the Global Network of National Geoparks (GGN).


That it has stunning natural scenery and a rich culture is well known, but the stone plateau geopark must be one of the most difficult destinations to reach in Vietnam.


This only adds to its allure though, at least for those with a thirst for adventure.


Dong Van Highland, which spans four districts: Dong Van, Meo Vac, Yen Minh and Quan Ba, is known as the Sa Pa of Ha Giang because of its cool climate. Indeed, it has to be one of the few places in Vietnam where one can enjoy the midday sun without getting burned!


But we were experiencing winter here, although it was autumn in Hanoi. I was reminded of the terrible winter four years ago when thousands of cows and buffalos in the region died because of the cold snap.












HOW TO GET THERE



Book a trip through some travel agents in Hanoi like Dulichvietnam Open Tour (43 Luong Ngoc Quyen Street, tel: (04) 3 717 1444, email: info@opentour.vn); Green Trail Tours (Suite #1016 - B4 Building - Tran Dang Ninh Street, tel: (04) 3 754 5268, email: info@greentrail-indochina.com.


By motorbike: a big motorbike (Minsk, Win, Bonus, etc) would be more suitable. From Hanoi, follow National Road No. 2, passing Vinh Phuc and Tuyen Quang provinces. You need at least two days in Ha Giang to explore the area. Information on hotels for your stay can be found at www.hotels84.com/hagiang.htm.




Daughters of the soil: Brightly clad mother and daughter prepare soil for the next crop




A local guide advised us to return in spring or summer to see a different Ha Giang. “Spring is really a joy, with tricolored peach blossoms everywhere,” he gushed. “And in summer, the highlands are a rainbow of different colors, with green cabbages and golden terraced rice fields nestling in the mountains”.


The colors of nature are well complimented by the local people of Dong Van, who play a huge part in the popularity of this area.


We were lucky to chance upon a Sunday market, a perfect place for people watching, in Dong Van.


Carrying heavy vegetable baskets on their backs, dozens of young girls and old women in their best and brightest dresses milled around selling their wares and socializing. In sharp contrast, all the men wore black or dark colored tunics.


To get to the market on time, many sellers have to start their journey at midnight. However, there was no sign of tiredness on the cheerful faces.


“I rarely miss any market gathering because it is a chance for me to meet my friends,” said a young Mong girl who sells wine made from corn. She comes with her father who likes eating thang co (a kind of soup cooked with horse meat). Life looked easy for Mong men, many of who lay inebriated on the roadside, while their wives tended to them.


Leaving the market, we drove to the Lung Cu Flag Tower, the northern-most point in Vietnam. Set in the midst of a gorgeous landscape, the tower was the perfect spot to take in the beauty of Dong Van and breathe in the crisp mountain air. The treacherous journey was a small price to pay for the expansive views and much-needed escape from our city lives.













THE DESTINATION



* Dong Van Highland lies over 100km north-east of Ha Giang Town in Ha Giang Province, north of Vietnam, which is more than 300 km from Hanoi. The area is located at an average height of 1,000-1,600m above sea level and features limestone structures in various sizes and shapes and with different characteristics. Local and foreign specialists from Russia, Japan, Germany, Poland, and Belgium have found fossils of thousands of species that lived some 400-600 million years ago. New valleys, rocks and caves have been discovered here.


* In addition to the breathtaking scenic attractions, Dong Van is said to be home to around 250,000 people belonging to nearly 20 ethnic groups including the Tay, Nung and Mong who are preserving their centuries-old rich culture.


* Places to visit: Vuong’s House in Sa Phin Commune, Dong Van District – a national architectural heritage, Lung Cu Flag Tower, Dong Van Ancient Street (in Dong Van District), Ma Pi Leng Historical Relic, Khau Vai Love Market (in Meo Vac District) and Nui Doi (in Quan Ba District).



Related Articles

Between rocks and beautiful spaces



It’s a pain in your calf, your thighs and what not, but boy, is it worth it!




Rocky terrain: High up among the mountains, a unique garden


Driving through rugged, rock-strewn mountain slopes is hard work, and made more difficult when the narrow path ahead is hidden among clouds.


We had been climbing all morning, up the rocky slopes that seemed to stretch into eternity.


A bumpy two-hour motorbike ride later, we finally reached the top. Spread out beneath us was a breathtaking view of the Ngoc Hue River snaking through the valleys below.


It was a clear day in early October, and we were in the Dong Van Stone Plateau, recognized as part of the Global Network of National Geoparks (GGN).


That it has stunning natural scenery and a rich culture is well known, but the stone plateau geopark must be one of the most difficult destinations to reach in Vietnam.


This only adds to its allure though, at least for those with a thirst for adventure.


Dong Van Highland, which spans four districts: Dong Van, Meo Vac, Yen Minh and Quan Ba, is known as the Sa Pa of Ha Giang because of its cool climate. Indeed, it has to be one of the few places in Vietnam where one can enjoy the midday sun without getting burned!


But we were experiencing winter here, although it was autumn in Hanoi. I was reminded of the terrible winter four years ago when thousands of cows and buffalos in the region died because of the cold snap.












HOW TO GET THERE



Book a trip through some travel agents in Hanoi like Dulichvietnam Open Tour (43 Luong Ngoc Quyen Street, tel: (04) 3 717 1444, email: info@opentour.vn); Green Trail Tours (Suite #1016 - B4 Building - Tran Dang Ninh Street, tel: (04) 3 754 5268, email: info@greentrail-indochina.com.


By motorbike: a big motorbike (Minsk, Win, Bonus, etc) would be more suitable. From Hanoi, follow National Road No. 2, passing Vinh Phuc and Tuyen Quang provinces. You need at least two days in Ha Giang to explore the area. Information on hotels for your stay can be found at www.hotels84.com/hagiang.htm.




Daughters of the soil: Brightly clad mother and daughter prepare soil for the next crop




A local guide advised us to return in spring or summer to see a different Ha Giang. “Spring is really a joy, with tricolored peach blossoms everywhere,” he gushed. “And in summer, the highlands are a rainbow of different colors, with green cabbages and golden terraced rice fields nestling in the mountains”.


The colors of nature are well complimented by the local people of Dong Van, who play a huge part in the popularity of this area.


We were lucky to chance upon a Sunday market, a perfect place for people watching, in Dong Van.


Carrying heavy vegetable baskets on their backs, dozens of young girls and old women in their best and brightest dresses milled around selling their wares and socializing. In sharp contrast, all the men wore black or dark colored tunics.


To get to the market on time, many sellers have to start their journey at midnight. However, there was no sign of tiredness on the cheerful faces.


“I rarely miss any market gathering because it is a chance for me to meet my friends,” said a young Mong girl who sells wine made from corn. She comes with her father who likes eating thang co (a kind of soup cooked with horse meat). Life looked easy for Mong men, many of who lay inebriated on the roadside, while their wives tended to them.


Leaving the market, we drove to the Lung Cu Flag Tower, the northern-most point in Vietnam. Set in the midst of a gorgeous landscape, the tower was the perfect spot to take in the beauty of Dong Van and breathe in the crisp mountain air. The treacherous journey was a small price to pay for the expansive views and much-needed escape from our city lives.













THE DESTINATION



* Dong Van Highland lies over 100km north-east of Ha Giang Town in Ha Giang Province, north of Vietnam, which is more than 300 km from Hanoi. The area is located at an average height of 1,000-1,600m above sea level and features limestone structures in various sizes and shapes and with different characteristics. Local and foreign specialists from Russia, Japan, Germany, Poland, and Belgium have found fossils of thousands of species that lived some 400-600 million years ago. New valleys, rocks and caves have been discovered here.


* In addition to the breathtaking scenic attractions, Dong Van is said to be home to around 250,000 people belonging to nearly 20 ethnic groups including the Tay, Nung and Mong who are preserving their centuries-old rich culture.


* Places to visit: Vuong’s House in Sa Phin Commune, Dong Van District – a national architectural heritage, Lung Cu Flag Tower, Dong Van Ancient Street (in Dong Van District), Ma Pi Leng Historical Relic, Khau Vai Love Market (in Meo Vac District) and Nui Doi (in Quan Ba District).



Related Articles

Wednesday, September 15, 2010

Gone fishing at Cam Son Lake

Hiring a boat is a great way to see Cam Son Lake in Bac Giang Province - Photo: Mai Ly
Cam Son Lake in Luc Ngan District, Bac Giang Province, is a famous tourist site that you should not miss when you visit the north.

The lake covers 2,600ha, but during the rainy season it swells to 3,000ha. The 30km-long lake is 7 kilometers at its widest point and 200 meters at the narrowest.

It is surrounded by mountain ranges.

Hiring a wooden boat is the best way to admire the scenery and get close to nature. You can find a quiet place to anchor and throw in a fishing line.

After exploring the lake, visitors should take a hike to visit the local tribe and learn about their daily lives and customs - enjoy local specialties such as chestnut, honey and gecko wine. Singing is also popular among the San Chi, Cao Lan, Nung, and Tay minorities in this area.

Bac Giang Province, 51 kilometers from Hanoi, has three large rivers including Luc Nam, Thuong and Cau. The province also boasts many other attractions such as Duc La Pagoda built early in the Tran Dynasty. The pagoda is in the foothills of Co Tien (Fairy) Mountain and bound by Luc River, rice fields and small villages. Nham Bien Mountains are in the distance.

Tourists can also visit Khe Ro Primitive Forest, which is a 7,153ha protected forest in An Lac Commune, Son Dong District. The area boasts a rich variety of flora and fauna and many fresh water streams.

Other sites of interest include Khuon Than Lake and Tu Ma Temple.

Related Articles

Gone fishing at Cam Son Lake

Hiring a boat is a great way to see Cam Son Lake in Bac Giang Province - Photo: Mai Ly
Cam Son Lake in Luc Ngan District, Bac Giang Province, is a famous tourist site that you should not miss when you visit the north.

The lake covers 2,600ha, but during the rainy season it swells to 3,000ha. The 30km-long lake is 7 kilometers at its widest point and 200 meters at the narrowest.

It is surrounded by mountain ranges.

Hiring a wooden boat is the best way to admire the scenery and get close to nature. You can find a quiet place to anchor and throw in a fishing line.

After exploring the lake, visitors should take a hike to visit the local tribe and learn about their daily lives and customs - enjoy local specialties such as chestnut, honey and gecko wine. Singing is also popular among the San Chi, Cao Lan, Nung, and Tay minorities in this area.

Bac Giang Province, 51 kilometers from Hanoi, has three large rivers including Luc Nam, Thuong and Cau. The province also boasts many other attractions such as Duc La Pagoda built early in the Tran Dynasty. The pagoda is in the foothills of Co Tien (Fairy) Mountain and bound by Luc River, rice fields and small villages. Nham Bien Mountains are in the distance.

Tourists can also visit Khe Ro Primitive Forest, which is a 7,153ha protected forest in An Lac Commune, Son Dong District. The area boasts a rich variety of flora and fauna and many fresh water streams.

Other sites of interest include Khuon Than Lake and Tu Ma Temple.

Related Articles

Tuesday, September 14, 2010

Gone fishing at Cam Son Lake

Hiring a boat is a great way to see Cam Son Lake in Bac Giang Province - Photo: Mai Ly
Cam Son Lake in Luc Ngan District, Bac Giang Province, is a famous tourist site that you should not miss when you visit the north.

The lake covers 2,600ha, but during the rainy season it swells to 3,000ha. The 30km-long lake is 7 kilometers at its widest point and 200 meters at the narrowest.

It is surrounded by mountain ranges.

Hiring a wooden boat is the best way to admire the scenery and get close to nature. You can find a quiet place to anchor and throw in a fishing line.

After exploring the lake, visitors should take a hike to visit the local tribe and learn about their daily lives and customs - enjoy local specialties such as chestnut, honey and gecko wine. Singing is also popular among the San Chi, Cao Lan, Nung, and Tay minorities in this area.

Bac Giang Province, 51 kilometers from Hanoi, has three large rivers including Luc Nam, Thuong and Cau. The province also boasts many other attractions such as Duc La Pagoda built early in the Tran Dynasty. The pagoda is in the foothills of Co Tien (Fairy) Mountain and bound by Luc River, rice fields and small villages. Nham Bien Mountains are in the distance.

Tourists can also visit Khe Ro Primitive Forest, which is a 7,153ha protected forest in An Lac Commune, Son Dong District. The area boasts a rich variety of flora and fauna and many fresh water streams.

Other sites of interest include Khuon Than Lake and Tu Ma Temple.

Related Articles

Gone fishing at Cam Son Lake

Hiring a boat is a great way to see Cam Son Lake in Bac Giang Province - Photo: Mai Ly
Cam Son Lake in Luc Ngan District, Bac Giang Province, is a famous tourist site that you should not miss when you visit the north.

The lake covers 2,600ha, but during the rainy season it swells to 3,000ha. The 30km-long lake is 7 kilometers at its widest point and 200 meters at the narrowest.

It is surrounded by mountain ranges.

Hiring a wooden boat is the best way to admire the scenery and get close to nature. You can find a quiet place to anchor and throw in a fishing line.

After exploring the lake, visitors should take a hike to visit the local tribe and learn about their daily lives and customs - enjoy local specialties such as chestnut, honey and gecko wine. Singing is also popular among the San Chi, Cao Lan, Nung, and Tay minorities in this area.

Bac Giang Province, 51 kilometers from Hanoi, has three large rivers including Luc Nam, Thuong and Cau. The province also boasts many other attractions such as Duc La Pagoda built early in the Tran Dynasty. The pagoda is in the foothills of Co Tien (Fairy) Mountain and bound by Luc River, rice fields and small villages. Nham Bien Mountains are in the distance.

Tourists can also visit Khe Ro Primitive Forest, which is a 7,153ha protected forest in An Lac Commune, Son Dong District. The area boasts a rich variety of flora and fauna and many fresh water streams.

Other sites of interest include Khuon Than Lake and Tu Ma Temple.

Related Articles

Of Love and Shashlik

 The grill master at Quan Chieu Nay on 30B Vo Van Tan Street adjacent to the War Remnants Museum

Pham Thanh Giang says he’s old now. The retired, 64 year-old economist has been married three times and has run the same Soviet-style barbeque joint at 30B Vo Van Tan Street for the past 16 years.

But there is something spritely in his manner when speaking about the essence of barbeque. His pointy eyebrows arch high on his head when he gets to talking.

As his face stretches into a taut grin, Giang seems to almost glow.

When he was 17, the government decided to send him to the Ukraine to study Economics. The year was 1967 and Giang was happy to leave the Hanoi suburbs at the height of the Vietnam War.

Kiev was like a dream to him, he says half-rising out of his seat. Old buildings, tree-lined streets and snow.

He mingled with Germans and Poles and Czechs. He went to public parks, where the Ukrainians sparked up long metal boxes full of charcoal and served meat in the open air. “Nobody sat,” he said. “Everybody stood, ate, drank and talked. That’s the way to eat barbeque.”

He produces a few snapshots of a grinning young man with sweeping black hair posing before a statue of Lenin in Kiev. There he is, palling around with his classmates in front of a propaganda mural.

Then there are some photos which, he says, we cannot reprint. They feature a striking young blond and her plump mother standing with young Giang on a terrace in Uzbekistan.

In his 20th year, he met this girl, Anna while picking fruit in the Turkic Soviet republic during a summer work program.

“She was just 17,” he says grinning. “And so, so beautiful.”

They met at her parent’s roadside shashlik stand and fell in love over grilled skewered meat.

Two weeks before he left, her mother told him she wanted to teach him how to prepare their traditional food.

She explained that the Uzbek nomads had defined barbeque as the roasting of a whole animal – nose to tail. The choicest parts of the creature were reserved for the most senior members. The worst parts were carved up, skewered and grilled again.

This, she said, was the basis of shashlik



Pham Thanh Giang, (3rd, R) pictured with a group of Vietnamese foreign exchange students in Kiev in 1971. During his seven years spent studying economics in the Soviet Union, Giang says he learned the secrets of shashlik (Turkic-style barbeque) from the Uzbek family of his first true love. Photo courtesy of Pham Thanh Giang

“I want you to learn this dish and prepare it for your friends,” Anna’s mother told him. “I want you to remember the USSR.”

In their kitchen, at home, Anna’s mother taught him how to choose and prepare the meat. She also revealed the secret ratios of salt and spices – none of which Giang will discuss.

In his final weeks, Giang worked with the family at their restaurant to ensure he got everything about the recipe right – and to stay close to Anna.

“I had no money,” he says. “So I made her no promises. The story ended there.”

Giang returned home in 1974. After liberation, he was transferred to Ho Chi Minh City where he worked as a government economist.

He liked the southern girls and the tropical weather.

He got married, twice, and retired from public service after twenty years. In 1994, he decided he was bored. It was then that he remembered Anna’s mother’s recipe.

“I had nothing to do,” he says.

“So I thought I’d open a little restaurant.”

Some friends told him about a long-narrow space that had opened up next to the War Remnants Museum. He’s been renting it ever since.

Five years ago, he got married again. He took up photography and says his favorite subjects are beautiful nude women. His wife, Ho Thi Kim Yen can often be seen managing the restaurant from a steel desk in the middle of the busy restaurant.

On a recent evening, he stood before the smoky entrance to Quan Chieu Nay (this afternoon) wearing a pink, fish-print shirt and a garish, brown crocodile-skin fanny pack.

Above him, a perplexing sign glows with a cartoon sheep head and Cyrillic lettering advertising shashlik.

On a busy night, diners pour out into the street. Long rows of tables sit covered in empty plates and cups. Stacks of chicken bones and towlette wrappers pile up faster than they can be swept into a dust pan.

Giang’s restaurant features a number of unlikely imports.

His specialty, he says, is ostrich, which is grilled and served in tender brown slices with pickled root vegetables and a small bowl of mustard for VND80,000. For a time, he was the town’s kangaroo king; a giant skin hanging on the wall attests to Giang’s marsupial heyday. (A couple of years ago, he says, Ho Chi Minh City’s only importer stopped bringing it in).

Australian plates aside, Quan Chieu Nay’s menu features “Soviet style” pork, lamb and veal.

Like everything at the restaurant (with the exception of the limp salads) these sizeable hunks of meat are skewered onto twisted metal skewers and cooked through over the restaurant’s charcoal grill. The Soviet-style meat platters are a steal at VND55,000: salty, sweet and marbled with just enough fat to butter each bite. The meat eats tender, with a flavor not unlike lean smoked brisket, and is accompanied nicely by the toasty rolls that run 3,000 a piece.

“This is a not a luxury restaurant,” Giang said as he uncorked a sizeable bottle of iced Merlot and invited Thanh Nien Weekly to dinner. “In art as in cuisine, one need not be luxurious to succeed. It’s the atmosphere. My place is cozy, not very expensive. That’s what shashlik is all about.”

In addition to the kangaroo skin, photos and paintings of Vietnam and Russia line the walls. Not far from the smoky entrance hangs a huge browned print of a birch forest taken in Kiev, by a friend.

He’s never been back to the Ukraine, but he heard that Anna got married and her mother passed away.

“Like the poet says: ‘love is only beautiful when it lacks a happy ending.”

Related Articles

Of Love and Shashlik

 The grill master at Quan Chieu Nay on 30B Vo Van Tan Street adjacent to the War Remnants Museum

Pham Thanh Giang says he’s old now. The retired, 64 year-old economist has been married three times and has run the same Soviet-style barbeque joint at 30B Vo Van Tan Street for the past 16 years.

But there is something spritely in his manner when speaking about the essence of barbeque. His pointy eyebrows arch high on his head when he gets to talking.

As his face stretches into a taut grin, Giang seems to almost glow.

When he was 17, the government decided to send him to the Ukraine to study Economics. The year was 1967 and Giang was happy to leave the Hanoi suburbs at the height of the Vietnam War.

Kiev was like a dream to him, he says half-rising out of his seat. Old buildings, tree-lined streets and snow.

He mingled with Germans and Poles and Czechs. He went to public parks, where the Ukrainians sparked up long metal boxes full of charcoal and served meat in the open air. “Nobody sat,” he said. “Everybody stood, ate, drank and talked. That’s the way to eat barbeque.”

He produces a few snapshots of a grinning young man with sweeping black hair posing before a statue of Lenin in Kiev. There he is, palling around with his classmates in front of a propaganda mural.

Then there are some photos which, he says, we cannot reprint. They feature a striking young blond and her plump mother standing with young Giang on a terrace in Uzbekistan.

In his 20th year, he met this girl, Anna while picking fruit in the Turkic Soviet republic during a summer work program.

“She was just 17,” he says grinning. “And so, so beautiful.”

They met at her parent’s roadside shashlik stand and fell in love over grilled skewered meat.

Two weeks before he left, her mother told him she wanted to teach him how to prepare their traditional food.

She explained that the Uzbek nomads had defined barbeque as the roasting of a whole animal – nose to tail. The choicest parts of the creature were reserved for the most senior members. The worst parts were carved up, skewered and grilled again.

This, she said, was the basis of shashlik



Pham Thanh Giang, (3rd, R) pictured with a group of Vietnamese foreign exchange students in Kiev in 1971. During his seven years spent studying economics in the Soviet Union, Giang says he learned the secrets of shashlik (Turkic-style barbeque) from the Uzbek family of his first true love. Photo courtesy of Pham Thanh Giang

“I want you to learn this dish and prepare it for your friends,” Anna’s mother told him. “I want you to remember the USSR.”

In their kitchen, at home, Anna’s mother taught him how to choose and prepare the meat. She also revealed the secret ratios of salt and spices – none of which Giang will discuss.

In his final weeks, Giang worked with the family at their restaurant to ensure he got everything about the recipe right – and to stay close to Anna.

“I had no money,” he says. “So I made her no promises. The story ended there.”

Giang returned home in 1974. After liberation, he was transferred to Ho Chi Minh City where he worked as a government economist.

He liked the southern girls and the tropical weather.

He got married, twice, and retired from public service after twenty years. In 1994, he decided he was bored. It was then that he remembered Anna’s mother’s recipe.

“I had nothing to do,” he says.

“So I thought I’d open a little restaurant.”

Some friends told him about a long-narrow space that had opened up next to the War Remnants Museum. He’s been renting it ever since.

Five years ago, he got married again. He took up photography and says his favorite subjects are beautiful nude women. His wife, Ho Thi Kim Yen can often be seen managing the restaurant from a steel desk in the middle of the busy restaurant.

On a recent evening, he stood before the smoky entrance to Quan Chieu Nay (this afternoon) wearing a pink, fish-print shirt and a garish, brown crocodile-skin fanny pack.

Above him, a perplexing sign glows with a cartoon sheep head and Cyrillic lettering advertising shashlik.

On a busy night, diners pour out into the street. Long rows of tables sit covered in empty plates and cups. Stacks of chicken bones and towlette wrappers pile up faster than they can be swept into a dust pan.

Giang’s restaurant features a number of unlikely imports.

His specialty, he says, is ostrich, which is grilled and served in tender brown slices with pickled root vegetables and a small bowl of mustard for VND80,000. For a time, he was the town’s kangaroo king; a giant skin hanging on the wall attests to Giang’s marsupial heyday. (A couple of years ago, he says, Ho Chi Minh City’s only importer stopped bringing it in).

Australian plates aside, Quan Chieu Nay’s menu features “Soviet style” pork, lamb and veal.

Like everything at the restaurant (with the exception of the limp salads) these sizeable hunks of meat are skewered onto twisted metal skewers and cooked through over the restaurant’s charcoal grill. The Soviet-style meat platters are a steal at VND55,000: salty, sweet and marbled with just enough fat to butter each bite. The meat eats tender, with a flavor not unlike lean smoked brisket, and is accompanied nicely by the toasty rolls that run 3,000 a piece.

“This is a not a luxury restaurant,” Giang said as he uncorked a sizeable bottle of iced Merlot and invited Thanh Nien Weekly to dinner. “In art as in cuisine, one need not be luxurious to succeed. It’s the atmosphere. My place is cozy, not very expensive. That’s what shashlik is all about.”

In addition to the kangaroo skin, photos and paintings of Vietnam and Russia line the walls. Not far from the smoky entrance hangs a huge browned print of a birch forest taken in Kiev, by a friend.

He’s never been back to the Ukraine, but he heard that Anna got married and her mother passed away.

“Like the poet says: ‘love is only beautiful when it lacks a happy ending.”

Related Articles

Monday, September 13, 2010

Of Love and Shashlik

 The grill master at Quan Chieu Nay on 30B Vo Van Tan Street adjacent to the War Remnants Museum

Pham Thanh Giang says he’s old now. The retired, 64 year-old economist has been married three times and has run the same Soviet-style barbeque joint at 30B Vo Van Tan Street for the past 16 years.

But there is something spritely in his manner when speaking about the essence of barbeque. His pointy eyebrows arch high on his head when he gets to talking.

As his face stretches into a taut grin, Giang seems to almost glow.

When he was 17, the government decided to send him to the Ukraine to study Economics. The year was 1967 and Giang was happy to leave the Hanoi suburbs at the height of the Vietnam War.

Kiev was like a dream to him, he says half-rising out of his seat. Old buildings, tree-lined streets and snow.

He mingled with Germans and Poles and Czechs. He went to public parks, where the Ukrainians sparked up long metal boxes full of charcoal and served meat in the open air. “Nobody sat,” he said. “Everybody stood, ate, drank and talked. That’s the way to eat barbeque.”

He produces a few snapshots of a grinning young man with sweeping black hair posing before a statue of Lenin in Kiev. There he is, palling around with his classmates in front of a propaganda mural.

Then there are some photos which, he says, we cannot reprint. They feature a striking young blond and her plump mother standing with young Giang on a terrace in Uzbekistan.

In his 20th year, he met this girl, Anna while picking fruit in the Turkic Soviet republic during a summer work program.

“She was just 17,” he says grinning. “And so, so beautiful.”

They met at her parent’s roadside shashlik stand and fell in love over grilled skewered meat.

Two weeks before he left, her mother told him she wanted to teach him how to prepare their traditional food.

She explained that the Uzbek nomads had defined barbeque as the roasting of a whole animal – nose to tail. The choicest parts of the creature were reserved for the most senior members. The worst parts were carved up, skewered and grilled again.

This, she said, was the basis of shashlik



Pham Thanh Giang, (3rd, R) pictured with a group of Vietnamese foreign exchange students in Kiev in 1971. During his seven years spent studying economics in the Soviet Union, Giang says he learned the secrets of shashlik (Turkic-style barbeque) from the Uzbek family of his first true love. Photo courtesy of Pham Thanh Giang

“I want you to learn this dish and prepare it for your friends,” Anna’s mother told him. “I want you to remember the USSR.”

In their kitchen, at home, Anna’s mother taught him how to choose and prepare the meat. She also revealed the secret ratios of salt and spices – none of which Giang will discuss.

In his final weeks, Giang worked with the family at their restaurant to ensure he got everything about the recipe right – and to stay close to Anna.

“I had no money,” he says. “So I made her no promises. The story ended there.”

Giang returned home in 1974. After liberation, he was transferred to Ho Chi Minh City where he worked as a government economist.

He liked the southern girls and the tropical weather.

He got married, twice, and retired from public service after twenty years. In 1994, he decided he was bored. It was then that he remembered Anna’s mother’s recipe.

“I had nothing to do,” he says.

“So I thought I’d open a little restaurant.”

Some friends told him about a long-narrow space that had opened up next to the War Remnants Museum. He’s been renting it ever since.

Five years ago, he got married again. He took up photography and says his favorite subjects are beautiful nude women. His wife, Ho Thi Kim Yen can often be seen managing the restaurant from a steel desk in the middle of the busy restaurant.

On a recent evening, he stood before the smoky entrance to Quan Chieu Nay (this afternoon) wearing a pink, fish-print shirt and a garish, brown crocodile-skin fanny pack.

Above him, a perplexing sign glows with a cartoon sheep head and Cyrillic lettering advertising shashlik.

On a busy night, diners pour out into the street. Long rows of tables sit covered in empty plates and cups. Stacks of chicken bones and towlette wrappers pile up faster than they can be swept into a dust pan.

Giang’s restaurant features a number of unlikely imports.

His specialty, he says, is ostrich, which is grilled and served in tender brown slices with pickled root vegetables and a small bowl of mustard for VND80,000. For a time, he was the town’s kangaroo king; a giant skin hanging on the wall attests to Giang’s marsupial heyday. (A couple of years ago, he says, Ho Chi Minh City’s only importer stopped bringing it in).

Australian plates aside, Quan Chieu Nay’s menu features “Soviet style” pork, lamb and veal.

Like everything at the restaurant (with the exception of the limp salads) these sizeable hunks of meat are skewered onto twisted metal skewers and cooked through over the restaurant’s charcoal grill. The Soviet-style meat platters are a steal at VND55,000: salty, sweet and marbled with just enough fat to butter each bite. The meat eats tender, with a flavor not unlike lean smoked brisket, and is accompanied nicely by the toasty rolls that run 3,000 a piece.

“This is a not a luxury restaurant,” Giang said as he uncorked a sizeable bottle of iced Merlot and invited Thanh Nien Weekly to dinner. “In art as in cuisine, one need not be luxurious to succeed. It’s the atmosphere. My place is cozy, not very expensive. That’s what shashlik is all about.”

In addition to the kangaroo skin, photos and paintings of Vietnam and Russia line the walls. Not far from the smoky entrance hangs a huge browned print of a birch forest taken in Kiev, by a friend.

He’s never been back to the Ukraine, but he heard that Anna got married and her mother passed away.

“Like the poet says: ‘love is only beautiful when it lacks a happy ending.”

Related Articles

Of Love and Shashlik

 The grill master at Quan Chieu Nay on 30B Vo Van Tan Street adjacent to the War Remnants Museum

Pham Thanh Giang says he’s old now. The retired, 64 year-old economist has been married three times and has run the same Soviet-style barbeque joint at 30B Vo Van Tan Street for the past 16 years.

But there is something spritely in his manner when speaking about the essence of barbeque. His pointy eyebrows arch high on his head when he gets to talking.

As his face stretches into a taut grin, Giang seems to almost glow.

When he was 17, the government decided to send him to the Ukraine to study Economics. The year was 1967 and Giang was happy to leave the Hanoi suburbs at the height of the Vietnam War.

Kiev was like a dream to him, he says half-rising out of his seat. Old buildings, tree-lined streets and snow.

He mingled with Germans and Poles and Czechs. He went to public parks, where the Ukrainians sparked up long metal boxes full of charcoal and served meat in the open air. “Nobody sat,” he said. “Everybody stood, ate, drank and talked. That’s the way to eat barbeque.”

He produces a few snapshots of a grinning young man with sweeping black hair posing before a statue of Lenin in Kiev. There he is, palling around with his classmates in front of a propaganda mural.

Then there are some photos which, he says, we cannot reprint. They feature a striking young blond and her plump mother standing with young Giang on a terrace in Uzbekistan.

In his 20th year, he met this girl, Anna while picking fruit in the Turkic Soviet republic during a summer work program.

“She was just 17,” he says grinning. “And so, so beautiful.”

They met at her parent’s roadside shashlik stand and fell in love over grilled skewered meat.

Two weeks before he left, her mother told him she wanted to teach him how to prepare their traditional food.

She explained that the Uzbek nomads had defined barbeque as the roasting of a whole animal – nose to tail. The choicest parts of the creature were reserved for the most senior members. The worst parts were carved up, skewered and grilled again.

This, she said, was the basis of shashlik



Pham Thanh Giang, (3rd, R) pictured with a group of Vietnamese foreign exchange students in Kiev in 1971. During his seven years spent studying economics in the Soviet Union, Giang says he learned the secrets of shashlik (Turkic-style barbeque) from the Uzbek family of his first true love. Photo courtesy of Pham Thanh Giang

“I want you to learn this dish and prepare it for your friends,” Anna’s mother told him. “I want you to remember the USSR.”

In their kitchen, at home, Anna’s mother taught him how to choose and prepare the meat. She also revealed the secret ratios of salt and spices – none of which Giang will discuss.

In his final weeks, Giang worked with the family at their restaurant to ensure he got everything about the recipe right – and to stay close to Anna.

“I had no money,” he says. “So I made her no promises. The story ended there.”

Giang returned home in 1974. After liberation, he was transferred to Ho Chi Minh City where he worked as a government economist.

He liked the southern girls and the tropical weather.

He got married, twice, and retired from public service after twenty years. In 1994, he decided he was bored. It was then that he remembered Anna’s mother’s recipe.

“I had nothing to do,” he says.

“So I thought I’d open a little restaurant.”

Some friends told him about a long-narrow space that had opened up next to the War Remnants Museum. He’s been renting it ever since.

Five years ago, he got married again. He took up photography and says his favorite subjects are beautiful nude women. His wife, Ho Thi Kim Yen can often be seen managing the restaurant from a steel desk in the middle of the busy restaurant.

On a recent evening, he stood before the smoky entrance to Quan Chieu Nay (this afternoon) wearing a pink, fish-print shirt and a garish, brown crocodile-skin fanny pack.

Above him, a perplexing sign glows with a cartoon sheep head and Cyrillic lettering advertising shashlik.

On a busy night, diners pour out into the street. Long rows of tables sit covered in empty plates and cups. Stacks of chicken bones and towlette wrappers pile up faster than they can be swept into a dust pan.

Giang’s restaurant features a number of unlikely imports.

His specialty, he says, is ostrich, which is grilled and served in tender brown slices with pickled root vegetables and a small bowl of mustard for VND80,000. For a time, he was the town’s kangaroo king; a giant skin hanging on the wall attests to Giang’s marsupial heyday. (A couple of years ago, he says, Ho Chi Minh City’s only importer stopped bringing it in).

Australian plates aside, Quan Chieu Nay’s menu features “Soviet style” pork, lamb and veal.

Like everything at the restaurant (with the exception of the limp salads) these sizeable hunks of meat are skewered onto twisted metal skewers and cooked through over the restaurant’s charcoal grill. The Soviet-style meat platters are a steal at VND55,000: salty, sweet and marbled with just enough fat to butter each bite. The meat eats tender, with a flavor not unlike lean smoked brisket, and is accompanied nicely by the toasty rolls that run 3,000 a piece.

“This is a not a luxury restaurant,” Giang said as he uncorked a sizeable bottle of iced Merlot and invited Thanh Nien Weekly to dinner. “In art as in cuisine, one need not be luxurious to succeed. It’s the atmosphere. My place is cozy, not very expensive. That’s what shashlik is all about.”

In addition to the kangaroo skin, photos and paintings of Vietnam and Russia line the walls. Not far from the smoky entrance hangs a huge browned print of a birch forest taken in Kiev, by a friend.

He’s never been back to the Ukraine, but he heard that Anna got married and her mother passed away.

“Like the poet says: ‘love is only beautiful when it lacks a happy ending.”

Related Articles

Friday, September 10, 2010

Making a clean break

An Giang Province has gone to some trouble to ensure a getaway opens doors to a different cultural experience

You wake up to the rooster’s crowing, not an alarm clock.

You walk along unpaved, earthen pathways shaded by trees, nudged constantly by a gentle breeze.

You work in the fields, go fishing, or learn these and other skills including cooking a few dishes, made all the more enjoyable by the effort you put into it.

If this sounds good, especially compared to the drudgery of crowded, noisy streets, air-conditioned offices and stressful work, you should go ahead and take a break without further ado.

And one of the places you would do well to choose is An Giang Province in the Mekong Delta, about 250 kilometers southwest of Ho Chi Minh City.

In September 2006, the Vietnam Farmers’ Association opened a special tour in the province’s My Hoa Hung Commune that offers more than what you can get from a usual home-stay visit.

Here, you can stay with residents for as long as you want, try your hand at cultivation, ably helped by local experts.

“Local families taking part in the farm tour project have all been assigned to take courses in advanced cultivation and foreign languages so they can receive tourists,” said Nguyen Thanh Tung, one of the project executives.

For those inclined to go fishing, it will be worth their while to visit floating fish farms on the Hau River where they can learn the intricacies of breeding fish in a safe and hygienic way.

Ton That Dinh, one of the farmers who has joined the project and owns a house that is almost 100 years old, said visitors are given all the needed comforts

BOOKING THE FARM TOUR

6A, Le Loi Street, My Binh Ward, Long Xuyen Town, An Giang Province
Phone: (076) 3 955 931 - (076) 6 271 931

Email: tungndag@yahoo.com.vn

 

A tourist carries newly-harvested rice in An Giang Province

Over the years, he said, “Most visitors have been happy to tend plants by themselves and walk around the islet.”

One of the special treats of staying with the locals is the chance to enjoy special dishes like the traditional banh canh (southern noodle soup), lap xuong (Chinese sausage), and mam (fermented fish sauce), that never fail to please, Tung asserted.

During the rainy season, tourists can join locals in harvesting dien dien (sebania sesban) flowers, also known as Egyptian peas, and water lilies.

My Hoa Hung is not without places of historical interest. It hosts the house of Ton Duc Thang, known also as Bac (Uncle) Ton, successor to former president Ho Chi Minh. The house was built in 1887 and recognized as a national heritage site in 1984.

Next to the house is a memorial dedicated to Vietnam’s second president, which is a veritable museum that opened in August, 1998, on the 110th birthday of Uncle Ton. Covering 160 square meters, the area houses many items attached to his life and work.

Van Giao Commune in the Tinh Bien Area is an added-value attraction to the farm tour project in An Giang, offering visitors the chance to experience and be part of the ethnic Khmer community.

“If they are lucky, tourists can take part in Khmer people’s weddings or traditional festivals and learn more about their life and religion,” Tung said.

A historical military blacksmith workshop founded in 1867, a workshop producing the renowned My A silk, are value-added-attractions. The silk-making facility in Van Giao is the only one producing the special fabric that was once an exclusive preserve of the wealthy.

In fact, other than the My A silk, Van Giao also has Khmer shops weaving brocade on the premises.

“Tourists can choose to sightsee or try their hand at learning these traditional trades,” Tung said.

Another place not to be missed is Chau Doc Town, where various architectural styles are presented by pagodas, temples, tombs and markets.

Related Articles

Wednesday, September 8, 2010

Chariot racing - Vietnam style

The Bay Nui region in An Giang Province where the bull racing takes place in early October this year - Photo: Mong Binh
Colorful costumes are being tailored and bulls are being trained and fed with fresh grass in the month prior to the Dolta Festival in the Mekong Delta.

In the Bay Nui (seven mountains) region in An Giang Province and surrounds, the locals are all talking about the annual Vietnamese version of a chariot race.

A competitor in a previous Dolta Festival bull race spurs on his team in front of the crowd - Photo: Courtesy of Victoria Chau Doc Hotel
Traditionally celebrated by the Khmer people in An Giang, the Dolta Festival is now widely attended by all ethnic groups around the province and beyond, and draws a slew of domestic and foreign travelers from near and far. It’s all for a good cause - to celebrate the planting of the autumn-winter crops.

As usual, the festive activities feature colorful parades, cultural shows, dancing and family dinners. But the most-awaited part of the festival is the bull races, which are open to contestants from An Giang and nearby provinces. This year’s races are already heating up the usually-quiet temple courtyard of Ta Miet in Tri Ton District.

According to the rules, each bull pair must drag a 1.2-meter-long rake with 50-centimeter teeth and two teams compete in each race. Two young nai (jockeys) control and use a rattan rod to drive their bull on over the 120 meter muddy track.

To further complicate their task, the bull teams must run forward in a straight line and are disqualified if they veer off the paddy field course. Red and green flags mark the start and finish lines.

Owners of bull teams from Tri Ton, Tinh Bien, Chau Thanh, Chau Phu and Thoai Son districts of An Giang Province as well as Hon Dat and Kien Luong districts of Kien Giang have registered to compete at the 19th annual races. The organizers also expect registrations from bull drivers from Cambodia’s Takeo region.

This exciting and often hilarious event is a spectacle with a crowd of locals and visitors banging pots and pans with cooking utensils to drum up the mood from morning till afternoon.

In celebration of this unique festival, Victoria Chau Doc Hotel will launch a fun-filled package from October 4 to 6. Priced at US$224 per person on a twin-share basis, the package covers a welcome drink and fruit basket upon arrival, two nights stay at the colonial-style hotel on the banks of the Bassac River, trips to the bull racing and Sacred Sam Mountain, a boat tour to the floating fish farm and unique Cham village, and a 45-minute Vietnamese massage. 

The boat tour will take you on a journey to discover the life and culture of families living on the banks of the river for a welcome chillout after race day.

Related Articles