Showing posts with label Tours. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tours. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 8, 2011

Eco-tours offer green experience to visitors


Local residents offer tourism services and visitors can turn into
fishermen – that’s the ethos on the eco-tours initiated in 2006 by Hoian
Eco-tour Director Tran Van Khoa, who was born into a fishing family and
used to work in Hoi An’s Victoria Hotel as a receptionist.


A coracle (type of small boat) is dropped into the sea and Khoa
skilfully jumps aboard. He then explains to the tourists onboard that
local fishermen use coracles to catch fish and squid offshore.


He demonstrates how to steer it through the waves and receives a clap from five year old Ally Chris from Singapore .


Other members of the group are invited to try rowing the coracle. Many
of them are intrigued by the local fishing methods. Little Ally’s
mother, Elliott, insists on trying to cast a net into the sea. She draws
it back with only weeds, but she looks delighted, saying: "I have now
learnt how to net fish."


It is not difficult to find a
coracle or a buffalo on the Internet but if someone wants to experience
both interesting and exiting feelings when he/she tries the coracle or
rides a buffalo they need to have some experiences, said Erica Rubbs,
who is working for a non-governmental organisation in Myanmar , after
joining the eco-tour.


Every day, Khoa takes tourists
on cruises to try the coracles. They also visit the Bay Mau palm forest,
where soldiers sheltered in their fight against US invaders. Later they
can enjoy seafood delicacies served up by Khoa’s father.


Khoa also co-ordinates with the five-star Victoria Hotel to offer
special eco-tours, where tourists are encouraged to join in clean-up
activities in Bay Mau palm forest.


"Eco-tourism is
associated with no pollution, greenery and beauty," said Khoa, "There is
too much rubbish in the rivers, along the beach and in the forest. All
my customers are willing to join in a 15-minute clean-up and even the
other tours pick up rubbish to put in the bins on the boats." Within a
day, the tourists can experience farming techniques in Tra Que vegetable
village and then ride bicycles to Cuu Dai beach and try fishing from
Cua Dai Fishing Wharf .


"It’s an excellent way
to see the countryside and meet the people," wrote Tarja Halonen,
President of Finland , who took a tour in February in 2008,
together with her husband and their bodyguard.


Khoa’s
eco-tours have resulted from his own initiative and his whole family and
neighbours have helped. After graduating in English from Da Nang
College , Khoa worked in the Victoria Hotel . He soon realised that
foreign tourists were interested in his fishing village and its
surrounding natural beauty.


So he started the tour
business with 100 million VND (over 5,000 USD) capital. He designed his
own itineraries, and he was the sole guide, his father and mother help
to gear up the boats and serve the food.


Now there are
10 guides who speak mainly English and French and around 30 fishermen
provide and row coracles to serve big groups, earning up to 3 million
VND (more than 150 USD) a month.


"Eco-tourism is successful, because it requires little investment, but results in a higher financial turnover.


"Our eco-tours are especially appreciated as Hoi An has beautiful
scenery, many historic sites and hard-working, warm-hearted people,"
Khoa said.

The Business Traveller magazine has run an article
to commend Tran Van Khoa and his company. Together with the rich
cultural heritages, the efforts to preserve traditional values and
environment is the certificate of the young man on his love for people
and land in Hoi An where he was born and grew up, said the Asian Pacific
tourist magazine.

Hoian Eco-tour has become a famous tourist
trademark of Hoi An which received around 4,000 international tourists,
making up around one-third of the total foreigners to the city in
2010./.

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Thursday, January 20, 2011

Travel firms offer Tet tours for tourists

As the Tet (Lunar New Year) Festival is approaching, tourist companies
are eagerly preparing to launch tours to serve not only local
holidaymakers but also tens of thousands of foreign visitors.


Doan
Thi Thanh Tra, Head of the Saigontourist Travel Service Corporation’s
Marketing Department, said that as of January 26 (the 23rd day of the
12th lunar month) the company will begin to receive groups of foreign
tourists who want to experience the Vietnamese people’s biggest
traditional festival.


More than 8,500 visitors have booked tours
to Vietnam for the occasion and this is the 8th consecutive year that
Saigontourist has organised tours to serve holidaymakers from abroad as
well as foreigners who are working and living in the country.


If
booking a tour to Ho Chi Minh City, visitors will have a chance to enjoy
the flowers at the Tao Dan Park and learn about the spiritual lives of
the local people by visiting pagodas, where they can pray for good luck
during the Year of the Cat.


Visitors will have an interesting
experience by going on a sightseeing tour of Cho Lon market by pedicab
or visiting local families, enjoying traditional dishes and receiving
gifts for good luck from the owners.


Meanwhile, tours to the
Mekong Delta offer holidaymakers an opportunity to experience the
typical Tet atmosphere of the local residents, with exciting floating
markets and Don ca tai tu (music of the talented) singing. They can join
in with the hosts to pack banh tet (cylindric glutinous rice cakes) and
banh chung (glutinous rice cake).


In addition, Saigontourist’s
restaurants, hotels and tourist sites have also prepared menus with
typical and traditional dishes to serve domestic and foreign visitors
during the festival.


Other travel firms are planning to launch
their own tours, alongside the traditional ones, to attract tourists
during the holidays.


Duong Mai Lan, from the Vietravel Company’s
Marketing Department, said that most of visitors have chosen the central
ancient town of Hoi An, the central city of Da Nang and the Mekong
Delta as destinations.


Tours in the North will bring
holidaymakers to the capital city of Hanoi, the UNESCO-recognised
natural heritage Ha Long Bay, the northern mountainous town of Sapa, and
the Huong (Perfume) pagoda.


Tourists can travel along the Hong
(Red) river by ship and visit a number of riverside tourist sites such
as Tien Dung-Chu Dong Tu Temple and Bat Trang pottery village.


According
to the Vietnam National Administration of Tourism (VNAT), the country
is targeting welcoming 5.3 million foreign visitors and serving 30
million domestic holidaymakers in 2011.


The tourism sector will
strive to earn revenue of more than 110 trillion VND (5.5 billion USD),
equivalent to 4.6 percent of the country’s estimated gross domestic
product (GDP).


To reach these targets, the VNAT has mapped out
plans to attract one million tourists from each of the key markets,
namely Thailand, Japan, the Republic of Korea and Europe./.

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Tuesday, October 26, 2010

Conquering Fansipan to be the champion

Climbers make their way to the top of Fansipan - Photo: Courtesy of Lua Viet Tours
In late September, we went on a tour called “Conquering the roof of Indochina” held by Lua Viet Tours to climb Mount Fansipan, 3,143 meters above sea level. We met at Hanoi railway station at 8:30 p.m. to catch the train to Lao Cai. That night we could not sleep and the weather was very bad.

At 9 a.m. the next morning, we transferred from Sapa Town to Tram Ton pass, which is at an altitude of 1,900 meters, where we started the climb. Dressed in proper mountaineering gear, we were eager for the journey ahead. On our shoulders were light backpacks with water, cookies and fruit and clothes and we carried the “Truong Son stick”. The local porters took the tents, sleeping bags and food ahead of us.

Fansipan is the highest peak of Vietnam, Laos and Cambodia, so it is called the “Roof of Indochina” while the local people call it Huasipan, which means large tottering rock. Located in Lao Cai Province in the northwest of Vietnam, 9km southwest of Sapa Town in the Hoang Lien Son Mountain Range, Fansipan is approved as an eco-tourist spot of Vietnam, with about 2,024 floral varieties, over 700 medical herbs, 66 faunal species, 347 bird species, 102 species of reptile and amphibians. Vietnamese people are proud of Fansipan and consider it the Garden of Eden that God gave to Vietnam.

From afar, magnificent and surrounded by white clouds, Fansipan looks proud and as charming as a mountain girl in waiting. In the cold wind, we passed along the tortuous roads through forests where trees wore moss coats. We smelled the different scents from the moss, grass, cardamoms, wet soil and many kinds of flowers.

On the way, we saw some huge dew-worms, 40 centimeters long and as thick as fingers, and heard frogs and birds. We had staffs for walking but sometimes we had to climb with our hands and feet. At noon, we stopped at a rest-point for lunch. After that, we continued our way upwards and the paths got wetter and more slippery. The beautiful scenery, however made us forget our tiredness. Many kinds of flowers displayed their beauty. The cold wind rustled the groves of bamboo. We reached the top camp at 17:45 p.m. After dinner, we put on extra coats and crept into our sleeping bags. It was raining outside and the strong winds were screaming.

In the morning, we started climbing in the rain. We encouraged each other and went on with a sense of excitement. At 10:45 a.m., we were on the top and feeling happiness all around, we hugged each other tightly and took pictures beside the metal triangular marker written “Fansipan 3,143 m – Roof of Indochina”. Anyone who has conquered the summit of Fansipan or other summits will never forget the happy moment, when we find out that we can scale the height, the difficulties and ourselves.

For the Daily’s readers: Lua Viet Tours company offers a promotion to the Daily’s readers who bring this paper with an article about Fansipan to the office at 677 Tran Hung Dao Street, HCMC’s District 5. You will enjoy a discount of 5% when booking a 5-day-4-night Fansipan tour "Conquering the Roof of Indochina with Lua Viet" for VND3.7 million (before discount), and will be given a free three-month subscription to The Saigon Times Daily. Tours will start from October 31 to November 5.

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