Monday, September 6, 2010

World-class golfer Bryan Saltus promotes golf in Mui Ne

World-class golfer Bryan Saltus (2nd, L) poses for photos with the management board of Sea Links Golf & Country Club and Sea Links Beach Hotel at a press conference - Photo: Kieu Giang
An American golfing pro is at Sea Links Golf and Country Club in Mui Ne, Phan Thiet, till October 6 to promote the beach town as a leading golf destination in Vietnam.

During his six week stay, Californian Bryan Saltus, who won the Johnny Walker Cambodian Cup in 2007, is also offering local school children, and staff at the new 18-hole golf course golfing tuition.

During his stay, Saltus will hold the first ever inaugural ‘Bryan Saltus Golf Classic Tournament’ on September 24 and 25 at the Club for local and international golfers to join.

The finalists will be chosen to compete at a golf championship to mark the 1,000 anniversary of Thang Long-Hanoi in October.

 “Golf in Vietnam is in good development trend with many international-standard golf courses and I hope to open a golf course in the future here,” Saltus said at the press conference to announce his visit.

As well as business people from Binh Thuan province, Saltus has invited families who live in the villa’s on the golf course to send their children to learn golf with him in his ‘Golf is for Everyone’ class. 

Born in 1971, Saltus turned professional in 1996 and has been on the Asian Tour since 2004 and European Tour during 2009. Prior to this Saltus played for four years on the Canadian Tour. His golf swing is reliable and self-taught. He casually describes it as a ‘caddy swing’.

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Palace Hotel’s new look dining

A corner of CALIBRE Charner- Photo: Courtesy of Saigontourist
The Palace Hotel Saigon has opened the doors of its new Calibre Charner Restaurant, to replace the former Palace Café.

Located in downtown Nguyen Hue Boulevard and surrounded by trade centers, buildings, banks and fashion shops, cafés, Calibre Charner is an ideal venue for businessmen and tourists.

The restaurant is part of a relaxation, healthcare and beauty complex featuring restaurant, café, bar, karaoke, spa, gym and hair salon.

The complex is stylishly lit and furnished with comfortable sofas and cushioned chairs with courteous staff.

CALIBRE Charner is open from 7 a.m. to midnight. Guests can enjoy breakfast with noodle soup with ox tails, Hue style noodle soup with beef, Nam Vang noodle soup or broken rice. The restaurant also serves set menu for lunch and many Asian and European dishes for dinner. Gourmets can also enjoy live jazz with piano and saxophone.

CALIBRE Charner is at the Palace Hotel Saigon, 55-66 Nguyen Hue Boulevard, HCMC’s District 1. Tel: 3829 2860.

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Bat Nha monastery

Bat Nha Monastery from a distance - Photo: Thai Hang 
There are many places around Bao Loc, on the way to Dalat from HCMC, for tourists to visit. One of them is Bat Nha monastery. It is very popular, not for just tourists but also locals.

Bat Nha monastery opens to tourists from early morning and this is the best time to visit, as the air is full of the smell of tea leaves from the surrounding farms.

Venerable Thich Duc Nghi in 1995 laid the first brick of the monastery that is on top of a hill and covers 20 hectares.

Stone stairs lead from the main road to a giant dragon statue in front of the main house. In the house lays a Buddha statue, but before lighting some incense and praying for peace and protection for family and loved ones, tourists are advised by an old monk to go to the back of the Buddha statue to pay respect to Indian monk Vinitaruni, who brought Buddhism into Vietnam in the early second century. The architecture and decorations are similar to other pagodas with Buddha statues - a cast iron bell, carved wood rails and wattles - but it’s the mood of the monastry that brings the visitor to Zen.

Outside is the sacred Lam Ty Ni garden, which is named after the place where Buddha was born. The garden has statues of Buddha, dragons and phoenix. Behind the garden are the monks’ quarters and areas for reading and study. It is restricted to tourists.

Tourists who came to Bat Nha in late September last year will remember the dispute between supporters and opposers a strange statue that was put there by a monk who had come back from France. The dispute turned to violence and tourists visiting the garden a year later can still see the broken pieces of statues and stones, a reminder of a fight in sacred territory.

Behind the hill are two streams which are always full of water no matter what season. When the weather becomes too hot, the streams are favorite spots for local people to swim, fish and cool off.

Bat Nha monastery recently opened short-term classes for those who want to study Buddhist texts and find some quiet.

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Hanoi B-boys change their mood

The Big Toe break dance crew will perform their new “Change of Emotion” show on September 9 and 10 at Youth Theater, 11 Ngo Thi Nham Street in Hanoi.

The crew aims to raise hip hop street arts to a different level by popping, locking, and hip hopping and using traditional costumes to tell contemporary stories.  Founded in 1992 with just seven members when hip hop first arrived in Vietnam, the crew has grown to 60 members. Big Toe is the country’s leading hip hop crew winning many national and international awards such as the 4th dancers (SEA Hip hop Competition 2005-6); One in 16 top dance groups (Floor War 2006 – Hip hop European Competition); Champion of Vietnam Boty 2009; The 4th prize (Asia Boty 2009); Best showcase and top 8 (Floor the Love 2010) and Champion prize (R16 SEA 2010).

Recently, the Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism recognized hip-hop as an art and plans to develop it nationwide. It is a remarkable achievement for Vietnamese hip-hop fans and dancers. The recognition is in part due to the work of Big Toe.

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1,000 wishes for Hanoi

To celebrate the 1000-year anniversary of Thang Long - Hanoi, HSBC Vietnam has launched the “1,000 wishes for Hanoi” campaign to collect 1,000 well wishes to mark this major milestone in the city’s long history.

Till September 24, HSBC Vietnam will encourage Vietnamese people to express their most heart-felt best wishes for Thang Long - Hanoi on the occasion of its 1,000th anniversary and for the future.

For each of 1,000 wishes selected from the entries, HSBC will donate VND500,000 to the Tuoi Tre Scholarship Fund. At the end of the campaign, the VND500 million raised will finance 100 new university students studying in Hanoi. Each student will receive VND5 million towards their tuition fees and living expenses as they commence their academic career.

The campaign is open to people nationwide who wish to express their thoughts and feelings about Hanoi. To make a wish, participants are invited to visit HSBC’s computer-booths at seven different locations, at HSBC’s three offices (83B Ly Thuong Kiet, 23 Phan Chu Trinh and 6 Nha Tho), Trang Tien Plaza, Megastar Cinema, Melia Office Building, and the Foreign Trade University. They can also submit their wishes online at www.ngandieuuoc.com or via email to hsbc@ngandieuuoc.com.

A jury comprised of Duong Trung Quoc, a noted historian, Dinh Chuc, managing editor of Lao Dong newspaper, and Ton That Anh Vu, head of compliance and government relations of HSBC Vietnam, will select the top ten most eloquent wishes from the best 1,000 submissions.

Each of the ten winners will be awarded a Sony DSC HX1 camera and a special Thang Long trophy. In addition to the top ten prizes, there will be five prizes awarded to the best wishes as voted by the public each week. Each winner will be given a 2GB iPod Shuffle music player.

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Sunday, September 5, 2010

Vietnam looks for more Belgian tourists

The Vietnam National Administration of Tourism (VNAT) and Vietnamese
Embassy in Belgium on September 4 co-organised a programme to
promote the country’s image as an attractive and safe tourism
destination.


As part of activities in the
“Vietnamese Days in Belgium ”, the programme, titled “ Vietnam , your
destination”, also aimed to offer Belgian and Vietnamese businesses
operating in tourism industry an opportunity to exchange and seek out
partners.


At the meeting, VNAT’s deputy head Nguyen
Manh Cuong introduced tourism potentials of Vietnam , a country with
54 ethnic groups that boast a diverse cultural asset, and a
thousand-year history. Especially, the country is home to ten world
natural and cultural heritages recodnised by the United Nations
Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation (UNESCO), he said.


The Vietnamese tourism industry has also organised a
wide range of special activities on the celebration of the 1,000 th
anniversary of the capital city of Thang Long-Hanoi , Cuong added.


On the occasion, he called on Belgian tourist businesses to increase their investment in Vietnam./.

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A sunset adventure



Fishermen on Ke Ga Island prepare to go out to sea

"This is the life.” I thought to myself as I lay soaking in a honey and flower bath tub in the tropical garden of the Princess D’Annam Resort & Spa. “Things can’t get much better.”

I was soon to be proved wrong, however.

While I was taking tea, I saw an imposing and mysterious stone lighthouse standing tall on a rocky outlet, protecting all boats in the area. It was getting late but I couldn’t resist the idea of a sunset adventure to see Ke Ga lighthouse up close.

Ke Ga is a small village that lies on the coast. Under the water’s surface, the sea bed is dotted with rocks that pose dangers to boats out at sea. The French built the lighthouse from February 1897 to the end of 1898 to aid both local and foreign ships. It began operations in 1900.

“No one has ever wanted to visit the lighthouse at night.” the F&B manager of the resort, taken aback at my request, told me. “I will arrange for someone to accompany you.”

Before long, I was walking down the beach, my feet delighting in the soft sand, with Le Nam, the member of staff nominated to make my dream of adventure come true. I didn’t feel too sorry for him, though; he was grinning from ear to ear with the excitement of a newcomer that had just moved from Mui Ne (Ne Cape).

We reached the end of the bay where a fisherman took us across to the lighthouse in his basket boat. Waves attacked us from either side as the tiny boat bobbed up and down on the choppy waters.

After a fraught ten-minute journey, we reached a small island lined with large rocks into which waves crashed relentlessly, leaving in their wake white foam that swirled and frothed like a witch’s cauldron. Up above, the crescent-shaped bay took our breath away. Further in the distance stood white sand dunes dotted with trees while looming above us was the old lighthouse that stood proudly and silently at the edge of the sea.

HOW TO GET THERE

Ke Ga is around 35 km from Phan Thiet Town in Binh Thuan Province, which is four hours by car from Ho Chi Minh City. Sinh Café has buses from HCMC to Phan Thiet three times a day.



Ke Ga Lighthouse, which was put into operation in 1900, is one of the oldest existing lighthouses in Vietnam

The wind was the only noise apart from the sound of the birds circling the top of the lighthouse

I wanted to spend more time watching the waves pound the rocks, but our tour guide hurried us along so as to see everything before it got dark. With the sun setting on the horizon, we passed the majestic frangipani (plumeria rubra) trees in full bloom, said to have been planted when the lighthouse was built.

Inside the lighthouse, it was cold and so dark that we couldn’t see our fingertips. There was a spiral staircase leading to the top. And on the way up were small windows, similar to those of a French chateau, which looked out onto a breathtaking landscape. At the top was a balcony that held panoramic views of the surrounding coastal area and the sea. From there, I could see all the way to Mui Ne with its white sands.

The climb and the excitement upon seeing the view soon took its toll. We couldn’t pass up the chance, however, to visit the only house on the island with its whitewashed walls and blue windows. We met Trung, one of the six people that take care of the lighthouse.

“I have lived here a long time and the weather has proved to be good for my health. Every day, I climb up to the top of the lighthouse at least once to check everything and to make sure the solar panels that run the lights are operational. Local and foreign boats pass by this area so it’s important that the lighthouse is always on at night.”

Trung was generous enough to invite me to come back and visit Ke Ga with my friends. “Next time, when you could come back with someone special please stay with us. It will be a night to remember.”

The way back seemed more fraught with danger. In the darkness, the sea was more threatening and unpredictable with waves going over our heads, it seemed.

Just as we were about to board the boat to go back to the resort, we were stopped by a fisherman who invited us to his boat for dinner. It turned out he was from Quy Nhon Town in central Binh Dinh Province and had come here to work. The dinner of green mango salad, dried fish and fried pork was simple but tasty. Inside, I missed the fresh sea breeze and began to feel sleepy. Before long, we said our goodbyes with our new friends and headed back to the resort for a good night’s sleep.

That was enough adventure for one day.

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