Tuesday, November 30, 2010

Wildlife and nature, a short trip from the city

Tourists pat a deer at Vam Sat Ecotourism Area in HCMC’s Can Gio District
Situated about 50 kilometers from the center of HCMC, Vam Sat Salt-Marsh Forest Ecological Tourist Zone in Can Gio District, is one of the city’s oxygen lungs and a popular venue for day trips.

The diverse fauna and flora make it ideal for scientific research, ecological tourism and rejuvenation.

A sanctuary away from vehicle noise and exhaust, millions of trees send oxygen back into the atmosphere, one of the reasons why it is recognized as a world salt-marsh biosphere reserve.

One of the gibbons at Bat Swamp - Photos: Hai Duyen
Visitors can enjoy fishing, cruising, watching wildlife, walking on bamboo bridges and tasting the local specialties.

The tour starts with a hired motorboat at Dan Xay Bridge accompanied by female guides in traditional costumes. The boat follows the canals under the tree canopy.

After about 20 minutes, you will arrive in Bat Swamp, where you can see troupes of monkeys and bats in the tree tops. You can also try your hand at catching one of the local crabs so you can eat its giant claws for lunch.

Saying goodbye to the Bat Swamp, the tour takes you crocodile fishing at a crocodile farm, swimming in the sea, or feeding monkeys and deer.

The view of the mangroves from Tang Bong Tower is not to be missed. The binoculars up there make it easy to spy on the forest’s many water fowl.

Visiting Vam Sat Eco-Tourist Area by boat from HCMC is a new way to see the mangroves. The journey starts from Bach Dang Wharf in the very early morning. Visitors can also head to Binh Khanh ferry station and then take an hour long bus ride to Dan Xay Bridge.

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Saturday, November 27, 2010

Artists respond to sacrifices of the oldest sister

The birds in this three panel painting by Hoang Cong Minh represent freedom at different stages of the older sister’s life - Photo: My Tran
A group exhibition at San Art that opened last night reveals how a brother views the sacrifice of the oldest sister in a traditional Vietnamese family.

The show named after a 1980’s song, Chi Toi (My eldest sister) features paintings, installations and conceptual art from 10 male artists. Next month women artists will present their point of view on Chi Toi.

The artists in the show are Nguyen Xuan Nguyen, Mai Thanh Nam, Le Dinh Chung, Le Nhat Thanh, Nguyen Thanh Lan, Hoang Cong Minh, Pham Tran Viet Nam, Le Nguyen Chinh, Do Thanh Lang and Truong Cong Tung.

The song that is popular on radio and Karaoke bars talks about the familial duties and love of the eldest sister, who often never marries and never has a family of her own, as she takes the role of a surrogate mother for her siblings.

Mai Thanh Nam’s piece is a three dimensional collage of small  photographic portraits, blurred to depict movement in his pursuit of fun. He enjoys himself both inside and outside the framework that is set by his sister.

A small glass installation by Nguyen Xuan Nguyen on the floor of the gallery as you enter is a powerful commentary on the strict morals meant to guide women in this country.

The gallery assistant Le Xuan Hong Nhung said the piece, which is made of small squares of glass stacked like bricks, is a village-well that represents how easy and dangerous it is to break the rules and moral codes for women. An areca fruit that is a traditional fruit used in marriage customs sits at the bottom of well, lit by diffracted light from the sharp pieces of glass surrounding it.

All of the pieces show the loneliness and unfulfilled dreams that the male artists sense in their older sister.

The show will run at San Art Gallery at 3 Me Linh St, Binh Thanh District until Dec.4. The second part of the exhibition featuring female artists will open Dec.16.

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Friday, November 26, 2010

Rival for old ceramics village

A new craft village site, the Minh Hai ceramic village, which has been
built near the Bat Trang ceramic village, began welcoming tourists on
October, and offers more choice for tourists looking for a day out from
Hanoi.


Bat Trang village is a well-known half-day tour
from Hanoi, but the new site will offer travellers more choices in
exploring a large natural site with folk performances and a backdrop
modelled in the typical style of craft villages in the northern delta
region.


The 10-ha Vietnamese art village displays
different traditional handicraft trades, such as ceramics, silk,
woodwork and bamboo.


A lake stage has been set up at the
site to feature traditional Vietnamese folk performances such as “cheo”
(traditional opera), “chau van” (spiritual music), “quan ho” (love
duet), “ca tru” (ceremonial singing), and water puppetry twice a day
every Saturday and Sunday.


Visits cost from 150,000 VND (7.5 USD) to 300,000 VND (15 USD) for a day-time tour.


The cost includes pottery practices, cultural performances, lunch and fishing from the lake.


The site is a 20-minute bus journey from the city centre. The No 47 bus
leaves from Long Bien station to Bat Trang village every 15 minutes
from 5.30am to 8.20pm daily.


The bus route winds the 12km
river dyke from Chuong Duong bridge to the east and runs across the site
gate, which is 300m from Bat Trang.


Visitors can explore both the site and Bat Trang village over a few hours.


Hanoian Nghiem Huyen Trang and her friends visited the site as soon as it opened last month.


The 19-year-old student, who grew up in the Old Quarter, said she
enjoyed the peace and quiet of the place, just 20-minutes from the
crowded city centre.


Nguyen Minh Hai, the owner of the
Minh Hai craft village, designed the gate of the site in the shape of a
pottery-kiln, while pavilions and stilt houses surround a big lake.


The passageway imitates a stream with dotted stepping-bricks in the middle.


Hai, 40, who has 20 years of experience in the tourism and pottery
industries, wanted the site to offer a new look at traditional ceramic
villages.


"Bat Trang village has been long-known as a
pottery centre, but it's not easy to promote it as a charming
destination due to its polluted environment. Although villagers have
introduced gas furnaces to replace coal-fired kilns," said Hai.


"I launched the cart-buffalo service 10 years ago, but I want to lure tourists with a new tourist product," he added.


The site has different galleries showcasing silks from Van Phuc Village
in Ha Dong town; brocade weaving from Sa Pa ; wooden furniture,
rattan and bamboo products, terracotta from Bau Truc in Ninh Thuan
central province and precious stone from Yen Bai northern province .


"It's like a miniature centre for Vietnamese craft villages. I even
made myself a flower pot with the help of a craftsman in the ceramic
workshop," said Tran Thanh Van.


Van, 28, a shop assistant from Hanoi , said she was glad to make the clay pot within half an hour.


Craftsman Nguyen Van Doanh, 36, instructs visitors in practising with porcelain clay.


"I teach them how to form thing with hands and a slab-roller. It lets them do a bit of handicraft," Doanh said.


"Tourists can take home unfinished things that they make themselves. We
want to let visitors have a bit of fun for a few hours."


The tour closes with cultural performances./.

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The tragic love story of Dam Trau Beach

Dam Trau Beach is named after a village girl in a local legend - Photo: Tuong Vi
Dam Trau is a long deserted tropical beach on Con Dao Archipelago.

At one end is the Co Ong Airport runway where the occasional plane breaks the silence as it comes into land. At the other end is a rocky headland jutting into an azure sea. The white sandy beach is clean and backed by forested hills. It can be accessed from the road by a few rough tracks.

Tuan Anh, our tour guide tells us a sad love story about Dam Trau Beach where a clever, hardworking guy named Truc Van Cau who lived in Co Ong Village fell in love with a beautiful girl named Mai Thi Trau.

Everyone in the village thought they were a beautiful couple, until Cau’s father told him that Trau was actually Cau’s sister because the father had an affair with her mother many years prior. So the love was forbidden.

Knowing that they couldn’t love each other anymore, Cau left his village for a small island and lived there. People called this island Hon Cau (Cau Islet). Trau was pregnant with Cau’s child and she went to the cliffs where they used to meet and waited for him every day. Finally she committed suicide. The place where she died, people in Co Ong Village called Dam Trau Beach. Cau never returned and stayed on the island for the rest of his life.

A local saying goes, “Remember telling Cau, how far from Hon Cau to Dam Trau?”

The answer is 10km according to our tour guide.

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December is food festival month in HCMC

A Singaporean chef shows how to make chili crab at the Tastes of the World 2009 at the September 23 Park in HCMC’s District 1 - Photo: Kieu Giang
Rice dishes from the length and breadth of Vietnam and food from around the world will feature at two big food and culture festivals coming to HCMC next month.

The culture-culinary Hat Lua Que Toi (My country’s rice grain) festival from December 10-12 at Binh Quoi 1 in Binh Thanh District will promote about 100 different dishes made from rice from every corner of Vietnam.

From December 27 to January 3, the HCMC Department of Culture, Sports and Tourism will hold the Tastes of the World 2010 festival at September 23 Park in District 1 with dishes from 20 countries.

Vendors at the Hat Lua Que Toi festival will peddle their goods and cry out their wares as they do on the streets of the three regions. The hardship of the farmers working on the rice fields will also be highlighted.

“We’ve made 10 survey trips to find dishes for the festival,” said Chiem Thanh Long, director of Binh Quoi Tourist Village.

Binh Quoi organized a similar event in 2008 that presented southern cuisine.

Long said the tourist village wants to attract more families to this year’s event. “Parents can bring their children to enjoy food and learn how farmers plant rice and the rice culture of Vietnam,” he said.

The village expects to sell around 7,500 tickets for three-day festival that runs from 5 p.m to 10 p.m. The ticket costs VND220,000 per adult, and VND150,000 for a child.

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The majesty of Hue

Dai Noi, which is divided into the Hoang Thanh (royal citadel) and Tu Cam Thanh (forbidden citadel), is the largest most-important heritage building in the ancient capital. It was started in 1804 and finished in 1833. There are 100 different constructions inside the palaces but most of them were destroyed by natural disasters and wars. UNESCO has contributed money to restore parts of the citadel.
Hue was the capital of Vietnam during the Nguyen dynasty (1802-1945). The city which is 1,066 kilometers north of HCMC has a distinctive geography, history, culture, architecture and culture. Nowadays, Hue attracts tourists to its temples and royal tombs that were acknowledged as World Heritage by the UNESCO in 1993.

The Saigon Times Daily’s photo-journalist Kinh Luan captures some of the romantic city’s history and natural beauty that Vibeke Jensen, head of the UNESCO office in Vietnam, was speaking about, when she said Hue was “One of the few places in the world that has both global-value tangible and intangible heritages.”

The 400 meter-long Trang Tien Bridge across Huong River was designed by architect Gustav Eiffel in 1897 and finished after two years. In the war time, the bridge was destroyed twice.
Built on the banks of Huong River in 1601, Thien Mu is the city’s most famous pagoda. Lord Nguyen Hoang Lord named it Thien Mu after a legend about a woman who fell from heaven to announce a time of prosperity.
Poetic Huong river and majestic Ngu Binh Mountain in the background are icons of hue. People say they are as solemn and as unobtrusive as Hue people.

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Lace up the joggers for Terry Fox Run

The 14th annual Terry Fox Run, a fun-filled family event, will start near Crescent Plaza, Phu My Hung, District 7, on Sunday, November 28.

People can participate in this 5-km non-competitive run or walk and join in the party and picnic afterwards. The Ten Dollar Bill Band will stir things up and get people dancing and singing during the event. Pre-run festivities begin at 7 a.m, and the race starts at 8 a.m.

More than 7,000 people registered for last year’s run, raising  VND730 million for cancer research.

The Terry Fox Run is named in honor of the Canadian amputee runner who attempted to run across Canada. Terry Fox had to have his leg amputated above the knee at age 18 because of cancer. At 21, he decided to run across Canada to increase awareness of cancer and raise money for cancer research. During his Marathon of Hope he ran over 5,300 kilometers, the equivalent of a marathon a day for 143 days, but his cancer finally prevented him from achieving his goal. Countries around the world hold events yearly in support of Terry’s dream of finding a cure for cancer.

The event will be held by the Consulate General of Canada in HCMC, in cooperation with the Canadian International School, Canadian Chamber of Commerce, and the HCMC Union of Friendship Organization.

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