Saturday, September 11, 2010

Sleep by fire, wake up in mist

Mist hovers in the air amid the pine trees at Tuyen Lam Lake near Dalat
The nights in Lam Dong province are getting cooler with a bit more rainfall but the falling temperatures are not the only topic on the lips of travelers to the Central Highlands province. The amazing mists and warm camp fires are very often talked about.

Dancing by a fire at Nam Qua Camping Site - Photos: Mong Binh
Have you ever slept in a tent by a fire at night? Camping out beside picturesque Tuyen Lam Lake is a memorable experience.

Nam Qua Camping Site is one of the accommodation options for visitors to the lake who traveled by boat from the main wharf or trekked the hilly 10 kilometers to spend the night. At the campsite a fire is lit for them to dance around after they eat some of the local specialties.

After dinner comes supper. Fresh sweet potato and corn cobs are placed by the fire for dancers to grill for starters before the pigs are roasted and served with cups of rice wine.

Dancing, meals and singing are not all the camping site offers, as visitors will wake up to find themselves enveloped in thick mist. Clouds of mist drift around, rippling the surface of the Lake and then flying through pine trees on the hills.

Experience is better than words. Try a night by a fire and hide in the mist in the morning by Tuyen Lam Lake near Dalat City, and then you will realize that there are more things to do at the lake than just boat tours.

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Domestic tourists fly the coop

Domestic tourists fly the coopTravel agents have resorted to taking domestic tourists on tours abroad after failing to get air tickets for inbound destinations, especially those on special discount offers.

“It is difficult to book enough air tickets for groups of 20 visitors upwards in the same flight on some routes,” said Nguyen Cong Hoan, deputy director of travel agency Hanoi Redtour. “Now it is the tourist season, so Vietnam Airlines tickets sell out quickly.”

Travel agents in Ho Chi Minh City who are participating in the domestic tourism promotion program launched by the Vietnam National Tourism Administration bought only 2,089 tickets under the special offer for Vietnam Airlines flights departing in July, down from 4,052 in June.

The tickets were booked in May or June, before Vietnam Airlines stopped selling the tickets offered under the domestic tourism promotion program from July 1 to August 15.

Vietnam Airlines had earlier committed to sell a number of tickets on some routes at a 50 percent discount during the year.

Stopping the special offer has increased tour prices, making it difficult for travel agents to lure local customers.

Although Vietnam Airlines brought back its special offer on Thursday, it has not become easier for travel agencies to book the tickets, as they need it for the “rush hour” – weekends or holidays, Hoan said. “We want to book some 2,000 tickets on special offer from now to the end of this year, but only 40 percent of them have been confirmed.”

Luu Duc Ke, director of Hanoi Tourist, said a number of customers have chosen low-priced outbound tours, mainly to Cambodia, Singapore and Thailand, instead of their initially planned domestic tours.

Hoan of Redtour said his company had to book tickets with low cost airline Jetstar Pacific on some routes. However, the number of domestic air routes operated by Jetstar Pacific is much smaller than that of Vietnam Airlines.

When getting air tickets becomes too difficult, his customers traveling between Hanoi and destinations like Nha Trang and Da Nang have to travel by train, or accept a more distant flight route that has fewer passengers.

The national tourism authority has targeted 4.2 million foreign tourists and 27-28 million domestic travelers in 2010.

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Friday, September 10, 2010

Domestic tourists fly the coop

Domestic tourists fly the coopTravel agents have resorted to taking domestic tourists on tours abroad after failing to get air tickets for inbound destinations, especially those on special discount offers.

“It is difficult to book enough air tickets for groups of 20 visitors upwards in the same flight on some routes,” said Nguyen Cong Hoan, deputy director of travel agency Hanoi Redtour. “Now it is the tourist season, so Vietnam Airlines tickets sell out quickly.”

Travel agents in Ho Chi Minh City who are participating in the domestic tourism promotion program launched by the Vietnam National Tourism Administration bought only 2,089 tickets under the special offer for Vietnam Airlines flights departing in July, down from 4,052 in June.

The tickets were booked in May or June, before Vietnam Airlines stopped selling the tickets offered under the domestic tourism promotion program from July 1 to August 15.

Vietnam Airlines had earlier committed to sell a number of tickets on some routes at a 50 percent discount during the year.

Stopping the special offer has increased tour prices, making it difficult for travel agents to lure local customers.

Although Vietnam Airlines brought back its special offer on Thursday, it has not become easier for travel agencies to book the tickets, as they need it for the “rush hour” – weekends or holidays, Hoan said. “We want to book some 2,000 tickets on special offer from now to the end of this year, but only 40 percent of them have been confirmed.”

Luu Duc Ke, director of Hanoi Tourist, said a number of customers have chosen low-priced outbound tours, mainly to Cambodia, Singapore and Thailand, instead of their initially planned domestic tours.

Hoan of Redtour said his company had to book tickets with low cost airline Jetstar Pacific on some routes. However, the number of domestic air routes operated by Jetstar Pacific is much smaller than that of Vietnam Airlines.

When getting air tickets becomes too difficult, his customers traveling between Hanoi and destinations like Nha Trang and Da Nang have to travel by train, or accept a more distant flight route that has fewer passengers.

The national tourism authority has targeted 4.2 million foreign tourists and 27-28 million domestic travelers in 2010.

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Domestic tourists fly the coop

Domestic tourists fly the coopTravel agents have resorted to taking domestic tourists on tours abroad after failing to get air tickets for inbound destinations, especially those on special discount offers.

“It is difficult to book enough air tickets for groups of 20 visitors upwards in the same flight on some routes,” said Nguyen Cong Hoan, deputy director of travel agency Hanoi Redtour. “Now it is the tourist season, so Vietnam Airlines tickets sell out quickly.”

Travel agents in Ho Chi Minh City who are participating in the domestic tourism promotion program launched by the Vietnam National Tourism Administration bought only 2,089 tickets under the special offer for Vietnam Airlines flights departing in July, down from 4,052 in June.

The tickets were booked in May or June, before Vietnam Airlines stopped selling the tickets offered under the domestic tourism promotion program from July 1 to August 15.

Vietnam Airlines had earlier committed to sell a number of tickets on some routes at a 50 percent discount during the year.

Stopping the special offer has increased tour prices, making it difficult for travel agents to lure local customers.

Although Vietnam Airlines brought back its special offer on Thursday, it has not become easier for travel agencies to book the tickets, as they need it for the “rush hour” – weekends or holidays, Hoan said. “We want to book some 2,000 tickets on special offer from now to the end of this year, but only 40 percent of them have been confirmed.”

Luu Duc Ke, director of Hanoi Tourist, said a number of customers have chosen low-priced outbound tours, mainly to Cambodia, Singapore and Thailand, instead of their initially planned domestic tours.

Hoan of Redtour said his company had to book tickets with low cost airline Jetstar Pacific on some routes. However, the number of domestic air routes operated by Jetstar Pacific is much smaller than that of Vietnam Airlines.

When getting air tickets becomes too difficult, his customers traveling between Hanoi and destinations like Nha Trang and Da Nang have to travel by train, or accept a more distant flight route that has fewer passengers.

The national tourism authority has targeted 4.2 million foreign tourists and 27-28 million domestic travelers in 2010.

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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.

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China-Vietnam party colors Mid-Autumn

The Vietnam Museum of Ethnology in Hanoi will host a Mid-Autumn celebration September 17-20 called “Vietnam-China Color”.

The festival organized by Museum of Yunnan ethics, Yunnan Opera Institute (China) and Chinese Embassy in Vietnam will feature Chinese Opera with excerpts from the film “Journey to the West.” It will be the first time Chinese opera has been held at the museum.

Also new to the venue, will be performances of boi singing, a traditional music of Vietnamese Southerners

In this year’s program, there will be many Vietnamese and Chinese traditional games, toys such as lanterns, kites and Chinese masks and popular shows like lion – dragon dances and water puppets. Traditional cake making classes will be held.

Other activities such as dress-ups in Vietnamese and Chinese traditional costumes, story tellers sharing the legends of the Mid-Autumn Festival and cultural films of Vietnam and China will be there.

Tickets are available at the Vietnam Museum of Ethnology at Nguyen Van Huyen Street, Cau Giay District for VND25,000 per adult, VND30,000 per child and VND5,000 students.

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China-Vietnam party colors Mid-Autumn

The Vietnam Museum of Ethnology in Hanoi will host a Mid-Autumn celebration September 17-20 called “Vietnam-China Color”.

The festival organized by Museum of Yunnan ethics, Yunnan Opera Institute (China) and Chinese Embassy in Vietnam will feature Chinese Opera with excerpts from the film “Journey to the West.” It will be the first time Chinese opera has been held at the museum.

Also new to the venue, will be performances of boi singing, a traditional music of Vietnamese Southerners

In this year’s program, there will be many Vietnamese and Chinese traditional games, toys such as lanterns, kites and Chinese masks and popular shows like lion – dragon dances and water puppets. Traditional cake making classes will be held.

Other activities such as dress-ups in Vietnamese and Chinese traditional costumes, story tellers sharing the legends of the Mid-Autumn Festival and cultural films of Vietnam and China will be there.

Tickets are available at the Vietnam Museum of Ethnology at Nguyen Van Huyen Street, Cau Giay District for VND25,000 per adult, VND30,000 per child and VND5,000 students.

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