Sunday, September 19, 2010

Wade into a special experience

Wade into a special experienceWhile most eco-tourism sites in Vietnam host a variety of flora and fauna, Co (Stork) Island in Chi Lang Nam Commune of the northern province of Hai Duong boasts 20,000 wading birds.

A boat ride on An Duong Lake is a special experience, as thousands of storks and night-herons take turns in flying back and forth for food, covering the expanse above the lake.

The best time to see this is early in the morning when the night-herons are back and storks set out on their hunting forays, and late in the afternoon when the two species exchange their “working shifts” again.

If you happen to take a trip to the island between September and April, don’t forget to bring along a camera with a zoom lens or a pair of binoculars to see hundreds of eggs in the nests built by the birds on trees and in shrubs, or to watch baby storks practice flying.

Residents say during eight months of the year, thousands of storks from other places fly to the island and lay eggs.

At least 12 species of water-walking birds have been spotted on the island, which is some 70 kilometers from Hanoi. These include the storks, night-herons and rare cinnamon bitterns.

The island, covering nearly 3,000 square meters, also houses another 170 animal species like otters. The An Duong Lake, which is up to 25 meters deep, has fish weighing up to several dozen kilograms each.

Visitors to the island will no doubt hear legends about it from local residents. It is said that during the 15th century, three deluges struck a big dyke along the Red River, breaking it into pieces. The island was formed after the second disaster.

In 1994, authorities of Thanh Mien District, where the island is located, invested in a project to turn the island into a tourism site, which now attracts some 40,000 visitors annually.

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A feast fit for a Sultan

Middle Eastern cuisine is based on healthy foods like vegetables, fruits, fish, lean meat, beans and nuts

 

Philippe Godard, general manager of Sofitel Saigon Plaza, says he’s proud to be bringing Middle Eastern cuisine to the hotel’s famed international eatery.

From September 20-26, a special menu will be on offer at Café Rivoli Restaurant, located in the lobby of the Sofitel Saigon Plaza in District 1.

“We are delighted to introduce this culinary experience to Vietnam and we hope that our patrons enjoy the Middle Eastern flavors,” Godard said of his hotel’s upcoming one-week promotion.

The Sofitel will serve up a whole range of Turkish-styled marinated meat and Persian-styled meat kebabs.

To give customers an authentic taste of the Middle Eastern dishes, the hotel is flying in chef Maher who grew up in Syria and currently works at the Sofitel Dubai Jumeirah.

Maher will bring traditional salads and side-dishes such as tabouleh, fattouch, hummus, and mutabbal (eggplant salad) to the table. The meal will conclude with a selection of dried fruits, nuts and traditional sweet pastries.

Maher will join a professional team of cooks from the hotel to prepare a fantastic, week-long Middle Eastern dinner party from Monday to Sunday of next week.

CAFÉ RIVOLI RESTAURANT - SOFITEL SAIGON PLAZA17 Le Duan Boulevard,

District 1, Ho Chi Minh City

Tel: (08) 3 824 1555

Email: fb@sofitelsaigon.com.vn

The meals will include Middle Eastern tea, wine, beer, soft drinks and fruit juice at the price of VND750,000++ for an adult and VND375,000++ for a child below six. The meal will be offered from 6 p.m. to 10:30 p.m. from Monday to Sunday.

In addition, the Sofitel Saigon Plaza will also offer a cooking class on Middle Eastern cuisine on September 25 to help locals bring these delicacies home.

Chef Maher will lead the class and help customers learn more about Middle East dishes.

The class will cost VND700,000 + +, including a lunch with the chef. The lesson is capped at a maximum of ten students.

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Friday, September 17, 2010

Vinpearl autumn packages for families and honeymoons

Hotel guests ride jetskis and catamarans at Vinpearl Resort & Spa - Photo: Courtesy of the Vinpearl Resort & Spa
Newlyweds and families can ensconce in five-star luxury from September 25 to November 30 with special packages at the Vinpearl Resort & Spa in Nha Trang City.

The “Honeymoon package” for US$399++ for three-days and two-nights or US$529++ for four-days-three-nights for two includes a welcome flower bouquet,  five-star standard room decorated with fresh flowers and three free buffets a day. Vinpearl will pamper the happy couple with free massage vouchers at Vietspa, a romantic diner for two and a free tour to Nha Trang Bay or city tour.

The “Happy family” package for US$499++ for three-days and two-nights and US$669++ for four-day-three-night for a family of two adults and two children under 12 offers a five-star standard room with three free buffets a day, free tour to Nha Trang Bay or a city tour, a free cake with candles and shuttles to and from the airport/station.

The packages also provide Vinpearl souvenirs and free entertainment activities at Vinpearl Land Amusement Park including games, 3D movies, underwater world, music fountain stage and free facilities including swimming pool, gym and Vinpearl’s private beach.

For further information, contact the Vinpearl Resort & Spa at 058 3598 188. email: info@vinpearlland.com.

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Venues for Mid-Autumn celebrations

Children play around a giant fish lantern - Photo: Le Toan
When the Mid-Autumn Festival comes, the streets are full of children carrying lanterns with friends and parents, watching lion dances and joining folk games. Here are some ideal venues for festival celebrations.

In Hanoi

The program “Vietnam-China Color” at the Vietnam Museum of Ethnology at Nguyen Van Huyen Street, Cau Giay District on September 17 - 20.

The program will feature Chinese and Vietnamese dramas, traditional music, dances, lion – dragon dances and water puppet shows. There will be a variety of Vietnamese and Chinese traditional games and toys such as lanterns, kites and Chinese masks.

Visitors to the museum can enjoy Chinese tea and learn to bake traditional cakes. Dress ups in Vietnamese and Chinese traditional costumes, oral legends of the Mid-Autumn Festival, cultural films of Vietnam and China, and singing and dancing shows are also part of the activities.

Tickets are available at Vietnam Museum of Ethnology for VND25,000 per adult, VND30,000 per children and VND5,000 for students.

“Kid’s party to admire the moon” at Tay Ho Park on September 19

One thousand primary school kids in Hanoi will enjoy contests and Mid-Autumn activities such as craft classes to make lanterns, kites and to he  (a traditional children’s toy made by shaping glutinous rice powder dough into edible figurines such as animals, flowers or characters from folk stories)

The night will be broadcast live on VTV1 on September 22.

Thang Long lantern parade at Hoan Kiem Lake on September 22

There will be a lantern parade around the lake with a lion dance troupe and a 1,000-meter-long dragon, 1,000 lanterns, 1,200 lantern hanging on the streets and 1,000 lotus flowers released on the lake.

Children will be given moon cakes, fruits and snacks.

In HCMC

“Full Moon” Festival at HCMC Fine Arts Museum, 1 Le Thi Hong Gam in District 1 on September 18

Learn how to make lanterns from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. with bamboo, plastic, paper and paints, enjoy a lantern exhibition, music shows and film screening from 6 p.m. to 9 p.m.

“Love Mid-Autumn Festival” at the Hoa Binh Theater at 240-242 Ba Thang Hai Street, District 10 on September 18

The program will feature music shows for children.

“Charitable Mid-Autumn Fair” at Ben Thanh Theater, 6 Mac Dinh Chi Street in District 1, on September 18

Games and shows will keep the kids entertained while the parents can discuss with experts how to make their kids healthier and smarter. All the proceeds will be donated to children with heart disease at Children Hospital 2.

Children can also celebrate the festival at Dam Sen Park, 3 Hoa Binh Street in District 11, design and make their own lanterns to enter a contest, enjoy dragon dances, lantern parades and story telling contests. At Binh Quoi Tourist Area 1, children and their parents can join folk games. The circus at September 23 Park will be on and Nguyen Du Stadium has water puppet shows.

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Saigontourist Mid-Autumn dinner deals

A buffet program at Van Thanh Tourist Area in HCMC’s Binh Thanh District - Photo: Courtesy of Saigontourist
Saigontourist has dinner specials at the following venues for the Mid-Autumn festival.

Van Thanh Tourist Area (48/10 Dien Bien Phu Street, Binh Thanh District, tel: 3512 3025)

A buffet program for children will take place from 4:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. on September 21 and 22. The buffet will feature over 35 dishes such as fried shrimp rolled in flour, grilled chicken wings and snail steamed with banana and beans. Kids can enjoy folk games, puppet shows and circus performances and walk in a lantern parade with Moon Fairy and Moon Boy.

Tickets are priced at VND190,000 per adult and VND120,000 per child.

Tan Cang Tourist Area (A100 Ung Van Khiem Street, Binh Thanh District, tel: 3512 8775)

A grilled hot pot buffet will open everyday from 5 p.m. in the garden area. The buffet has 80 grill, hot pot and seafood dishes with salads, fruit, cakes, ice-cream, fruit juices and drinks. Enjoy music by violin, guitar and flamenco players and games for children.

Tickets are priced at VND250,000 per adult and VND140,000 per child, and are discounted 30% for September 21. On the Monday night, the program is free for children accompanied by their parents. Each ticket includes one jug of Fifth Ocean Russian draught beer.

De Nhat Restaurant (18 Hoang Viet Street, Tan Binh District, tel: 3844 1199)

Children at the hotel’s First Grill Restaurant can join a lantern parade for kids, listen to legends, laugh at the water puppet shows and circus and join lucky draws. Children will receive photos, Givral moon cake, Monterosa ice-cream and many gifts from the Monterosa brand from Pham Nam Company and Sacombank.

Central Restaurant (177-179 Le Thanh Ton Street, District 1, tel: 6291 7977)

The restaurant will host a buffet accompanied with circus and juggling shows. Tickets are VND299,000 per adult and VND199,000 per child.

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Homage to goddess of wealth

by Hoang Ha

Gourmet delight: Chau Doc Market is a jumble of exotic food, such as dried salted fish, sun-dried gourami fish and a fish sauce made from snakehead fish, palm sugar, fried rice flour and grated papaya. — VNS Photos<br />

Gourmet delight: Chau Doc Market is a jumble of exotic food, such as dried salted fish, sun-dried gourami fish and a fish sauce made from snakehead fish, palm sugar, fried rice flour and grated papaya. — VNS Photos

Sublime outlook: The terrace of the Bassac Restaurant at the Victoria Chau Doc Hotel is a wonderful place to enjoy a meal. <br />

Sublime outlook: The terrace of the Bassac Restaurant at the Victoria Chau Doc Hotel is a wonderful place to enjoy a meal.

Every year, thousands of people flock to Chau Doc Town near the Cambodian border in the Cuu Long (Mekong) Delta to pay their respects to Ba Chua Xu, the famous goddess of wealth, at a temple on top of Sam Mountain.

The trip is usually taken during the 15th day of the first lunar month or in the second half of the fourth lunar month, which is typically in February and May, respectively, on the Western calendar.

But I think the beauty of this incredibly friendly town is revealed best during the rainy season, or what is more commonly known in this low-lying region as the high-tide season.

Recently, I took a 280km trip from HCM City to Chau Doc to sightsee and shop leisurely on a xe loi, a pedicab drawn by a bicycle, as in the old days.

I planned to venture deep into the forest to come face-to-face with thousand of storks, cranes and other feathered friends, and taste delicious dishes made of linh fish and dien dien flowers.

Departing the city at 6am, I marvelled at the view of verdant fields and the swift-moving rivers of the Cuu Long (Mekong) Delta during the six-hour bus trip.

Although there were few accommodations in the town, I was impressed with the French architecture and gracious welcome from the Victoria Chau Doc Hotel, which offered me a lemon-and-ginger tea and a cool lemongrass-scented towel.

Located on the bank of the Bassac River at the Three-River Fork, the hotel, which opened in 1999, is built in a colonial style.

Entering the hotel conjured up that unmistakable feeling of arriving at a new place and transported me to a different place and time when art and culture intersected with the generous spirit of comfort and good company.

For lunch, I ate at the hotel's Bassac restaurant, where I had linh fish tempura, sauteed dien dien flower with baby shrimp and steamed rice.

I then took a xe loi around town before visiting the Chau Doc market, only 500m from the hotel.

The market was a jumble of special foods, including dried linh salted fish; sun-dried sac (gourami) fish; mam Thai, a fish sauce made with snakehead fish, palm sugar, fried rice flour and grated papaya; mam long (salted fish's gut); may fruit; and duong thot not (palm sugar).

I bought gifts for friends and family, and did not forget to purchase a kilo of fresh lotus seed, which was an inexpensive VND20,000 (US$1). During the evenings, I loved sipping this drink as I watched my favourite HBO film channel in my hotel room.

My second day started early when I joined the hotel's environmental campaign, the seventh annual Green Day on September 11, the date of a series of coordinated attacks by al-Qaeda upon the US nine years ago.

It was fun but I nearly lost my breath when climbing up Sam Mountain for the clean-up with 20 local students from the Thu Khoa Huan Secondary School, local community members and hotel guests.

Unoccupied

Halfway up the mountain, the hotel staff showed me a beautiful, unoccupied resort built by Victoria Hotels&Resorts eight years ago. The corporation has yet to put it into operation because of the limited number of tourists who visit Chau Doc.

However, the brick-and-wood resort was creatively designed, with its five rows of bungalows looking like fingers of an outstreched hand hanging down the side of the mountain.

From anywhere on the resort grounds, guests can enjoy splendid views over Chau Doc's paddy fields and Cambodia.

I continued my "day of exercise" by hiring a bicycle from the hotel for a promenade around the ethnic Cham community in Da Phuoc Commune (An Phu District), 2km away from the hotel. I visited authentic houses on stilts, where young Cham women and elders worked on wooden spools and weaving machines that turned out attractive sarongs, towels and shirt fabrics.

The Cham people still retain their distinctive dress of brocade and culture. Young women wear bright purples, yellows and greens while the married women wear darker colours.

In order to satisfy my curiosity, a young girl showed me how to weave.

First she warped the loom and then wove a few rows of a straight weave. There was about a centimetre worth of weaving, which was a good base to begin our brocade pattern.

Then, she opened a shed and left the primary shuttle inside. As she held the top threads in her left hand, she counted how many threads she had to pass from her left to her right hand before she got to the place where the pattern would begin.

I finished the day by travelling 17km to Nha Ban Town in Tinh Bien District. From there it was a hop, skip and a jump to Cam Mountain, right next to Tra Su Cajeput Forest.

Jumping in a sampan, we rowed the remaining kilometre and a half to the forest while taking in the view of the mysterious green landscape along both riverbanks.

We cruised smoothly around the swamp with its wildlife and were greeted by the sounds of whistling ducks, kingfishers, cuckoos, coucals, spotted doves, cranes, water-hens, egrets and herons.

As we passed by, we spotted a group of storks on their way home nestled among the dense mangrove jungle.

"Beside the abundant and splendid flora, this is home to more than 70 species of birds, including two rare species of Indian stork, the Mycteria leucocephala and the dien dien or Anhinga Melanogaster," the forest guard Uyen said.

Climbing a lonely watchtower built of mangrove logs high over the serenity of the jungle, I saw a vast panorama of greenery punctuated by thousands of snow-white wings.

As the sun set and night arrived, the view changed and became livelier as the screeching birds returned home, covering the dark sky with a huge mass of feathers. — VNS

Mui Ne waves: Enough to satisfy the surfer inside

Mui Ne is on the map as an Asian kite surfing mecca, but there’s a few waves left over for longboarders - Photo: Kinh Luan
Happy to say, I had a good surf recently in Mui Ne. This time of year there’s no rideable waves on the back beach there but I was told there’s some small swells on the front beach.

These swells last until October when the wind changes and favors early morning waves on the back beach.

I actually rode a monstrous sail board – well over ten foot long, almost too wide too paddle – and hard to turn. But what it lacked in maneuverability it made up in sheer speed and ease to get on the wave. As a result I hardly missed a single one that I went for and caught dozens of little two foot waves right to the beach.

Despite the sad amount of plastic bags in the water it was great to get wet and have a play on the board. I found these waves on a strip of beach near the terraces where the all the fishing boats dock at the northern end of the tourist strip. There is a decent beach there and I was able to get some quite long rides and even show a few Vietnamese teenagers how to do it – standing up on a surfboard the size of an oil tanker is not hard - even for beginners. They loved it.

I surfed early in the morning thinking that the waves would get blown out, so I better get in early. But it didn’t happen; I had a surf in the morning, and again in the afternoon, both high tide and low tide were ok.

As a keen longboarder from the Gold Coast in Australia, when I came to Vietnam I had no information about whether or not there was surf here so I left my eight footer in  a mate’s shed.

A few months after I arrived in 2007, I body-surfed some two foot waves on a sandbank in Vung Tau and judged it to be quite acceptable for a longboard. Unfortunately the closest thing to a malibu for hire on the beach was a tire tube or a cocktail, so the idea was shelved for a while until I scored a board off a mate of mine, who told me he’d had a few waves at Long Hai.

As it turns out there’s quite a history of surfing in Vung Tau, going back about 40 years and there’s even a surf shack up there and an online surf report called Vung Tau Beach Club on the Globalsurfers website. What’s great about Vung Tau is it is easy to get to on the hydrofoil with the surfboard. From Saigon I can go there for a morning surf and be back in the afternoon. A few crabs, a few waves and I’m a happy chappy.

Mui Ne is not so easy to get to. It’s only 200km but it’s not Australia so there’s no way you can do it in two hours. The quickest I could manage was four and a half hours on the motorbike. There are a few decent long boards for rent at Jibes restaurant but I didn’t see any motorbikes for rent with board racks like you can get in Bali, so it’s got to be taxis or brave the wind on the back of a xe om with a nine footer poking out front and back.

Another way to get there that I was recommended by someone – head to Mien Dong bus station in Binh Thanh district at about 3 a.m. (you can chuck the board in the luggage compartment underneath). Catch a bus and wake up in Mui Ne. It’s probably a bit safer than fanging a 100cc step-through motorbike along Hanoi Highway and has the added advantage of being able to take your own board.

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