Wednesday, October 20, 2010

Discovering French culture in Saigon

The French Wine & Food Fair named “une balade en France” hosted by the Hotel Equatorial HCMC will showcase French music, culture, cuisine and wine to Vietnam on October 22 and 23.

The event will feature fine wine and food producers from Rhone, Alsace, Loire, Sud de la France,  Burgundy, Champagne and Bordeaux regions. All brought together in one place promise to offer visitors a chance to taste, learn, enjoy and discover fine French wines and cuisine.

Guests will have the opportunity to listen to everlasting songs to be sung by Bigot Swing band from France. The Institute for Cultural Exchange with France, or Idecaf, will also be involved with a booth to introduce the French language to the local community.

Early birds will be offered a reduced ticket price of VND350,000 per person compared to the normal price of VND400,000 applicable on the day of the event. And group bookings are entitled to a special discount. The fair is open from 5 p.m. till 11 p.m.

For more information, contact the hotel at 242 Tran Binh Trong Street, District 5, HCMC, tel: 3839 7777 ext. 8041.

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Tuesday, October 19, 2010

Fairy tale telling café in noisy town

A view of The Princess and the Pea Café - Photo: Tuong Vi
It’s not difficult for Saigonese to find a coffee shop to escape the noise because there are a variety of cafés including those featuring live music, soft music and comedy performances. But a fairy tale telling café in the heart of a modern city like HCMC is quite new.

The café going by the name of The Princess and the Pea was opened in August by two film directors, Lam Minh Khoi and Vo Thi Thach Thao, as they were inspired by the well-known fairy tale of the same name by Danish author and poet Hans Christian Andersen.

Since it is in a very small alley on the crowded one-way street of Pasteur in District 1, it may take you some time to spot it. Car or bike parking is recommended at the HCMC Exhibition House, 92 Le Thanh Ton Street, and the coffee shop is just across the street. Entering Alley 85 for some meters and looking left, you can see Princess and the Pea sign and go up an old apartment building.

On the walls along the stairs there are many pictures featuring Western folk culture. The dark purple-painted café covers over 40 square meters on the third floor.

This is like a private world for the princess and is divided into three compartments. Given the limited space, the owners arrange low tables with cushions and pillows for guests. All cushions, pillows, curtains and even menus are made from flowered cloths.

At the window is the little smiley doll statue in a blue dress with a basket in her hands. She is a naive countryside girl who sings and dances in the yellow rice field as the tale tells her story.

At the end of the room, there’s a small bed piled with many mattresses reminding guests of the tale. Beside the bed are a mirror and a long red and black gown of the princess. Next to her bedroom is a place for the princess to entertain with the old stories and listen to music.

If you come there, don’t forget to taste a dish called burning rice. Dip a piece of burning rice into a small bowl of fatty onion and roll it with shrimp and salted dried meat, then dip it into chili sauce.

Visitors come to the place because they are curious about The Princess and the Pea tale by Andersen. Once upon a time, there’s a prince seeking a perfect princess for marriage and he goes many places but he finds no perfect lady. On a stormy night, a girl knocks on the door of his palace begging to stay there for a night. She says she’s the perfect one the prince is looking for. To check it, the queen leaves a pea on the bed and piles 20 mattress layers on the pea. In the morning, the queen asks the girl whether she sleeps well or not. The girl says she could not sleep well because of something hard under the bed. The queen smiles as she finds a true wife for her son.

On Friday, from 8:30 p.m. to 10:00 p.m., guests can listen to live music performed by amateur singers with famous movies soundtracks. Moreover, a monologue comedian nicknamed Cucumber performs there and tells guests about daily life stories. Because so many guests come on Friday but the room is small, for a maximum of 60 guests, you need to make reservations by Thursday by phone 0907.703.159 or 0907.010.192.

If you wish to stay away from the noisy streets and enjoy a fairy tale atmosphere after a day of hard work, don’t hesitate to go there.

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Saigontourist has Women’s Day buffets

For Vietnam Women’s Day on October 20, hotels under Saigontourist in HCMC will host buffet parties, promising women fine food for an unforgettable day.

The four-star Grand Hotel Saigon’s Chez-Nous Restaurant will hold a “Day of Women” buffet from 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. The buffet will include dishes made of snail and clam with different salads, spring rolls and sweet soups. Tickets are priced at VND149,000 per adult and VND99,000 per child, inclusive of drinks. Women will receive a 20% discount.

The four-star Oscar Saigon Hotel’s Starlight Restaurant will hold a buffet lunch from 11 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. with selected dishes in sections with seven appetizers, eight salads, five fried and barbecued dishes and a vast array of fruit, sweet soups and ice-creams. A range of hot pots made of seafood, pork or beef will be also available. Drinks are free.

The Cyclo Restaurant at the five-star Majestic Hotel Saigon will bring Vietnam’s best dishes to gourmets. Tickets are priced at VND25,000 per a dish or VND228,000 for the selection inclusive of tea or coffee. Diners can enjoy food from the nation’s three regions such as salads mixed with shrimps and lotus buds, or with beef, banana flowers and chicken, grilled chicken with lemon leaves, loc fish steamed in earthen pot, sour soup made in Mekong Delta style with fish, pineapple, tomato, bean sprout or thac lac fish steamed with bitter melon and many kinds of seafood, fruits and drinks. Meals are accompanied with ethnic music performances.

The Majestic Hotel Saigon is at 1 Dong Khoi Street, tel: 3829 5517, email: banquet@majesticsaigon.com.vn.

The Grand Hotel Saigon is located at 8 Dong Khoi Street, HCMC’s District 1, tel: 3829 4046, email: banquet@grandhotel.vn.

The Oscar Saigon Hotel is at 68A Nguyen Hue Boulevard, HCMC’s District 1, tel: 3829 2959, email: oscarsaigonhotel@oscar-saigonhotel.com.

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Terraced rice fields- a photographer’s dream

It is easy to see why Che Cu Nha is recognized as a national landscape
The first two weeks of October are harvest time for farmers in Mu Cang Chai District, an area famous for terraced mountainsides. The three communes of Che Cu Nha, La Pan Tan, and De Xu Phinh in the district have been recognized as national sight-seeing sites because of the picturesque rice farms. This time of year the scenery has tourists begging drivers to stop for a photo because of the glowing yellow of the ripe rice on the hillsides. In Mu Cang Chai you can admire these landscapes from just about anywhere on the road

Mu Cang Chai District is in Yen Bai Province about 300 kilometers northwest of Hanoi. Take National Highway 32, to Khao Pha Mountain which is the gateway to Mu Cang Chai District. From there the terraced fields stretch seemingly forever. To sleep, travel 50 more kilometers to Mu Cang Chai Village, where you can rent a hotel room for the night. There are many scenic lookouts along the way.

A cottage house, where local ethnic people dry corn for pig food, amidst the immense rice terraced field
You can see a lot of ethnic people walking or standing along the road
This colorfully dressed ethnic girl looks from her house at the rice paddies

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A path to somewhere

It takes some getting to, but a bamboo-lined dirt road makes it worthwhile



A long bridge across the Ma River is just one of the picturesque features on the trip to the Suoi Muong bamboo path

If it’s all about the journey and not the destination, there is a “journey to a journey” involving quite a few ups and downs, not to mention twists and turns, that awaits the nature lover in Vietnam’s northern region.

The destination is a path, 40 kilometers long, that winds its way through a dense bamboo grove in Thanh Hoa Province.

In order to reach the Suoi Muong bamboo path, there’s a long way to go, past high mountains and deep valleys. A motorbike is an indispensable accessory.

Let’s get going from Hanoi and head to Hoa Binh, where Muong Lat Street along the Lao border leads to the mountainous western part of Thanh Hoa.

The first village on the road is named Thanh Son, where backpackers can tuck in for the night in local homes after a simple supper.

As we go further, more villages appear, as do the first bamboos.

Here, the road is named Suoi Muong after a local stream.

Along the red-soil road, which gets narrower toward the end, are tall, dense bamboo grasses that cast their green shadows on the Ma River flowing alongside.

Then the bamboos disappear, and the Mau Village market comes into view, several minutes from the pier across the Ma River.

Stationed at the pier is a woman in her sixties. Her teeth are dyed in black, a beauty aid for Vietnamese women in the old times and a tradition to protect their teeth.

“I row until four in the afternoon, then go home to rest,” said the ferrywoman who has been doing this job nearly 20 years and knows everyone in the area.

GETTING THERE

From Hanoi take the Ho Chi Minh Road to Thanh Hoa, around 155 kilometers away. Trains and buses are also available.



A 40-km path that entertains with a never-ending play of light and shade and a concert of bird cries and rustling leaves is an unusual destination, but those who reach there aren’t complaining

There are close to 30 streams, big and small, in the area and they put in an appearance after every turn along Suoi Muong road that is 100 kilometers long. But not every stream has a boat to take you across. Sometimes, people have to wade into the water first and lead others waiting to take their bikes across.

And the adventure is only the beginning. Some parts of the road are piles of rock, some are slippery soil, some are in between the cliff where the bikes have half a meter width to drive on.

The bike driver needs to be firm and the pillion rider should be ready to jump off at all times to help push the motorbike.

It can be discouraging, but if you’re in a mood to take things on, the tough road is the perfect challenge.

The Ma River continues to flow alongside, playfully switching from the left to the right and vice versa. On some parts of the road, the river is so close you can lean over and wash your hands in the flowing waters.

It’s best to make this journey early May, when it’s not raining and the bamboos are in their post-spring prime.

November or December is also good as the monsoon has passed and the bamboos throw in a dash of yellow.

The journey is an absolute no-no during the first days of rainy season as the road gets very muddy, the rocks get very slippery and the streams get very fierce.

Every 10 or 15 kilometers on the road is a village where such necessities as instant noodles, eggs, soaps, cookies and sweets can be procured.

Most villages are home to ethnic minority groups who invariably bade visitors passing by their stilt houses to come in and rest, freshen up and even use their ovens to cook.

Not far from Chieng Nua, one of the villages, is a cemetery on a cliff that dates back to the 11th century. The place is also home to vestiges of the Dong Son Culture, a prehistoric Bronze Age in Vietnam, and temples worshiping heroes of the Lam Son revolution during the early 15th century against Chinese invaders.

The journey can take longer, but patience is rewarded when, almost unnoticed, the magnificent bamboo path is there in front, casting a mysterious aura and allure.

Long and slender, the leaves sparkle in the sun and make joyful rustling and creaking sounds as the breeze blows through them. The play of light and shade is soothing and exciting at the same time. Where does the path lead?

But that’s it. There is nowhere to go but where the path takes you. In fact, the path is “home”. You have arrived.

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Monday, October 18, 2010

A path to somewhere

It takes some getting to, but a bamboo-lined dirt road makes it worthwhile



A long bridge across the Ma River is just one of the picturesque features on the trip to the Suoi Muong bamboo path

If it’s all about the journey and not the destination, there is a “journey to a journey” involving quite a few ups and downs, not to mention twists and turns, that awaits the nature lover in Vietnam’s northern region.

The destination is a path, 40 kilometers long, that winds its way through a dense bamboo grove in Thanh Hoa Province.

In order to reach the Suoi Muong bamboo path, there’s a long way to go, past high mountains and deep valleys. A motorbike is an indispensable accessory.

Let’s get going from Hanoi and head to Hoa Binh, where Muong Lat Street along the Lao border leads to the mountainous western part of Thanh Hoa.

The first village on the road is named Thanh Son, where backpackers can tuck in for the night in local homes after a simple supper.

As we go further, more villages appear, as do the first bamboos.

Here, the road is named Suoi Muong after a local stream.

Along the red-soil road, which gets narrower toward the end, are tall, dense bamboo grasses that cast their green shadows on the Ma River flowing alongside.

Then the bamboos disappear, and the Mau Village market comes into view, several minutes from the pier across the Ma River.

Stationed at the pier is a woman in her sixties. Her teeth are dyed in black, a beauty aid for Vietnamese women in the old times and a tradition to protect their teeth.

“I row until four in the afternoon, then go home to rest,” said the ferrywoman who has been doing this job nearly 20 years and knows everyone in the area.

GETTING THERE

From Hanoi take the Ho Chi Minh Road to Thanh Hoa, around 155 kilometers away. Trains and buses are also available.



A 40-km path that entertains with a never-ending play of light and shade and a concert of bird cries and rustling leaves is an unusual destination, but those who reach there aren’t complaining

There are close to 30 streams, big and small, in the area and they put in an appearance after every turn along Suoi Muong road that is 100 kilometers long. But not every stream has a boat to take you across. Sometimes, people have to wade into the water first and lead others waiting to take their bikes across.

And the adventure is only the beginning. Some parts of the road are piles of rock, some are slippery soil, some are in between the cliff where the bikes have half a meter width to drive on.

The bike driver needs to be firm and the pillion rider should be ready to jump off at all times to help push the motorbike.

It can be discouraging, but if you’re in a mood to take things on, the tough road is the perfect challenge.

The Ma River continues to flow alongside, playfully switching from the left to the right and vice versa. On some parts of the road, the river is so close you can lean over and wash your hands in the flowing waters.

It’s best to make this journey early May, when it’s not raining and the bamboos are in their post-spring prime.

November or December is also good as the monsoon has passed and the bamboos throw in a dash of yellow.

The journey is an absolute no-no during the first days of rainy season as the road gets very muddy, the rocks get very slippery and the streams get very fierce.

Every 10 or 15 kilometers on the road is a village where such necessities as instant noodles, eggs, soaps, cookies and sweets can be procured.

Most villages are home to ethnic minority groups who invariably bade visitors passing by their stilt houses to come in and rest, freshen up and even use their ovens to cook.

Not far from Chieng Nua, one of the villages, is a cemetery on a cliff that dates back to the 11th century. The place is also home to vestiges of the Dong Son Culture, a prehistoric Bronze Age in Vietnam, and temples worshiping heroes of the Lam Son revolution during the early 15th century against Chinese invaders.

The journey can take longer, but patience is rewarded when, almost unnoticed, the magnificent bamboo path is there in front, casting a mysterious aura and allure.

Long and slender, the leaves sparkle in the sun and make joyful rustling and creaking sounds as the breeze blows through them. The play of light and shade is soothing and exciting at the same time. Where does the path lead?

But that’s it. There is nowhere to go but where the path takes you. In fact, the path is “home”. You have arrived.

Related Articles

A path to somewhere

It takes some getting to, but a bamboo-lined dirt road makes it worthwhile



A long bridge across the Ma River is just one of the picturesque features on the trip to the Suoi Muong bamboo path

If it’s all about the journey and not the destination, there is a “journey to a journey” involving quite a few ups and downs, not to mention twists and turns, that awaits the nature lover in Vietnam’s northern region.

The destination is a path, 40 kilometers long, that winds its way through a dense bamboo grove in Thanh Hoa Province.

In order to reach the Suoi Muong bamboo path, there’s a long way to go, past high mountains and deep valleys. A motorbike is an indispensable accessory.

Let’s get going from Hanoi and head to Hoa Binh, where Muong Lat Street along the Lao border leads to the mountainous western part of Thanh Hoa.

The first village on the road is named Thanh Son, where backpackers can tuck in for the night in local homes after a simple supper.

As we go further, more villages appear, as do the first bamboos.

Here, the road is named Suoi Muong after a local stream.

Along the red-soil road, which gets narrower toward the end, are tall, dense bamboo grasses that cast their green shadows on the Ma River flowing alongside.

Then the bamboos disappear, and the Mau Village market comes into view, several minutes from the pier across the Ma River.

Stationed at the pier is a woman in her sixties. Her teeth are dyed in black, a beauty aid for Vietnamese women in the old times and a tradition to protect their teeth.

“I row until four in the afternoon, then go home to rest,” said the ferrywoman who has been doing this job nearly 20 years and knows everyone in the area.

GETTING THERE

From Hanoi take the Ho Chi Minh Road to Thanh Hoa, around 155 kilometers away. Trains and buses are also available.



A 40-km path that entertains with a never-ending play of light and shade and a concert of bird cries and rustling leaves is an unusual destination, but those who reach there aren’t complaining

There are close to 30 streams, big and small, in the area and they put in an appearance after every turn along Suoi Muong road that is 100 kilometers long. But not every stream has a boat to take you across. Sometimes, people have to wade into the water first and lead others waiting to take their bikes across.

And the adventure is only the beginning. Some parts of the road are piles of rock, some are slippery soil, some are in between the cliff where the bikes have half a meter width to drive on.

The bike driver needs to be firm and the pillion rider should be ready to jump off at all times to help push the motorbike.

It can be discouraging, but if you’re in a mood to take things on, the tough road is the perfect challenge.

The Ma River continues to flow alongside, playfully switching from the left to the right and vice versa. On some parts of the road, the river is so close you can lean over and wash your hands in the flowing waters.

It’s best to make this journey early May, when it’s not raining and the bamboos are in their post-spring prime.

November or December is also good as the monsoon has passed and the bamboos throw in a dash of yellow.

The journey is an absolute no-no during the first days of rainy season as the road gets very muddy, the rocks get very slippery and the streams get very fierce.

Every 10 or 15 kilometers on the road is a village where such necessities as instant noodles, eggs, soaps, cookies and sweets can be procured.

Most villages are home to ethnic minority groups who invariably bade visitors passing by their stilt houses to come in and rest, freshen up and even use their ovens to cook.

Not far from Chieng Nua, one of the villages, is a cemetery on a cliff that dates back to the 11th century. The place is also home to vestiges of the Dong Son Culture, a prehistoric Bronze Age in Vietnam, and temples worshiping heroes of the Lam Son revolution during the early 15th century against Chinese invaders.

The journey can take longer, but patience is rewarded when, almost unnoticed, the magnificent bamboo path is there in front, casting a mysterious aura and allure.

Long and slender, the leaves sparkle in the sun and make joyful rustling and creaking sounds as the breeze blows through them. The play of light and shade is soothing and exciting at the same time. Where does the path lead?

But that’s it. There is nowhere to go but where the path takes you. In fact, the path is “home”. You have arrived.

Related Articles