Sunday, October 31, 2010

Playing misty for you



Lung Van Village, also known as the roof of the Muong minority people, in Hoa Binh Province

‘Clouded’ is a way of life in Lung Van Village.

Located more than 1.2 kilometers above the sea level, the commune that somewhat incongruously nestles in a valley is also called the roof of the Muong minority people in the northern province of Hoa Binh.

Getting there is a cloudy affair as well.

From Muong Khen Town in downtown Hoa Binh, one has to get past 13 kilometers of zigzagging, sloping hills to reach Lung Van.

There’s only one bus on this route in the afternoon, so most people choose to take a xe om (motorbike taxi).

Road No. 440 is a tough road, with many parts bordered by mountain cliffs. It gets so foggy at times that visibility is restricted to three or four meters in front. The bikes pass Dich Giao, Quyet Chien and Doc Mun communes as they take more than one hour to get to Lung Van.

Fresh green fields of chayote run along the road and lines of young corn stretch to the feet of mountains far away.

The road has been in service for three or four years. Earlier, people from Lung Van Village had to use horses and set out on a journey that took several days.

As you go a further up, a vast green plain spreads out under your feet. The clouds here are so thick you feel like you can hold them.

At this high altitude, it is distinctly cooler.

From Dich Giao, look along the sloping road, up a steep slope, and you catch your first glimpse of Lung Van, where people use thick blankets the whole year round as it’s always freezing.

GETTING THERE

Hoa Binh Province is around 75 kilometers from Hanoi. Take National Highway 70, then turn to National Highway 6. Bus and public bus are both available.


Lung Van children smile as they climb up a slope in their valley

The name of the valley gives a very clear hint as to its looks. Lung, taken from thung lung means valley and Van means cloud.

Almost bypassed by tourism, this is a “wild” place that will make all nature lovers go gaga over it.

People first lived in Lung Van at least a thousand years ago, when it was named Muong Cham but not much is known about the history of the place that also seems shrouded in the mists of time.

Below the layer of mysterious clouds, the place is green all around. The mountains, the terraced paddy fields, the lanes – they are all green. And the houses are tiny grey dots on the lush green carpet, scattered among trees and hung on the mountain sides. They show up and disappear as the clouds lift and lower their foggy curtains.

To discover the wilderness in the high valley, ask for the Po, Trau and Tien mountains that surround the valley. The place has several beautiful small caves which don’t even have names.

On the face of it, the valley is poor, so poor that most people never get a satisfactory meal, sometimes they don’t have rice to eat, but notwithstanding this plight, the residents call their home a fairy land that blesses them with extraordinary longevity.

Unofficial statistics estimate the village has a population of more than 2,000 people with 166 people aged over 80.

The oldest of them is Dinh Thi Heu. She’s 113 this year and still of sharp mind. Heu fetches water by herself to cook wine and tends to her garden every day. Her sixth son, whom Heu is living with, is 71 years old.

At Lung Van, guests will be introduced to Thich, a local police officer, who makes sure they can go around freely during their stay. In the village the primary means of transport is the feet.

If they manage to get the go-ahead for a sleep-over at a local’s house, visitors will be treated with corn wine and special dishes that Muong people only use to serve guests: chicken roasted with fermented bamboo shoots and pumpkin bud soup.

Usually, visitors are not just welcomed, but also asked to stay over.

The mists of time are lifting over Lung Van, which now has a school and a medical center.

But some of its traditions have been lost, like their attire of yesteryear that is only worn now by old women on festive occasions.

If you are lucky, or if you take the trouble to find out, you can get to meet Thien, 59, who has played music for 20 years and composed dozens of songs and hundreds of dances for the Muong people in the area.

He still sings about trau forests that give oil and fruits, the sound of the gong, of wooden bells, but now, there is a dreamy, nostalgic yearning for lost things in his voice.

Related Articles

Saturday, October 30, 2010

Playing misty for you



Lung Van Village, also known as the roof of the Muong minority people, in Hoa Binh Province

‘Clouded’ is a way of life in Lung Van Village.

Located more than 1.2 kilometers above the sea level, the commune that somewhat incongruously nestles in a valley is also called the roof of the Muong minority people in the northern province of Hoa Binh.

Getting there is a cloudy affair as well.

From Muong Khen Town in downtown Hoa Binh, one has to get past 13 kilometers of zigzagging, sloping hills to reach Lung Van.

There’s only one bus on this route in the afternoon, so most people choose to take a xe om (motorbike taxi).

Road No. 440 is a tough road, with many parts bordered by mountain cliffs. It gets so foggy at times that visibility is restricted to three or four meters in front. The bikes pass Dich Giao, Quyet Chien and Doc Mun communes as they take more than one hour to get to Lung Van.

Fresh green fields of chayote run along the road and lines of young corn stretch to the feet of mountains far away.

The road has been in service for three or four years. Earlier, people from Lung Van Village had to use horses and set out on a journey that took several days.

As you go a further up, a vast green plain spreads out under your feet. The clouds here are so thick you feel like you can hold them.

At this high altitude, it is distinctly cooler.

From Dich Giao, look along the sloping road, up a steep slope, and you catch your first glimpse of Lung Van, where people use thick blankets the whole year round as it’s always freezing.

GETTING THERE

Hoa Binh Province is around 75 kilometers from Hanoi. Take National Highway 70, then turn to National Highway 6. Bus and public bus are both available.


Lung Van children smile as they climb up a slope in their valley

The name of the valley gives a very clear hint as to its looks. Lung, taken from thung lung means valley and Van means cloud.

Almost bypassed by tourism, this is a “wild” place that will make all nature lovers go gaga over it.

People first lived in Lung Van at least a thousand years ago, when it was named Muong Cham but not much is known about the history of the place that also seems shrouded in the mists of time.

Below the layer of mysterious clouds, the place is green all around. The mountains, the terraced paddy fields, the lanes – they are all green. And the houses are tiny grey dots on the lush green carpet, scattered among trees and hung on the mountain sides. They show up and disappear as the clouds lift and lower their foggy curtains.

To discover the wilderness in the high valley, ask for the Po, Trau and Tien mountains that surround the valley. The place has several beautiful small caves which don’t even have names.

On the face of it, the valley is poor, so poor that most people never get a satisfactory meal, sometimes they don’t have rice to eat, but notwithstanding this plight, the residents call their home a fairy land that blesses them with extraordinary longevity.

Unofficial statistics estimate the village has a population of more than 2,000 people with 166 people aged over 80.

The oldest of them is Dinh Thi Heu. She’s 113 this year and still of sharp mind. Heu fetches water by herself to cook wine and tends to her garden every day. Her sixth son, whom Heu is living with, is 71 years old.

At Lung Van, guests will be introduced to Thich, a local police officer, who makes sure they can go around freely during their stay. In the village the primary means of transport is the feet.

If they manage to get the go-ahead for a sleep-over at a local’s house, visitors will be treated with corn wine and special dishes that Muong people only use to serve guests: chicken roasted with fermented bamboo shoots and pumpkin bud soup.

Usually, visitors are not just welcomed, but also asked to stay over.

The mists of time are lifting over Lung Van, which now has a school and a medical center.

But some of its traditions have been lost, like their attire of yesteryear that is only worn now by old women on festive occasions.

If you are lucky, or if you take the trouble to find out, you can get to meet Thien, 59, who has played music for 20 years and composed dozens of songs and hundreds of dances for the Muong people in the area.

He still sings about trau forests that give oil and fruits, the sound of the gong, of wooden bells, but now, there is a dreamy, nostalgic yearning for lost things in his voice.

Related Articles

Playing misty for you



Lung Van Village, also known as the roof of the Muong minority people, in Hoa Binh Province

‘Clouded’ is a way of life in Lung Van Village.

Located more than 1.2 kilometers above the sea level, the commune that somewhat incongruously nestles in a valley is also called the roof of the Muong minority people in the northern province of Hoa Binh.

Getting there is a cloudy affair as well.

From Muong Khen Town in downtown Hoa Binh, one has to get past 13 kilometers of zigzagging, sloping hills to reach Lung Van.

There’s only one bus on this route in the afternoon, so most people choose to take a xe om (motorbike taxi).

Road No. 440 is a tough road, with many parts bordered by mountain cliffs. It gets so foggy at times that visibility is restricted to three or four meters in front. The bikes pass Dich Giao, Quyet Chien and Doc Mun communes as they take more than one hour to get to Lung Van.

Fresh green fields of chayote run along the road and lines of young corn stretch to the feet of mountains far away.

The road has been in service for three or four years. Earlier, people from Lung Van Village had to use horses and set out on a journey that took several days.

As you go a further up, a vast green plain spreads out under your feet. The clouds here are so thick you feel like you can hold them.

At this high altitude, it is distinctly cooler.

From Dich Giao, look along the sloping road, up a steep slope, and you catch your first glimpse of Lung Van, where people use thick blankets the whole year round as it’s always freezing.

GETTING THERE

Hoa Binh Province is around 75 kilometers from Hanoi. Take National Highway 70, then turn to National Highway 6. Bus and public bus are both available.


Lung Van children smile as they climb up a slope in their valley

The name of the valley gives a very clear hint as to its looks. Lung, taken from thung lung means valley and Van means cloud.

Almost bypassed by tourism, this is a “wild” place that will make all nature lovers go gaga over it.

People first lived in Lung Van at least a thousand years ago, when it was named Muong Cham but not much is known about the history of the place that also seems shrouded in the mists of time.

Below the layer of mysterious clouds, the place is green all around. The mountains, the terraced paddy fields, the lanes – they are all green. And the houses are tiny grey dots on the lush green carpet, scattered among trees and hung on the mountain sides. They show up and disappear as the clouds lift and lower their foggy curtains.

To discover the wilderness in the high valley, ask for the Po, Trau and Tien mountains that surround the valley. The place has several beautiful small caves which don’t even have names.

On the face of it, the valley is poor, so poor that most people never get a satisfactory meal, sometimes they don’t have rice to eat, but notwithstanding this plight, the residents call their home a fairy land that blesses them with extraordinary longevity.

Unofficial statistics estimate the village has a population of more than 2,000 people with 166 people aged over 80.

The oldest of them is Dinh Thi Heu. She’s 113 this year and still of sharp mind. Heu fetches water by herself to cook wine and tends to her garden every day. Her sixth son, whom Heu is living with, is 71 years old.

At Lung Van, guests will be introduced to Thich, a local police officer, who makes sure they can go around freely during their stay. In the village the primary means of transport is the feet.

If they manage to get the go-ahead for a sleep-over at a local’s house, visitors will be treated with corn wine and special dishes that Muong people only use to serve guests: chicken roasted with fermented bamboo shoots and pumpkin bud soup.

Usually, visitors are not just welcomed, but also asked to stay over.

The mists of time are lifting over Lung Van, which now has a school and a medical center.

But some of its traditions have been lost, like their attire of yesteryear that is only worn now by old women on festive occasions.

If you are lucky, or if you take the trouble to find out, you can get to meet Thien, 59, who has played music for 20 years and composed dozens of songs and hundreds of dances for the Muong people in the area.

He still sings about trau forests that give oil and fruits, the sound of the gong, of wooden bells, but now, there is a dreamy, nostalgic yearning for lost things in his voice.

Related Articles

Playing misty for you



Lung Van Village, also known as the roof of the Muong minority people, in Hoa Binh Province

‘Clouded’ is a way of life in Lung Van Village.

Located more than 1.2 kilometers above the sea level, the commune that somewhat incongruously nestles in a valley is also called the roof of the Muong minority people in the northern province of Hoa Binh.

Getting there is a cloudy affair as well.

From Muong Khen Town in downtown Hoa Binh, one has to get past 13 kilometers of zigzagging, sloping hills to reach Lung Van.

There’s only one bus on this route in the afternoon, so most people choose to take a xe om (motorbike taxi).

Road No. 440 is a tough road, with many parts bordered by mountain cliffs. It gets so foggy at times that visibility is restricted to three or four meters in front. The bikes pass Dich Giao, Quyet Chien and Doc Mun communes as they take more than one hour to get to Lung Van.

Fresh green fields of chayote run along the road and lines of young corn stretch to the feet of mountains far away.

The road has been in service for three or four years. Earlier, people from Lung Van Village had to use horses and set out on a journey that took several days.

As you go a further up, a vast green plain spreads out under your feet. The clouds here are so thick you feel like you can hold them.

At this high altitude, it is distinctly cooler.

From Dich Giao, look along the sloping road, up a steep slope, and you catch your first glimpse of Lung Van, where people use thick blankets the whole year round as it’s always freezing.

GETTING THERE

Hoa Binh Province is around 75 kilometers from Hanoi. Take National Highway 70, then turn to National Highway 6. Bus and public bus are both available.


Lung Van children smile as they climb up a slope in their valley

The name of the valley gives a very clear hint as to its looks. Lung, taken from thung lung means valley and Van means cloud.

Almost bypassed by tourism, this is a “wild” place that will make all nature lovers go gaga over it.

People first lived in Lung Van at least a thousand years ago, when it was named Muong Cham but not much is known about the history of the place that also seems shrouded in the mists of time.

Below the layer of mysterious clouds, the place is green all around. The mountains, the terraced paddy fields, the lanes – they are all green. And the houses are tiny grey dots on the lush green carpet, scattered among trees and hung on the mountain sides. They show up and disappear as the clouds lift and lower their foggy curtains.

To discover the wilderness in the high valley, ask for the Po, Trau and Tien mountains that surround the valley. The place has several beautiful small caves which don’t even have names.

On the face of it, the valley is poor, so poor that most people never get a satisfactory meal, sometimes they don’t have rice to eat, but notwithstanding this plight, the residents call their home a fairy land that blesses them with extraordinary longevity.

Unofficial statistics estimate the village has a population of more than 2,000 people with 166 people aged over 80.

The oldest of them is Dinh Thi Heu. She’s 113 this year and still of sharp mind. Heu fetches water by herself to cook wine and tends to her garden every day. Her sixth son, whom Heu is living with, is 71 years old.

At Lung Van, guests will be introduced to Thich, a local police officer, who makes sure they can go around freely during their stay. In the village the primary means of transport is the feet.

If they manage to get the go-ahead for a sleep-over at a local’s house, visitors will be treated with corn wine and special dishes that Muong people only use to serve guests: chicken roasted with fermented bamboo shoots and pumpkin bud soup.

Usually, visitors are not just welcomed, but also asked to stay over.

The mists of time are lifting over Lung Van, which now has a school and a medical center.

But some of its traditions have been lost, like their attire of yesteryear that is only worn now by old women on festive occasions.

If you are lucky, or if you take the trouble to find out, you can get to meet Thien, 59, who has played music for 20 years and composed dozens of songs and hundreds of dances for the Muong people in the area.

He still sings about trau forests that give oil and fruits, the sound of the gong, of wooden bells, but now, there is a dreamy, nostalgic yearning for lost things in his voice.

Related Articles

Friday, October 29, 2010

Playing misty for you



Lung Van Village, also known as the roof of the Muong minority people, in Hoa Binh Province

‘Clouded’ is a way of life in Lung Van Village.

Located more than 1.2 kilometers above the sea level, the commune that somewhat incongruously nestles in a valley is also called the roof of the Muong minority people in the northern province of Hoa Binh.

Getting there is a cloudy affair as well.

From Muong Khen Town in downtown Hoa Binh, one has to get past 13 kilometers of zigzagging, sloping hills to reach Lung Van.

There’s only one bus on this route in the afternoon, so most people choose to take a xe om (motorbike taxi).

Road No. 440 is a tough road, with many parts bordered by mountain cliffs. It gets so foggy at times that visibility is restricted to three or four meters in front. The bikes pass Dich Giao, Quyet Chien and Doc Mun communes as they take more than one hour to get to Lung Van.

Fresh green fields of chayote run along the road and lines of young corn stretch to the feet of mountains far away.

The road has been in service for three or four years. Earlier, people from Lung Van Village had to use horses and set out on a journey that took several days.

As you go a further up, a vast green plain spreads out under your feet. The clouds here are so thick you feel like you can hold them.

At this high altitude, it is distinctly cooler.

From Dich Giao, look along the sloping road, up a steep slope, and you catch your first glimpse of Lung Van, where people use thick blankets the whole year round as it’s always freezing.

GETTING THERE

Hoa Binh Province is around 75 kilometers from Hanoi. Take National Highway 70, then turn to National Highway 6. Bus and public bus are both available.


Lung Van children smile as they climb up a slope in their valley

The name of the valley gives a very clear hint as to its looks. Lung, taken from thung lung means valley and Van means cloud.

Almost bypassed by tourism, this is a “wild” place that will make all nature lovers go gaga over it.

People first lived in Lung Van at least a thousand years ago, when it was named Muong Cham but not much is known about the history of the place that also seems shrouded in the mists of time.

Below the layer of mysterious clouds, the place is green all around. The mountains, the terraced paddy fields, the lanes – they are all green. And the houses are tiny grey dots on the lush green carpet, scattered among trees and hung on the mountain sides. They show up and disappear as the clouds lift and lower their foggy curtains.

To discover the wilderness in the high valley, ask for the Po, Trau and Tien mountains that surround the valley. The place has several beautiful small caves which don’t even have names.

On the face of it, the valley is poor, so poor that most people never get a satisfactory meal, sometimes they don’t have rice to eat, but notwithstanding this plight, the residents call their home a fairy land that blesses them with extraordinary longevity.

Unofficial statistics estimate the village has a population of more than 2,000 people with 166 people aged over 80.

The oldest of them is Dinh Thi Heu. She’s 113 this year and still of sharp mind. Heu fetches water by herself to cook wine and tends to her garden every day. Her sixth son, whom Heu is living with, is 71 years old.

At Lung Van, guests will be introduced to Thich, a local police officer, who makes sure they can go around freely during their stay. In the village the primary means of transport is the feet.

If they manage to get the go-ahead for a sleep-over at a local’s house, visitors will be treated with corn wine and special dishes that Muong people only use to serve guests: chicken roasted with fermented bamboo shoots and pumpkin bud soup.

Usually, visitors are not just welcomed, but also asked to stay over.

The mists of time are lifting over Lung Van, which now has a school and a medical center.

But some of its traditions have been lost, like their attire of yesteryear that is only worn now by old women on festive occasions.

If you are lucky, or if you take the trouble to find out, you can get to meet Thien, 59, who has played music for 20 years and composed dozens of songs and hundreds of dances for the Muong people in the area.

He still sings about trau forests that give oil and fruits, the sound of the gong, of wooden bells, but now, there is a dreamy, nostalgic yearning for lost things in his voice.

Related Articles

Places to celebrate Halloween Night

Scary party heads pose for photos at Seventeen Saloon’s Halloween bash last year - Photo: Official website of the Seventeen Saloon
If you are looking for a cool place for a Halloween party, here’s our list of some hotels, bars and café in town.

*Caravelle Hotel: The Halloween Nightmare Party will be at Saigon Saigon Bar at 6:30 p.m. on October 31 with exciting games, sweet and spooky Halloween drinks, “frightening food” and shock-inducing shots awaiting you and your friends.

Halloween drink list includes Vampire’s Kiss, Blood and Sand, Ectoplasm n’ Eyeballs, Swarm Water Gross and Bloody Vampire for VND135,000++ each.

*Legend Hotel Saigon:  A fabulous night filled with the Halloween spirits and treats lies ready at the hotel’s Atrium Café from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. on Oct 31. There’s a buffet with frightful dishes, live entertainment by the Jamm’n Essence band and the orange and black scareroom, with skeletons, spider webs, carved pumpkins and frightening creations.

A witch will be flying her broom over the tables to make you scream. While enjoying the live band, you can have Transylvania Dinner, Asian Witch Soup, Dracula’s First Bite and many more devilish foods.

*Windsor Plaza Saigon: On Oct. 31 from 9 p.m. till late, the hotel’s America Discotheque will host Halloween special activities.

Dress up in your best costume for a chance to be crowned Halloween King or Queen of the night in the special costume contest. At 12 midnight, the lights will go out for 15 minutes and Halloween fever will come to life for everyone present.

America Discotheque will be decorated as a haunted house on the evening with plenty of spooky decorations everywhere, including traditional Jack-o’-lanterns, spider webs and mummies. There will be plenty of opportunities to take fun and memorable photographs with special backdrops and photo areas as well.

The hotel’s Café Central An Dong in Dist. 5 and Café Central Nguyen Hue in Dist. 1 will also present a fun-filled Halloween.

*Seventeen Saloon: The saloon will be turn into a Halloween maze with well-known celebrities from hell like Jason, Dracula, Vampire and Frankenstein. There are two different theme nights including “The return of Jason” (the main character in the Friday the 13th horror movie) featuring dances and gameshows on Oct 30 and “The combination of Dracular and vampire” on Oct 31.

The fun starts at 9 p.m. both nights at Seventeen Saloon, 103A Pham Ngu Lao Street, District 1. Guests who buy a bottle of spirits will get one Halloween mask or gift. Seventeen Saloon with give prizes for guests with the best make up. Free make-up is available from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m.

For further information, contact 3914 0007 or 0944 017 017.

*Vasco’s bar: To celebrate Halloween on Oct. 30, Vasco’s will transform its two rooms into dungeons. The main room will feature A.K.A.T, DJ Kamel Knight, DJ Robert Brant, DJ Alex Zander, Jordan and Jase while the Blue Room will host several birthday parties with music by Von Knappe, Don Pucci, DR.Jakell and guest performers.

The night also includes a variety of prizes and specials including a bottle of Southern Comfort and a US$200 F&B voucher to be used at La Camargue and Vasco’s for Best Male Costume and best Female Costume. Lucky guests will also have a chance to win bottles of Southern Comfort throughout the night.

Vasco’s 74/7D Hai Ba Trung Street, District 1, HCMC, tel: 3824 3148.

*Acoustic Café: The live music cafe Acoustic will host “Scream From the Ring” at 8 p.m. on Saturday Oct. 30. The Halloween live concert features bands Titanium, Coconuts and Overload, singers Ha Okia, Thao Trang, Chu Minh Ki, Minh MTV and special guests guitarist Nguyen Dat and his famous band Da Vang.

The night will also feature a host of horror games with the chance to win prizes worth US$400. Halloween makeup for guests is available from 6 p.m. Entrance is VND80,000 inclusive of a drink. Entry is free for guests in Halloween costumes.

Acoustic, 6E1 Ngo Thoi Nhiem Street, District 3, HCMC, tel: 3930 2239.

*Hard Rock Café: “Running with the Devil” is the Halloween Special Treat to guests at 9 p.m. on Saturday Oct 30. The café offers free entrance with live music, free shots and special treats for those in Halloween costume.

Hard Rock Café s at Kumho Asiana Plaza, 39 Le Duan Blvd., District 1.

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Leading Vietnam florist joins Interflora

John Gwee (L), chairman of the Interflora Pacific Unit LTD, talks with Interflora’s new member, Bui Ngoc Quang, director of the Vietnam Telegram Flower Corp - Photo: My Tran
The international flower delivery network Interflora welcomed leading local florist, Vietnam Telegram Flower Corp, as a member of its network on Thursday after a final inspection.

“After seeing that Vietnam Telegram Flower Corp. have highly skilled and creative florists that can use flowers to express feelings for every occasion… I am perfectly assured to sign an agreement on admitting the company,” said John Gwee, chairman of Interflora Pacific Unit Ltd.

Headquartered at 50 Tran Quang Khai Street, HCMC’s District 1, Vietnam Telegram Flower Corp. has over 100 branches and member florists throughout Vietnam, providing a nationwide service and deliveries to over 80 countries. “We deliver many kinds of flowers and arrangements,” said Bui Ngoc Quang, director of the company, adding that keeping to Interflora standards would benefit customers and increase the number of countries the florist could deliver to.

Interflora is a US$2 billion a year flower delivery network with 24 executive offices and more than 55,000 members in 150 nations worldwide. It can handle 75 orders a minute.

For more information, visit www.dienhoavietnam.com for Vietnamese version and www.interflora.vn for English version.

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