Archive for » May, 2011 «

City hotels celebrate Children’s Day in style

857db 1.central.img 3680 City hotels celebrate Children’s Day in style

A view of the restaurant at the Liberty Central Hotel in District 1 - Photo: Courtesy of Saigontourist

For International Children’s Day on June 1 many restaurants and hotels under management of Saigontourist in HCMC will offer wonderful buffets to give families a happy day with unforgettable moments.

Liberty Central Hotel (179 Le Thanh Ton Street, District 1)

The hotel offers a buffet with many delicious dishes for children and animated games from 5:30 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. The buffet will feature more than 30 food choices along with a vast selection of cakes. Tickets are VND299,000 per adult and VND199,000 per child. If you buy ten tickets, you get one guest free.

Continental Hotel (132 Dong Khoi Street, District 1)

Kids and adults alike have the chance to experience a buffet party which features more than 40 Western and Asian dishes. The fun night includes a drawing contest, puppet show, music shows and games. The evening is from 6:30 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. It costs VND390,000 for adults and VND250,000 for kids, inclusive of drinks.

Star 39 Hotel (39 Nguyen Van Ba, Thu Duc District)

There will be an outdoor BBQ buffet from 4 p.m. to 6 p.m. with a drawing contest, lucky draw and music show. Tickets are VND150,000 per adult and VND100,000 per child. With every ten tickets purchased, you get one free.

Saigon Hotel (41 Dong Du Street, District 1)

From 6:30 p.m. to 9:30 p.m., the hotel will hold a buffet called ‘Festive day for children’ with more than 30 dishes, a game show, singing and drawing contests. Tickets cost VND169,000 for adults and VND119,000 for kids.

(Source: Saigon Times Online)

Creation of bamboo boats is a silent pleasure

Most visitors go to Phan Thiet City’s Thuy Tu Temple to witness the hundreds of whale skeletons but they forget there is also a lot of life in the nearby bamboo boat making craft village, the silent corner of sea life.

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A worker in the bamboo boat making craft village in Phan Thiet City

Thuyen thung (bamboo boat) has been used by fishermen in the Quang region for over a century in central Vietnam. Due to the high demand of fishermen, the craft of making bamboo boats also developed, but these days just a few households preserve the craft.

Other crafts are seen as basic but making a bamboo boat is no plain sailing. Firstly, artisans have to cut bamboo trees in the forest them soak them in water for a day. The next important step is to slice them into regular, light and straight strings. This step influences the quality of the boats which are soft, leathery and solid. Bamboo strings also need to be dried for one day.

The artisans then weave them into round planks and finish the boat with a stable hoop also made by bamboo. The boat needs to be covered by a form of glue made of rai (a kind of tree) oil and cow droppings.

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A bamboo boat race in Phan Thiet City - Photos: Khai Nguyen

A craftsman with 50 years of experience of making bamboo boats, Do Van Luong, said: “To have a good boat, you have to find a good bamboo tree that is not too old or too young; it needs to be straight and should not have many sections. The job requires you to be patient, meticulous and of course talented.”

Also keeping the tradition alive with Luong’s family is Ngo Phuoc.

Phuoc said: “The boat is not only for fishermen plying their trade but also a very important part of the traditional boat race festivals, and of course for tourists to experience. So we have to preserve the tradition.”

Luong and Phuoc and their families also have to hire workers to help meet the demands of local fishermen.

(Source: Saigon Times Online)

Hue Vietnam – Giving History Its Due
c2848 img 2446 Hue Vietnam   Giving History Its Due

One of the entrances to Hue’s imperial city

More than any other city in the south, Hue’s balance of past and present charms its visitors. True to the original architect’s intention the symmetry and feng shui of the imperial city and tombs remain, and a good portion of Hue’s population live, work and play beside and upon the old walls and moats.

One of the simple pleasures that Hue affords, is sitting drinking coffee on Le Huan Street opposite an ornate fortified city gate. At the heart of the city, the imperial city, walled within walls, is a restoration work in progress. The grounds surrounding the main buildings are a rustic combination of nature and man’s best work. The chance to walk unheeded around the inside of the citadel walls reveals banyan trees taking over the brickwork, and untended island wildernesses in the moats.

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One of the arched entrances to Hue’s Imperial City

The Citadel whose construction was started in 1864 gives the impression of being much older than it is. The sporadic restoration of the royal residences and halls continues. The atmosphere, however, is far from austere as there are many activities including pony and elephant rides and Vietnamese family groups lie languidly in the heat where once only royalty could tread.

Back along the river is a market where you can see the work of some of Vietnam’s best basket and hat makers. On the other riverbank, is a small backpacker area where foreigners can recharge their travelers’ batteries on western foods and flavors. It’s also a good place where you can meet local guides, xe om riders and easy riders who can show you around.

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Tu Duc was more interested in art than politics. His tomb is designed according to principles of feng shui - Photos: Michael Smith

A few minutes by motorbike, the buildings and traffic fall away. After Danang’s endless spread of noisy

dusty roads, Hue is like country town. For lovers of designed tranquility, Tu Duc’s tomb five kilometers outside the city is the most beautiful of a good selection of royal mausoleums. It was made as much for living as dying, as the emperor used it as his palace before he died. In fact his body is not in his tomb; the actual site is unknown as it was kept a closely guarded secret – so much so that the 200 servants who buried him were all beheaded. In the day’s dying light, wandering around the lakes and pavilions, it is interesting to contemplate Emperor Tu Duc, who was more interested in art than politics.  No warrior statesman, Tu Duc’s reign (1847-1883) was quite arbitrary and longer than any other member of his Nguyen family and by its end, Vietnam was completely under the yoke of French colonial rule.

For people who fancy a bit of pretend archeology, the road beyond this tomb quickly becomes a dirt track and passes several other massive overgrown tombs with rusty locks on their gates.

(Source: SGTO)

Nha Trang Sea Festival 2011 to kick off
biennhatrang211 300x224 Nha Trang Sea Festival 2011 to kick off

Nha Trang Beach

The biennial Sea Festival 2011 will take place from June 11-15 in the resort beach town of Nha Trang in central Vietnam.

First held in 2003, this year’s festival features nearly 50 various cultural, art and sporting outdoor activities including Cau Ngu (Fish Worshipping) rite, fireworks display, wine, kite, lantern and carnival festivals.

The province’s vice chairman and head of the organizing committee, Le Xuan Than, told Thanh Nien that the seminar and photo exhibition, and music show about Truong Sa (Spratly) archipelago will be the highlight of this year’s festival.

Sideline activities to be held in the days before the festival include music shows, a collective wedding, calligraphy showcase, food court and film week.

Many local and foreign artists from South Korea (RoK), China, France and Cuba will participate.

Than said that the Nha Trang government has requested the owners of Nha Trang hotels not to overcharge the customers more than 50% of regular price.

The Khanh Hoa Department of Culture, Sports and Tourism will send a team of surveyors to do spot checks on businesses to prevent price gouging. Those taking advantage of visitors will be heavily punished, according to officials.

The organizer expects the fifth Sea Festival will draw more than 100,000 visitors.

The activities are all free to the public.

(Source: ThanhnienNews)

A beautiful painting of nature

Sa mu, known as Cunninghamia lanceolata trees, shrouded in a thick mist of the mountain and forest looks like a water-colour painting.

Local people in the pictureque Sapa resort district of northern Lao Cai Province have grown these trees called ‘Samu’ or ‘Samoc ‘ to cover bare hills and decoarete tourist sites.

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(Source: VOV)

Hanoi through a Saigonese’s lens

Photographer Nguyen The Duong has just finalised the first stage of a project named “I Love Hanoi”.

In the eyes of a Saigonese man, Hanoi looks different.


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Hoan Kiem Lake

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The The Huc Bridge in Hanoi’s center

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The “legendary” Dong Xuan market

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Part of the ceramic road

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A new residential area

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Kaengnam – Vietnam’s highest building

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The West Lake

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Hanoi at night

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The Hanoi Opera House

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Dong Kinh Nghia Thuc Square

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Hanoi at 11.45 pm

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Hanoi – the city of future

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The National Convention Center

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Hanoi at night

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The best roundabout in Hanoi: Tran Duy Hung – Pham Hung

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Thang Long Avenue

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Kim Lien tunnel

(Source: Vietnamnet)