Tuesday, 30 April 2013

International Fireworks Competition_Love songs on Han River, Da Nang, Vietnam

The 2013 Danang International Fireworks Competition was officially opened on April 29 in Central Danang City with participation of representatives from the US, Russia, Japan, Italy and Vietnam.


Apart from annual activities such as floating flower garlands and colourful lanterns and boat procession on Han River, street music performances and displays of souvenirs and stone statues, visitors will have a chance to attend an exhibition entitled "Vietnam's Hoang Sa: historical evidence", a sea festival and a national Hiphop exchange as well as enjoy famous dishes of Vietnam and other foreign countries.
The first day of competition saw fireworks displays from Russia, Italy and Danang.

Some photos of the opening show:



Performance by the Russian team

Performance by Vietnam's Danang team


Performance by Italian team

Monday, 29 April 2013

Best Summer Biking Tours in Vietnam 2013



Summer considers as the ideal time for travelers explore Vietnam. The sky is always brighter, the scenery is more colorful, and the social activities are more exciting. Travelling in this time, travelers have a chance to enjoy Vietnam in active way.

Pu Luong Nature Reserve, Vietnam

Biking Pu Luong Nature Reserve – 4days ( Hanoi - Mai Chau - Pu Luong – Hanoi). This trip offers 4 days 3 nights. Departed for Mai Chau witness the lush rice field, enjoy the fresh air then head to the Pu Luong- the place is considers as a place have great biodiversity. Travelers chance to closer with the Mother Nature. The beaten path will provide the great adventure for explorers. Along this trip will bring an unforgettable experience with the riding on first part of the historic Ho Chi Minh Trail and exploring the quintessential of the ethnic minority culture. The trip includes support vehicle, home stay permission, meals, sightseeing fees & entrance fee.

Biking Mai Chau, Vietnam
Biking Mai Chau  - 2 days (Hanoi - Mai Chau- Hanoi).This is a 2 days 1 night tour departs from Hanoi, to Mai Chau then back to Ha Noi, stay overnight at Buoc Village. Mai Chau is known as the top fresh destination - the paradise of fog, smog and cloud. Travelers have a chance to visit a rice paddle, wild waterfall, witness the rustic beauty of this place, interact with the ethnic people, enjoy the local food,  sleep at the Thai’s silt house, learn how to weave the “ tho cam” product. The trip includes support vehicle, home stay permission, meals, sightseeing fees & entrance fee.

Summer promotion 2013:
ATA has launched “Great summer holiday with lucky travels” for summer promotion 2013 in Vietnam, Lao, Cambodia. The program applies for all customers request tour on website from 25 March to 30 September 2013. Variety gifts such as discount up to 15% on tour request, free city tour, free one night at a luxury cruise or at hotel, free meal at elegance restaurant and others are in listing lucky gift.

Travel Facts:
ACTIVETRAVEL ASIA (ATA) offers a wide selection of Vietnam, Laos, Cambodia adventure tours, including hiking and trekking, biking, motorcycling, kayaking, overland touring and family travel packages. For more information, please contact ATA for tailoring your very own tour via:

ACTIVETRAVEL ASIA (ATA)
Telephone: +844 3573 8569
Fax:        +844 3573 8570
Email: info@activetravel.asia
Address: Floor 12 Building 45 Nguyen Son Street, Long Bien district, Hanoi, Vietnam.




Saturday, 27 April 2013

HCM City streets lit up for holiday

Le Duan Street in HCM City’s District 1 has been decorated with colourful flowers and sparkling decorations to mark the holiday period.

 

Le Duan Street at night

The street decoration is a part of series activities to celebrate the Liberation Day April 30.

The two-kilometre street is regarded as one of the oldest and most beautiful streets in HCM City.

HCM City will hold fireworks displays at the Sai Gon River tunnel in District 2’s Thu Thiem Ward and Dam Sen Park in District 11 at 9pm on April 30.

Some photos taken from the street:

Cả con đường rực rỡ ánh sáng
Cả con đường rực rỡ ánh sáng
Sparkling street

Những tạo hình đèn màu trang trí
Những tạo hình đèn màu trang trí
Decorative lighting

Tiểu cảnh ánh sáng tại các giao lộ
Nice light design

Rất nhiều người dân đến tham quan hằng đêm
Rất nhiều người dân đến tham quan hằng đêm
An attractive destination for many

Dự kiến phố ánh sáng Lê Duẩn sẽ kéo dài cho đến hết ngày 10/5.
Dự kiến phố ánh sáng Lê Duẩn sẽ kéo dài cho đến hết ngày 10/5.
The lights will stay until May 10

Friday, 26 April 2013

Thousand-year-old bricks unearthed at Ho Dynasty Citadel

The Ho Dynasty Citadel Heritage Conservation Centre has announced that in recent archaeological excavations in the campus of the Ho Dynasty Citadel in Tien Vinh commune, Vinh Loc district, Thanh Hoa province, scientists discovered many bricks of thousand years old.

 

The surfaces of these bricks are engraved with ancient Chinese scripts, noting place-names such as Giang Tay (Jiangxi) Quan and Giang Tay Chuyen. This finding helps researchers explain about the origin of the bricks used to build the Ho Dynasty Citadel, a world cultural heritage.

These bricks are rectangular, in gray color, with average size of 37x17x5.5 cm, smaller than the popular bricks that were used to build the citadel. Scripts were carved into the bricks when the soil was still wet, scientists said.

The researchers said that these bricks were dated back to the Tang dynasty of China (618-907). At that time, every year in the fall and winter, the Tang dynasty sent defensive armies to Linh Nam. They were organised and had the designation of provinces in China, mainly Jiangxi.

The colonial government forced soldiers to make bricks and tiles to build citadels. The bricks were carved with the names of the provinces where they were made. The bricks carved with scripts “Giang Tay Quan” and “Giang Tay Chuyen” were produced by troops of Jiangxi Province.

At the end of the Tang dynasty, Annam (Vietnam today) was called Tinh Hai Quan. The word "quan" means an administrative unit that is the same as “district” in China.

At the Imperial Citadel of Thang Long, similar bricks have been discovered, which existed in parallel with bricks of the Ly – Tran dynasties in Vietnam.

Scientists believe that the later dynasties of Vietnam re-used these kinds of bricks to build palaces and fortresses. According to the ancient history book “Dai Viet Su Ky Toan Thu,” Ho Quy Ly dismantled some palaces in the capital of Thang Long to build the An Ton palace in the Ho Dynasty Citadel.

In addition to the above bricks carved with "Giang Tay Quan" and "Giang Tay Chuyen", scientists also found out bricks carved with the letter "Dai Viet Quoc." This is the first time this type of brick discovered at the Ho Dynasty Citadel.

 

Most scholars believe that the scripts “Dai Viet Quoc” on these bricks is the country name in the Ly Dynasty. However, according to recent studies, “Dai Viet Quoc” was the name of an independent state founded by Luu Cung in the Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms period (907-979). The country name of Dai Viet was created under the Ly Dynasty (1054).

Excavations at the ancient capital of Hoa Lu (Ninh Binh province) also found a lot of bricks carved with the letters "Dai Viet Quoc Quan Thanh Chuyen" (Dai Viet bricks for fortress construction).

Mr. Nguyen Xuan Toan, deputy director of the Ho Dynasty Citadel Heritage Conservation Center said that the latest discovery shows that the construction of the Ho dynasty citadel attracted the tremendous financial and intellectual resources of the Vietnamese people.

"The bricks used to build the citadel are important evidences for researchers to have more grounds in learning about the construction time, construction techniques and the contribution of the people of different regions in the country for the construction of the citadel," Toan stressed.

Thursday, 25 April 2013

Hoang Sa fest recognised as intangible cultural heritage

The Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism officially recognised the Hoang Sa (Paracel) Soldier Feast and Commemoration Festival as a national intangible cultural heritage and the communal temple of An Vinh village in central Quang Ngai Province's Ly Son island district as a national relic.

 

Hoang Sa (Paracel) Soldier Feast officially recognised as a national intangible cultural heritage
This decision will be announced at the 2013 Quang Ngai Sea and Island Cultural Week, to take place in Quang Ngai Province from April 25-29.

Observed for hundreds of years by families in the Ly Son islands, the festival pays tribute to local men who enlisted in the Hoang Sa Flotilla. This group was organised to patrol the Hoang Sa and Truong Sa archipelagos in order to mine resources and defend the nation's sovereignty over the area.

The festival includes a requiem for the dead, a procession of four supernatural creatures, the release of lanterns, boat races and sailing.

Director of the provincial Department of Culture, Sports and Tourism Nguyen Dang Vu said the dual recognitions were a significant event for the province.

This year's festival would be the biggest ever, he said, and the Sea and Island Cultural Week next month was expected to draw 2,000 visitors.

In previous centuries, An Vinh communal house served as a place to select soldiers to protect Hoang Sa and Truong Sa archipelagoes.

An international seminar on Vietnam's sovereignty over the archipelagoes will take place on April 27-29 on Ly Son Island with the participation of Vietnamese and international scholars, lawyers and historians.

Participants will seek to prove, using historical and legal evidence, that Vietnam has peacefully held continuous sovereignty over the two archipelagoes in accordance with international law.

Ly Son Island, 30km off the coast of the central province of Quang Ngai, is a tranquil destination with 3,000 inhabitants, most of whom make their living from farming garlic and spring onion and fishing.

It was formed by five mountains, of which four are dormant volcanoes.

Centuries-old houses have still been preserved, as has Am Linh Pagoda, built to worship the souls of sailors who died during long voyages to Hoang Sa (Paracel) and Truong Sa (Spratly) islands in the Nguyen dynasty (around the 17th century).

A local museum displays over 200 ancient documents and 100 exhibits that prove that Hoang Sa and Truong Sa islands belong to Vietnam.

Impression about Vietnam on a cycling tour.

On a cycling trip across north Vietnam, Kevin Rushby finds that….
By Kevin Rushby
We were on a cycling trip that would encompass homestays and national parks, taking us from the Mai Chau valley some 100 miles south-west of Hanoi and close to the Laotian border, south-east towards the coast and the city of Ninh Binh. If you imagine the shape of Vietnam as rather like a giant upright prawn, we were going to do a neat cross-section just at the base of the head. No day would involve much more than 20 miles – about the limit for our nine-year-old – and there was always a support vehicle to pick up stragglers. The route would, we hoped, give us a complete range of Vietnamese experiences, from tribal homestays and untouched jungle hills to fast-developing towns. 

Mai Chau was definitely at the less developed end of the Vietnamese spectrum. All around us the rice fields were being harvested by ladies in conical straw hats. Others were wafting nets to catch crickets or filling baskets with bundles of water hyacinth. In places, songbirds in bamboo cages had been hung in the shade of trees to ward off wild, food-stealing birds. The valley floor was almost completely devoted to rice, and generations of careful landscaping have left it almost flat. At the sides, perhaps a kilometre apart, the tangled secondary forest rose sharply to serrated peaks. There, at the junction of the horizontal and vertical worlds, people had built their houses on stilts. Curls of smoke rose from among them, where rice husks were being burned. 

Biking Mai Chau, Vietnam
We rattled across a rusty suspension bridge and through a village. Every house seemed to lie at the centre of a perfect storm of picturesque food production. There were fish ponds and ducks. There were neat vegetable gardens filled with beans and cabbages. There were orchards of longans, rambutans and persimmon. Even the scrubbier patches were stocked with areca palms, which provide betel nut as well as support for prickly dragonfruit stems. Under the houses were recently harvested crops – rice, peanuts, taro roots and bamboo – plus all the paraphernalia of further operations: fish traps, coops and cages. What was significantly absent was any plastic litter or mess. 


A few miles on, we left the bicycles in a hut and walked uphill to a tiny hamlet of wooden houses on stilts. Climbing the steps to one of them, we entered a traditional house of the White Thai tribe, a people who had come from Thailand several centuries ago and whose way of life seems largely unchanged. The floor was bamboo slats, worn to a glossy smoothness by years of bare feet. There was little in the way of furniture, just a huge low bed, a couple of benches and an altar for the ancestors. On the ceiling was a hand-painted tribute to Ho Chi Minh and in every window hung a chirruping bird cage. We had stayed in a similar house the previous night – the whole valley has embraced the homestay idea, giving the farmers a valuable side income. Success, however, has made some homestays more like guesthouses.

Homestay Mai Chau, Hoa Binh, Vietnam
This one was certainly authentic. Green tea was brought and served in small bowls, then a toast of rice wine. 
Lunch came on a large tray: bowls of noodles cooked with carp from the pond, tofu, slivers of bamboo and other strange leaves and roots. It was a magnificent feast in a country whose cuisine is one of the high points of human culture.

On our third day, after some gorgeous mountain scenery, we had reached Vietnam's largest and oldest nature reserve: Cuc Phuong national park, a 50,000-acre area of forest slung over a stunning landscape of jagged mountains. It is home to 97 species of mammal and more than 300 species of bird, but after a six-mile trek and a 20-mile bike ride, we had spotted precisely one stick insect and heard exactly one gun shot.

Cage after cage of small furry creatures represent the last few examples of species endemic to Vietnam, most of them langurs, a long-tailed leaf-eating monkey. This is a country where tigers and elephants have been more or less wiped out and superstitious crazes for rare animal meats have sent dozens of species spiralling towards extinction, including five of the 11 species of langur. 

Cuc Phuong Jungle, Vietnam
Next day we rode into a landscape that is becoming more common in Asia: a strange melange of the traditional and natural with the newly industrialised, newly touristified. There would be achingly beautiful wetlands dotted with water buffalo and backed by jagged peaks, then a cement factory. There were sleepy, algae-encrusted Catholic churches and ancient temple gateways, then new concrete pagodas with huge coach parks. We passed fishermen in traditional hats setting bamboo fish traps and fishermen using truck batteries and electrodes. All around, limestone outcrops rose in jagged profusion, like pods of humpback whales.

The first boat in our group had entered the cave for the return trip when the woman paddling the second boat called out. There, on the top of the crags, silhouetted against the late sun, was a family group of langurs. More arrived, moving with total grace and vitality in their mountain fastness. There was, I estimated, around half the world's remaining population on display. For several minutes we all watched them leaping around, and it felt good to be with local people who were as pleased as us. Our cross-section of modern Vietnam had, I felt, ended on a suitable high note.

Eventually we left the langurs and passed back through the cave, in time to see the magical sight of thousands of egrets flying over to their roost. We sat by our bikes and watched them settle as the light faded.

Way to go
ACTIVETRAVEL ASIA can provide the trip for you which include bike, hike and kayak tour of northern Vietnam, which combines Hanoi,  Mai ChauCuc Phuong national park, Ninh Binh and Halong Bay.
The highlight
- Awesome scenery
- Tam Coc - the "Halong Bay on the rice fields"
- Homestay in Thai village
- Jungle trails

Further information
ACTIVETRAVEL ASIA offers a wide selection of Vietnam, Laos, Cambodia and Myanmar adventure tours, including hiking and trekking, biking, motorcycling, overland touring and family travel ackages. The packages and tailor-made private itineraries will take you through exotic destinations to really experience the culture, history and nature of Asia.

Add: Floor 12th, Building 45 Nguyen Son St., Long Bien Dist.Hanoi, Vietnam
Hotline: +84 97 98 00 588
Tel: +84 4 3573 8569
Fax: +84 4 3573 8570
Email address: info@activetravel.asia

Hanoi tries to revive traditional haircut village

Numerous barbers from northern Vietnam gathered in Hanoi's Kim Lien Village on April 24 to offer free haircuts.

 

Kim Lien Village formerly famous for haircuts 

The festival drew the participation of around 30 barbers from 18 cities as part of series activities to help revive the village's traditional craft.

Kim Lien haircut village, in Dong Da District, has been around for a many decades.

The village reached its height in popularity between 1954 and 1968, which helped the careers of several barbers who went on to open hair salons in other areas. A number of well-known hairstylists learned their trade there.

In the 1970s and 1980s, about 80% of residents made their living by cutting hair. Now that percentage is much smaller. 

Event photos:

 

Kim Lien Communal House  

 

Municipal authorities attend the festival  

 

Waiting for a turn   

 

Professional barber   

 

 

Barbers cutting hair for free   

 

Skilful job   

 

Meeting of the barbers   

 

Many barbers from Kim Lien moved to other locations   

 

  

Satisfied customers 

  

Time to sit back and exchange 

 

Wednesday, 24 April 2013

Biggest exhibition about Food & Hotel opens in Ho Chi Minh City

The Food&Hotel Vietnam 2013 fair opened in Ho Chi Minh City on April 24 which saw the largest ever number of participating businesses, 434 enterprises from 35 countries and territories.

Sapporo Beer, one of the oldest and most popular beer brands in Japan, and many other food products of Japan are being showcased for the first time, besides an impressive pavilion of the European Union.

The exhibition, the sixth of its kind, creates opportunities for domestic and international firms to share experience and learn from the world’s leading experts in food and hotel sector.

First organised in 2004, Food&Hotel Vietnam has become one of the leading events in the field in Vietnam, driving the development and growth of food and hotel sectors in the country.

The food, beverage and hotel industries in Vietnam continue keeping the momentum of robust growth and development, said Tee Boon Teong, Country Head Representative of Singapore Exhibition Services Company.

Source: VNA

Internet exhibition displays north-south divide

A collection of images that attempts to illustrate the difference between Hanoi and Saigon has gained popularity on the internet and attracted attention.

The series of illustrations and designs was appropriately named "The Difference Between Hanoi and Saigon" and composed by 27-year-old Le Duy Nhat. He posted it on a website on April 15.

The seemingly simple images illustrate the slight but important differences in culture between the north and the south of Vietnam, such as the way fruits are arranged, the way people eat breakfast or offerings to house guests.

Nhat is from Thanh Hoa Province, but has lived in HCM City for more than ten years. He has also spent several years in Hanoi. The time spent in the two cities has lent him his perspective on small but significant differences in the country from the capital to the largest city.

He said, "My inspiration for this came after attending a graphic design competition on culture of Vietnam" He added that it was difficult for him to find and recreate the nicest things from each city.

"There has been a lot of press focusing on, and even exaggerating the differences between Hanoi and HCM City, focusing on the small differences in culture. This is not what I want to do. I just want to show the differences as they are."

Some people who have viewed his images have criticized him for using English. But Nhat said that the reason is that he wanted to use an international language to explain Vietnamese culture to both Vietnamese and foreigners.

A selection from Nhat's work: