More than meets the eye

Visitors to the Sam Son coast in the north will discover many amazing sights aside from the beautiful beaches.

Tourists fly kites at Sam Son Beach

Located near Truong Le Mountain, the coastline is a famous tourist site in the northern province of Thanh Hoa. It was discovered and turned into a holiday resort in the early 20th century by the French.

The coast, located in Quang Xuong District’s Sam Son Town, is 15 km from Thanh Hoa Town and 170 km from Hanoi. It boasts breathtaking sandy beaches which span a total length of 10 km.

There are four distinct beaches of equal beauty along the Sam Son coast and the water is safe for tourists to swim in. In many places there are even security guards and lifeguards on duty.

Other scenic areas abound along the coast and many are associated with well-known legends such as Doc Cuoc Temple, Trong-Mai Islet, and Co Tien Mountain. Most are within walking distance of the beaches.

Early in the morning, fleets of village fishing boats come ashore, bringing with them the fish and shrimp they have caught out at sea. Fishermen and dealers trade a variety of fish, shrimp, crabs, cuttlefish and clams right on the beach. Here, tourists can buy fresh seafood directly from fishermen and ask their hotel or guesthouse to prepare dishes for them.

A variety of interesting festivals and cultural events are set to be hosted on the Sam Son coast this year in a bid to increase tourism in the area. The festivals include the Banh Chung, Banh Day (Square and Round Rice Cakes) Festival to be held at Doc Cuoc Temple on June 4, and the Cau Ngu (Wishing for Good Fishing) Festival to be held on June 7. In July, a cultural and gastronomic week will be held throughout the northern-central provinces.

From Hanoi, tourists can take a tour of Sam Son by contacting the Sam Son Tourism Office on Duong Quang Ham Street, Cau Giay District.

Lion Restaurant to launch beer buffet

The Lion Restaurant in HCMC will launch a weekly beer buffet for German beer enthusiasts.

The buffet will take place on Saturdays at noon from 2:30 p.m. to 5:30 p.m., starting this Saturday. With a ticket priced at VND120,000 beer aficionados can enjoy the tasty flavor of German beers made from natural wheat in Bavaria region.

The hotel also features a menu of European, Asian and Vietnamese cuisine with more that 300 dishes made by experienced chef Doan Minh Tam.

The Lion Restaurant is an outstanding place for weddings, birthday parties, buffet parties, cocktail receptions and conferences for up to 300 guests.

Lion Restaurant is located at 11-13 Lam Son Square, HCMC’s District 1, tel: (08) 3827 9544.

Park Hyatt offers Mother’s Day menu

Square One Restaurant, on the mezzanine of the Park Hyatt Saigon, is offering a special Mother’s Day.

Square One Restaurant, on the mezzanine of the Park Hyatt Saigon, is offering a special Mother’s Day menu available for lunch and dinner on Sunday.

The menu, created by Chef Takeuchi Satoru and his team, consists of crab cakes with mayonnaise, prawn cocktails on butter lettuce, white asparagus soup with chives and truffles, grilled U.S. sirloin, corn fed chicken and lamb chops, mashed potatoes, cream spinach and dessert. Mum will also receive an exclusive gift.

This Mother’s Day offer is US$38++ for adults and US$19++ for children from 6 to 12. Prices are the same for both lunch and dinner.

A wonderful world of fabric

Tucked away on the outskirts of Hanoi, the Ninh Hiep Fabric Market is the northern region’s largest textile market.

Established around 10 years ago, the market comprises more than 1,000 trading households in Nanh Village of Gia Lam District’s Ninh Hiep Commune.

First-time visitors will be surprised to see such a diverse range of colorful fabrics throughout the village. New products appear continuously in assorted designs and textures. According to experienced shoppers, it’s a great way to see what the next fashion trends will be.

Customers can buy cloth by the kilo, one-tenth of a kilo, or by the meter and most fabrics are very inexpensive. Savvy shoppers can find great bargains.

Fabrics at Ninh Hiep, according to the sellers, are cheaper than other places as village traders bring them directly from China and South Korea. The materials are often priced half to one-third lower than products at Dong Xuan, Hom and Phung Khac Khoan fabric markets in urban Hanoi. And almost no one leaves the market empty-handed.

Ninh Hiep Fabric Market also sells other goods including specialty laces, zippers and ready-made garments priced lower than similar clothing found in the city.

Visitors should also be sure to sample some of the traditional dishes available at the market including filtered flour cakes, oyster porridge, grilled birds, boiled corn, and boiled sweet potatoes. After a trip to the market, tourists can also visit 17th century temples, pagodas and other ancient relics nearby.

Ninh Hiep Fabric Market is located 20 km north of Hanoi. To get there, visitors can take a bus numbered 10, 54 or 203 from Hanoi, or alternatively, take a tour offered by the Kham Pha Viet Tourism Joint Stock Company (Tel: 04-3 878 7551). The tour, which costs VND210,000 (US$11.80), includes a shopping trip to Ninh Hiep Fabric Market as well as sightseeing at Giong Temple and Co Loa Citadel.

New entertainment venue opens in town

HCMC, the largest city in Vietnam, is attracting more and more tourists everyday, so entertainment services are in great demand. Que Huong – Liberty 1 Hotel opened the Enzo KTV & Bar on Wednesday for local and foreign tourists to meet this demand.

A view of Enzo KTV & Bar.
Que Huong – Liberty 1 Hotel, one of three hotels in the Que Huong - Liberty Joint Stock Company hotel chain, is a popular venue where both businessmen and tourists can find luxurious and cozy facilities for conferences, holidays and parties.

The Enzo KTV & Bar is nestled in the basement of the hotel. The design of the Bar is elegant and warm.

The Enzo KTV & Bar includes two areas: karaoke and bar. The Karaoke area includes six rooms with capacity of 10-20 guests each, providing a place to relax and enjoy sweet melodies and drinks prepared in rooms.

The bar area has capacity for 120 guests and serves outstanding drinks prepared by professional bartenders and a menu of Vietnamese dishes prepared by the hotel’s professional chefs. Moreover, a Flamenco band will perform at the bar every night.

Guests of the Enzo KTV & Bar will be welcomed by courteous, friendly staff and dedicated waiters and treated with promotions. Enzo KTV & Bar is giving out 500 discount vouchers of 10-15% till the end of the year to celebrate its opening.

The Enzo KTV & Bar, Que Huong – Libery 1 Hotel is located at 167 Hai Ba Trung Street, HCMC’s District 1. Tel: (08) 6265 9242, email: libertyhotels.com.vn.

Hoi An readies for festival

The 2009 Quang Nam – Heritage Journey is planned to open June 4, with a vintage vehicle parade taking centre stage, the festival’s committee announced recently.

The four-day festival will take place at Song Hoai Square, Hoi An Ancient Town.

The festival will feature Hoi An arts at “Hoa si va pho co Hoi An” (Painters and Hoi An ancient town) and a photo exhibition.

The Hoi An Museum of History and Culture will also celebrate the festival with two exhibitions, one to present Chu Dau pottery (a Vietnamese traditional handmade pottery and a photo exhibit), and “Thang canh Hoi An” (Hoi An landscape).

The festival will open with a contest, “Skillful waiters,” and a folk culture gala at the An Hoi Sculpture Park.

The next day will see the vintage vehicles parade.

This year, the parade includes mobylettes, vespas and vintage cars from the 30s and 70s. The parade, including Miss World 2008 Ksenia Sukhinova, will start from the Palm Garden Resort Hoi An and later visit Phuoc Kieu trade village, the venue for the annual boat race and the Dien Ban food and drinks fair.

In the early evening, the vintage vehicles will stop at the Vuon Tuong Park for an awards ceremony. Two prizes will be offered, including “The most impressive vehicle” and “The most original vehicle.”

On the same evening, ethnic groups from Vietnam and overseas will present traditional songs and dances around Hoi An Ancient Town and Song Hoai Square.

The closing events on June 6, “Khat vong Thu Bon” (Thu Bon River’s aspiration), and the Hoi An Legendary Night are two of the festival’s highlights.

The last day will celebrate the fishing village festival at Cua Dai Beach with variety of mini events, such as a knitting fish nets contest, a beach soccer tournament, art kite contest, a food market and many traditional beach games.

The Quang Nam – Heritage Journey has been held annually since 2006, with an aim to introduce the beauty of both the landscape and the culture of Hoi An Ancient Town and Vietnam to foreign tourists.

The waiting wife of Lang Son

To Thi, or “Lady To,” has been perched atop Vong Phu Mountain for hundreds of years, waiting for her husband to return from war.

The road to Vong Phu, nestled in the remote province of Lang Son near the Chinese border, offers some of the most breathtaking scenery of all northeast Vietnam.

The tortuous 154 kilometers of mountainous road from Hanoi boast the breathtaking vistas that many travelers seek

in Vietnam. Awe-inspiring views of rice terraces creeping down mountains, rivers running through deep valleys and cliffs peaking through the mist are par for the course. Along the road and in the canyons and fields of the lowlands, ethnic minority communities till the land, work their household lumber yards and herd buffalo.

Legend has it that a Lang Son woman who lived centuries ago, To Thi, unwittingly married her long-lost brother. When her husband learned the truth, he volunteered to go to war and never came back. The innocent To Thi carried her baby to the peak of a mountain and waited for her husband. She waited so long that she and her baby eventually turned to stone. And there she still stands, baby on her back, looking out toward the sky in longing. The mountain was later named Vong Phu (waiting for husband).

The natural stone formation was unfortunately destroyed by limestone miners in the early 90s. But locals have since built a replica and placed it at the site. Atop the high peak, all alone, the woman looks lost, abandoned and lonely.

Vong Phu also boasts the picturesque Tam Thanh caves, Nhat Thanh, Nhi Thanh and Tam Thanh.

Inside Tam Thanh, the most famous of the caves, the 15th century Tam Thanh Pagoda and its statue of Amitabha Buddha draw pilgrims from far and wide.

Many travelers also visit Mau Son Mountain known for its cool temperature, generally around 15 degrees, and it’s perfect hiking. The Mau Son Tourist Area offers accommodation and restaurants serving local specialties such as the famous Mau Son wine and homegrown peaches and pears.

Musicians from the Tay and Nung ethnic groups often perform at Mau Son and also invite tourists to take part in local folk games and eat regional specialty dishes.

Discovering Vietnam in two weeks or more

Having a diverse natural environment, age-long traditions and a rich culture and long history, Vietnam could satisfy tourists for a wonderful vacation. To discover the country more thoroughly, tourists could book a two-to-three-week trans-Vietnam tour to well-known destinations recently offered by Ben Thanh Tourist.

Tourists cruise at Halong Bay.
The first stop on the tour is the Mekong Delta, a land of endless green rice fields, tropical orchards and floating markets such as Cai Rang and Phong Dien in Can Tho City.

Sapa, the misty town in the northern province of Lao Cai, is a must-see destination listed in every itinerary. One reason is the famous Sapa Love Market and another is the trek to Ham Rong Mountain for a panoramic view of Sapa Town. Hikers will be dazzled by the poetic and splendid scenery of red-tiled roofs looming in the mist.

Despite its growing popularity Sapa has changed very little and much can be earned about the life and culture of ethnic groups from the locals.

Next stop is the UNESCO world heritage Ha Long Bay, in the northern province of Quang Ninh. Halong Bay resembles a geographic work of art with more than 1,500 spectacular islands and islets including the Sail, the Pair of Roosters and the Incense Burner, as well as grottoes and caves such as Thien Cung (Heaven Palace Grotto), Dau Go (Wooden Stake Grotto), Sung Sot (Surprise Grotto), and Tam Cung (Three Palace Grotto). When exploring the bay and observing the stalactites of many shapes and colors it is easy to get lost in the legendary world of the stone islands.

Another world heritage awaits the travelers: Hoi An Ancient Town in the central province of Quang Nam. The ancient town is famous for pagodas, wooden houses and architectural wonders such as the Japanese Bridge, Tan Ky House, Tu Duc King Temple and Thien Mu Pagoda, all standing as a testimony to the elegant and meticulous architecture and design of the past.

The grandiose complex of Bich Dong Pagoda and Tam Coc Grotto in Ninh Binh Province will excite even the most seasoned travelers with the pristine beauty of stalactites and stalagmites sparkling like gemstones in the caves and the serenity of the ancient pagoda.

The tour also includes a city tour in HCMC and Hanoi with visits to famous cultural and historical sites and cruises to coastal cities such as Nha Trang and Danang, as well as Mai Chau Valley, a beautiful green valley with stilt houses of ethnic groups in Hoa Binh Province.

Ben Thanh Tourist has been honored as the best service provider in 2009 voted by readers of Sai Gon Tiep Thi newspaper at an award ceremony “Best Service Company in 2009” last week. The result comes from 40,000 votes by customers in a survey in the Sai Gon Tiep Thi newspaper in four services: transport, travel, healthcare and supermarket.

For more information, contact Ben Thanh Tourist at 86 Ly Tu Trong Street, HCMC’s District 1, tel: (08) 3520 2020, website: www.benthanhtourist.com.

Young travellers flock to Dien Bien

Many topics encouraging youngsters to visit the historical site of the Dien Bien Phu victory 55 years ago have appeared on online forums. The number of travellers visiting Dien Bien is suddenly soaring in May.

Visitors at the headquarters of the Dien Bien Phu campaign.

These topics attract many members and they are updated with the latest photos of Dien Bien.

Minh Thuy and her friends, students from several universities in Hanoi, will take a tour of Dien Bien on May 7, the day of Dien Bien Phu victory. The group will also go to Lai Chau.

“The northwestern region has many cultural events and festivals. The landscapes there are very nice. This is a chance for us to review war remnants of the Dien Bien Phu Victory,” Minh Thuy said.

Five years ago, Huong Lien and her father, a Dien Bien veteran, paid a visit to Dien Bien. This year, the whole family will return to the site.

“My father called his comrades in Dien Bien one week before the trip. He is very happy and very excited because he will meet his friends again in Dien Bien. For myself, I’m impressed by the wild beauty and the cultural identity of Dien Bien,” Lien said.

According to Duong Mai Lan, representative of Vietravel Hanoi, the tour to Dien Bien is normally not very popular but the number of visitors going to this site has suddenly increased on the occasion of the Dien Bien Phu Victory celebration.

Besides veterans who want to return to the old battlefield, many young people want to go there to learn about the history and discover the characteristics of the northwestern region.

Vietravel tour will take visitors to the Cemetery of Martyrs on A1 Hill, the Dien Bien Phu Museum, Muong Thanh Bridge and some villages of ethnic minorities like Men, Thanh Nua, Ten, Thanh Xuong, Phieng Loi and Him Lam as well as other places.

The price for a 3-4 day Hanoi-Dien Bien tour is VND2-3 million per person, travel by air with Vietnam Airlines.

Director of the Dien Bien City Department of Culture, Sports and Tourism, Pham Van Hung, said that tens of thousands of travellers visited Dien Bien in the recent holiday (April 30-May 2). During this time, the six northwestern provinces of Lao Cai, Yen Bai, Lai Chau, Dien Bien, Son La and Hoa Binh organised the Cultural, Sports and Tourism Festival of Northwestern Ethnic Groups 2009 in Lai Chau.

Hung said all hotels and inns in Dien Bien city and Dien Bien district were occupied this holiday. Dien Bien province has 38 hotels and inns, totalling nearly 800 rooms with 2,000 beds.

Travellers can go to Dien Bien by air or by land. From Hanoi, visitors will go on National Highway 6 through Hoa Binh, Son La to Dien Bien or from Lao Cai, along National Highway 4D to Lai Chau and Dien Bien.

Vietnam Airlines has daily flights from Hanoi to Dien Bien city and vice versa, using 70-seat ATR72. The travelling time is only one hour.


Shore leave

The Nam Du archipelago is an undiscovered paradise off the southern coast of Vietnam.

It takes six hours for our small ferry to bounce over the waves to Cu Tron island, 100km from the coastal city of Rach Gia in Kien Giang province in the southwest of Vietnam. Cu Tron is part of the Nam Du archipelago, a barely known set of islands that covers 40sqkm of land in the Gulf of Thailand.

There are 21 islands altogether, of which Cu Tron Island is the largest. Legend has it that the island was named by Lord Nguyen Anh, who sought safety here in 1870 after coming off second best in a battle with the Tay Son rebel army that had taken control of mainland Vietnam.

Lacking water, Nguyen Anh commanded his soldiers to dig a well, which is still there today on the northwest of Cu Tron island by Ngu beach. Nguyen Anh and his troops were also short of food, so the locals helped them dig up yam to cook. When Nguyen Anh later took the throne as King Gia Long in 1802, he named the island Cu Tron, which means the island of the Round Yam, in memory of his tough times in exile. From the wharf you can walk along a three kilometre paved road towards the central town of An Son commune.

From there we head up into the hills and climb a mountain peak that provides a sweeping panorama view of the archipelago and beyond. We stand by the island’s lighthouse, staring down at the deep blue ocean which glistens in the brilliant sunshine. I can see the fishing villages and deserted beaches far below, which seem to call out to the explorers in us.

Inspired by the view, we descend down the mountain path, stopping by Ngu beach where we find Nguyen Anh’s historic well. There is only a smattering of houses around and the peace and quiet is almost hypnotic. We decide to rent a boat and take a trip around the archipelago. Down by the wharf we find a captain with a vessel who says he’ll take us for VND100,000. We sail around, passing some of the smaller islets off the coast of Cu Tron.

Most of these islets are rocky and rugged and uninhabited but Hon Mau is home to a small community and two striking white sandy beaches. We decide to take a closer look. The 200-hectare island is home to about 100 households who unsurprisingly live off fishing. The white sandy beaches slope gently to the sea. After hours of floating on the sea, we can’t resist taking a dip in the cool blue waters to take advantage of this hidden paradise – after all who knows when we’ll be back?

Afterwards we stop briefly on Mau island, which is covered with thick green forest. Here there just 20 families living in thatched houses under the shade of coconut trees. It seems beyond idyllic but with nowhere to stay we have to press on to Ngang Island, which is the second largest island in the archipelago. Here thousands of fishing boats and boat-houses are anchored by the dock.

The island is much more crowded than Cu Tron though there are no vehicles running on the island. Neither are there actually any hotels, but you can crash at a local’s house for about VND20,000 to VDN50,000 per night in a sparsely furnished spare room. You won’t find a fancy candlelit restaurant nearby either, but local food stores or floating houses will cook up some fresh seafood and rice for you on request.

The locals are extremely friendly and hospitable and the food is amazing as long as you like seafood! While we feast on fish, sea snails, shrimp and crab, our host also offers us some handy advice on how to build a floating house, should we decide to relocate. When night falls, the sky and sea merge in the darkness and become a galaxy of twinkling lights and sparkling stars. We sit in silence on the bobbing floating house marvelling at the simple beauty of this heavenly island.

How to get there: Currently you can only get to Cu Tron island by boat, which departs Rach Gia to Nam Du at 7.30am on Nguyen Cong Tru street every day. It takes five to six hours to get there. There are also two ferries connecting Ngang Island with Cu Tron island departing at 7.30am and 3pm for VND10,000 person.

Mountain of old pagodas and sweeping views

Tram Mountain on the outskirts of Hanoi is ideal for day-trippers.

Tram Mountain is a famous scenic attraction 25 kilometers from the center of Hanoi.

The first place that tourists usually check out when they visit the mountain is Tram Pagoda, shaded by ancient trees. After lighting some joss-sticks and saying a few prayers before the different altars, visitors can go on to discover the lovely Long Tien Pagoda nearby.

Long Tien is situated inside a cave of the same name. In its largest section is Buddha’s altar, with statues of many arhats around.

There’s a mysterious beauty in the stalactites hanging from the ceiling of the cave and the cool water that flows from under the rocks that locals call "mother’s breasts."

The cave also has a narrow, twisting passage commonly called the "valley of love" because it is hard to squeeze through and mirrors the tortuous ways of young couples.

After Long Tien Cave comes a test of fitness: scrambling up to the summit of Tram Mountain.

On the rise before the final summit sits yet another pagoda, Tram Vo Vi, around 500 meters and 100 rock steps up from Tram Pagoda.

The original temple that stood there was built in 1515 at the urging of Tran Van Tang, an army general who became a monk and traveled everywhere to preach.

Getting to the very top of Tram Mountain requires traversing a steep, narrow cleft. The view from the summit is great and takes in lush paddy fields all the way to the Day River and heaps of magnificent mountains, forests and lakes.

To reach the mountain from Hanoi, take National Highway 6 to the West in the direction of Ha Dong for 20 kilometers to get to Chuc Son in Chuong My District. Cross the small bridge, turn right and go for two more kilometers.

Or simply book a day trip with Vietnamtravelrates at 224 Thuy Khue Street, Hanoi.

Ha Long climbs to 2nd in world wonders voting group

One of Vietnam’s two UNESCO natural world heritage sites ascended to second place in Group G in the voting for the New 7 Wonders of Nature on May 4.

Ha Long Bay surpassed the Great Barrier Reef of Australia to take the position, ranking behind Bangladesh’s Cox Bazar beach.

Voting will continue until July 7 this year and the N7W Panel of Experts will choose finalists for short-listing.

In July 2009, 21 sites will be chosen to enter the next stage of voting.

The final round of voting will take place between 2010 and 2011, during which the New7Wonders World Tour will visit all 21 sites. The New7Wonders of Nature will eventually be unveiled in the summer of 2011.

Anyone who wants to vote for Ha Long bay can visit www.new7wonders.com/nature/en/vote_on_nominees./.

Pay homage to selfless royalty

On the outskirts of central Hue Town stands a temple to Huyen Tran, a thirteenth-century princess who sacrificed love for duty.

The temple is the centerpiece of a two-year-old cultural center named in her honor at the foot of pine-clad Ngu Phong Mountain in An Tay Ward.

Huyen Tran (1287-?) was the beloved daughter of King Tran Nhan Tong and was reputed to be the secret lover of General Tran Khac Chung of the Tran court.

Instead of following her heart, the princess agreed to a political marriage in 1306 to King Jaya Simhavarman III (or Che Man in Vietnamese) of the Champa Kingdom to the south.

As his wedding dowry, Che Man surrendered O and Ri districts, which thereby expanded Vietnam’s territory southward from what is now the southern bank of the Hieu River in Quang Tri Province to the northern bank of the Thu Bon River in Quang Nam Province.

After her husband died, Champa custom dictated that the princess be burned alive so that she could accompany him to the afterworld.

Instead, she was rescued by her military paramour.

One story has it that the pair escaped across the sea and never went back to Vietnam but there’s no historical evidence to back it up. In another telling, Huyen Tran returned home and became a nun.

The tale of her love and sacrifice has been the inspiration for countless literary works through the ages.

Back in the modern world, there are three gates to pass through to reach Huyen Tran’s temple, which houses a gold-plated copper statue of the princess.

The 240-centimeter-tall statue sits atop the main altar and was made by artisans of Hue’s Duc Ward.

Behind the temple is an octagonal pavilion with a statue of Huyen Tran as a nun with the adopted Buddhist name Huong Trang.

There are also two stone dragons on the temple grounds, one of them measuring 105 meters from snout to tail.

From the temple, 250 steps lead up to the summit of Ngu Phong Mountain and the Bell Tower of Peace with its 1.6-ton copper bell.

Strike it and pray for whatever your heart desires.

Festivals fail to boost foreign tourism

Despite a slight month-on-month increase in April, the number of international visitors to Viet Nam still dropped 18 per cent during the first four months of the year to reach about 1.29 million, said the Viet Nam National Administration of Tourism (VNAT).

Foreign arrivals during the first four months of the year included 790,000 tourists, 210,000 business trips and 79,000 coming for family reunions.

Impact from the global economic recession remained the main reason for this unsatisfactory performance, even though the VNAT and local authorities have made efforts to organise a series of festivals in the hope of attracting more foreigners, said representatives from the administration.

Foreign arrivals during the first four months of the year included 790,000 tourists, 210,000 business trips and 79,000 coming for family reunions, the agency reported.

The number of foreign visitors arriving from key markets such as mainland China, Japan, South Korea and Taiwan continued to fall sharply, off 10-30 per cent during the period. Arrivals from the US, Australia and Canada saw modest increases, from 1.5-8 per cent.

The country target's serving 5 million foreign and 21.5 million local tourists this year. The figures are expected to increase to 6 million and 23.5 million respectively in 2010.

In related news, holidaymakers flocked to the country's famous places such as central Nha Trang City and northern Ha Long Bay during last week's four-day holiday.

Nha Trang welcomed between 25,000 and 30,000 tourists per day, said the local tourism sector, adding that the number of arrivals to the coastal city were three or four times higher than normal days.

The world heritage site Ha Long Bay and northern Quang Ninh Province saw some 150,000 tourists visiting from April 25 - May 2.

Popular beaches such as Do Son in the northern port city of Hai Phong, Sam Son in central Thanh Hoa Province, and Cua Lo in central Nghe An Province also welcomed large numbers of visitors who wanted to make the most of the long holiday.

City art club fuels enthusiasm

Nestled on a small street named Huynh Khuong Ninh in HCMC’s District 1, the Over Land Club, a club opened by a Japanese national in 2001 to offer cooking, folk music, pottery and ao dai (Vietnamese traditional dress) making classes, is a favorite destination of city art lovers.

A staff of the Over Land Club (L) guides a pottery student from Hong Kong.

With the theme “cultural opportunity for everyone,” the club welcomes anyone who wants to learn international culture and art.

For 40 year old Japanese expat Tomizawa Mamoru, founder and director of the Over Land Club, this is home, a place to share art and culture, especially Vietnamese pottery. It also marks a turning-point in his life.

The 1995 Kobe earthquake claimed Mamoru’s house and job as his seaside import-export company headquarters and house were buried, Mamoru told the Daily.

For such a tremendous life change, Mamoru had to find a place to re-start and after reading and researching about investment in Vietnam, he decided to visit the country.

Mamoru said that after visiting Vietnam and tasting the food he was won over and decided to set up his new life here. He spent years working for a tourist company of the Japanese government in Vietnam to lead tourists on bus tours through nine countries from Asia to Europe.

The time working in the tourism industry gave Mamoru the love of art and culture and the idea for a place where tourists do not need to travel so far to learn something. He quit his job and in 2001 founded his own cultural and art club in HCMC.

Mamoru zeroed in on Vietnamese pottery making. He spent time in pottery handicraft villages such as Bat Trang in the north and the villages of Binh Duong Province in the South. He joined the Vietnamese Art College to learn.

He said that pottery uses a pure, eco- friendly, wonderfully textured material, namely clay, and that it enhances creativity, especially the creativity of children. Tactile work can be good for the mind as it relaxes the student and gives him an escape from the stressful environment of big cities, he added.

Mimoru said that he expected sponsorship so that he could organize free pottery classes for elementary school children as this art was not only fun but also good for tapping creative potential.

The club is offering pottery classes from 9:30 a.m to noon every day and from 1:30 p.m to 4:30 p.m on Thursday and Sunday. The fees are between US$12 and US$20 per class.

Cooking classes learn French, Japanese, Malaysian and Vietnamese cuisines. The fees are between US$25 and US$28.

Folk music and Vietnamese ao dai making classes are available upon request.

For more information contact the Over Land Club, 36 bis Huynh Khuong Ninh Street, Dakao Ward, District 1, tel:(848) 3820 9734, website: www.overlandclub.jp.

Son La, the pearl of North-western Vietnam

Son means mountain and La means stream. Son La Province originates from a stream on a mountain. Through 110 years of development since its founding, the stream is still running around 12 fraternal ethnicities who have created great strength, making the province a shining pearl in the North-western region of the country.

Teacher and students in Son La Teachers’ College.

Visiting the work of the century

Son La hydroelectric-power work lies upstream on the Da River in It Ong Commune of Muong La District, about 250 km away from the Hoa Binh hydroelectric-power station. With an average electricity output of 10.2 billion KWh per year, it is the biggest hydroelectric-power plant in Southeast Asia.

After only six months of construction, the cadres and workers of Song Da Construction Company (LICOGI) have built 120 km of new roads, three bridges over the Da River at the construction site area and the Muong La Port Complex, using more than 80,000 cubic metres of concrete. These facilities have been put to use, serving the transport of materials and equipment.

From It Ong Commune, we had a complete view of the work. At the construction site, over 5,000 workers and huge equipment are working hectically around the clock. Vu Duc Thin, Deputy General Director of Vietnam Electricity Corporation and Head of the Management Board of Son La Hydroelectric-power Project, said most of the engineers and workers on the construction site had participated in building Hoa Binh, Ialy and Song Hinh hydroelectric-power stations, so they were technically skilled and capable of solving any problem.

With three working shifts a day now, the damming of the Da River can be completed at the end of November 2005, well ahead of schedule and before the floods come. This is the first hydro-electric project of the country, where the building of the plant and the damming of the river have been carried out simultaneously. Previously, the plant construction started one to two years before river damming.

Other supporting facilities, such as the mechanical centre, the steel-frame workshop, the concrete mixing station and the assembly complex, are located around the construction site to provide the most effective services to the project.

All for the electricity of tomorrow

When Son La hydroelectric-power project started, 18,600 households in the area had to move to a new place. VND 10,300 billion out of the VND 37,000 billion investment in the project have been spent on resettlement. Most of the households in this area are poor and have a per capita income of only VND 2.5 million per year.

Under the resettlement policy, the annual income of each resident will increase to VND 20 million. This resettlement policy, the best in the country is not inferior to that of other countries in the region for a similar project. An area of 224 sq. kilometres with cultiva-ted land and many cultural relics was submerged. In return, the Province has the conditions to re-plan its production and life.

In the dry season, the Province is no longer influenced by the Southwest wind. Its climate becomes cool that forms a climatic sub-region in the neighbouring provinces of Dien Bien and Lai Chau, very favourable for vegetation development. In addition, the waterway transport system will be expanded.

During the five month-long dry season, 200-tonne ships can navigate from Hai Phong City through Hoa Binh Province to Son La and arrive at Lai Chau Wharf. More importantly, the reservoir will help prevent floods in the rainy season and store water for Hanoi Capital and the whole northern delta region in the dry season.

To support the project, the industrial establishments in Son La Province are working at full capacity. Lying at the foot of Chieng Sinh Mountain in Son La Township, the brick plant with more than 200 employees, who work three shifts a day, produces 30 million bricks a year.

The plant’s Director, Quan Van Chien, said: “All bricks are sold out even though the capacity has increased to 30 million from 20 million bricks a year. The plant is renovating the technology to raise its output and the product quality to meet the demand of the local construction industry”.

Together with the brick plant, Chieng Sinh Cement Plant is shifting to use a blast furnace instead of the rotary furnace in production of cement, thus increasing its output by 10 times (100,000 tonnes). Raising the people’s knowledge is one of the top priorities of Son La Province.

For this purpose, Son La Teachers’ College has opened 12 disciplines, including not only the basic but also new ones, such as agricultural and household economics. The College also organises training courses to improve the management skills of the cadres at different levels.

When Ta Sa-Mai Son Industrial Park is established in 2008, handicrafts and cottage industries will develop and craft villages and traditional occupations will be restored. With the establishment of Muong La urban centre, many towns will be upgraded and Son La City will come into being with a more beautiful image.

Son La Province:

Area: 14,210 sq. km.
Population: 868,400.
Ethnic groups: The Dao, Xinh Mun, Kho Mu, Khang, La Ha, Viet and Muong.
Administrative units: Son La Town and nine districts including Quynh Nhai, Muong La, Thuan Chau, Phu Yen, Bac Yen, Mai Son, Song Ma, Yen Chau and Moc Chau.
Geography: Son La Province is located in North-western Vietnam on Highway 6, about 308 km away from Hanoi Capital. It borders on Yen Bai and Lao Cai Provinces in the North, Lai Chau Province in the West, Thanh Hoa and Hoa Binh Provinces in the Southeast and the country of Laos in the South.
Topography: With mountains and high lands, an abundant system of rivers and streams and rich water resource, for development of hydroelectric power industry, with favourable conditions for development of cow raising, mulberry-growing, silkworms-raising, coffee, tea and fruit-tree cultivation as well as the mining, agricultural and forestry product-processing industries.
Climate: Average temperature of 21 0C with tropical monsoon.
Traffic system: With roads, waterways and airway (Na San Airport)

Vietnam’s marine attractions capture great European interest

European visitors including representatives of travel companies crowded the Vietnam Sea Festival that took place at the fashion center Pierre Cardin in the French capital city of Paris last week.

Most European visitors were impressed with Vietnam’s coastal attractions as well as marine tourism services.

The first major Sea Festival of diverse business and cultural activities ever held in France attracted nearly 60 leading travel companies from European countries including Britain, France, Germany, Russia and the Netherlands, according to Vietnam Airlines.

Vietnam Airlines general director Pham Ngoc Minh said the number of participating travel companies showed the Vietnamese market had drawn great interest of European tour operators and travelers.

Minh said as the visitors to Vietnam from the Western Europe was on the decline, Vietnam Airlines and other entities staged a major promotion event in order to bring back travelers from this market.

Vietnam Airlines held and sponsored the Sea Festival in collaboration with the Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism, the Vietnamese Embassy in France and the Bank for Investment and Development of Vietnam to promote Vietnam’s tourism in the context of global economic recession.

The Vietnam News Agency quoted Minh of Vietnam Airlines as saying that the country had great potential for tourism, especially beautiful landscapes and tranquil beaches along its coastline of more than 3,000 kilometers.

Minh also highlighted the country’s reputation as being home to UNESCO-listed heritage sites including Halong Bay in the north, Phong Nha-Ke Bang Caves and the former imperial citadel of Hue in the central region.

The national flag air carrier spent around 90,000 euro promoting the Sea Festival on more than 1,500 panels at metro stations in Paris before the event kicked off.

Most European visitors were impressed with Vietnam’s coastal attractions as well as marine tourism services. However, they agreed that the country was not very competitive in price or service quality.

Experts urged Vietnam to consider falling demand for travel worldwide as an opportunity to enhance tourism services and adjust tour prices so to attract more international visitors and to better compete with regional destinations.

The Vietnam News Agency quoted journalist Jean Claude Cartier as saying that tours and airfares in other countries were lower and that they had more diverse and quality services.

“If Vietnam can overcome these factors, the country could become the region’s leading tourist destination,” Cartier said.

Figures show the number of international visitors to Vietnam in the first four months of this year dropped by 17.8% year-on-year to nearly 1.3 million, though the arrivals in April was up 0.6% on the month before to more than 305,000.

The number of foreigners traveling by air to Vietnam in the first four months was 1.12 million, down 10% on the year earlier period while those coming by sea plunged by more than 63%.

To counter the impact of global economic turbulence on international arrivals, the local tourism sector is expected to offer more promotions as part of the national tourism campaign announced earlier this year.

Vietnam Airlines has pledged to offer fare discount of up to 25% for those travel agents who arrange tours for French visitors to Vietnam from April to June and from August to October as part of special promotion programs for travelers from this European market.

The airline plans to operate at least one more flight from Paris, Frankfurt of Germany and Moscow of Russia to Vietnam from October this year to meet anticipated increasing demand for air travel from these markets.

The national tourism industry expects to attract at least 4.3 million international travelers this year, or 500,000 more than last year. However, this number has turned out to be a hard target to realize in a time when the global crunch has dealt a heavy blow to the tourism industry.

Mysterious Tien Son Grotto

Tien Son is a famous cave belonging to Phong Nha-Ke Bang, a world natural heritage site in the central province of Quang Binh. Nguyen Duc Trong shares the mysterious beauty of the cave through his photos.

Amazing natural beauty of Phong Nha-Ke Bang

Phong Nha-Ke Bang again proposed for world natural heritage recognition









“Ha Long Heritage Gala” performance

A “Ha Long Heritage Gala” performance was held at night on May 2 on Bai Chay wharf in Ha Long city, northern Quang Ninh province.

The unique and impressive event is the last in a series as part of the 2009 Ha Long carnival.

Among performance troupes were those coming from different localities in Vietnam and also from foreign countries including the Republic of Korea, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Cuba and China.

The performance featured traditional dances from Quang Nam province’s Hoi An ancient city and My Son historical site as well as Central Highlands’ gongs, which have been recognised by the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation (UNESCO) as part of the World’s Cultural Heritage.

The event drew the participation of famous singers, such as Ho Quynh Huong, Hoang Tung, Tuan Anh, Hoang Thai, Tan Nhan and Ngoc Anh. In addition, a fashion show on the theme of the four seasons introduced tourists to the beauty of thousands of islands in Ha Long Bay. The night performance was closed with a brilliant firework display.

Ha Long Bay has become a centre for voting for one of 7 world cultural heritages at the website http://www.New7wonders.com launched by the New Open World organisation. The tourism industry in Ha Long city has carried out activities to create awareness of their destination among domestic and foreign tourists.

In 2009, Quang Ninh province is scheduled to receive 4.8 million arrivals, including 2 million international tourists.

Some photos of the Gala:

The opening fireworks on the Bai Chay Bridge.

A Chinese traditional dance performed by dancers from Yunnan, China.

Dragon dance performed by students of the Art School of Quang Ninh Province.

Drum dance performed by Chinese artists.

Gong performance by artists from the Central Highlands.

Hoi An lantern dance.

Another dance from China.

The miniatures of royal tombs in Hue City, My Son Holy Land, Ha Long Bay, a communal house of the Central Highlands and others were built on a 500m-long street to serve visitors.

A place to remember

Nhat Le Beach on the central coast delivers history, fun and luxury in one dose.

At the mouth of the Nhat Le River in Quang Binh Province, tourists frolic on a long strip of white sand where soldiers once fought and died.

Owing to its strategic location, the river mouth was the scene of a major battle between the forces of Dai Viet (now Vietnam) and the Champa kingdom of Chiem Thanh in the eleventh century.

The estuary where the Nhat Le River ends its journey down from the Truong Son Range is also called Tru Nha, Ha Cu or Cua Sai, and is the location of the provincial capital, Dong Hoi.

When the sky is clear and a breeze is blowing, the splashing waves cast off bubbles like pearls as they lap against the beach. The crystal-clear water is perfect for swimming and splashing around.

The beauty of Nhat Le Estuary can be poetic. At night, fishing boats festooned with lanterns of all colors make the river look like a city or a sky filled with thousands of stars.

For overnighters and day-trippers, there’s a four-star resort called Sun Spa that occupies 29 hectares of Bao Ninh Peninsula and houses a hotel, villas, bungalows, a restaurant serving Asian and European meals, and coffee bar.

Surfing, canoeing, jet-skiing and paragliding are available there, as are football and volleyball on the beach, tennis, billiards, swan boats and the ubiquitous karaoke. They also have yoga and tai chi classes.

Many of the resort’s guests try out paragliding, which affords them spectacular views of the sea, the river, the sand dunes of the peninsula, the expanse of Dong Hoi, and the mountains of the hinterland.

Tourists pack popular beaches during holiday

Holiday makers flocked to the country’s famous landscapes like central Nha Trang city and Ha Long Bay during a four-day holiday from April 30.

Nha Trang welcomed between 25,000 and 30,000 tourists per day during the period, said the local tourism sector, adding that the number of arrivals to the coastal city were three or four times higher than normal days.

On May 1, Nha Trang city also received over 1,600 passengers and crew on board the Bahamas-flagged Legend of the Sea.

The world heritage site of Ha Long Bay the northern province of Quang Ninh saw some 150,000 tourists during the week from April 25-May 2.

Ha Quang Long, Deputy Director of the Quang Ninh provincial Department of Culture, Sports and Tousim, said the surge in visitor number is partly attributable to the Ha Long Tourism Festival which featured a wide range of activities.

Popular beaches such as Do Son in the northern port city of Hai Phong, Sam Son in central Thanh Hoa province, Cua Lo in central Nghe An province, also welcomed large numbers of visitors who wanted to make the most of the long holiday.

The tourists crowd have sent service charges up sharply and caused traffic jams in many major roads.

Heaven’s Gate on Yen Tu Mountain

Yen Tu Mountain in the northern province of Quang Ninh is famous for its breathtaking natural scenery.

Known as a Buddhist holy land, the mountain and surrounding area in Uong Bi Town attracts visitors and pilgrims thanks to its unique architectural works and relics relating to Vietnamese King Tran Nhan Tong (1258-1308).

The third emperor of the Tran Dynasty came to the area after his abdication and began a new life as a Buddhist monk. He also founded the Truc Lam Zen School, the first Vietnamese Buddhist Zen institution.

A cable car shuttles visitors up to the mountain’s peak and offers a spectacular view of lush green forests, valleys, streams and misty rolling mountains.

However, Yen Tu remains best known for a special outcrop on the mountain called An Ky Sinh rock. As visitors ascend the peak toward the two-meter tall stone, a misty cloud engulfs the area, appropriately named Heaven’s Gate.

After reaching An Ky Sinh rock, visitors will continue walking toward another famous rock projection. This stone is located in the Hoa Yen, Mot Mai and Dong pagoda complex and looks out over a small temple where pilgrims pray, light joss-sticks and give offerings.

The rock bears the likeness of a figure looking down upon the world. Legend has it that An Ky Sinh, a Chinese Taoist, lived on the peak of Yen Tu Mountain thousands of years ago and turned to stone after achieving enlightenment. For this reason, many believe that the statue is sacred.

The An Ky Sinh stone is well looked after by the pilgrims who visit it to pray for peace, health and prosperity. They donate VND200 (US$0.11) banknotes as part of their offerings and scatter them around the area. Alternatively, some people opt to simply rub the rock with a banknote in the belief that it will bring financial prosperity and help them to conduct business more smoothly.

Vietnam holds marine tourism exhibition in France

Over 50 travel and tourism companies took part in the Vietnamese Marine Tourism Exhibition that was held at the Pierre Cardin Centre in Paris on April 29.

The festival aiming to promote Vietnam and its marine tourism industry to French and foreign friends was jointly sponsored by Vietnam Airlines, the Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism, the Vietnamese Embassy in France and the Bank for Investment and Development of Vietnam.

Addressing the opening ceremony, Vietnam Airlines General Director Pham Ngoc Minh highlighted Vietnam ’s great potential for tourism, especially with its 3,000km of coastline, beautiful landscapes and wild tropical beaches. Moreover, the country is also well known for its world renowned cultural heritage and traditional customs.

Many visitors at the exhibition were impressed with Vietnam’s beautiful coastline and islands, as well as the country’s marine tourist services.

Cyril Fuentes, a French architecture who has visited Vietnam many times, said that he liked Vietnam’s coastal resorts not only for their scenery, but also because of the Vietnamese people’s hospitality. Meanwhile, Gerard Arcelin and his wife added that besides the sea, beaches and the beautiful countryside, Vietnam’s historical sites, culture and its cuisine make it an extremely attractive destination.

However, many visitors agreed that Vietnam is not very competitive in price or quality of service.

Journalist Jean Claude Cartier said that despite its potentials, Vietnam has not been able to attract as many foreign visitors as regional countries like Thailand and Malaysia do. He noted that tours and air fares in other countries are cheaper and they have more diverse and quality services. If Vietnam can overcome these factors, the country could become the regions leading tourist destination, Cartier said.

Buffalo fights attract thousands of spectators

Sixteen carefully selected buffalos fought in the 2009 Tourism Buffalo Fighting Festival on May 1, attracting thousands of spectators as it coincided this year with the South Liberation Day and May Day holidays.

This is the fourth consecutive festival held by Do Son district of the northern port city of Haiphong, drawing the interest of many tourists to Do Son beach.

After 15 rounds of competition, buffalo number 17, owned by Mr Nguyen Van Son from Bang La ward of Do Son district, won the championship, while second prize went to buffalo number 10. Buffalos 3 and 8 shared third prize.

With a strong and decisive act, Buffalo 17 knocked out and killed Buffalo 2 on site in a quarterfinal.

Sa Pa tourism and cultural week begins

Thousands of domestic and foreign visitors and local people flocked to the Sa Pa district Cultural Centre in the north-western province of Lao Cai to attend the opening ceremony of the 2009 Sa Pa Tourism and Culture Week.


In an opening speech, a representative of the district people’s committee highlighted the history, tradition, lifestyle and distinctive cultural identities of different ethnic groups in the district and the province.

Visitors were treated to a special performance given by artists from the provincial performance troupe and villages in the district. They also had the chance to enjoy folk games, including arnis, crossbow shooting and tug of war, and to take in the beauty of local flower varieties at a flower market fair.

On April 30, the Sa Pa Cloudy Festival began on Ham Rong Mountain, about 1,700m above sea level.

Organisers expect to receive 20,000 visitors to Sa Pa during the week-long event.

Vietnam should flaunt its marine tourism: foreign travel firms

Vietnam needs to promote its marine tourism more to attract foreign visitors since many of them simply do not know about its beautiful beaches and resorts, foreign travel agencies said at a recent festival in Paris.

Foreign visitors play chess at the Sea Lion Beach Resort in Phan Thiet.

The 2009 Vietnam Marine Tourism Festival, held by national flag carrier Vietnam Airlines and the Bank for Investment and Development of Vietnam at Pierre Cardin fashion house on April 28-29, included 24 booths set up by local travel firms and hotels.

Olivier Chiffert, a representative of US travel firm Asia Voyages, said tourists coming to Vietnam mainly come for its culture and do not know about its beaches.

She said events promoting its marine tourism potential should be held often to attract tourists since one event cannot hope to make a change.

Johan Six, sales representative of Belgian travel company Kales, said Vietnam needs to enhance promotion, diversify services, and create more tourism products.

If the country can do these things, its marine tourism can absolutely compete with Thailand’s Phuket, Indonesia’s Bali or Malaysia’s Langkawi, he said, adding it means Europeans would consider Vietnam a spot on the world marine tourism map.

Nguyen Xuan Hung, chairman of the Vietnam promotion center for trade, investment, culture and tourism in Berlin (Viethaus AG), said attracting European tourists would be good since they are big spenders.

“A German tourist can spend 3,000- 4,000 euros (US$4,000-5,300) to stay at Vietnamese beaches for a week to 10 days,” he said.

Bart De Four, an executive of Odysseus, a Belgian luxury travel agency, said many Europeans think of Vietnam as a tour destination and few know that the country is also a leisure destination thanks to its nice beaches and high-end resorts.

Tourists living in cold countries would see Vietnam’s beaches as a good place to spend winters if the country’s tourism sector holds more events like this, Irina Bosak from Russian travel operator Valma-M said.

Rudy Van Brork, who lives in Paris, was surprised to learn about Vietnam’s coastal resorts at the festival.

He said Vietnamese beaches are very beautiful though he had never known they have so many coastal resorts.

Pham Ngoc Minh, general director of Vietnam Airlines, said the carrier decided to organize the festival to attract Western European visitors as the number of foreign tourists to Vietnam is falling.

The number dropped 17.8 percent to around 1.3 million in the first four months compared to the same period last year as a result of the global downturn, according to the General Statistics Office.

Minh said his airline plans to increase the number of flights between Paris and Hanoi/HCMC from six to eight a week starting next October.

It would also increase the number of Frankfurt -Vietnam flights to six from five and Moscow -Vietnam flights to five from four, also starting October, he added.

The tourism sector, which employs more than 10 percent of the nation’s workforce, expects 4.5 million foreign travelers to visit the country this year.

Public holidays boost tourism

Combined with the weekend, the two days of public holidays have led to an increase in tourists around the country.

Ho Chi Minh City: Rain keeps people at home.

Traveler flock to Water Park, Ho Chi Minh City in the dry morning, May 1

With rain lasting for hours on May 1, many visitors to Dam Sen, Suoi Tien, zoo and botanical garden and Le Thi Rieng Park went home early, with many outdoor music programs canceled.

During the dry morning, 250,000 people visited Dam Sen and Suoi Tien. The Water Park also saw its numbers triple compared with normal days.

Over the last two days, Dai Nam Cultural-Historical-Tourist Zone in Thu Dau Mot Town welcomed a large number of visitors.

The number of visitors going to Thanh Le Cultural Park also exceeded the number of visitors on April 30 by 500. Many visitors appreciated the clean and green look recently given to the park.

Nha Trang Beach attracted more than 1,000 foreign visitors

The Bahamas Legend of the Sea set sail from Chan May Port, Thua Thien Hue Province, for Nha Trang on May 1, carrying nearly 1,600 passengers, 1,000 were foreign visitors.

They toured Dam Tron market, Ponaga Tower, Long Son pagoda, and the Cai River. They also visited craft villages on the outskirts of Nha Trang City, enjoyed traditional art performances and tasted local specialties.

According to local travel agents, the number of visitors to Nha Trang has increased sharply over the past two days.

All key tourist resorts have been full.

Nha Trang has been welcoming between 25,000-30,000 visitors every day for the four day weekend.

Traffic jams in Hanoi

Traffic jams occurred in Lang Hoa Lac in Hanoi with heavy numbers of vehicles and people traveling on the street. Jams were created by floods of visitors trying to get into Thien Duong Bao Son Park.

Traffic was mostly cleared by the afternoon.

Da Lat: Prices increased

On May 1, warm weather brought a threefold increase of tourists, with traffic jams occurring on its major roads and bridges.

To take advantage of the situation, many car parks increased prices by VND5,000 per motorbike and VND15,000 per car.

Many restaurants also increased prices from VND18,000 to VND30,000 per bowl of pho. Most hotels were fully booked, with room prices having been tripled.

Mekong Delta: Green tourism

Visitors queue to enjoy traditional food at My Khanh tourist area, Can Tho Province. (Phoro: SGGP)

During the past two days, the number of travelers flocking to the Mekong Delta has also increased sharply.

My Khanh and Phu Sa in Can Tho welcomed 3,000 to 4,000 visitors each day, an increase of three to four times usual visitors.

Many souvenir shops on the Rach Mieu bridge, which links Ben Tre and Tien Giang Provinces, pier attracted customers. Le Thi Dung, a shop owner, saw takings increase 20 to 30 percent.

Rains did not dampen spirits for people visiting crocodile and ostrich parks, fishing ponds and floating markets.

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