Tuesday, March 31, 2015

White-browed Crake breeding in Hanoi



Although Craig Robson's guide mentions White-browed Crake as an "uncommon / locally common" resident southern species, occurring in Vietnam in Cochinchina, it was long known that they occur at least at Van Long Nature Reserve regularly. But in the swamp behind my house on Xuan Dieu in Hanoi they also occur. 


This is a shallow pond, oblong, but quite large, if all the time encroached upon by the surrounding houses. Part of it is used for floating vegetable cultivation, but the part behind my house is mostly covered in Water Hyacinth. In the autumn of 2013 I noticed White-browed Crake for the first time, but assumed it was a winter visitor. However, they have never left since. Quite vocal and territorial, there are now at least 4 pairs and already some time ago I thought one was an immature. But today we finally got definite proof of breeding. Two adults were balancing on the Water Hyacinths and when I checked with my binoculars why they were walking on top, rather than sneaking amongst, I noticed 3 small chicks, all covered in black down and still completely featherless, trying to make their way over the hyacinth leaves. Yes, White-browed Crake breeds in Hanoi!

Tom Kompier

(photos taken by Sebastien in Hanoi last month, not at this breeding site but not far)
Source : vietnambirdnews[dot]blogspot[dot]com
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Top 20 Vietnamese foods visitors need to try, Buzzfeed

Buzzfeed, an American online social news and entertainment giant, has announced the list of top 20 Vietnamese Foods visitors need to try now.

The foods are selected by well-known Vietnamese-British cook Uyen Luu, who is the author of the famous cookbook “My Vietnamese Kitchen”.

Here are the top 20 Vietnamese dishes:

Pho Bo (beef Pho) and Pho Ga (chicken Pho)

Vietnamese Hue-style Beef Noodle Soup

Congee 

Summer rolls 

Fried tilapia with mango 

Beef Stew with noodle

Stir fried noodles with beef 

Egg pudding with minced pork and wood ear mushroom

Chicken with mung bean noodle soup

Seafood noodle soup with tomato and egg

Grilled pork noodle salad

Southern noodle soup with pork and prawns

Sweet Sour Fish Soup

Steamed bun

Crispy pork belly with Banh Hoi

Caramelised fish in coconut water

Chicken salad with onion pickle

Vietnamese bread

Fish cakes

Vietnamese crepes
Source : dtinews[dot]vn
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TripAdvisor – Hanoi among top 10 world’s best destinations

TripAdvisor, the world's largest travel site, has announced its 2015 Travelers' Choice has announced its 2015 Travelers' Choice awards for Destinations.

This year's awards honour 469 top travel destinations worldwide including lists for Africa, Asia, Australia, Canada, Caribbean, Central America, Europe, China, Middle East, Russia, South America, the South Pacific, the UK, and the US, based on millions of valuable reviews and opinions from TripAdvisor travelers.

Award winners were determined using an algorithm that took into account the quantity and quality of reviews and ratings for hotels, restaurants and attractions in destinations worldwide, gathered over a 12-month period.

Hanoi ranked 4th in the top 10 Travelers' Choice Destinations thanks to its charming Old Quarter, monuments, French-style architecture while making room for modern developments alongside.


 The Hoan Kiem Lake in Hanoi

The website notes that lakes, parks, shady boulevards and more than 600 temples and pagodas add to the appeal of this city, which is easily explored by taxi.

Rounding on the list of top 10 are Morocco’s Marrakech, Cambodia’s Siem Reap, Turkey’s Istanbul, the Czech Republic’s Prague, the UK’s London, Italy’s Rome, Argentina’s Buenos Aires, France’s Paris, South Africa’s Cape Town.

Source : dtinews[dot]vn
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Saturday, March 28, 2015

A good day for skulkers


Below some shots of 3 fine skulkers taken Saturday, March 28, at Hanoi.

Pale-footed Bush Warbler, a shy and rarely seen inhabitant of thickest scrub
I finally managed to get some (poor) shots of one individual (playback of recently recorded songs has been used), which unfortunately remained in thick cover. A master skulker!

This species resembles Asian Stubtail and Pale-legged/Sakhalin Leaf Warbler, which share similarly pale legs and a contrasting face pattern. But they are easy to separate by structure and some pattern differences.
As I wrote in my last post, I found 1,5 week ago several songsters along the Red River, in dense scrubs and tall rank grasslands with scattered scrub in clearings and edges of a small wooded patch.

Today, a "tape-and-wait" session led to the discovery of 4-5 individuals along a 200m section. As I never recorded the  Pale-footed Bush Warbler in Hanoi in winter, it would be quite normal to consider them as passage migrants. But I strongly believe that this species is well present in winter. Skulking and silent birds are elusive and easily overlooked. Only singing males reveal their presence.

Asian Stubtail - passage migrant
Striking supercilium with dark eye-stripe as Pale-footed Bush Warbler, but obvious structural differences

Siberian Blue Robin (m) - passage migrant
Not a cryptically colored bird, but secretive and quite difficult to see well
Source : vietnambirdnews[dot]blogspot[dot]com
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Thursday, March 26, 2015

Insiders explain why Vietnam is losing its tourism appeal

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Vietnam wastes its chances at international tourism fairs while hindering vacationers with complicated visa rules, as industry insiders name more reasons to explain why the country has seemingly become less attractive to tourists worldwide.

Foreign tourists enjoy a horse and carriage ride in Tien Giang Province, located in southern Vietnam.

 

Attending such high-profile international tourism exhibition as the ITB Berlin Convention is a precious opportunity for any country to give its tourism industry a boost.

But Vietnam always throws away the chance despite its frequent attendance at what is known as the world’s leading travel trade show, according to Vu The Binh, deputy chairman of the Vietnam Travel Association (VITA).

“Vietnam used to open one common booth for its travel agencies and airlines at the ITB events, but the way it was organized was always unscientific,” said Binh, who is also the former head of the travel department of the Vietnam National Administration of Tourism (VNAT).

National flag carrier Vietnam Airlines used to be in charge of the Vietnam booth at the tourism fairs, but there were times when other travel companies and carriers refused to join the mutual booth.

“So what Vietnam showed to the world at the ITB was an empty, lifeless booth,” he said.

Starting this year, VNAT was in charge of Vietnam’s ITB booth, but Binh is pessimistic about the situation improving.

“The VNAT will assign different departments under its umbrella to join the exhibition in turn,” he said. “So when will we be able to have experienced experts with deep tourism knowledge represent Vietnam at the events?”

The way Vietnam promotes its tourism attractions and services at the international travel fairs is also way behind its global counterparts, the VITA official added.

“We hardly deploy any technology for the promotions,” he said. “We only use simple slideshows or short video clips to introduce the beauty of our nature and countryside or cultural heritage, while other countries wow visitors with their modern, hi-tech and interactive displays.”

The ITB Berlin 2015 took place from March 4 to 8, attracting 10,096 exhibitors from 186 countries, according to the event’s website.

Luong Hoai Nam, director of seaplane operator Hai Au Aviation, returned from the event with a bitter remark.

“Vietnam promoted the tourism potential of its whole country on premises even smaller than those of a single Thai province [at the event],” Nam said.

Vietnam also lacks other promotional activities besides the travel exhibitions, such as on foreign tourism TV channels or magazines, as other countries do, he added.

“Vietnam does not stand out from other countries at the ITB, and it lacks a clear tourism identity,” he concluded.

Rigid visa rules

The unnecessarily strict visa procedures Vietnam demands from some countries have apparently driven tourists from these markets away.

Takahiko Ohata, chairman of the Overseas Tour Operators Association of Japan (OTOA), said fewer Japanese tourists have chosen to visit Vietnam due to the inconvenient visa policy, which has become a headache for both the association and its Vietnamese partners.

Japanese holidaymakers used to be able to enter Vietnam and enjoy a 15-day stay without a visa, according to the Japanese chairman.

This enabled tourists from the East Asian country to fly to Hanoi or Ho Chi Minh City, stay there a few days before visiting the Cambodian city of Siem Reap, and spend the last day in Vietnam before returning home, Ohata said.

But under a new visa rule that took effect on January 1, Japanese vacationers have to apply for a visa to enter Vietnam in order to follow that itinerary, he added.

The visa application costs at least VND1.26 million (roughly US$60).

Ohata said money is not an issue but the problem is Japanese tourists will have to waste time completing the visa procedure for a journey on which they used to enjoy many preferential treatments.

The holidaymakers will therefore choose to fly to Bangkok and then visit Cambodia instead, he added.

Even when tourists opt to apply for a visa on arrival, the procedure is no simpler, according to the Japanese official.

Tourists are required to fill in the online visa application form, wait to get the application code, and present it to authorities at the airport to be able to get their visa, Ohata elaborated.

Ohata said these policies do not encourage Japanese vacationers to visit Vietnam.

The OTOA has complained to the Vietnamese Embassy in Japan about the issue but was told that things cannot be changed, he said.

 

Source: Tuoi Tre News

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Source : news[dot]com[dot]vn
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Vietjet inks deal with HCMC Tourism Association to cut travel costs

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Today Vietjet will slash fares by up to 50 percent on flights for tours run by domestic agencies under the Ho Chi Minh City Tourism Association in a special collaboration aimed at spurring growth for the tourism industry.

In recent weeks, Vietjet has also announced the opening of several new domestic routes, such as Ho Chi Minh City - Chu Lai in Quang Nam province (May 27, 2015), Ho Chi Minh City - Dong Hoi in Quang Binh province (April 29, 2015), and Hanoi - Quy Nhon (April 26, 2015).

This year, Vietnam is promoting the country’s incredible heritage sites. It is hoped that these new flights and cheaper tours will encourage more Vietnamese and international travelers to explore many of the country’s heritage sites.

A representative from the Ho Chi Minh City Tourism Association said air tickets normally account for 45-50 percent of a tour’s total fee and as a result of this agreement domestic tourism agencies would be able to offer more affordable tours which will in turn encourage tourism growth.

Many of Vietjet’s new flights will also encourage tourism growth in Central Vietnam’s less well-known destinations, such as Quy Nhon, Dong Hoi and Chu Lai, where travelers will discover unspoiled beaches, incredible scenery and fascinating heritage sites. As always Vietjet will help travelers reduce travel time and costs when traveling to these areas.

With an extensive flight network linking every major city in Vietnam to the country’s most popular tourism destinations as well as cities in Taiwan, Thailand, South Korea, Cambodia and China, Vietjet has fast become one of Asia’s most popular airlines.

Vietjet has gained a firm foothold in the aviation industry by offering high-quality flights at incredible prices on brand new Airbus jets.

On board every Vietjet flight passengers can relax in a luxurious leather seat and choose one of nine delicious hot meals on offer or select a souvenir from the in-flight Vietjet boutique. Visit www.vietjetair.com to find out more about Vietjet’s latest promotions.

 

Source: Thanh Nien News

Source : news[dot]com[dot]vn
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Direct air routes deemed key to Vietnam-India tourism cooperation

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Direct air routes are key to boosting tourism between Vietnam and India, according to Joint Secretary of the Indian Ministry of Tourism, Suman Billa.

A recently signed agreement between India and the Vietnamese Ministry of Transport will serve as an important legal framework to facilitate the development of their transport infrastructure, Billa noted at a tourism promotion event held by the Vietnamese Embassy in New Delhi on March 24.

He said that India is one of the two countries that have had the most tourists going overseas in the world, and encouraged Vietnamese people to visit. He also suggested that if promotional activities are conducted effectively, Vietnam will be a magnet for Indian visitors because it possesses a multitude of attractive destinations, a rich culinary culture and many shared spiritual and cultural similarities with his country.

General Director of the Vietnam National Administration of Tourism, Nguyen Van Tuan, said numerous measures have been taken to strengthen bilateral cooperation, particularly in tourism, since Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung’s visit to India last October.

Following the decision of India’s second biggest carrier, Jet Airways, to open a direct air route to Vietnam, the Southeast Asian country’s national flag carrier Vietnam Airlines is also planning to launch a direct route to India. This will fuel tourism between the nations, Tuan claimed.

Minister Counsellor of the Vietnamese Embassy, Tran Quang Tuyen, said India has seen the world’s fastest growth in the number of citizens travelling overseas, from 4.4 million in 2000 to 17 million in 2013, up by 13 percent per year on average. The figure is expected to hit 50 million by 2020.

Although Vietnam welcomed 55,000 Indian tourist arrivals in 2014, a surge from 12,000 in 2007, the number accounted for only 0.07 percent of the total foreign visitors to Vietnam and 0.03 percent of Indian tourists who spent their holidays overseas.

Meanwhile, only 12,000 Vietnamese people visit India every year, with the majority heading to Buddhist relic sites such as Gaya, Varanasi, and Kushinagar, he noted. He said that this proves tourism cooperation is far behind where it should be.

Tuyen urged for both countries step up tourism promotion and open more direct air routes as soon as possible.

 

Source: VNA

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Source : news[dot]com[dot]vn
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Pegas Touristik adds more chartered flights to Khanh Hoa

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Pegas Touristik will add one more chartered flight this week connecting Russian capital Moscow and Cam Ranh of Khanh Hoa Province. 

Pegas Touristik adds more chartered flights to Khanh Hoa

Foreign tourists are seen at a resort in Phan Thiet City.

 

The service is operated every five days by Russian airline Nordwind.

According to Hoang Thi Phong Thu, chairwoman of Anh Duong Tourist Company, the domestic partner with Pegas Touristik, Russian tourist arrivals in Vietnam are in decline, so a small increase in flight frequency is still good news.

“In the peak travel season last year we served around 120 flights a month but saw a mere 30-35 flights last month,” she said.

“The market has yet to show positive signs but we’re still trying to maintain operations. Pegas Touristik brings Russian tourists to 22 foreign markets but still regards Vietnam, Thailand, Egypt and Turkey as its four major markets.”

Russia is an emerging market for Vietnam’s tourism sector in recent years. However, Russian arrivals in Vietnam have shrunk rapidly in the past few months due to Western sanctions.

More than 68,000 Russians visited Vietnam in the first two months this year, down 25.7% against a year earlier. The fall in Russian tourists has led many chartered flights to be canceled. Vietnam Airlines has suspended Moscow-Cam Ranh service.

From March 18 to 21, the Vietnam National Administration of Tourism and some enterprises attended an international travel and tourism exhibition in Russia to meet partners and hold a roadshow to promote tourist destinations in Vietnam.

However, fewer Vietnamese enterprises participated in the exhibition than in previous years.

 

Source: SGT

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Source : news[dot]com[dot]vn
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Steep tour discounts at travel festival

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Travel firms at the upcoming Hochiminh City Tourism Festival will offer price discounts of up to 50% on many tour packages to attract customers to buy Reunification Day (April 30) and summer tour programs. 

Steep tour discounts at travel festival

Customers join a game at a previous HCM City Tourism Festival.

 

The event will take place from March 26 to 29 at September 23 Park near the landmark Ben Thanh Market in the central business district.

Participating companies will put on many local and outbound tours. Danang tours will be strongly promoted as the central coast city of Danang will host an international fireworks competition on April 28 and 29.    

Many tour operators, especially members of the HCMC Tourism Association, have worked with carriers such as Vietnam Airlines and VietJetAir to promote domestic tours by lowering prices by up to 50% compared to normal prices.

For instance, Vietravel will cut prices of many domestic tours by VND700,000 (US$32.6) to VND4.4 million per passenger and those of tours to China, Hong Kong, Japan, Taiwan, and India by VND600,000 per passenger if clients place deposits in advance.

Viet Media Travel offers discounts of 40% for many products and gifts to customers who book tours during the festival.

Saigontourist Travel Service Company will also reduce prices of tours to Hanoi, Ninh Binh, Yen Tu, Halong Bay, Lao Cai, Sapa, Danang, Hoi An, Hue, Thien Duong Cave by VND4.18 million per passenger.

Meanwhile, buyers of tours to Korea, Japan, the U.S., the Netherlands and other summer tours at Ben Thanh Tourist Service Joint Stock Company will get discounts of 15-30%.

According to the HCMC Department of Tourism, around 150 enterprises, hotels, restaurants, transport firms and domestic and foreign tourism promotion centers will be attending the event.

Visitors to the “Impressive World Heritage in Vietnam” festival can enjoy performances such as Vietnam's royal music (nha nhac), the cultural space of the Gongs in the Central Highlands and Quan Ho Bac Ninh folk songs.

 

Source: SGT

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Source : news[dot]com[dot]vn
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Tuesday, March 24, 2015

Spring migration : slowly but surely


Spring is an exciting time of year as tons of birds make their way through East Tonkin to their breeding grounds in China, Russia... Spring birding in Hanoi is not about quantity of birds but rather about quality, diversity - if you devote enough time and perseverance.

Recent short strolls on my favorite wooded and scrubby patches along the Red River produced some nice photo opportunities of some fine examples of different (but expected) migrants/winter visitors.

Birds included, among other, a mixed flock of Grey-backed and Japanese Thrushes, one female Rufous-gorgeted Flycatcher, some Hainan Blue Flycatchers, one flock of Ashy Minivets, 2 Rufous-tailed Robins, dozens of "Blyth’s Leaf Warbler" cf P. claudiae and some Sulphur-breasted Warblers and best of all: a fleeting glimpse of a Pale-footed Bush Warbler - a good local rarity (hmmm, maybe not…).  This species is extremely shy and is a great skulker. I just realized that I have overlooked it for a long time. During winter it is almost impossible to locate but in spring its typical song helps to find it easily. It is a loud, explosive zip..zip-tschuk-o-tschuk which reminds me of the one of the Cetti’s Warbler - a well-known song amongst European birders. I located 2-3 songsters in scrubby grasslands along the Red River and caught a glimpse of one. It was impossible to get a clean view - leave alone a clean shot. But I took some recordings of call and song which I put on xeno-canto. I also heard 2 Manchurian Bush Warblers and 1 Siberian Rubythroat singing from dense scrubs. Spring!

Apart from songbirds, I scored 1 fly-over Purple Heron, 1 Grey-headed Lapwing and 1 Eurasian Woodcock (flushed from just a few feet away as usual).

Song of two species of Bush Warblers recorded recently:

-the explosive one of the Pale-footed Bush Warbler

-the melodious one of the Manchurian Bush Warbler


Rufous-gorgeted Flycatcher (f)


Black-naped Monarch (m)

Black-naped Monarch (m)

Hainan Blue Flycatcher (m)

Cyornis sp. Flycatcher (f)

Sulphur-breasted Warbler


Sulphur-breasted Warbler

"Blyth's Leaf Warbler" cf P. claudiae
Source : vietnambirdnews[dot]blogspot[dot]com
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Chinese travel firms explore Nha Trang's attractions

NHA TRANG (VNS) — The Khanh Hoa Tourism Promotion Information Centre and Hoang Tra Tourism Co organised a farm tour to Nha Trang for 20 Chinese travel firms to enable them to check out tourism products and services there.

The visitors took in attractions like the Hundred Egg mud bath park, Labixa sea diving, Vinpearl Land, islands, and luxury hotels. The local tour operators had the opportunity to introduce many of the city's tourism products to the visitors.

It is expected to be a precursor for tours from China to Nha Trang.

Last year the number of Chinese visiting Khanh Hoa increased by 17.6 per cent over 2013.

Some airlines are set to launch commercial and charter flights from certain places in China to Cam Ranh. — VNS



Source : vietnamnews[dot]vn
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Folk Cake Festival to be held in Can Tho

CAN THO (VNS) — The fourth Southern Folk Cake Festival will be organised from April 27 to May 1 at the Tan An Communal House in Can Tho City's Cai Khe Islet.

At the festival, more than 150 kinds of traditional cakes will be exhibited in 100 booths, and there will many activities like cake-making, contests to make cakes, eating and cooking competitions and folk art performances.

Le Van Tam, deputy chairman of the city People's Committee, said the festival, an annual cultural and tourism event, was held to preserve traditional cuisines and provide an opportunity to popularise Can Tho's tourism image. — VNS



Source : vietnamnews[dot]vn
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Bio-reserve tourists learn to dance in traditional coracles

Balance beam: Villagers in Cam Thanh started the community-operated Eco-discovery tour in Hoi An. It's one of the newest tours offered around the city, which boasts more environmentally friendly options for tourists in suburban areas.

by Hoai Nam

Villages in farmland surrounding Hoi An are highly popular with environment-loving tourists. Visitors are greeted with a smile and offered an inside look at rural Viet Nam among the green paddy fields and vast forests of nipa palms.

The palms along the banks of the Thu Bon River are used for producing medicine, hats, alcohol, sugar, vinegar and even fuel.

The nipa forests and Cham Island have been recognised as world bio-reserves, and the forests protect the 2,000 Cam Thanh villagers from storms.

On a 10,000sq.m aquaculture farm in Cam Thanh Village at the mouth of Thu Bon River, Nguyen Tuan Lien has opened an eco-tour for weekend retreats and fishing.

Lien, 35, was born in Cam Thanh, but his family's traditional trades such as fishing and handicrafts have made way for tourism services as they are more lucrative with less risks. Lien started the Hoi An Eco Discovery Tour to offer short-stay tourists the chance to explore Hoi An and Cam Thanh in a day.

"It's a community service," Lien said.

40 villagers are employed to cycle guests around Hoi An, paddle coracle boats through the nipa forests, fish with them on Thu Bon River and cook for them on their farms.

Do a little dance: A tour guide dances in a coracle. Visitors can watch funny dances performed on basket boats and play folk games during the Hoi An Eco-discovery tour. — VNS Photos Cong Thanh

"Villagers provide a history of the forest and explain local customs while they paddle through the nipa forests. Each of our 45 boats carries two tourists and a guide," Lien said.

Tours usually start with a cycling trip around Hoi An early in the morning. Le Duc Long, the tour manager, said tourists could enjoy a peaceful time at the UNESCO-recognised world heritage site.

The city promotes the use of bicycles in the city by banning motor vehicles from the Old Quarter for most of the day," Long said.

Long said Cam Thanh Village also offered visitors a chance to learn some farming and cooking skills.

"After visiting the old town, visitors take a 3km ride to Cam Thanh Village to change from road to river. Coracles docked at the village wharf are ready to explore the nipa forest," he said.

Village guides show visitors around the nipa forests and make hats from leaves for them.

"Tourists can also harvest snails, oysters and shrimp while walking along river banks when the tide is low," said tour guide Nguyen Cong Tai.

Tai, 30, who started fishing as a teenager, said he also taught visitors how to paddle the coracle boats.

He also demonstrated a wild dance using his feet to rotate the little vessel in tango, rock and ‘Gangnam' styles.

Sea of food: Tourists experience rural life at a farm on the banks of the Thu Bon River through learning to fish and paddle coracles. They also enjoy fresh seafood.

"It's hard because you get dizzy after a few minutes. I perform for four minutes, but tourists like to play games and test their skills by dancing in a coracle," he said.

Tourists are also taught how to manouevre the coracles without a paddle, using their hands to rock the little craft.

Nguyen Thi Phuc joined a 20-member team to explore Hoi An and Cam Thanh Village. She was happy with the fishing lessons and games at the farm.

The lunch menu offered grilled chicken, fish, shrimp and clams. Farm "waiters" used the coracles to carry food across the water to huts scatted around the farm.

Lien said the dining huts were built around the farm and connected by bamboo bridges.

"It's a bit of a challenge for visitors to walk on a single bamboo pole and handrail. They have lunch in the huts they have helped to cook with the villagers," Lien said.

"Local food, including pan cakes, spring rolls, my quang (local noodles), maize soup and bean curd are always on the menu. Sometimes, visitors order food among the trees in the nipa forest so that they can have a relaxing and quiet time," he said.

Nguyen Van Dai, 56, head cook on the farm, said grilled oysters and chicken were the most popular dishes with visitors.

"Visitors love cooking crabs, clams and fish caught on the farm or in the nipa forest," Dai said.

A one-day tours costs about VND750,000 (US$35) per person. — VNS



Source : vietnamnews[dot]vn
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Ethnic minority crafts, cuisine to be featured in Ca Dy Commune

HCM CITY (VNS) — A cuisine and craft fair will open today at a community-based tourism site in Ca Dy Commune in the central province's Nam Giang District.

The event aims to promote community tourism in 12 communes with the participation of travel agencies and tour operators.

The commune, which is home to the ethnic Co Tu group, is first tourism site in the mountainous district under the co-operation of the Japanese Foundation of International Development and Relief (FIDR) and Nam Giang District.

The commune still preserves traditional crafts such as brocade weaving, love duets and cuisine.

Mountainous districts along the former Ho Chi Minh Trail in the central province have developed different community-based tourism sites including Bho Hoong Village, Dhroong Village, Ta Lu, and Ta Bhing. — VNS



Source : vietnamnews[dot]vn
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Entertainment centre opens at My Khe Beach

DA NANG (VNS) — A beach sport and recreation centre, Dana Beach, for tourists was opened at the city's My Khe beach.

Nguyen Anh Minh, director of the company Que Viet, said the 10,000sq.m centre offers visitors summer entertainment, water sports, cuisine, a beach bar, the Wynn Lounge and Beach Beer.

Tourists can rest on pristine, white sandy beaches and enjoy local seafood and drinks while swimming in the sea.

The centre, just 10 minute from the city, can host about 3,000 visitors at the same time for a BBQ party on beach.

It is open from 8am to 2am everyday. — VNS



Source : vietnamnews[dot]vn
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Satisfying a craving, far away from home

You never appreciate what you have until you do not have it, they say. Khieu Thanh Ha realises the truth of this saying in Bangkok. Fortunately, she finds good Vietnamese food in a small alley.

Eating with relish: Vietnamese tourists enjoy a bowl of sweet and sour soup at Jeraporn Restaurant.

I had always confessed to my friends that I am not a fan of Vietnamese cuisine and have never craved for it at any time or in any place.

Recently I found this to be untrue when I took a trip to Thailand for five days. In the land-of-smiles, I tasted almost all local specialities - from seafood and street food to the local fruits - which was really satisfactory until one day, I felt deprived.

"It is definitely Vietnamese food," my friend told me, when I described the feeling to her.

In a small alley in Bangkok, we found a restaurant specialising in Viet Nam's cuisine. We arrived at Jeraporn at around 7.30pm and were told that we seemed to be the last customers. I was very surprised to hear this since it is rare in Bangkok, which is known as a sleepless city.

A staff member told us that this was because they had worked very hard all day, serving numerous clients and now must rest for the next day's shift.

She said that if we had not booked in advance, they would have to scramble to find food for us at that time.

This was the first time that I recognised the advantage of dining in a group as we could not pay much, but could enjoy different dishes.

Our eight-member group really enjoyed the 12-course set menu, which was delicious and full of Vietnamese style.

Knowing that we were all hungry, all the dishes were served at the same time. The one that I liked the most was a bowl of sweet and sour soup with shrimp and sliced green spring onions and other herbs.

House special: Fried spring rolls of fish (instead of the traditional pork) is a dish that has to be booked in advance.

For a person, who travels a lot during a day, there is nothing better than this kind of a soup, which quickly helps dispel all tiredness and allows you to regain your energy.

It seemed that other members in our group were also having the same thought as me as they all finished the soup first.

Another dish that I liked was grilled pork rolled in rice paper with slices of cucumber, pineapple, green banana and herbs.

As wraps and rolls have been an all-time favourite of mine, I turned to them first, my hands busy picking ingredients, arranging them and rolling them.

In my opinion the one element that makes a delicious wrap or roll is the dipping sauce. And I was satisfied with what the Jeraporn Restaurant offered us.

The sauce was prepared with a fine amalgamation of different tastes: sweet from sugar, sour from lime juice, hot from pepper and chillies, salt and water. It also looked really delectable with pieces of garlic and chillies floating on the surface of the bowl. For me, the sensation of soaking the roll in the dip was like tasting the whole world in one bite.

The two other dishes were also so seductive that there was no way for me but to taste them, although I was trying to follow a low-carb diet.

They were banh xeo (crisp yellow pancake) and banh hoi thit heo (steamed rolls made of rice-flour and served with pork).

These was also a kind of wrap-and-roll, that made me busy again until the end of the meal.

Hot stuff: A Vietnamese staff prepares chillies at the Jeraporn restaurant in Bangkok. — VNS Photos Khieu Thanh Ha

These dishes were accompanied with different dipping sauces. Although, the ingredients were nearly the same, the cooks had been able to achieve different tastes that matched with the food.

Throughout the meal I tried to compare and look for something that was not Vietnamese, but it was a mission impossible.

I finally found the reason for this, when I suddenly heard a man speaking Vietnamese: the owner and some staff member there were my fellow-country people.

Chirawath Tepsiri, whose Vietnamese name is Quy, looked younger than her 60 years. She said her parents had migrated to Thailand many years ago and opened this restaurant.

She has taken charge of running the business and has also been the chef there for nearly four decades, as her parents grew older and passed on all their secret cooking recipes to her.

Jeraporn Restaurant

Add: 1352, Sutthi San Road, Huai Khwang, Bangkok, Sam Sen Nok

Tel: +66 227 782 36 Open from 10.30am onwards

Comment: Good food at reasonable prices, starting from $4.5; friendly and fast service, which includes take away and delivery.

Quy works in the restaurant almost daily and is efficiently helped by her 89-year-old mother and some assistants. She said she had to make sure all the dishes served to the customers would be nice and delicious.

"Most of the ingredients are imported from Viet Nam. Those that we cannot import, we try to make it as similar as possible and strictly follow the original recipes," said Quy.

"Of course, there is no way to make all the dishes 100 per cent authentic. We still have some exceptional cases when we change the recipe a little bit to serve an order from the customers, such as add more chillies or some local herbs," she added.

"Our people love to eat Vietnamese food, which is famous in Thailand. It is quite nice and there are a lot of vegetables. It brings good heath," my friend Chutathip Chareonlarp whispered me.

Quy said her restaurant is also a destination for not only Vietnamese tourists, but local Thai residents, Japanese, French and Filipinos.

"They all love my cooking. The most in demand here are pancakes sugarcane skewers, sour and spicy pork salad and fresh spring roll with shrimp," said Quy, but revealed that her speciality was dishes using fish, for which customers had to book in advance.

Recently, Jeraporn opened another branch nearby as Quy's oldest son wanted to tap into the growing demand for Vietnamese cuisine. The new restaurant also receives as many gourmands every day. — VNS

Source : vietnamnews[dot]vn
post from sitemap

Sunday, March 22, 2015

Eco-tourism in Ca Mau proves profitable

Homestay services are bringing a good income for farmers in Ca Mau Province, who are promoting the flora and fauna of the region's wetland ecosystem.

 

 Visitors enjoy water scenery

Visitors can experience life in stilt houses amid watery scenery and local food including fried mud skippers or len snail fried with coconut juice. They learn to catch fish in the daytime, and listen to traditional music in a hammock at night.

 

Stilt houses for holiday stay

Eco-tourism has helped improve life for the local farmers.

Nguyen Van Nhuan, a retired soldier turned farmer in the Lower U Minh National Park of Vietnam's southernmost Ca Mau Province, earns an annual profit of VND300m, which he shares with other farmers who help him.

In 2013, the Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency selected five households and offered each VND54m to develop eco-tourism. Nhuan now hosts 50 to 70 visitors a day.

In the north, Mai Chau Family Homestay, developed by Pham Thanh Binh, now has four stilt houses.

 

Pham Thanh Binh leads a group of tourist into the mountains

Binh often leads visitors through Pu Mat National Park, crossing rivers or climbing waterfalls, to experience the natural beauty, and learn about ethnic minority life and culture. The cost is USD20 a night, including three meals.

 

Two visitors admire Ma River

Tran Xuan Truong, an official from Ca Mau Department of Culture, Sports and Tourism, said there was more than enough capacity -- one million tourists visit each year -- but high travel costs and limited infrastructure were constraints.

Binh said he relies on referrals from tour agencies in Hanoi.

Source : dtinews[dot]vn
post from sitemap