Monday, September 30, 2013

Hippopotamus 河马



Sunday, September 29, 2013

Cuộc sống như quyển sách



Cuộc sống như quyển sách

人生就像一本书
Life is like a book

Thursday, September 26, 2013

Tuesday, September 24, 2013

Điện thoại công cộng

Điện thoại công cộng 
公共电话
Public Phone

Điện thoại 电话 phone
công cộng 公共 public

Sunday, September 22, 2013

A fruitful expedition

A fruitful expedition



Foreign tourists cycle along the National Road 57 in Cho Lach District, Ben Tre.

I had been to Cho Lach District a couple of times earlier, but I did not remember much apart from bad roads and weak bridges. There was nothing to write home about.

However, on a recent trip to the place with a group of friends, I saw the district in a new light.

The district is located about 144 kilometers from Ho Chi Minh City in the Mekong Delta province of Ben Tre. When we requested the Center for Ben Tre Tourism Promotion to help us spend some time with farmers in the district, they recommended that we visit the Dai Loc eco-tourism site belonging to Nguyen Cong Thanh, better known as Tu Thanh, in Son Dinh Commune.

It was late in the evening when we arrived at Thanh’s place. Ben Tre’s reputation as “the land of coconuts” is well deserved and we were not surprised to see coconut palms with 50-70 fruits each right at the entrance.

Thanh, a middle-aged man, took us to a restaurant on the banks of the Cho Lach canal.

We started our dinner with a sweet-sour, lightly fragrant white smoothie. Called ca cao dằm đá (cocoa chipped with ice), the drink was made with cocoa flesh. Suitable for almost every kind of soil, cocoa is quite popular in Ben Tre, where, apart from its main use as raw material for chocolate, all its parts are used – the flesh is made into a fresh fruit drink or wine, seeds are powdered, and the fruit’s outer layer is used as food for cattle.

Since he received 600 cocoa saplings from the HCMC University of Agriculture and Forestry in 2001, Thanh has successfully developed eight strains of cocoa and every year he provides more than 500,000 seedlings to farms nationwide.

After the refreshing drink, we were treated to bánh xèo hến (deep-fried pancake, or sizzling cake, stuffed with mussels) cooked by Thanh’s wife.

Having had the pancake at many different places, I can confidently say it was one of the best I’ve enjoyed. The sweetness of mussels, the fattiness of coconut milk and fresh milk, the fragrance of home-grown mushrooms and mung beans, the dipping sauce - fish sauce mixed with lime, sugar and coconut juice, and fresh herbs picked from Thanh’s garden, are tastes that will linger on our tongues and in our minds for a long time.

Other dishes on the menu included freshwater apple snails that were cooked into seven different dishes, sour hot pot with swamp eels, and braised small cyprinids – fish with a toothless jaw that do not have stomachs. These dishes were accompanied with sips of cocoa wine.

The dinner ended with durians, another fruit that Thanh is famous for. Nicknamed “the durian witch,” he was the man who brought the famous Mon thong durian variety from Thailand into Vietnam during the 1990s and successfully grew it here.

I would highly recommend a boat ride with Thanh along the canal that runs through his garden. He will provide the best form of “entertainment,” introducing you to many facts about the many fruits that are grown in his four-season garden that covers more than two hectares. Guests are free to collect ripe durians that fall on the ground and eat them. Or, at the coconut area, just tell Thanh, and he will pick whichever fruit you like and you can enjoy it on the spot.

We decided to spend the night at Thanh’s place. Contrary to our initial belief that it would be a homestay experience, we ended up staying in bungalows built in the garden to serve guests. There were no mosquitoes, but the pleasant breeze was cooling and comforting.

The next morning we visited the Cho Lach Market, which can be reached either by motorboat or bicycle.

The sight of vegetables like sweet potatoes and taro, seafood like prawns, snails, and fish, as also a variety of dried foods, made me want to buy them all. In the end, however, I just bought the ingredients needed to make the tapioca noodle soup (bánh canh) with mussels and coconut milk that Thanh’s wife was going to teach us to cook.

Besides Thanh’s eco-tourism site, there are many other places to visit in Cho Lach: a sandy beach on the banks of the Co Chien River in Son Dinh Commune; the Ba Ngoi and Tam Loc fruit gardens in Vinh Binh Commune; the Nam Cong ornamental garden with nation famous plants in Vinh Thanh Commune; the Cai Mon tourism area with fruit gardens and one of the oldest churches in southern Vietnam.

On this trip, I felt Cho Lach is a good match for Thailand’s Suan Supatra Land, which is considered a paradise for fruit lovers. If local authorities could improve the infrastructure and promote its attractions, this place can be a big draw for tourists.

~News courtesy of Thanh Nien News~

xe buýt

xe buýt  Bus 巴士


Monday, September 16, 2013

Thursday, September 12, 2013

Singapore and Vietnam launch strategic partnership

Singapore and Vietnam launch strategic partnership



Singapore and Vietnam formally elevated their relationship to that as strategic partners on Wednesday, an agreement which deepens their ties on the political, economic, defence, security and international fronts.

Under the strategic partnership agreement, the two Asean members will promote high-level bilateral exchanges, with direct communications between their leaders. The strategic partnership was launched by Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong, who is in Vietnam on a three-day official visit, and his Vietnamese counterpart Nguyen Tan Dung.

In trade, both countries have agreed to step up cooperation in sectors such as transport, infocomms technology, finance and banking. They have also agreed to look into other promising areas like cruise tourism, commodities trading, healthcare and agriculture. Vietnam and Singapore are also working to increase air traffic between the two countries and with the rest of the world.

For defence and security, Singapore and Vietnam will increase their cooperation in military and training exchanges, amongst other areas. The two countries will also explore tie-ups in areas such as tourism, healthcare, legal systems and education. In addition, they reaffirmed their commitment to bring about an integrated Asean Community by 2015, and to enhance the region's role in the global community.

~News courtesy of Straits Times~

Grace Fu urges Singapore companies to invest in Vietnam

Grace Fu urges Singapore companies to invest in Vietnam



There are opportunities abound in Vietnam for Singapore companies, Second Minister for Environment and Water Resources and Foreign Affairs, Ms Grace Fu, said in Hanoi on Thursday.

And with the official launch of a strategic partnership between the countries on Wednesday, Singapore is in a good position to tap on growing industries such as manufacturing, financial services and hospitality.

"This is a country with over 90 million population, it has a very young population," said Ms Fu, who is accompanying Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong on his official visit to Vietnam.

"Labour cost is very low, (they have a) very hardworking population, very eager to learn and with their greater linkages to the world through the various free trade agreements as well as the TPP (Trans-Pacific Partnership) for example, we see this as a great potential for us to tap."

~News courtesy of Straits Times~