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Wednesday, June 30, 2010

Vietnam Tourism Award 2010


The Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism on June 26 presented the Vietnam Tourism Award 2010 to 30 hotels, 20 travel agencies and 15 tourism service enterprises at a ceremony in Hanoi.

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Free visa for visitors to Vietnam on Hanoi’s 1000th anniversary



This year awards went to ten big outbound tourism firms, including Saigontourist, Ben Thanh Tourist, Tan Dinh Tourist, Apex Vietnam, Exotissimo, Vietnam Tourism JS Company in Hanoi and HCM City, Hoa Binh Tourist, Vietravel and Huong Giang Tourism.

Ten inbound travel firms also won recognition, including Vitours, Lua Viet, Viet Culture, Youth Tourism, and Hanoitourist.

The organizing board also presented an award for the most dynamic and creative travel firm to Young Generation Tourism Company and Oriental Tourism and Trade Co., Ltd.

Winning hotels are divided in three groups, including ten five-star groups with Majestic, Melia Hanoi, Renaissance Riverside Saigon, Hanoi Daewoo, InterContinental Hanoi Westlake, Vinpearl Resort & Spa and Six Senses Hideaway Ninh Van Bay.

There are 10 four-star hotels, named: Dong Khoi, De Nhat, Hoan Cau, Yasaka Nha Trang, Saigon Phu Quoc, Saigon Morin, etc. and ten three-star hotels, including Hoa Binh, Vien Dong, Dong Khanh, Rex, Cuu Long, Vietnam Trade Union, etc.

At the event, 19 hotels, which won the title “Green Hotel” from the ASEAN Environment Organisation, were also honoured. These hotels have been praised for contributions not only to tourism development, but also to environmental protection, energy-saving and sustainable development.

Vu The Binh, a senior official from the Vietnam National Tourism Administration, remarked that the award winners met standards on the number of guests, service quality and high revenue.

Addressing the ceremony, Minister of Culture, Sports and Tourism Hoang Tuan Anh commented that the Vietnam Tourism Award had been given to successful businesses whose operations contributed to the success and trust in the country’s tourism sector. The award is a milestone for tourist firms to work better to improve their service quality and professional skills.

The Vietnam Tourism Award was launched in 1999 under the name “Top Ten International Tourism Company and Top Hotels in Vietnam”.

PV

Monday, June 28, 2010

Da Nang casino closed


 Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung told Da Nang authorities to temporarily close the casino ran by Silvershore Hoang Dat JV Company to address the firm’s violations.


Illustration photo from Wayfaring.


The casino can only reopen once Silvershore Hoang Dat meets the conditions requested by the Ministry of Planning and Investment (MoPI).

Da Nang authorities were told to review management of Silvershore Hoang Dat and to closely work with relevant agencies to instruct and supervise this company to deal with violations previously defined by the MoPI.

The Ministries of Finance, Public Security, Labour-War Invalid-Social Affairs, Culture-Sports-Tourism and Foreign Affairs will cooperate with Da Nang to consider and solve the issues related to this casino and hotel.

The Silver Shores International Tourist Site was inaugurated on January 26, 2010 in Da Nang, consisting of a five-star hotel and Vietnam’s largest casino. This was also the largest foreign-invested project in Da Nang in 2006, at $86 million.

Previously, the MoPI asked Da Nang to inspect and supervise the Silver Shores project. According to MoPI, the firm’s license allowed it to have 8 card tables, but it had over 10. The investor also employed a large number of unskilled foreign workers, while Vietnamese law only permits use of foreign experts when the domestic labor market can’t provide workers.

PV

Sunday, June 27, 2010

Brides and Prejudice

Vietnamese men impose a double standard on women by demanding virgin wives while also insisting on engaging in premarital sex, a study finds

A couple kiss at their wedding in Ben Tre Province in the Mekong Delta. Many men in Vietnam want their bride to remain chaste while preferring premarital sex for themselves.
Twenty-six-year-old Dang Thi Mai Phuong admits that she had premarital sex before getting married last year, and she also assumes that Vietnamese men nowadays no longer insist that their wives remain chaste until marriage.

“This is a time when people don’t care about virginity. It’s normal to have sexual relations before marriage,” the Retail Management Service Manager at The Nielsen Company told Thanh Nien Weekly.

However, she said a girl should be aware of possible consequences of premarital sex.

“The public has opened [toward premarital sex] but it doesn’t mean they accept it as easily as in the West,” she said.

Phuong is one of many Vietnamese women who have made choices in the context of the double standard imposed by many local men who consider virginity one of the most important criteria in marriage, but still engage in as much premarital sex as possible.

A recently released survey found there is still a systematic gender inequality in the perceptions and attitudes of Vietnamese men toward men’s and women’s sexuality, in which women are subjected to a much stricter view and more punishment when they are involved in premarital or extramarital sex.

The study conducted in 2007 and announced in May 2010 by the Institute for Social Development Studies surveyed 228 men from Hanoi, the former Ha Tay Province [which was merged into Hanoi in August 2008], and Ho Chi Minh and Can Tho cities, four locations that represent four major political, economic, and social environments of contemporary Vietnam.

The survey, conducted through questionnaire and in-depth interviews, concluded that Vietnamese men believe that they should not be punished equally like women if they take part in premarital or extramarital sex and 45 percent of the respondents admitted that they had sex before marriage, with a large proportion of these men having had sex with prostitutes multiple times.

A culture thing

Vu Thanh Long, a researcher at the Institute for Social Development Studies who is a member of the survey team, said unfair prejudices had been adopted by many Vietnamese people, including women.

“It may not necessarily be selfishness that gives men this attitude toward virginity and marriage. Maybe the notions of masculinity and femininity for Vietnamese men and women cause the situation,” he told Thanh Nien Weekly.

“Most of the time, men are taught and expected to be active, brave, and experienced, while virtuous women are believed to be the passive, obedient, and innocent ones.”

He said Vietnamese women had told the survey that they couldn’t rely on innocent and inexperienced men as a husband and therefore preferred to have a husband that is confident and experienced.

“These perceptions can do nothing but reaffirm the double standards that disadvantage the women.”

Long also said that such notions have repeatedly been reinforced by families, schools, and the media. On the other hand, the scientist said that young generations are more “open” in dealing with premarital sex, cohabitation, and adultery.

Thirty-year-old Nguyen Duy Tuan said he hadn’t had sexual relations and insisted on marrying a virgin girl when he was a student several years ago. However, the PetroVietnam employee said he had since engaged in premarital sex, and his perceptions have changed. He no longer expects to marry a virgin girl anymore.

Pham Thanh Thao, a teacher of Chinese and a translator at the National Sports Training Center 2 in HCMC’s Thu Duc District, said she would accept a husband who had premarital sex. However, the 25- year-old woman said she wants to preserve her virginity until marriage.

“I wouldn’t cross the barriers to do that [have sexual relations] before marriage,” she told Thanh Nien Weekly.

“It is better to allow my boyfriend to make the mistake [of having premarital sex] so that he could be better in the future, rather than having him know nothing about that and be allured [into extramarital sex] later,” Thao said.

Source: Thanh nien

Saturday, June 26, 2010

Vietnam performs First independent Heart Transplant

Vietnam performs first independent heart transplant surgery

The patient met with Health Minister Nguyen Quoc Trieu on June 24.

“The patient has fully recovered one week after surgery. He can walk, eat, sleep and the new heart has been completely integrated into his body,” detailed Dr. Hoang Manh An, Director of the Army Hospital 103, to Minister Trieu.

Dr. An went on to explain that this surgery is a result of a long period of preparation, including hundreds of experimental operations on pigs, experiences in other countries and preparing technical conditions.

More than 10 patients are now on the waiting list for heart transplants at the hospital, having been examined and tested already.

Minister Trieu congratulated the Army Hospital 103 surgeons. He asserted that Vietnam will build a viscera transplant coordinating centre.

Vietnamese doctors have mastered transplant techniques, so now the major obstacle for patients is the lack of donor hearts.

Hanoi flower festival in New year


White egret photos, golden rice fields, small streams or other vehicle improvements bring manner of Vietnam village highlights in Hanoi flower festival.

Hanoi flower festival conner  in New year

Ly Thai To statue near Hoan Kiem lake

Hanoi flower  festival conner  in New year

Khue Van Cac near lotus pond

Hanoi flower festival conner  in New year
Royal proclamation moved capital made oyster mosaic wooden with height of 1.93 m, wide 1.27 weighs 79 kg intervening thousand tulip flowers.

Hanoi flower festival conner  in New year

Cyclo with girl and boy wear vietnamese traditional oriental robe (Áo dài)

Hanoi flower festival conner  in New year

Pot like soul of vietnamese villages

Hanoi flower festival conner  in New year

The orient robe was plaited from 1000 silk flowers and dried flowers, long 10 m , weighing 30 kg were arrangements with drum festival sight. On lap of dress, the flower associated to a picture representing the four seasons of Hanoi

Hanoi flower festival conner  in New year

Bamboo symbol is a symbol of vietnamese people will
.
Hanoi flower festival conner  in New year

White egret is popular on the vietnam fields

Vietnamese village symbol in New year

Symbol of vietnamese villages

Thursday, June 24, 2010

Room rates at three- to five-star hotels fall 18% in first half

The room rate at three- to five-star hotels in HCMC has fallen by 18% in the first half of this year to an average of US$92 per room per night while the average room occupancy has reached around 63%, up 10 percentage points year on year, the city’s Department of Culture, Sports and Tourism said on Tuesday.
Vinpearl in Nha Trang.
Vinpearl in Nha Trang.
The department explained in its report that the room rate fell strongly as some international hotel management groups have cut down their rate after a period of strong rates in 2006-2007 to raise competitiveness.
In addition, greater supply of rooms has also tended to bring rates down. The city had more than 600 new three- to five-star rooms in the period, including around 300 five-star rooms at the newly opened InterContinental Asiana Saigon hotel.
According to the report, the city currently has 60 three- to five-star hotels with nearly 8,600 rooms.
While the average room tariff has fallen, the number of foreign visitors has increased 12% to1.5 million in the first half. Around 50% of the visitors come as tourists, 30% for business and the rest for other purposes, including medical treatment, according to the department.
The department commented that HCMC needed to develop new tourism products and services to attract visitors to stay and spend more time in the city instead of just dropping in for a while and then going to tourist sites elsewhere.
“The city’s tourism products are still poor. It has still not made the most of its advantages, such as rich culture and quality shopping centers, to boost tourists’ spending and their stay here,” the department said.
La Quoc Khanh, deputy director of the department, had told the Daily the day earlier that the department was focusing on the two main activities, namely promoting and developing tourism products.
He said the department had completed the HCMC – One Hundred Excitements program to select 100 best tourism brands for international visitors and 100 best brands for local tourists in the city.
It is surveying the river routes in HCMC and neighboring provinces to develop river tourism.
“The city’s leaders and our department will have a meeting on Thursday to further discuss river tourism development. The city has a strong potential to develop it,” Khanh said.
The department said tourism revenue reached VND18.5 trillion in the first half of this year, up 16% year on year.
VietNamNet/SGT

Wednesday, June 23, 2010

Friends in Sapa, Vietnam

    Images by Chuck Kuhn

Artifacts of Oc Eo culture at Ba The Mountain museum


Vestiges of Oc Eo culture at Ba The Mountain
Last update 16:30, Tuesday, 22/06/2010 (GMT+7)
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VietNamNet Bridge – In 1942, in Thoai Son District, An Giang Province, a French archaeologist discovered many artifacts of the Oc Eo culture which were attached to the legendary kingdom of Phu Nam dating back nearly 1,500 years. The antiques were kept in a cottage in the rice field where they were discovered before the local authorities brought them to the top of Ba The Mountain in Oc Eo Hamlet, Thoai Son District.
A view of the house displaying antiques of the Oc Eo culture at Ba The Mountain in An Giang Province.
A view of the house displaying antiques of the Oc Eo culture at Ba The Mountain in An Giang Province.
These antiques reveal secrets of a strong and prosperous kingdom that originated in South Asia. After about 1,500 years of the displacement of nature and history, this culture has fallen into oblivion.

In 2002, the government built a winding concrete road lined with trees to the top of Ba The Mountain to serve tourism.
At the top of the mountain is Son Tien Tu Pagoda which was built in 1933. Standing in front of the pagoda is an eight-meter high statue of Quan The Am and next to it a three-meter high slab of granite with a diameter large enough to separate a circle of four or five people. On this huge stone’s surface is a footprint which is bigger than a normal human footprint. People call it a ban chan tien, or a fairy’s foot.
About ten kilometers from the pagoda is a house that looks like an Indian temple with a front door facing east following the Hindu pattern. This house contains many antiques related to the history and culture of Ba The-Oc Eo. In front are two statues of human bodies with elephant heads and with linga and yoni in hand.
The antiques are divided into three groups. One includes ceramic vases, metal pots and terracotta cups. The second includes bricks, walls, pillars and statues of humans, Buddha and animals. The final group features terracotta tombs, stone molds as some stone jewelry.
“I seem to live in the past of Phu Nam’s time. I can imagine how their life was, the way they built houses, cooked and practiced religious rituals and festivals. It is amazing when artifacts of a vanished nation still exist,” said an unidentified visitor to the relic.
VietNamNet/SGT

Fishing boat in Ha Long Bay-Photo of the Day

    Photo: Chuck Kuhn

Tuesday, June 22, 2010

Smallest newborn baby in Vietnam

Baby girl Bui Thi Gai came into the world at the 25th week of her mother’s pregnancy, when she weighed just 500g, making her the smallest newborn baby still alive in Vietnam.

LookAtVietnam - Baby girl Bui Thi Gai, born in the northern city of Hai Duong, came into the world at the 25th week of her mother’s pregnancy, when she weighed just 500g, making her the smallest newborn baby still alive in Vietnam.

Doctor Nguyen Thanh Ha, chief of the Hanoi-based Central Obstetrics Hospital’s Newborn Children Ward, said the baby was born March 31, when she was just 25 week old. The baby has been placed on a special programme to ensure her health.
The 500g baby has been nurtured through an IV because her stomach and bowels don’t function adequately yet.
Doctor Ha said this is the smallest baby who has been kept alive at the hospital and in Vietnam in general. Last year the hospital cared for a newborn baby who weighed only 600g, he said.
“Babies who are born prematurely often suffer from bleeding meninges, necrosis enteritis, bleeding lung, [and other maladies] because internal organs don’t develop completely. It is lucky that Gai doesn’t face these problems,” said Ha.
As of April 6, the baby no longer needed to use a respiratory machine to breathe, according to Ha.
As of April 8, she began eating normally, with 2ml of milk per meal. Today, the girl weighs 1.7kg and can breathe on her home. Doctors say she will return home very soon.
The baby’s mother, Bui Bich Ngoc, said she thought her baby would not survive given her premature birth.
“Every time we visit my daughter, seeing her growing up I and my husband are very happy,” Ngoc said.
Gai is Ngoc’s second child. Her first son is 10-years-old. She said she and her husband visit the baby every weekend. During the week, her relatives in Hanoi visit the baby daily.

Museum exhibition recreates war life on the HCM Trail

A private war museum in Nghia Ninh Village, 7km west of Dong Hoi City in the central province of Quang Binh, was the second stop on Canadian writer Susan M Smith’s trans-Viet Nam tour after Ha Noi.
Makeshift bridge: A pontoon across a stream in  a private museum near the Ho Chi Minh Trail in Quang Binh.
Makeshift bridge: A pontoon across a stream in a private museum near the Ho Chi Minh Trail in Quang Binh.
The Canadian novelist took a two-week trip to former battle fields and landscapes from north to south Viet Nam, where she collected documents to complete her novel.
The novel, which she had planned for three years, was inspired by documentation from a US chopper pilot – who flew on US Air Force helicopter transport missions in the central region of Viet Nam during the war 35 years ago.
The 10ha private war museum, which was built by Hanoian Nguyen Xuan Lien in 2003, has been visited by over 60,000 tourists, veterans and historians.
It’s not only a house of war remnants, but has recreated the appearance of a typical village in the north during the fierce battles of the late 1960s.
Lien, 67, who worked in a medical school from 1961-71 while the war raged, has built the museum in memory of his colleagues, local people and soldiers who gave their lives during the war.
The museum partly lies on the former legendary Ho Chi Minh Trail and remnants of the path marched by Vietnamese soldiers during the war still exist.
Walking down 100m from the Ho Chi Minh Trail, the museum dazzles visitors at the gate with a 30m diameter bomb crater, surrounded by dozens of shell-casings.
"I excavated the crater as a medium size hole that a 250kg bomb would have left. I set munitions at different angles dependent on how the deadly weapons were deployed, whether dropped by aircraft or shot by artillery," the Hanoian explains.
Lien said he had collected numerous bombs and artillery shells from metal scrap agents in the central region.
Tourist guide Nghiem Viet Hung, who accompanied Smith, said he was amazed with the museum’s introductory bomb crater at the entrance. The 2km path snaking its way to the village with a natural canopy of jungle and bush is equally authentic.
"Soldiers used pontoons to cross over rivers or streams during marches along the secret Ho Chi Minh Trail during the war. I’ve recreated the pontoon in the same style as they used four decades ago," Lien says.
"I found dug-outs or trenches along the route, I had heard that shelters were dug by northerners everywhere, but I saw them for myself for the first time," Hung said.
The village has five unique cottages.
Impression of war: A bomb crater recreates an  image of war destruction.
Impression of war: A bomb crater recreates an image of war destruction.
"Most rural houses in the region are built with timber or bamboo. The walls are made of a mixture of clay and mud with bamboo frames. Each house has its own underground hide-out or foxhole," the museum owner explained.
The 67-year-old man even bought a house, which had survived bombardment in 1965, from a local resident that still has two wooden doors with cuts left by bomb fragments from air strikes 40 years ago.
In the centre of the village, there are underground classrooms, a kindergarten, an operating theatre and filling stations with a pipeline left from the war.
"I’m very surprised by the operating theatre; especially how a tiny man-powered dynamo attached to a bicycle was pedalled throughout the night," recalled Hung.
A 25sq.m warehouse is full of military equipment.
Lien also has a camouflaged US antenna which had been dropped from a plane to detect North Vietnamese troop movements along an electronic anti-infiltration barrier south of the Demilitarised Zone along the 17th parallel in Quang Tri Province.
The museum is also the site of a memorial house, where a stone stele is carved with the names of 4,300 martyrs who died in Quang Binh.
"I’ve built a museum for everyone; I’m not interested in making money. Young people, who were born after the American War ended in 1975 should visit and learn about the war period," he says.
Some travel agencies in Ha Noi have included the museum as a destination during Viet-trans tours.
"We introduced the museum as a new site in our veteran tour for foreigners travelling in Quang Binh, instead of the well-known Phong Nha-Ke Bang World Natural Heritage Site," said Luxury Travel agency’s tour manager Nguyen Hung.
To learn more or book the package, visit www.luxurytrav-elvietnam.com.
VietNamNet/Viet Nam News

Monday, June 21, 2010

Beating Hanoi's Heat Wave

Hanoi people employ countless ways to survive in the current heat, including lining wet wash-cloths under their backs to sleep, soaking their bodies in water basins, etc.

VietNamNet Bridge – Hanoi people employ countless ways to survive in the current heat, including lining wet wash-cloths under their backs to sleep, soaking their bodies in water basins, lying on cool brick foundations, buying cold compress pillows, fans, sending kids to rural areas, etc.

It’s hot! No relief for Hanoi region until June 20
Heat wave leads people surrounding power office asking for electricity
Hot weather, power cut, Hanoians flock to streets

After seeing the power cut schedule and weather forecast for the next week, Mrs. Ngu Thi Yen in Cau Giay District has sent her two children to her hometown Ninh Binh to avoid the heat.

“My husband and I have to work. Our kids are on summer holiday. Hanoi is so hot. Power is cut all the time. I can’t let my kids stay in Hanoi. There are few trees around my home. They could fall sick,” Yen said.

Ms. Vu Thanh Tam, from Doi Can Street, said: “I only dare to go out on the street after wearing two overcoats, two gloves and a big sunglasses”.

Beer shops and swimming-pools in Hanoi are always crowded from 4-8 p.m., as people look to cool off.

The good news is that hot weather is expected to reduce in the northern region this week, as reported by the National Centre for Hydrometeorological Forecast.

Taking fresh air at a pavement tea shop.


The owner of this shop said she sells 200-300 summer overcoats a day.


Air swimming-pools have sold very well.

This cyclo driver said that he normally drives 5-7 rides a day, but that during these hot days, he only had 3 rides.

Summer fashion.

Going to swimming pools – the best choice these days.



People hiding themselves from the heat in a park.



Batteries and electric generators have sold like hot cakes, despite their prices increasing 2-3 times.


Sleeping on the pavement.
  
Sleeping in a flower garden.


Sleeping in a park.

Going to supermarket to avoid the heat.

As power is cut, many people rent hotel rooms.

Vietnam scraps $56B bullet train project over cost

HANOI, Vietnam — Vietnamese legislators rejected a proposed bullet train over its $56 billion cost — the assembly's first rejection of a major proposal submitted by the all-powerful Communist government.
The nearly 500-member assembly typically acts as a rubber stamp but voted over the weekend to deny plans for the high-speed rail project.
The $56 billion investment would have built a 975-mile (1,570-kilometer) track linking the capital Hanoi and the southern commercial hub of Ho Chi Minh City by 2035.
A train trip that now takes 30 hours would have been cut to about six hours.
But ordinary Vietnamese could not afford the fares, and construction would equal about 50 percent of the country's gross domestic product, said Nguyen Minh Thuyet, a lawmaker from northern Lang Son province.
"I'm very glad that deputies have expressed their position," said Thuyet. "The move helped the country avoid an expected huge debt for an inefficient project."
He said it was the first time the assembly rejected a major proposal by powerful Communist leaders.
Senior economist Pham Chi Lan called the plan economically unsound.
"This project is too risky and too luxurious for Vietnam where we have many other things to do with agriculture, education, electricity and other transport projects," she said.
Some assembly members argued the bullet train would help promote tourism.
Lan said the project would not serve the country's majority where about 70 percent still live in rural areas.

Ancient Egyptian Town Found Using Radar :

Radar imaging in Egypt's Nile Delta has unveiled the outlines of a buried city that was the stronghold of foreign occupiers some 3,500 years ago, Egypt's Supreme Council of Antiquities announced Monday.
Discovered by a team of Austrian archaeologists in Tell el-Daba in the northeastern Nile Delta, the ruins belong to the southern suburban quarters of Avaris, the capital of the Hyksos kings who formed Egypt's 15th dynasty.
Known as the “rulers of foreign countries” (probably of Asiatic roots), the Hyksos infiltrated Egypt and came to dominate the Nile valley for over a century during the Second Intermediate Period (1664-1569 B.C.).
From their strategic capital, Avaris, these foreign rulers are credited with introducing horse-drawn chariots into Egypt and controlling the lucrative trade routes with the Near East and the Mediterranean world.
Using a combination of geophysical survey and excavation techniques, the Austrian archaeologists led by Irene Forstner-Müller investigated approximately 2.6 square kilometers (1 square mile) of the ancient buried city.
The resulting computer-generated images showed a very detailed layout, complete with houses, streets, cemeteries and palaces.
The team has also identified temples where the Hyksos worshipped the god Seth, a possible harbor area and a series of pits of different sizes whose function has not yet been determined.
“Using special scientific survey to locate such a city is the only way to gain a better understanding of such a large area at one time,” Dr. Zahi Hawass, Secretary General of the Supreme Council of Antiquities, said in a statement.
Avaris was then captured by King Ahmose I (ruled about 1570-1546 B.C.), who ended the Hyksos rule and founded the glorious 18th dynasty, which included pharaohs such as Hatshepsut, Amenhotep III, Akhenaten and Tutankhamun.
Picture: Color satellite image with radar imaging in monochrome showing the outlines of streets, houses and temples buried under the modern town of Tel al-Dabaa. Courtesy of Egypt's Supreme Council of Antiquities (SCA).

Sunday, June 20, 2010

Beauty in a tangle of pipe - VIETNAM IN PHOTOS -

Hanoi’s ‘Soviet era’ apartment buildings were designed with water supply only on the ground floor. The buildings’ inhabitants found ways to get the water to their individual flats. The result is an ‘art form’ unique to the capital city.















World's Best Tourist Attractions -

The Acropolis. The Eiffel Tower. The Great Wall of China. Sometimes, following the well-worn path really is the best way to appreciate a destination. Sure, we roused your ire with our recent coverage of the World's Worst Tourist Traps, but we also know there are some sights you just can't miss. You may still end up waiting in long lines, but there's a reason why the best tourist attractions are worth the wait.


Acropolis, Athens, Greece
The view of Athens from atop the Acropolis, a UNESCO World Heritage site, makes a visit worthwhile; and seeing the Parthenon up close is a much different experience than seeing it in a photo. The €12 admission fee (about $15 U.S.; check XE.com for current exchange rates) grants you access to several attractions, including the Acropolis of Athens, the north and south slopes of the Acropolis, the Ancient Agora of Athens, and more.
Colosseum, Rome, Italy
As one of the most visited sites in Italy, it's no surprise your first encounter with the Colosseum (site in Italian) will involve greetings from trinket peddlers, followed by long lines and a hefty ticket price—€12, with a €3 surcharge during exhibitions (about $15 and $4 U.S., respectively). However, once you enter its walls, it's easy to imagine yourself back in 79AD, amongst crowds of up to 50,000 people cheering on gladiators—a feeling even a Russell Crowe movie can't recreate.
Eiffel Tower, Paris, France
Tchotchke sellers, long waits in ticket lines, and flashy lights that go off on the hour are all major turnoffs, but the Eiffel Tower still manages to hold all the romantic charm you'd expect. When Gustave Eiffel began construction for the 1889 World's Fair, Parisians saw it as an eyesore. Now this iconic 300-meter iron structure is synonymous with the City of Light. Taking the 1,665 stairs is cheaper (€4.50, or about $5.50 U.S.), but if you expect to get to the top you'll have wasted a lot of energy. The views are spectacular from any part of the structure, but if you've traveled all the way to Paris, you'll likely want to wait a few extra minutes in line, and spend a bit more money (an elevator ride to the top costs €13, or $16 U.S.) to take in the expansive views from the very top.
Forbidden City, Beijing, China
Constructed in the 1400s, the Forbidden City is a literal tourist trap, surrounded by 10-meter high walls and a 52-meter wide moat. It lies in the center of Beijing, north of Tiananmen Square, and now houses the Palace Museum, which has around one million objects. Expect to pay between 40 and 60 yuan (about $6 to 9 U.S.), depending on the time of year. Around eight million tourists visit the halls, gardens, and pavilions that were once home to 24 Ming and Qing emperors. With that many visitors, the grounds are easily packed, and there's even a Starbucks, creating an unfortunate juxtaposition between the past and present. Nonetheless, the 72-hectare complex is worth a visit to see the largest ancient palatial structure in the world, and there are several different routes you can take, depending on what you want to see and how much time you have to spend.
Great Wall of China, Jiayuguan to Shanhaiguan, China
It's impossible to appreciate the magnitude of the Great Wall of China without actually seeing it in person. Most tour groups head to the portion of the wall closest to Beijing, the Badaling section, as it is the most well-preserved, but there are numerous places along the approximately 5,500 mile wall where crowds are much thinner. Access to the wall varies, depending on where you visit, but you can expect to pay around 40 to 50 yuan (about $6 to 7 U.S.), or a bit more for extras such as cable car rides and crossing bridges. More suited for serious hikers, the Jiankou section has no admission fee, no one trying to pawn off goods, and is open 24 hours. Locals charge around 5 yuan for parking. Portions of the wall are in disrepair, but the Mutianyu section offers 22 watchtowers, and is the longest fully-restored portion of the wall open to tourists. It features easy walking conditions and fewer crowds. If you're up for more of a challenge, you can hike the seven-and-a-half-mile portion between Jinshanling and Simatai, or run a marathon.
Machu Picchu, near Aguas Calientes, Peru
There are several ways to visit Machu Picchu, and you don't necessarily have to get into shape to do it, but a four-day trek on the Inca Trail may be the most rewarding. If you don't want to exert yourself quite as much on vacation, a train runs from Cuzco to Aguas Calientes for about $98 round-trip. From there, buses make the remaining eight-kilometer hike up the mountain. The bus costs around $14 round-trip and takes about 30 minutes. The 20-minute walk from Aguas Calientes to Puente Ruinas is the alternative, followed by another hour march up the remaining two kilometers to Machu Picchu. The cost to visit the site is almost as steep as the climb (S/128, about $45 U.S.), but is worth it if you take the time to walk around and explore.
Bourbon Street, New Orleans, Louisiana
No trip to New Orleans would be complete without a stroll down famed Bourbon Street (and maybe a pint of beer or two). If you stick to people watching, you may escape with your wallet intact. However, chances are the bars and souvenir shops lining the street will be next to impossible to avoid, and you'll find yourself lured into one, or several, of these establishments, if only out of curiosity. Stick to bars that aren't frat houses, such as Preservation Hall just off Bourbon Street, which often has live jazz music; or Lafitte's Blacksmith Shop Bar, which is said to be the oldest structure used as a bar in the country.
Pyramids of Giza, Giza, Egypt
There are more than 100 known pyramids in Egypt, but Giza is home to some of the largest, including the famous Great Pyramid of Giza, or Pyramid of Khufu. Unfortunately, modern developments (including fast-food chains), have crept up on the site, and tour buses unload thousands of visitors each year. Still, the fact that a formation completed around 2550BC with around 2.3 million blocks of stone is still standing is an impressive testament to the ingenuity of the Egyptians, and a feat to behold in person. The cost to enter the Great Pyramid is E£100 (about $18 U.S., extra fees may apply for photography), and tickets are limited to 300 visitors daily. At nearby Khafre's Pyramid, entrance costs E£35 (about $6 U.S.). Smaller pyramids lie to the east of the Great Pyramid and are free to visitors. If you throw in a visit to the Great Sphinx of Giza (E£20), the fees start to add up, but the price is worth a peek thousands of years into the past.
The Acropolis. The Eiffel Tower. The Great Wall of China. Sometimes, following the well-worn path really is the best way to appreciate a destination. Sure, we roused your ire with our recent coverage of the World's Worst Tourist Traps, but we also know there are some sights you just can't miss. You may still end up waiting in long lines, but there's a reason why the best tourist attractions are worth the wait.

Taj Mahal, Agra, India Built out of love by Mughal Emperor Shah Jahan for his wife, the Taj Mahal is visited by millions each year. However, with an area covering several acres, there's more than enough room to avoid the crowds. Materials for the creation of the mausoleum were brought from all over India and central Asia, including rare, semi-precious, and precious stones used in the inlay work. The 500 rupee toll tax, plus 250 rupee entry fee (about $11 and $5.50 U.S., respectively) won't buy you any of these jewels, but will cover admission to Fatehpur Sikri, as well as several other monuments in and around Agra. There are special night viewing tours (750 rupees for half an hour admittance; must be purchased 24 hours in advance) five nights per month including the night of a full moon and the two days before and after, with the exception of Fridays and month of Ramadan. Viewing the Taj at night is a great way to escape the often unbearable daytime heat, and the way the moon lights up the white marble will have you wondering why you ever doubted visiting.
Tower of London, London, United Kingdom
Since other major attractions in London are free (British Museum, National Gallery, Tate, etc.), it's worth spending the money on a visit to the Tower of London. You can spend hours roaming the grounds and buildings that make up the complex, so it's best to arrive early to avoid the crowds that are sure to arrive later in the day. Hit the crown jewels first, so when you want a second look across the moving walkway you can take one without having to wait in a long line. Be on the lookout for stone graffiti, carved in the walls by prisoners held in the tower. Booking tickets online results in a slight discount (£1, or about $1.50 U.S off admission), otherwise expect to pay £17 (about $25 U.S.). Take advantage of what your ticket includes, and make time for a Yeoman Warder guided tour and talk. Have questions? Ask a Yeoman Warder or the Jewel House or White Tower wardens. Visitors looking to see the four other historic royal palaces (Hampton Court, Banqueting House, Kensington Palace, and Kew Palace) can purchase a ticket for unlimited entry to all for £41 (about $61 U.S.).

Built out of love by Mughal Emperor Shah Jahan for his wife, the Taj Mahal is visited by millions each year. However, with an area covering several acres, there's more than enough room to avoid the crowds. Materials for the creation of the mausoleum were brought from all over India and central Asia, including rare, semi-precious, and precious stones used in the inlay work. The 500 rupee toll tax, plus 250 rupee entry fee (about $11 and $5.50 U.S., respectively) won't buy you any of these jewels, but will cover admission to Fatehpur Sikri, as well as several other monuments in and around Agra. There are special night viewing tours (750 rupees for half an hour admittance; must be purchased 24 hours in advance) five nights per month including the night of a full moon and the two days before and after, with the exception of Fridays and month of Ramadan. Viewing the Taj at night is a great way to escape the often unbearable daytime heat, and the way the moon lights up the white marble will have you wondering why you ever doubted visiting.

Saturday, June 19, 2010

Heat Wave in Hanoi

Hanoi’s average temperature on June 16, 34.6°C, was the highest recorded on that date since 1961. A government meteorologist expects that rains will break the heat wave at last on Sunday, June 20.
VietNamNet Bridge - Hanoi’s average temperature on June 16, 34.6°C, was the highest recorded on that date since 1961. A government meteorologist expects that rains will break the heat wave at last on Sunday, June 20.


Nguyen Huu Hai, chief of the National Weather Center’s Short-term Weather Forecast Department, said that on Wednesday, June 16, the highest temperature recorded at Hanoi’s Lang station was 39.6°C, and the lowest temperature at night was 30.4°C.  Though the suffocating heat was the highest average for June 16 since 1961, the peak fell short of the 40.4°C recorded on June 16, 1983.

Hai said it’s been above 35°C throughout Vietnam’s northern and north central regions every day since June 13.  Thanh Hoa and Nghe An provinces suffer the most from the prolonged heat wave, regularly recording temperatures of 40° or even 41°C at noon.

Hai blamed ‘urban effects,’ low humidity and windlessness for the harsh weather. He said if wind were stronger, the temperature would fall at night because wind would blow away the heat accumulating on the ground. The average wind speed on June 16 and 17 was only two meters per second, walking speed.

Low humidity caused the heat to seem hotter. At noon June 17, humidity was measured at 46 percent at the Lang station. The air became dry and hot like in a burning pan.

Moreover, the population density in Hanoi has increased in recent years.  There are many high-rise buildings in the city and a high density of vehicles, but the number is trees are modest, causing “urban effects.”

Hai said this heat wave may end on Sunday, June 20, followed by rain.  From now to July there will be two or three more heat waves but these are unlikely to exceed the intensity of the current one.

Normally, Vietnam has 1-2 storms by mid-June but this year it has not had any storm. Hai said that the stormy season comes late this year. Around 6-7 storms will hit Vietnam, mainly in the central and southern regions.