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Il-Ħamis, 8 ta’ Novembru 2007

Two more Hanoi-HCM City flights


17:03' 07/11/2007 (GMT+7)


VietNamNet Bridge – Low-cost carrier Pacific Airlines has announced it received a Boeing 737-400 on November 16 and it will supply two more flights between Hanoi and HCM City, raising the total to nine/day.

The new flights between Hanoi and HCM City are coded BL794 and BL800, starting at 8.30 and 13.30, and the corresponding flights coded BL795 and BL801, taking off at 11 and 14h everyday.

The airline said it would cancel some flights in the next several days for routine aircraft maintenance in cooperation with engineers of Boeing. However, passengers on these flights will be arranged on substitutes.

Meanwhile, the government has asked the Ministry of Defence for 14.3ha of land to expand the parking lot of Tan Son Nhat International Airport in HCM City.

Tan Son Nhat serves around two-thirds of the total foreign visitors travelling by air to and from Vietnam. This year, the airport will welcome around 11million passengers. It will be expanded to serve 15-17 million passengers by 2010.

Viet Nam Net

Pristine beauty of a submerged forest


10:28' 08/11/2007 (GMT+7)


VietNamNet Bridge - In the midst of south Vietnam's Mekong Delta lies a watery, 20-ha primeval indigo forest bursting with reeds, rushes and water lilies.

Visitors will be enraptured by the primitive beauty of the Xeo Quit forest – a region bordering the My Long and My Hiep communes in Dong Thap Province.

This culturally historic area was once a revolutionary base for resistance forces in the wars against the French and US armies, but today the ecologically diverse forest is a popular tourist destination.

Sampan boat trips run regularly through the vast swampy marsh under an immense canopy of dense cajuput trees.

Tour guides wearing traditional loose-fitting blouses and bandanas navigate the canoes skilfully throughout a maze of tree roots covered in multi-layered brown bark.

The air is cool and humid with the fragrance of cajuput flowers wafting among the vegetation.

Every so often a moor-hen sings out while Kingfishers fly off into the luxuriant jungle of trees.

Although the area was largely devastated during the war, by 1975, more than 100,000 ha of forest still remained; covering parts of Long An, An Giang, Kien Giang, Bac Lieu and Ca Mau provinces; and thanks to restoration efforts, much of the diverse ecological system has been re-established.

At points along the canals, however, the dug-outs, and thatched houses of the liberation army can still be seen.

Leading out of the estuaries, the "Kingdom of Rice" is an area alongside the Mekong's canals where large schools of river fish swim and several types of rice-eating birds like to flock.

The banks are home to harvest mice, snakes and turtles that can appear and disappear at a blink of an eye.

Locals make good use of this diverse natural landscape in creating specialty food dishes like Dong Thap Muoi (harvest mouse baked with chilli and citronella) and snake stewed with spices.

Brave tourists are welcome to try these indigenous delicacies for themselves.

For those with less daring palettes, there are other delicious local dishes like sprouts of lotus with baked fish dipped in seasoning.

After sipping rice wine, one can lie back in a hammock and contemplate the exotic tranquillity of the area.

Xeo Quyt is also an ideal meeting-place for artistic camps.

The intriguingly beautiful forest is considered a great source of inspiration for photographers, artists and sightseers alike.

(Source: Nhan Dan/Thanh Nien)

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