Hiển thị các bài đăng có nhãn Fireflies tour in Mekong Delta. Hiển thị tất cả bài đăng
Hiển thị các bài đăng có nhãn Fireflies tour in Mekong Delta. Hiển thị tất cả bài đăng

Thứ Bảy, 20 tháng 6, 2015

Harbin International Ice and Snow Sculpture Festival

Harbin International Ice and Snow Sculpture Festival

ice and snow sculpturesOfficially, the festival starts from January 5th and lasts one month. However often the exhibitions open earlier and last longer, weather permitting. Ice sculpture decoration ranges from the modern technology of lasers to traditional ice lanterns. There are ice lantern park touring activities held in many parks in the city. Winter activities in the festival include Yabuli alpine skiing, winter-swimming in Songhua River, and the ice-lantern exhibition in Zhaolin Garden. Snow carving and ice and snow recreations are world famous.
The Harbin festival is one of the world's four largest ice and snow festivals, along with Japan's Sapporo Snow Festival, Canada's Quebec City Winter Carnival, and Norway's Ski Festival.

ice and snow sculpturesice and snow sculpturesice and snow sculpturesice and snow sculpturesice and snow sculpturesice and snow sculptures

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Thứ Bảy, 13 tháng 6, 2015

India: Festival of Color

India: Festival of Color

Holi Festival of ColorFestival is known as the "Festival of Color" and is a celebration of Lord Krishna and God's Creations. The colorful festival of Holi, literally means 'burning', is celebrated on the full moon day in the month of Phalguna and heralds the onset of spring season. Holi is the time when people from all castes and social strata come together forgetting all past differences and grievances.
Originally the festival was primarily for the Shudras who were otherwise not allowed to participate in festivals. This is specially significant in the rural areas where in many places, there still exists a clear demarcation between each caste and community.


The main ritual on this day centres around a bonfire ceremoniously kindled at the time of the rising moon. This suggests that the festival is also a celebration of the barley harvest. People start collecting fire - wood, cow-dung and rubbish around a central pole in their locality many days in advance. On Choti Holi, they come together to light the fire. Men and women circumambulate the fire singing and dancing. A pot of new barley seeds is buried under the pyre for roasting. These seeds are eaten after the fire is extinguished . Divinations for the coming harvest are cast by interpreting the direction of the flames or by the state of the seeds in the buried pot. People sometimes take embers from the fire to their homes to rekindle their own domestic fires. The ashes from the Holi fire are also believed to provide protection against diseases.

The next day is called 'Dhulendi' and it is during these celeberations that people throw colored powder or 'gulal' and colored water on each other using 'pichkaris' shouting 'bura na mano holi hai'. The origin of this custom can be found in the pranks of Krishna, who used to drench the village belles or "gopis" with water and play tricks on them. 'Thandai', a drink made with almonds and milk, and cannabis 'bhang' pakoras are extremely popular on this day. A typical sweet meat served on this day is 'gujhia' and 'kanji vadas' are a popular appetiser.

Holi at Mathura and Vrindavana is celebrated with great gusto for many days, as these were the places where Krishna spent most of his childhood. Each major temple celebrates Holi in a different day. People throng the temples to get drenched with colored water and consider it a blessing from the god. Of particular interest is the Holi festival in the village of Barsana, 42 km from MathuraRadha belonged to Barsana while Krishna hailed from Nandagaon. On Holi, men from Nandagaon come to Barsana to celebrate Holi with the women here, who are ready to beat them with sticks instead of playing with 'gulal'. This is called "lathamar Holi". This is very similar to the "Dhulendi Holi" played in Haryana, where the "bhabhi" (sister-in-law) beats her "devar" (younger brother-in-law) with her sari rolled up into a rope. All this is done in good humor and in the evening the devar brings sweetmeats for his bhabhi.

Holi though is not very popular in South India, but a similar festival in the honor of the god of love Kama, takes place there at the same time. While there does not seem to be a direct link between the two rituals, literary sources suggest that both occasions are examples of an age-old tradition of celebrating the arrival of spring.

In Maharashtra and Gujarat, a grand procession of men soaked with colored water walk through the streets shouting 'Govinda alha re alha, zara matki sambhal brijbala''. This refers to Krishna's habit of stealing butter and milk stored in terracotta pots from people's homes. As a child, Krishna who was extremely fond of milk and milk products would prowl into any accessible house with his friends and steal pots of butter or break pots of milk. During Holi, a pot of buttermilk is hung high up in the street. Men forming a human staircase try to break this pot, and whoever succeeds is crowned the Holi king of the locality for that year.

In Bengal, Holi is called Dol Yatra, or the swing festival. Idols of Radha and Krishna are placed on swings and devotees take turns to swing them. Women dance around the swing and sing devotional songs, as men spray colored water at them. In Manipur too, Holi is extremely interesting. It is a six-day festival here, commencing on the full moon day of Phalguna. The traditional and centuries-old Yaosang festival of Manipur amalgamated with Holi in the18th century with the introduction of Vaishnavism. The entire theme of the festival is woven into the worship of Krishna and Chaitanya Mahaprabhu, also known as Lord Gauranga.

Thabal Chongba, a popular Manipuri folk dance, is associated with this festival. The literal meaning of Thabal is 'moonlight' and Chongba means 'dance', thus 'dancing in the moonlight'. Traditionally conservative Manipuri parents did not allow their daughters to go out and meet any young men without their consent. Thabal Chongbatherefore provided the only chance for girls to meet and talk to the boys. In earlier times, this dance was performed in the moonlight accompanied by folk songs. The only musical instrument used was a dholakor drum. It is performed in every locality on all the six days of the festival. Instead of a fire, a hut is built and then set ablaze. The next day, boys go in groups to play gulal with the girls. And in return for playing with them, the girls extract money from the boys.

Another significant feature of the festival in Manipur is the groups of devotees from different areas who gather at theShree Govindaji Temple in Imphal. Dressed in the traditional white and yellow turbans, they sing songs in praise of Krishna and Chaitanya Mahaprabhu, play gulal and dance in front of the temple. On Halangkar, the last day of the festival, hundreds of devotees gather at the temple as usual and march together towards the Vijay Govindaji Temple about 3 km west of Imphal where various cultural activities are performed. This brings to an end theYaosang festival.

Holi Festival of ColorHoli Festival of Color

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Chủ Nhật, 7 tháng 6, 2015

Sweden's top 10 unusual hotels

Sweden’s varied landscape, from the frozen reaches of the north to its vast forests and lakes, combines with cutting-edge design to inspire some unique lodgings. Here's our pick of the country's quirkiest sleeps, taking you underground, underwater, face-to-face with wildlife and beyond. 
icehotel-jukkasjarvi-3

Icehotel

Near the village of Jukkasjärvi in Sweden’s frozen north, the original Icehotel is as much a work of art as a hotel, with ice sculptors from all over the world reinventing it anew every winter. Built of blocks of ice from the Torne river, the main building features individually designed ice suites carved by hand and simpler Snow and Ice rooms with furniture made of ice. You overnight in deluxe sleeping bags used by the Swedish military, then thaw out in the morning in the sauna with a hot drink. If staying longer, guests relocate to warm satellite bungalows with skylights to catch the northern lights. The winter-only Icehotel restaurant is second to none, serving exquisite northern Swedish dishes on plates made of the same ice as the hotel. Want to arrive in style? Book the husky sled transfer from Kiruna airport in advance.
tree-hotel-sweden-2

TreeHotel

A spaceship with a retractable ladder. A mirror cube, reflecting the sunlight and the surrounding forest. A giant tangle of a bird’s nest. These are three of six unique treehouses that comprise the TreeHotel, designed by Sweden’s leading architects and suspended high above the ground from centuries-old pines off the scenic Route 97, west of Luleå in northern Sweden. Not only is everything custom-made – from the furniture to the light fixtures – the bathroom and sauna design reflect the hotel’s commitment to eco-friendly practices. Just one question: why is the Blue Cone room red?sala-silvergruna

Sala Silvergruva

To stay at the exclusive ‘mine suite’ at the Sala Silvergruva, the world’s deepest hotel in the town of Sala, you have to descend 155m to the subterranean depths of Sweden’s most important silver mine. After a tour of the vast banquet hall and the labyrinth of candlelit tunnels, underground lakes and caverns, you are left alone in your cosy, subtly-lit nook, carved into the rock wall, with a champagne supper and an intercom radio as your one link to the outside world.
salt-and-sill-kladesholmen

Salt & Sill

Just off the tiny island of Klädesholmen off Sweden’s west coast, the serene Salt & Sill is Sweden’s original floating hotel. The pontoon features six two-storey terraced houses, divided into bright, light rooms decked out in contemporary Scandinavian style. Pulled by its own auxiliary boat containing a spa, Salt & Sill frequently takes to the sea, while the hotel’s namesake restaurant specialises in some of the best, freshest seafood in the region.

Kolarbyn Eco-Lodge

Peel off Route 233 in central Sweden, follow a narrow road into the forest and near Lake Skärsjön you’ll find Kolarbyn Eco-Lodge, Sweden’s ‘most primitive hotel’. Aimed at those who enjoy getting back to nature, it has neither running water nor electricity and the twelve rustic, earth-covered shacks barely have room for two wooden bunks and a wood-burning stove each. Water is sourced from a nearby stream and heated over an open fire, as are the meals, which are consumed in a Sámi-style communal dining hut. A rustic sauna provides the only bit of pampering.
SAMSUNG

Jumbo Stay

You may have catnapped aboard a red-eye flight before, but Jumbo Stay gives you the opportunity to slumber on a Boeing 747 jumbo jet in considerably greater comfort and without leaving Stockholm’s Arlanda Airport. The pilot’s cockpit and the Black Box room have been remodelled into luxurious en suites (the former is a capsule-hotel–like space with the best views, naturally), while the rest of the plane has been split into snug, minimalist dorms and twin rooms.

Varghotellet

Next door to Järvzoo,  Sweden’s wilderness animal park specialising in large Nordic fauna such as bears, muskoxen, reindeer, lynx and wolves, Varghotellet gives you the opportunity to get up close and personal with the wolves. Whether you’re in your room or in the sauna, the only thing that separates you from the predators is a glass window that looks out onto the wolf enclosure, and you can fall asleep to their haunting howls.
gardsjo-elk-park

Gårdsjö Elk Park 

Another one for animal lovers, this secluded, self-contained two-person cottage – originally an 18th century farm – is found in the middle of the Gårdsjö Elk Park, home to Sweden’s rambling forest giants. Overnight packages include one of the daily elk safaris which allow you to meet these mighty creatures (who love bananas, by the way) and dinner is served in the cottage. Wandering elk aside, you can look forward to complete peace and solitude.

Hotel Hackspett (Woodpecker Hotel)

Suspended in a tree 13m above a public park in Västeras, Hotel Hackspett requires you to have a head for heights as access is a scramble up a rope ladder which you then retract. This arboreal hotel consists of a single simple double with a veranda overlooking the park and the lake beyond. There's no electricity or running water but drinking water and meals are provided.
utter-inn-vasteras

The Utter Inn (Otter Inn)

Conceived by local artist and sculptor Mikael Genburg, at first glance the Utter Inn looks like a compact red summer house, only floating on its own little platform on Lake Mälaren in Västerås. Three metres beneath the surface and accessed via a trapdoor from the main house is a remarkable underwater room with panoramic windows on all sides, giving you the impression that you’re sleeping in an aquarium. Guests are left alone with an inflatable canoe as a means of getting to the surrounding uninhabited islands to sunbathe, and meals are delivered by boat.

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Thứ Sáu, 15 tháng 8, 2014

Mekong Delta Fireflies evening tour

Hochiminh Muslim Tour Malaysia sincerely introduce the Mekong Delta Fireflies evening tour as follows:



  • At 14.00, Leave Ho Chi Minh city, enjoy the scenic journey along the National Highway bordered by green rice fields. On arrival at My Tho, a leisurely boat ride along the river, view stilt houses, fruit plantations and fishing villages along the river bank. Enjoy cruising on a hand-rowed sampan under the shade of water coconut trees along natural canals.

  • Having dinner in the orchard garden.

  • At nightfall we started out on an expedition to find fireflies. From a small dugout boat with rickety seats we paddled down canals lined with little shrubs where fireflies flickered in the night. Our guide had a special firefly net which consisted of a cloth bag attached to a bamboo pole and after some effort scooped fireflies off the leaves and into our hands. With stars sparking above, flashing bugs lighting up our fingers and frogs croaking nearby it was a night to remember.

  • Return to Ho Chi Minh city by road.

  • End of  your Mekong Delta Fireflies evening tour at your hotel around 9.00pm.
Include:
  • A/c private car/van/bus for transfer & sightseeing as per program.

  • English speaking tour guide

  • Private boat trip in Mekong Delta

  • All entrance fees

  • Mineral water on car (2 bottles/ pax/day)

  • Hotel pick up & drop off service

  • Dinner
Exclude:


  • Travel insurance

  • Drinks & other meals not mentioned in the program

Thank you for visiting our Mekong Delta Fireflies evening tour. We are looking forward to serving you.

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