Baan Sapan: a tranquil northern vaccine for lockdown fever #ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย

#ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation.

Baan Sapan: a tranquil northern vaccine for lockdown fever

Jun 16. 2020

By Thanachai Sangchan
Special to The Nation

Caged like tigers in our homes for months, many of us are craving wide open spaces and natural surroundings. One powerful cure for lockdown fever is Baan Sapan in Nan province, a small village nestled in a forested northern valley of pure air and pristine rivers.

This area was once carpeted in cornfields, which damaged the ecosystem and sucked up natural resources. But the village has now turned to homestay-style tourism as a sustainable way of earning money, supplementing farming revenue while keeping its fascinating traditions alive.

The tranquil and secluded atmosphere is perfect for reading a book, or just tuning yourself to the natural rhythms of trees and river. Choose to sleep in a tent under the stars beside the river, and you will be sung to sleep by the wind and the splash of water on stones. Next thing you know, sunlight and the smell of coffee will be poking you out of your slumber.

There are more places to stay in the foothills, where the valley views are truly spectacular.

Buncha Ruenmanee, manager of the Baan Sapan Retreat, says the vistas are most beautiful in February, when the black sky is strewn with bright stars and visitors wake to the sight of mountains poking from blankets of mist.

Between May and June, the valley is dyed bright green as the rainy season arrives in Thailand.

Amid this serene atmosphere, the village comes to life each morning on traditions that are centuries old. Locals gather at the market to choose meat, vegetables and fruit that traders bring in from the city. The shopping expedition is also a chance to swap the latest village gossip, which brings smiles and laughter all round.

This friendliness is a rare sight in Bangkok and other big cities, and the locals are generous enough to share it with travellers and passersby.

Villagers here see nature as the most important thing in their lives, while money is only secondary. The small tourism industry in the village allows new-generation residents to maintain that age-old harmony by staying in the village instead of leaving to work in a big city.

Methawat Bhuddhathadakul, the chief of Dong Phaya sub-district where Baan Sapan is located, says whole valleys in Nan province have been stripped of trees to make way for maize fields. An estimated 900,000 rai of forests had been felled for maize cultivation in 2010, but that destruction has accelerated in the past 10 years.

This commercial agriculture has taken a severe toll on natural resources. In the rainy season, soil once stabilised by tree roots is now being washed away into rivers and streams. In summer, forest fires shroud the valleys in a smog that chokes villagers and maize growers alike.

Locals are now collaborating with the government to solve these problems.

“The destruction of nature is not an individual problem but a problem for everyone,” said Methawat. “We must preserve the precious resources that nature gives us, so we can pass them on to our future generations.”

For those inspired to travel by this column, please don’t forget to stay on your guard against the Covid-19 virus.

Thai Vietjet announces 5 new routes with fares “as low as Bt5” #ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย

#ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation.

Thai Vietjet announces 5 new routes with fares “as low as Bt5”

Thailand

Jun 15. 2020

By The Nation

Viet jet has opened five new routes in Thailand connecting Bangkok (Suvarnabhumi) with the top tourism and cultural destinations of Hat Yai, Khon Kaen, Nakhon Si Thammarat, Ubon Ratchathani and Surat Thani, the airline announced today (June 15).

In celebration of the new routes, more than 500,000 promotional tickets priced from only Bt5 (excluding taxes and fees) are being given away for five days – from today until June 19 – between 12:00 and 14:00 via website http://www.vietjetair.com for travel from July 1 to December 31, 2020, the company said. 

The airline will also organise a lucky draw with a prize of  “5-month free travel with Thai Vietjet” for all customers booking tickets. Those interested can visit skyfun.vietjetair.com. 

The new routes now extend Thai Vietjet’s domestic flight network to 12, connecting 11 destinations in the country. 

Passengers have been advised to check the regulations and procedures of each destination city and airport for smooth entry and exit. 

Thai Vietjet has offered one-year complimentary travel to front line medical staff, including members of the government’s Centre for Covid-19 Situation Administration.

Governors told to get tourist attractions ready for phase 4 of lockdown easing #ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย

#ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation.

Governors told to get tourist attractions ready for phase 4 of lockdown easing

Jun 13. 2020

By The Nation

Ministry of Interior has instructed provincial governors nationwide to manage tourist attractions in preparation for the fourth phase of lockdown relaxation.

Chatchai Promlert, permanent secretary for Interior, said on Saturday (June 13) that after Prime Minister Prayut Chan-o-cha had ordered related authorities to manage beach attractions, the ministry has instructed provincial governors nationwide to manage their tourist attractions as follows:

1 Prepare tourist attractions, such as natural, community, and historical tourist attractions to welcome tourists with focus on managing tourism attractions to drive the economy and prevent the spread of Covid-19.

2 Arrangs areas in tourist attractions, such as stores, venues, rest and event areas, and parking space to enable people to maintain social distancing.

3 Manage traffic to reduce congestion.

4 Implement measures to contain the spread of Covid-19, such as maintaining cleanliness in tourism attractions and setting up hand sanitising checkpoints.

5 Urging entrepreneurs and tourists to use ThaiChana platform and creating awareness on the importance and benefits of using the app to enable the government to track Covid-19 patients.

Nan’s walking street comes alive again #ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย

#ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation.

Nan’s walking street comes alive again

Jun 13. 2020

By THE NATION

More than a thousand people flocked to Kuang Mueng Nan Walking Street in Nan province after it reopened on Friday (June 12).

The famous street was closed for over four months.

The walking street is located in Muang district, in front of a local tourist centre and near Phumin temple.

The temperature of visitors to the street must be checked and they must follow social distancing under the new rules.

Suraphon Thiansut, the mayor of Nan Municipality, said that visitors and sellers must wear medical or cloth masks all the time they were in Kuang Mueng Nan. Sellers must also wear gloves, he added.

Only two traders are allowed to sell in each specified area. Shops or stores situated near footpaths have been told to make adjustments to increase space available for walking and social distancing.

Myanmar launches survive, reopen, re-launch strategies for its tourism industry #ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย

#ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation.

Myanmar launches survive, reopen, re-launch strategies for its tourism industry

Jun 10. 2020(Photo credit: Myanmar Tourism Marketing)(Photo credit: Myanmar Tourism Marketing)

By THE NATION

Myanmar has designed a strategic roadmap for the recovery of its tourism sector, Minister for Hotels and Tourism U Ohn Maung announced on Tuesday (June 9).

“The tourism industry in the ‘new normal’ will operate in accordance with the ministry’s roadmap and in cooperation with related tourism organisations,” he said.

The Myanmar government has been working on a strategic recovery plan for the tourism industry since April and has come up with three phases.

In the first “survival” phase, the government relaxed taxes, reduced licence fees, postponed the collection of rents as well as provided loans for hotels and tourism businesses. The Hotels and Tourism Ministry also provided online training for tourism professionals and staff, discussed new destinations and assessed the tourism market.

The second “reopening” phase runs over three months – June, July and August – and involves the use of standard operating procedure for screening travellers and staff. The government will also promote domestic travel as local destinations have started re-opening this month.

The third phase, which will focus on re-launching the industry, will be implemented over six months to a year and will include new campaigns and long-term plans for reinventing Myanmar’s tourism. The government plans to create a “travel bubble” through bilateral agreements with Thailand, Cambodia, Laos and Vietnam once the countries reopen.

Myanmar is closed to international travellers until June 15, though Yangon airport remains open for domestic and relief flights.

“We need to start with domestic tourism before opening up to regional countries, followed by long-haul destinations once the Covid-19 crisis eases,” said May Myat Mon Win, chairperson of Myanmar Tourism Marketing.

Discovering the watery wonders of Thailand’s Emerald Triangle #ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย

#ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation.

https://www.nationthailand.com/travel/30389408?utm_source=category&utm_medium=internal_referral

Discovering the watery wonders of Thailand’s Emerald Triangle

Jun 11. 2020
By Komchai Tawabchai
Special to The Nation Thailand

If a waterfall plunges in the forest and no one is around to hear it, does it make a sound?

The old Zen riddle takes on new meaning in the heart of Thailand’s “Emerald Triangle”, where Phu Chong Na Yoi National Park sprawls 686 square kilometres in mountain lands that border Laos and Cambodia. This forest sanctuary in Ubon Ratchathani province is famous for its waterfalls, whose monsoon-swollen torrents plunge over cliffs between the lush deciduous forests that carpet these mountains.

Among them is Kueng Mae Phong Waterfall, with a thundering cascade that is second only to the park’s giant, Huai Luang Waterfall, which crashes down from 30 metres over three rock steps into the turquoise pool at its feet.

Other watery wonders hidden in the dense forest are Nuanlaor Waterfall and Kaeng Sila Thip rapids. However, our expedition veers off the beaten track and into the deepest part of the forest, which few visitors ever see.

Our adventure starts from the renowned Kaeng Ka Lao rapids, famous for their clear water and opportunities to get wet.

The mud road taken was once used to transport timber out of the forest, in the days of wood-cutting concessions. Commercial logging came to an end after Phu Chong Na Yoi was enshrined as a national park in 1987. Tree-felling for profit has been banned here ever since.

The mud road winds through the forest for about 10 kilometres but is too rough for two-wheel-drive cars. Faced with the option of a four-wheel-drive or a motorcycle, I grab the latter and set off into the wilderness.

My first stop is the forest rangers’ office, which leaves me four more kilometres of even rougher riding till I reach my destination.

After battling for another eternity through the deep monsoon mud, I finally skid to a stop at the object of my quest. Kueng Mae Fong waterfall is neither big nor visually spectacular. But few people have seen this gem hidden in the heart of the forest, which gives me a special sense of accomplishment. And something else: As my ears and eyes are enfolded by the ribbon of blue unfurling from the cliff, a rare sense of intimacy with my surroundings descends. Until it’s time to go, and I crank the bike into a roar that drowns out everything, even the sound of the waterfall.

Three major Bangkok tourist attractions reopen #ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย

#ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation.

https://www.nationthailand.com/travel/30389191?utm_source=category&utm_medium=internal_referral

Three major Bangkok tourist attractions reopen

Jun 07. 2020
By The Nation

The Temple of the Emerald Buddha, the Grand Palace and Bangkok City Pillar shrine are now open to visitors from Sunday (June 7) after being closed for more than two months due to the Covid-19 pandemic.

The Temple of the Emerald Buddha, officially known as Wat Phra Si Rattana Satsadaram, the Grand Palace and Bangkok City Pillar Shrine are open from 8.30am to 4pm from Sunday.Visitors must strictly follow the preventive measures for Covid-19 outlined by the Public Health Ministry, including social distancing and wearing face masks.

Universal Studios Japan sets measures for reopening #ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย

#ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation.

https://www.nationthailand.com/travel/30389180?utm_source=category&utm_medium=internal_referral

Universal Studios Japan sets measures for reopening

Jun 07. 2020
Photo credit: www.mprabin.com

By Syndication Washington Post, The Japan News-Yomiuri · No Author · WORLD, ASIA-PACIFIC 
Universal Studios Japan, a theme park in Osaka, which has temporarily been closed due to the coronavirus pandemic, has unveiled to the press its measures to prevent infections as the park plans to reopen in stages, starting Monday.

At the entrance gate, park staff wearing face guards will check the temperature of visitors and deny admission to those who have a temperature of 37.5C or higher.

Visitors will be asked to wear masks and use hand sanitizers. In addition, the park will request that visitors sit in every other row when on a roller coaster.

And when waiting in lines, they will be asked to stand at regular intervals following stickers that had been placed on the ground.

The park will also request that visitors not make physical contact with the themed characters.

Furthermore, at restaurants, visitors will be required to register with a tracking system introduced in Osaka in which a person who may have had contact with an infected person is notified via email.

“We’d like to propose a new way of enjoying the park while implementing preventive measures,” a senior official of the park said.

The park will be open again for the first time in about three months. From Monday to June 14, admission will be allowed only to Osaka Prefecture residents who have annual passes and have made prior reservations.

After June 15, admission will be allowed for all Osaka Prefecture residents with advance tickets.

The admission will be further expanded after June 19 to those who reside in the six prefectures in the Kansai region and hold annual passes.

Vacationing – with caveats #ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย

#ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation.

https://www.nationthailand.com/travel/30389177?utm_source=category&utm_medium=internal_referral

Vacationing – with caveats

Jun 07. 2020
Staff in protective face shields prepare the pool area for guests on May 30,2020, at Falling Rock, one of several hotels at Nemacolin Woodlands Resort in Wharton, Pa. MUST CREDIT: Photo for The Washington Post by Jeff Swensen

Staff in protective face shields prepare the pool area for guests on May 30,2020, at Falling Rock, one of several hotels at Nemacolin Woodlands Resort in Wharton, Pa. MUST CREDIT: Photo for The Washington Post by Jeff Swensen
By The Washington Post · Andrea Sachs · FEATURES, TRAVEL

At Nemacolin Woodlands Resort in Pennsylvania, a tall man in a gray suit and a black mask approached my car. He leaned toward my lowered window and asked for my name. Satisfied with my answer, he aimed a raygun-shaped gadget at my forehead, pressed the button and read the digital display.

“Ninety-seven degrees,” he told me in a slightly muffled voice.

Three degrees higher, and the resort would have turned me away, one of several protections against the coronavirus. But since I was fever-free, the security officer stepped aside, clearing the way to the luxury property and my first getaway since shutdowns began.

The pandemic knocked the breath out of the hospitality industry, but hotels across the country are slowly rising to their feet. According to Smith Travel Research, occupancy levels reached 35% between May 17 and 23, a notable improvement from early April, when 21 percent of hotel rooms were booked. To reassure guests, properties are implementing health and safety measures that rewrite the textbook on hospitality.

“It’s like a hotel opening,” Chris Baran, Nemacolin’s director of sales and marketing, said of resuming operations during the crisis. “We have to forget everything we know and do it this way.”

Nemacolin was one of the area’s first luxury properties to welcome back leisure travelers. In early May, the resort opened several dozen rooms at Falling Rock, its Fallingwater-inspired lodging. (The Frank Lloyd Wright-designed home is about 10 miles away). It also resumed a bevy of activities, including golf, tennis, fly-fishing, paintball, basketball, safari tours and biking on 2,000 acres of trails. A few days shy of June, the hotel added accommodations at Chateau LaFayette, the opulent spread modeled after the Ritz in Paris, as well as the outdoor pools and Laurel Lane shops. On Friday, when several Pennsylvania counties advanced to the “green phase” of the state’s reopening plan, the resort started accepting appointments at its spa and fitness center. Its on-site restaurants also switched from takeout to sit-down service at reduced capacity, so guests would no longer have to eat pan-seared scallops or a 16-ounce rib eye off disposable plates.

The day Washington lifted its stay-at-home order, I was on the road to Pennsylvania. My mission: to see how the new protocols would affect the guest experience and whether they would help or hinder my ability to relax. Ultimately, I wanted to know if Nemacolin could liberate me from the burdens of my face mask – metaphorically speaking, of course.

The hospitality industry is facing a mountain of challenges. Properties can’t just swing open their doors and hand guests a welcome cocktail, even if the staff has thoroughly disinfected the door handles and prepared the drinks while swaddled in personal protective equipment. First and foremost, the hotels must adopt the rules and restrictions issued by the state and local governments. The reopening measures touch on nearly every aspect of the hotel experience, from the number of guests permitted inside the restaurants to the accessibility of the spas and fitness centers.

For example, the Hotel Monteleone in New Orleans opened June 1 with 240 out of 570 rooms available. Its Criollo Restaurant can serve only 25% – or 25 seats – of its total capacity, and customers must provide a name and phone number for contact tracing purposes. Louisiana is not allowing stand-alone bars to open during its first phase; however, the hotel’s historic Carousel Bar and Lounge received the state’s blessing because it possesses a food service license. “We have to present guests with a bar menu, even if they don’t order from it,” explained hotel manager Stephen Caputo. As for the fitness center, only six guests can workout at a time. The spa, meanwhile, could remain shuttered until July.

“The objective is to create some sense of normalcy,” Caputo said, “even if it is restricted.”

To assist hotels as they tiptoe back, the American Hotel & Lodging Association created Stay Safe, a guide based on recommendations from the Centers for Disease Control and Protection and an advisory board composed of hoteliers. The measures promote practices recognizable to anyone who has shopped for groceries or ordered takeout during the pandemic, such as mandatory face coverings and no-contact food delivery. However, some of the suggestions are unique to hotels – for example, housekeeping should not enter a guest’s room unless the visitor has requested cleaning service.

“So many hotels operate differently – their constructions are different, and their travelers are different,” said Chip Rogers, the association’s president and chief executive. “We created a baseline for all hotels.”

Hotel chains have also assembled their own rule books and safety committees. Hilton launched the Hilton CleanStay program, a partnership with RB, the U.S. manufacturer of Lysol, and the Mayo Clinic Infection Prevention and Control. Marriott formed the Global Cleanliness Council, a body of experts from the public health, food safety and infectious-disease fields. Northwood Hospitality’s Safety and Well-Being Promise is centered on three principles: prevention, cleanliness and minimizing contact.

“The main challenge is how do the hotels create the confidence and cleanliness that is close to a hospital without making it feel like a laboratory or clinic,” said Linda Canina, academic director of the Center for Hospitality Research at Cornell University in New York.

The answer, thankfully, is not plastic-covered furniture or long-handled claws for grabbing your key card or breakfast sandwich. However, hotels have made significant changes from top to bottom in public and private spaces. For instance, they have erected plexiglass shields at front-desk counters, removed seating in lobbies and restaurants for social distancing purposes, and placed floor decals six feet apart. Guest rooms have been stripped of such extraneous materials as menus, magazines and extra bedding. Signs at elevator landings remind guests of the rider limit. Assuming most people don’t travel with a tape measure, Hotel Monteleone has adhered footprint stickers in each corner of its six lifts.

Hotels are also adjusting their guest services and reimagining their amenities. Hotel Drisco in San Francisco will keep its buffet but replace the communal serving dishes with individually plated and wrapped breakfast items – served on bone china, of course. At Hotel Figueroa in Los Angeles, text messaging with guests is the preferred form of communication. Four Sisters Inns, a collection of boutique properties in California, is requiring guests to reserve a breakfast time in its restaurants or order a complimentary breakfast in bed. (You will have to crawl out bed at least once, to collect the tray outside the door.) The evening happy hour with communal hors d’oeuvres is out, replaced by a picnic box filled with cheeses, fruit and crackers and a split of wine. The Sisters had to retire the cookie jar but not the cookies: The baked goods will arrive in individually sealed packaging. Hotels such as Nemacolin, Hotel Drisco and Hotel Monteleone are expanding their inventory of oft-forgotten items, adding masks and hand sanitizer to their supplies of toothbrushes and razors.

Upon arrival at Nemacolin, a bellhop offered to give me a lift from the self-parking lot to the hotel in a golf cart. “We disinfect them after each ride,” he added encouragingly. I accepted.

He dropped me off at the entrance to the Chateau LaFayette lobby, which was dripping in chandeliers and fresh flowers. Hand sanitizer dispensers stood out among the lavish furnishings. At the front desk, an employee greeted me from behind a plexiglass shield. I pressed my ID against the transparent square. He informed me of the house rules: I must wear a mask at all times outside of my room, and only four people are permitted inside the elevator at one time. He said the shuttle was not running and suggested I drive my own vehicle or walk. He asked if I wanted housekeeping to tidy up my room. I declined, preferring to restrict my social bubble to members-only.

To reach my room, I had to press an “up” elevator button protected by a plastic sheath. (The covering fell off and was not replaced during the remainder of my stay.) Inside, I switched on the TV to scan the listing of restaurants and activities, but the hotel channel was not working, so I had to make repeated calls and visits to the front desk. I eventually settled on an itinerary of mostly free diversions: miniature golf, bowling, pool, yoga ($20) and a wildlife talk starring a small collection from Nemacolin’s menagerie. Three restaurants were serving meals in lockdown fashion: Call, and they deliver anywhere on the property. I chose pizza from Barattolo by the Chateau’s purring fireplace.

I learned that some activities are built for social distancing. Hovering on the mini-golf course is bad form; the family behind me waited patiently while I putted around waterfalls and over trenches. At the bowling alley every other lane was open, and an employee wiped down each ball between players. Yoga is normally held in the spa, which was closed during my stay. Even better, the instructor gathered our trio in an open-air pavilion surrounded by rolling green hills and vocal birds.

“There is no cleaning [for you to do] after shavasana,” Susan said, referring to our final relaxing pose. “I will clean the mats.”

For the wildlife talk, the two experts separated the folding chairs and, as much as we pleaded with our eyes, did not allow us to cuddle Meatball Hoagie the guinea pig or Wendell the rabbit. Nor did they allow us to touch Loki, the sled dog who made a late afternoon appearance in the Chateau’s lobby. I air-pet him from a safe distance.

The pool drew the largest gatherings, though the ominous gray clouds and wind gusts kept most people on dry land. Staff members in plastic face shields reminiscent of a welder’s protective gear disinfected tables and delivered food in sealed containers. Signs at the towel station and pool bar reminded us to keep six feet apart.

The hotel was only 35% full, so crowding was not a big concern. However, many guests did not wear masks, a troubling predicament. I tried to keep my distance, which considering the spaciousness of the property was not too difficult. I raised the issue with the front desk as well with Baran once I was home. He said masks are required in indoor public spaces and that he would remind the staff to enforce this rule. (Housekeeping also cleaned my room even though I had declined its services; Baran said he would look into this oversight, as well.)

Despite the restrictions and occasional lapses, I could feel the tight knots loosening. It didn’t take much. A shaggy-haired musician performing under a cloud-speckled sky. A hole-in-one on the mini-golf course. An ankle dip in the hot tub. Two nights in a bed unaware of the previous months of fitful sleep.

On my last morning, I slid on my mask and headed down to the lobby. A bellhop was cleaning the revolving door. Without missing a beat, another staff member raced over to a side door and held it open for me.

Moomin Valley Park reopens #ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย

#ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation.

https://www.nationthailand.com/travel/30389174?utm_source=category&utm_medium=internal_referral

Moomin Valley Park reopens

Jun 07. 2020
Visitors stroll under the

Visitors stroll under the “umbrella sky” exhibit at Moomin Valley Park in Hanno, Saitama Prefecture. MUST CREDIT: Yomiuri Shimbun
By Syndication Washington Post, The Japan News-Yomiuri · No Author · WORLD, FEATURES, ASIA-PACIFIC, TRAVEL

Moomin Valley Park has reopened in Hanno, Saitama Prefecture, after a more than two-month shutdown due to the new coronavirus.

The park, which features the popular Moomin characters from Finland, had been closed since March 31. It resumed operations with various preventive measures, such as restricting the number of daily visitors to a maximum of 3,000 and using thermography to check visitors’ temperatures when they enter.

The gates opened at 10 a.m. Thursday, and about 20 people wearing masks entered the park, applying disinfectant to their hands. They were greeted by a decorated area featuring about 2,000 opened umbrellas – parents and children walked beneath this roughly 300-meter-long “umbrella sky” that stretches to an adjacent open area.