Vacation in Vinci

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/world/30369181

A general view taken from the Conti Guidi castle (Castello dei Conti Guidi) shows the Santa Croce church in Vinci, the Tuscan village where Leonardo Da Vinci was born./AFP
A general view taken from the Conti Guidi castle (Castello dei Conti Guidi) shows the Santa Croce church in Vinci, the Tuscan village where Leonardo Da Vinci was born./AFP

Vacation in Vinci

World May 11, 2019 01:00

By Agence France-Presse

Visitors still flock to the Tuscan paradise where Italy’s greatest artist grew up

BUTTERFLIES FLUTTER around centuries-old olive groves in Vinci, the Tuscan village where Leonardo da Vinci was born and honed his inventor skills as a child by studying the local flora and fauna.

Locals preparing to mark the 500th anniversary of Leonardo’s death say little has changed among the vineyards, lush fields and brooks that appeared in his art.

A general view taken from the Conti Guidi castle (Castello dei Conti Guidi) shows the Santa Croce church in Vinci, the Tuscan village where Leonardo Da Vinci was born./AFP

The Renaissance polymath, whose most famous works include the Mona Lisa and The Last Supper but whose vast range of talents is legendary, drew lifelong inspiration from his humble rural upbringing, according to experts.

“The landscapes, impressions and interests that influenced Leonardo throughout his life remain almost intact,” says Roberta Barsanti, director of the Leonardian Museum of Vinci.

“From his native house, set away from the village, we can still see the view he reproduced in ‘Landscape’, his earliest-known drawing, which he dated August 5, 1473,” she said.

Born on April 15, 1452, from an illegitimate liaison between a notary and a teenage peasant girl, Leonardo was raised by his grandfather and uncle.

A Leonardo Da Vinci look alike, left, is pictured in Vinci. /AFP

It was with them that he explored the surrounding countryside, studying and sketching insects, animals, plants and flowers.

The natural world was a rich source of ideas for the prolific and imaginative inventor, who designed machines that would only be built centuries later – from tanks to telescopes, flying machines to scuba gear.

Da Vinci was fascinated by the mills around Vinci and the various rivers that fed them.

The Tuscan master, who left Vinci and moved some 30 kilometres away to the city of Florence as a teenager, would go on to study hydraulic energy and its mechanical applications, as shown in his many drawings on this subject.

Da Vinci, who would draw himself in self-portraits with a stern brow and flowing beard, also developed a passion for anatomy, architecture, music, painting and sculpture.

People visit the Leonardo Da Vinci museum in Vinci./AFP

Experts say the rhythms of Vinci life – and even the colloquialisms of the rural inhabitants – echo throughout his later works. “Leonardo is the expression of a territory. He has internalised many things about this land, starting with the world of peasants,” says Nicola Baronti, president of the “Vinci nel cuore” (“Vinci in the heart”) association.

“When he draws his inventions, he uses the language of Vinci’s peasants, and has thus immortalised terms still used in engineering world-wide,” he adds.

Tourists who visit Vinci can walk the paths he trod five centuries earlier, and gaze upon the same waterfalls or vineyards.

Baronti, a local history buff, says numerous devotees had been drawn to Vinci over the centuries, including many eccentric inventors who feel an affinity with the Renaissance pioneer.

A tourist looks at a souvenir shop in Vinci./AFP

A few years ago, he says, an American dressed all in white wandered the streets of the village claiming to be in contact with da Vinci, who died on May 2, 1519.

The village takes its name from the “Vinchio” willow tree, whose soft branches were used by farmers to tie their grape vines.

The pattern of the knots typical in Tuscany since the 11th century is a familiar artistic motif – plaster peeling off the walls in a nearby church in San Pantaleo recently revealed the ancient design beneath.

“These interlacing threads, which recall the wicker braids specific to Leonardo’s native village, can be found in his paintings, even on the corsage of the Mona Lisa,” Baronti says.

“It is the master’s secret signature, as if he were telling us ‘I left, that is true, but this is where I come from’.”

Songkran in the snow

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/world/30369086

  • Ikseongdong Hanok Alley is a hip place with several cafes boasting both traditional and modern decor.
  • A panoramic view of the Yongin Dae Jang Geum Park, an outdoor film set for many Korean movies.
  • Standees of the characters from the hit series “Dae Jang Geum”
  • “Beojkkoch” or cherry blossoms in all their glorious beauty at Incheon Grand Park.
  • The highlight of Woljeongsa Temple is the octagonal nine-storey stone pagoda.
  • The breathtaking view from Balwangsan Mountain
  • Travellers have fun sledding during the April Snow 2019 event at Yongpyong Ski Resort.
  • A strawberry-picking experience at Yangsuri Strawberry Farm.

Songkran in the snow

World May 10, 2019 01:00

By Kitchana Lersakvanitchakul
THE NATION

2,167 Viewed

A trip to South Korea in the Spring offers a welcome break for Thailand’s scorching summer

Spring has long been the best time to visit South Korea for Thais, not only because the cool weather offers a welcome respite from the searing heat back home but also because it bathes the country in lights and sights that are a real treat for sore eyes.

So it came as little surprise during a media familiarisation trip organised last month to bump into large groups of Thai tourists at several tourist attractions.

For this reporter, one of the biggest delights of the trip was the chance to admire the cherry blossoms known as sakura in Japanese and beojkkoch in Korean that paint the capital Seoul and its surrounds a delicate pale pink.

 

The largest concentration can be found at Incheon Grand Park, the city’s biggest park boasting wide walkways, a botanical garden, bicycle trails, a lake, sledding hill and a children’s zoo, and whose long line of cherry trees gives the Yeongdeungpo Yeouido Spring Flower Festival at Yeouido Park a run for its money. Both parks are packed this time of year with both local and foreign tourists.

 

Seoul has many hip areas to visit and this time, I am taken to Songwol-dong Fairytale Village, a hidden gem in Incheon adjacent to Chinatown. This village is part of the government’s plan to revive dilapidated housing areas just as it has with Gamcheon Cultural Village in Busan.

 

Arriving at the village’s vibrant rainbow-coloured gate, there’s a sense of travelling back in time to childhood and the world of fairytales and stories. Murals featuring a myriad of characters including the Disney Princesses, the Wizard of Oz, and the animals on Noah’s Ark, cover every surface – walls, lampposts, pipes, stairways and the ground.

 

Equally trendy is Ikseongdong Hanok Alley, home to a wide selection of cafes decorated in both traditional and modern styles from which emanate the fragrant aroma of coffee and freshly baked bread and cheesecake. Interspersed with the coffee shops are restaurants and a few fashion boutiques.

 

We rise early the next day to board a bus that takes us out of Seoul City to Yongin. This city of one million is home to South Korea’s most popular amusement and water parks Everland and Caribbean Bay, as well as to the Korean Folk Village and Yongin Dae Jang Geum Park, an outdoor film set owned by Munhwa Broadcasting Corporation.

 

With the Korean Wave, or hallyu, still riding high, the country’s movie industry has grown into one of the world’s largest and busiest movie markets, as evidenced by the size of the park, which is so immense that visitors would do well to ask the ticket office for a map. I walk up the hill towards the traditional entrance and head to the studio set of the famous drama, “Dae Jang Geum” (“Jewel in the Palace”), about a small peasant girl named Jang Geum, who became a famous king’s cook and a doctor. The set is large, boasting an office, kitchen, giant spice storage jars, a supersize pantry, a pavilion used for sleeping and a room for servants as well as standees of Jang Geum and other characters.

 

Continuing up the hill, I come across the complex featuring permanent sets. This has everything from houses, palaces, marketplaces selling vegetables and fruits, tools, musical instruments to paper umbrellas and tea sets, city walls, gates, gardens, ponds, even prisons as they looked in the Samguk, Goryeo and Joseon kingdoms. Among the dramas filmed here are such big names as “The Scholar Who Walks the Night”, “Empress Ki”, “Arang and the Magistrate”, “Dong Yi”, “The Moon Embracing the Sun”, “Jumong”, “Queen Seondeok”, and “Flower in Prison”. The Anyangru Pavilion used for “The Great Queen Seondeok” in 2009 sits at the top of the hill and offers a panoramic view of the whole complex.

 

Leaving the park, we head to Yangsuri Strawberry Farm where we’re invited to pick the fruit and sample them as well as rice cakes and jam made of strawberries.

 

After a much-needed night’s rest, we’re back on the bus, this time heading to Pyeongchang, site of the 2018 Olympic Winter Games. A popular film location, it starred in the popular K-drama “Dokkaebi” (“Goblin: The Lonely and Great God”) and is home to the ski resorts of Alpensia and Yongpyong as well as Woljeongsa Temple, which is located in Odaesan National Park.

 

Woljeongsa Temple, meaning “Moon Vitality Temple” in English, sits on the eastern slopes of Odaesan and with thousands of needle fir-trees is a popular hiking spot.

 

A stone bridge straddles the stream on the path to two temples, Sangwonsa and Seonjaegil. We pass through the splendid dancheong of the Ilijumun gate at the entrance of Woljeongsa and walk through a tunnel of colourful lanterns.

 

The national park contains a number of important cultural heritage sites such as the octagonal nine-storey stone pagoda at Woljeongsa Temple, which stands alongside a seated stone Bodhisattva making an offering in front of the main worship hall. Other sights well worth admiring include Manjusri, the bronze bell, the wooden statue of a seated child at Sangwonsa Temple, and documents written during its restoration.

 

Our last destination of the day is Yongpyong Ski Resort, which is hosting the three-day April Snow 2019. The event features a sledding competition, a hanbok (traditional Korean costume) experience and a Korean food workshop and has drawn several groups of Thai tourists easily identifiable by their excited chatter.

 

I go sledding twice before boarding the cable car for the 20-minute ride to Dragon’s Peak. Alighting at Yongpyong Alpine Centre, the first thing I see is a picture from a scene of world-famous K-drama “Winter Sonata”, which aired more than 10 years ago.

It’s chilly outside the centre and the thrill of seeing snow but the breathtaking view from the summit of Balwangsan Mountain make the shivers worthwhile.

 

IF YOU GO

– For package details, call the Korea Tourism Organisation Thailand at (02) 611 27312, or visit http://www.Kto.or.th and its Facebook and Instagram walls.

Embraced by Mother Nature

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/world/30369081

Embraced by Mother Nature

World May 09, 2019 01:00

By THE NATION

Do you yearn to swap your everyday view for something more majestic?

Does the prospect of waking up to an endless horizon of azure waters, imposing mountain peaks or rolling verdant hills make you want to pack your bags and plan the perfect escape? If so, you’re definitely not alone – 86 per cent of Thai travellers say that outstanding natural scenery is one of their primary motivations for picking a destination for an upcoming trip.

Outstanding natural scenery, according to the survey of Booking.com, is one of the primary motivations for picking a destination for an upcoming trip of tourists. Six sensational stays that have been specially designed to make the most of the picturesque locations are thus recommended. From glass cabins to desert domes, these unique getaways magically merge with their surroundings and blend the borders between accommodation and nature, so that nothing stands between you and the breathtaking landscape that inspired you to travel in the first place.

Wadi Rum, Jordan

 The barren wilderness of Wadi Rum is made up of craggy canyons and orange earth, so pockmarked and rugged that it resembles the surface of the moon. The best way to immerse yourself in these stunning surroundings is to stay in a geodesic dome at the base of one of the desert’s many dazzling rock formations. Sun City Camp is a great base to explore the otherworldly landscape of Wadi Rum. Their “Martian tent” will provide you with a unique camping experience and panoramic views that you’ll never forget.

 

Bois Cheri, Mauritius

Located at a historic and picturesque spot along the Mauritian Tea Route, Bubble Lodge Bois Cheri is a transparent oasis in the middle of a working tea estate. Surrounded by lush foliage, the bubble rooms are all decorated in earthy tones and natural fabrics. Whether gazing at the myriad of stars that are visible through the rain forest canopy or simply daydreaming amongst the leaves, every moment is a tranquil treat in the heart of this tropical paradise. You can also visit the nearby tea factory to learn everything about tea production in Mauritius and savour one of their delicious signature tea blends for yourself.

Baa Atoll, Maldives

For uninterrupted 180-degree views of sparkling turquoise water as far as the eye can see, the private villas at Milaidhoo Island Maldives are the stuff that dreams are made of. This boutique luxury escape even has its own coral reef and is located in a Unesco-protected biosphere reserve. Bedecked with abundant tropical greenery, the island is fringed with wide, white sandy beaches with crystalclear waters that are ideal for snorkelling and diving. Best of all, with the barefoot informality that you’re afforded at this secluded getaway, you can laze away the hours on your private sundeck waiting for one of many epic sunsets over the Indian Ocean that you’re sure to enjoy during your stay.

 

Waipara, New Zealand

Magnificent conditions for stargazing and uninterrupted views of the pristine New Zealand countryside await at Greystone PurePod, a luxury glass eco-cabin set high above a beautiful organic winery in the Waipara Valley. Made of heavy-duty glass, this fully self-contained, solar-powered, environmentally sustainable holiday home enables you to enjoy awe-inspiring panoramas of the rural landscape from every direction, all from the comfort of your bed.

Guilin, China

Known for its iconic limestone hills and winding waterways, Guilin is a magical, must-see area of the Guangxi region in southern China. With giant windows that provide floor-to-ceiling views of the surrounding countryside, Heshe Hotel is a hidden gem. It’s also just steps away from one of the region’s most popular natural attractions, the Reed Flute Cave. At over 180 million years old, the stalagmites, stalactites and other rock formations in the cave have been attracting visitors for more than 1,200 years – at least according to the earliest inscriptions that still adorn its walls in ink.

 

Nordskot, Norway

Set in a remote location on the tiny island of Manshausen off the northwest coast of Norway, the minimalist sea cabins at this Nordic retreat (Manshausen Island) feature sleek sitting rooms encased entirely in glass on three sides. Perched over the edge of the water, they create an illusion akin to floating in mid-air, completely surrounded by sea, sky and the rugged hills of the other small neighbouring islands. The ultimate in seclusion and serenity, the property features an openair hot tub to soak away your stress. And if you visit in winter, you can almost guarantee a spectacular frontrow seat to enjoy the Northern Lights dance across the distant horizon.

A weekend in Taichung

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/world/30369097

A weekend in Taichung

World May 09, 2019 01:00

By THE NATION

Thai Vietjet has announced that it will be expanding its services by adding direct flights from Bangkok to Taichung, Taiwan, going from five flights per week to daily flights, starting from June 20.

Travellers can enjoy special rates starting from Bt2,265 one way for booking and travelling from now until October. Taichung is at the centre of Taiwan and is known as a city of arts and Taiwan’s cultural hub.

Discover the culture around the city by visiting the National Taiwan Museum, one of the largest museums in Asia or learn more about the people of Taiwan by visiting the Formosan Aboriginal Culture Village. The biggest night market in Taiwan ‘Feng Chia Night Market’ is also a major attraction of this city.

Check out the flight timings at http://www.VietjetAir.com.

Up, up and away… at the Hat Yai International Balloon Festival

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/Travel_log/30368527

Up, up and away… at the Hat Yai International Balloon Festival

Travel log May 08, 2019 01:00

The International Balloon Festival at Hat Yai 2019 will see the skies above Songkhla’s provincial capital bursting with larger-than-life characters and colour.

Taking place from May 10-12 at the Jiranakorn Stadium in Hat Yai and sponsored by the Tourism Authority of Thailand (TAT), the, the three-day festival of inflatable fun will feature 15 spectacular hot air balloons from Thailand and abroad, including the Netherlands, the United Kingdom, USA, Brazil, Japan and Vietnam.

In the daily program, there are morning activities from 06.00 – 08.00 Hrs. and evening activities from 17.00-22:00 Hrs. The morning activities include balloon flights, balloon tethering and walk-in balloon opportunities to get up close with the balloons and their pilots. The evening activities include the dazzling Balloon Night Glow performance with light and sound effects and international balloon display, as well as the balloon tethering and walk-in balloon attractions.

As always, this year’s edition of the International Balloon Festival @ Hat Yai promises heaps of fun. And for those who are visiting Hat Yai for the event, it’s an opportunity to take in some of the other local attractions. These include the Hat Yai floating market, Magic Eye 3D Museum, Princess Maha Chakri Sirindhorn Natural History Museum and Phra Maha Chedi Tripob Trimongkol.

For more information, see: http://www.thailandfestival.org/en

Primitive moves, digital images and post-rock music

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/world/30368697

Primitive moves, digital images and post-rock music

World May 02, 2019 01:00

By PAWIT MAHASARINAND
SPECIAL TO THE NATION
Taipei, Taiwan

2,928 Viewed

A new work proves that Cloud Gate 2 choreographer Cheng Tsung-lung is up to his new task

After winning the hearts of dance aficionados around the world for almost five decades, Asia’s renowned Cloud Gate Dance Theatre of Taiwan will go through a major transition next year. Its founder and artistic director Lin Hwai-min whose name and works are almost inseparable from the company’s will step down and hand the torch to Cheng Tsung-lung, currently the artistic director of Cloud Gate 2.

 

Notwithstanding the name, Cloud Gate 2, founded by Lin 20 years ago, is more like another company than a second company. Cloud Gate only performs works by Lin while Cloud Gate 2’s dancers are younger and do not necessarily aspire to be in Cloud Gate but would rather enjoy working with a variety of choreographers. Lin has been carefully preparing this transition in his company for two decades now, and it’s clear that he wants people to focus on works and the philosophies behind them, not certain individuals, which is probably why he didn’t put his name in the company’s.

Commissioned by the National Performing Arts Centre (NPAC), Taiwan ROC – National Theatre and Concert Hall (NTCH), the National Taichung Theatre, and the recently opened National Kaohsiung Centre for the Arts (Weiwuyin), “22? Lunar Halo” had its world premiere at the latter venue during our Songkran weekend. It was then the closing act at the Taiwan International Festival of Arts (TIFA) 2019 in the capital before travelling to Taichung last weekend. Tickets were hard to find in all three cities. While I had watched Cloud Gate in many cities around the world, it was at NTCH where I had my first, and clearly not last, experience of Cloud Gate 2 in Cheng’s“22? Lunar Halo”.

 

The substantial support from three theatres meant that Cheng could specifically request to work with his composer of choice – that’s Iceland’s post-rock band Sigur Ros and their longtime collaborator music director Kjartan Holm. The result was original music as unpredictable and riveting as the dance itself. The album has also been released and listening to it by itself, without recalling the images from the stage, would definitely create significant sensations and meaning.

In accordance with the title, which is derived from the natural phenomenon when the moonlight is refracted by 22 degrees through millions of ice crystals in the atmosphere causing a halo, the 70-minute work revealed the uninhibited to the point that it occasionally looked primitive or even animalistic. The six young female and eight young male dancers were up to every task.

 

Another star of the work was the visual design highlighted by the three LCD screens of different sizes and angles which frequently caught our eyes by surprise, sometimes acting as mirrors reflecting stage actions and on which videos were shown. As striking as these visual elements were, they never stole the spotlight from but always supported the dancers, a task that required close collaboration between visual designer and director Jam Wu, video designer Ethan Wang and lighting designer Chen Pohung.

It’s evident from this work that Cheng not only knows how to create a unique dance choreography but also how put all these elements together into an artistically unified production too. “22? Lunar Halo”, it’s been reported, will soon tour in Europe and be part of Cloud Gate’s repertoire once Cheng begins his tenure – fittingly so.

Cloud Gate nearer home

– As part of the Esplanade—Theatres on the Bay’s dan:s series, “Cloud Gate 45th Anniversary Gala Programme — Lin Hwai-min: A Retrospective” with excerpts from nine internationally acclaimed works, like “Moon Water”, “Bamboo Dream”, “Wind Shadow”, “Cursive”, “Pine Smoke” and “Rice”, is at the Esplanade Theatre in Singapore tomorrow and Saturday, 8pm.

– Tickets are from SGD 40 (Bt940) to SGD 120. For more info, visit http://www.Esplanade.com

– Keep track of Cloud Gate and Cloud Gate 2 at http://www.CloudGate.org.tw

The water of life

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/thailand/30368718

  • “Tourists can learn the king’s wisdom while at my homestay.” Viroj Soongying.
  • The opportunity to see elephants and gaurs in the wild attracts tourists to Kui Buri National Park.
  • Cows and sheep grazing on a 1,500-rai meadow bring to mind the New Zealand countryside.
  • Yang Chum Reservoir is a great place to fish or simply relax.
  • The stump of a sandalwood tree, which was cut for King Rama IX’s cremation ceremony.
  • Villagers from Phubon, Yang Sue and Ruam Thai have created the first khok nong na model on Viroj Soongying’s land.

The water of life

Thailand May 03, 2019 01:00

By Kitchana Lersakvanitchakul
THE NATION

Kui Buri district in Prachuab Khiri Khan has adopted the late Monarch’s new agricultural theory on land and water management and is keen to show it off

His Majesty the late King Bhumibol Adulyadej had a long and happy relationship with Kui Buri district in Prachuab Khiri Khan province and today his new agricultural theory on land and water management is being applied here for the first time.

 

The water management system is called khok nong na – khok meaning a moulded mound, nong a catchment, and na a field. Here, when it rains, the water runs down from the Tenasserim hills into the first catchment. When that catchment overflows, the water goes to the second catchment and runs through a khlong sai kai (spiral filling canal) towards the third catchment and the loom khanom khrok (a small catchment dug along the canal) before ending in the field. Along this canal line, the flow is continuously decelerated by a fai or weir. Crops are planted in terraced fields between those catchments to ensure irrigation.

Kui Buri has developed its own khok nong na and it’s known as the Kui Buri Model.

 

The district has long offered a range of homestay accommodation, but Viroj Soongying is the first resident to connect his homestay with the khok nong na model to promote sustainable tourism following the royal wisdom of the late King Rama IX.

 

Viroj, who lives in Baan Phubon, recently turned 50 though he looks considerably younger thanks, he says, to his love of cross-country mountain biking. Born and raised in Kui Buri, he left as a young man to work in the jewellery trade for 20 years, returning to his native land after learning about the late monarch’s philosophy related to natural agriculture.

 

“I love eating local, wild and organic vegetables that are in season and grow organic vegetables on two rai of my land,” says Viroj, who uses a further rai as a demonstration plot for the khok nong na model. “Climate change means that the world is heating up almost daily and we have to reduce the use of chemicals. This Kui Buri Model is a cooperation between three villages – Phubon, Yang Sue, and Ruam Thai.”

 

Viroj is a mountain-biking coach for five students from the villages and also a member of a group actively promoting the King’s philosophy for sustainable tourism. He has two homestays and also welcomes tourists to his own house.

 

“Visitors can learn the king’s wisdom by themselves through digging catchments, planting vetiver grass and trees, and finding shellfish, shrimp fresh water fish in the reservoir. And when they’ve done that, they can relax over such healthy dishes as pineapple curry with mussels and pork ribs soup. A homestay is priced at Bt600 per person,” says Viroj.

 

We start our stay by visiting the check dams built above Yang Chum Reservoir to store water for use as well as slow down the water flow to prevent flooding, maintain soil moisture and to provide water for the elephants that roam this area. The construction of check dams can be done at intervals and take the shape of a pond that is then connected with a pipeline system to disperse water and create moisture for the forest, which continues to serve as a food source for the elephants. We also spend time at the reservoir, which is wonderfully tranquil and demands to be photographed.

 

We have fried tilapia fish from the reservoir for our lunch and dinner. The freshwater fish, whose history dates back to Ancient Egypt, was introduced to Thailand by the late King in the 1960s. In 1965, the Thai monarch was looking for fish species with high nutritional value and which could breed fast to solve the problem of malnutrition among Thais in rural areas, and the tilapia fish from Japan was the species he chose. Later, the king bestowed the fish with the name “Pla Nil” from its English name “Nilotica” or Nile River fish.

 

Later, on the way to Kui Buri National Park to watch elephants and gaur and where, we are told, we are only allowed entry between 2 and 5pm, we stop off at a 1,500-rai meadow managed by the Department of Livestock and admire the tunnel formed by chamchuri trees and the herds of cows and flocks of sheep that graze here. Pine trees sway lightly in the background and the bucolic scene reminds me of happy times spent in rural New Zealand. The meadow had also been planted with ruzi and pangola – the highest-quality tropical grasses – which serve as forage for Phra Sawet Adulyadej Phahon, the first white elephant of King Rama IX.

 

Kui Buri National Park is a sight for sore eyes and we quickly climb into a ranger’s vehicle for the almost eight-kilometre drive to our first stop. After a while we spot a family of three elephants and others in the far distance. After that, we drive on to Phu Yaisai, Payang Ranger Station and Pong Saladdai, spotting the occasional elephant and also some gaur. On our way back, the ranger receives a report of elephants near the path and we stop for a while until these magnificent beasts move away of their own accord.

 

Prior to the park’s creation, villagers and elephants were at odds, with many conflicts turning tragic, even deadly. In the late 1970s, settlers migrated from all corners of Thailand to the area, establishing the village of Ruam Thai and cultivating pineapple where elephants had once roamed unimpeded. With fields of the fruit encroaching on what had been their territory, the animals began raiding farmlands, destroying crops, and leaving villagers furious. The killing of two elephants in 1997 – one poisoned, the other shot dead and burned – marked the peak of the conflict, attracting countrywide attention, including from King Bhumibol Adulyadej – the unquestionable patron of Thailand’s conservation movement.

 

Upon the park’s establishment in 1999, the king issued a special royal address calling for people to protect the elephants and their habitat: “Elephants should be in the forest. But we must ensure that there is enough food for them. In practical terms, we should create many small food plots spread around the forest in order to keep the elephants from invading the plantations and to help protect the elephants,” he said.

 

And thus came the Conservation and Restoration of Kuiburi National Forest Project to conserve wild elephants and wildlife.

The following day, we head back to the national park but this time through a different entrance to see the stumps of sandalwood trees. Nine of the trees were cut for use in HM King Bhumibol Adulyadej’s royal cremation ceremony, three for that of HRH Princess Galyani Vadhana, and a further three for the funeral rites of Somdet Phra Nyanasamvara Suvaddhana Mahathera, the 19th supreme patriarch of Thailand.

 

“Some Thai tourists sit and cry while hugging the stump,” Viroj tells us.

We take the longest of the two routes to see the stumps and are led up the two-kilometre climb by park official Somnuek Klinhom, who tells us about the trees, insects and salt licks along the elephant trail.

 

“Kui Buri National Park has more than 200,000 sandalwood trees and is the first and only place that can grow sandalwood for the royal family’s cremation ceremonies. Because of the dry evergreen forest, the timbers of the sandalwoods don’t contract like in other places. For King Rama IX’s cremation ceremony, a royal brahmin spent more than a month with us selecting the trees that met the criteria – they must be dead and aged over 100 years,” says Somnuek.

If You Go

– To visit Kui Buri National Park, call (032) 510 453, (081) 776 2410, or email kuiburi_np@hotmail.co.th, and kuiburi_np@hotmail.com.

– To reserve Viroj Soongying’s homestay, call (090) 784 7298.

MGallery property opens in Kyoto

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/sleep/30368676

MGallery property opens in Kyoto

sleep May 03, 2019 01:00

By THE NATION

MGallery Kyoto Yura Hotel makes its debut in Japan’s ancient capital of Kyoto, promising to take guests on a journey to the dawn of modern Japan through interiors that blend elements reminiscent of the legendary Samurai era.

The hotel pays homage to the traditions of Kyoto through art and heritage, providing a unique experience inspired by the local neighbourhood. Boasting 144 rooms with contemporary classical design, local fabric Nishijinorican be found in each of its guest rooms celebrating a weaving heritage dating back over 1,200 years, while the seating area is furnished with traditional tatami mats.

Located within walking distance of the hotel are Kyoto’s most scenic spots, among them the famed geisha district of Gion, the Yasaka Shinto Shrine and the downtown district of Kawaramachi. Guests staying at the hotel can enjoy an evening walk or morning run along the picturesque Kamo River.

 

“The opening of the property strengthens our luxury footprint in Japan following the successful launch of Pullman Tokyo Tamachi last year. Home to 17 stunning Unesco World Heritage Sites, Kyoto is considered the heart and soul of traditional Japan. Famed for its great temples, beautiful gardens and intricate works of art, it combines a modern city with historical treasures,” said Patrick Basset, chief operating office at Accor for Upper Southeast & Northeast Asia and the Maldives.

 

Designed to highlight the distinct historical heritage of the city, the allday dining, 54th Station Grill is named after the ancient route connecting Tokyo and Kyoto. Guests can expect to learn about similar authentic stories in 1867 Bar, located in the lobby, which draws inspiration from the original Samurai era and features a range of traditional and modern cocktails, mocktails and wines.

“Kyoto is the cultural heart of the country renowned for its popular temples and shrines. The MGallery brand is inspired by the destination enriched through arts, history and cultural experiences. Our hotel offers travellers memorable moments by blending the refined French art of hospitality with wholehearted Japanese hospitality known as omotenashi in one of Japan’s most beautiful cities,” said Kazunori Tanaka, general manager of Kyoto Yura Hotel MGallery.

To celebrate the opening, Le Club Accor-Hotels members enjoy a dining credit of JPY 5,000 (Bt1,430) by booking before until June 30 for stays from now until September 30 or can enjoy a weekend getaway with a Classic Room stay from 34,850 JPY per night.

For more information, visit AccorHotels.com.

Surreal nights with Mickey and Minnie

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/sleep/30368736

Surreal nights with Mickey and Minnie

sleep May 02, 2019 01:00

By THE NATION

Le Bristol Paris and Parisian gallerist Kamel Mennour have transformed the luxury Paris Suite into a live-in exhibit with radical pop artist Bertand Lavier’s artworks to give guests a surreal night’s sleep.

Inspired by Mickey and Minnie’s adventures in a modern art museum, the living room of this suite has become a “thought bubble” with cartoon characters jumping off the paper into sculptures set in a technicolour space.

The work, an extension of Bertrand Lavier’s Walt Disney Productions series, continues in Le Bristol Paris gardens where three-metre-high brilliantly bright sculptures confront guests amidst the nurtured elegance.

The suite’s salon is designed to resemble the museum in the Disney comics: the floor is swathed in a zingy purple carpet and minimalist modern furniture stands in relief against vivid yellow and green walls. Brilliant sculptures and canvases in pop colours are inspired by the Walt Disney comic strip.

 

The surprising journey in fiction stops only when you return to the reality of the Paris Suite’s other rooms, which retain their Louis XVI luxurious elegance, a rather surreal contrast.

The hotel offers the Art at Le Bristol package, in which guests can stay two nights in the Suite Paris by Bertrand Lavier, enjoy American breakfast, the wine tasting in exclusive wine cellar and dinner with artist Bertrand Lavier at Epicure restaurant. Other benefits include VIP roundtrip transfer and a private tour of the Bertrand Lavier exhibition at the Galerie kamel mennour, which runs until May 25.

Make a reservation at http://www.LeBristolParis.com.

Dusit comes to Doha

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/sleep/30368517

Dusit comes to Doha

sleep May 01, 2019 01:00

By THE NATION

Thailand-based, global hospitality company Dusit International brings its unique brand of gracious hospitality to Doha’s vibrant West Bay area with a view to capture a major market share of Qatar’s hospitality sector. The leading hotel and property development company recently made its Qatar debut with the launch of the luxury Dusit Doha Hotel.

Located in the heart of Doha’s vibrant West Bay area, adjacent to the breezy Corniche, Dusit Doha Hotel is a fivestar modern oasis only 20 minutes by car from Hamad International Airport, and just a fiveminute walk from Doha Exhibition and Convention Center, the City Centre Mall and The Gate Mall, making it a perfect stopover for business and leisure travellers alike.

Designed to provide luxury experiences and world-class hospitality, the fullservice property comprises 264 well-appointed guestrooms and suites and 96 elegant apartments for short and longstay guests. Guests will experience Dusit’s unique brand of Thai-inspired gracious hospitality blended with the true essence of Qatari hospitality and service and artistry of Doha.

Rooms and suites at Dusit Doha Hotel are designed to provide the utmost in comfort and convenience, with expansive living areas. Apartments are available in one to three-bedroom configurations with spacious living areas ranging from 95 to 200sqm.

Leisure and recreation facilities include a rooftop swimming pool, children’s pool, and a sundeck area offering panoramic views of West Bay. Guests will also find a wealth of dining outlets to choose from, including three restaurants, a classic French café, and a relaxing rooftop lounge.

 

Now open and ready to welcome guests is the Taste, a contemporary allday dining restaurant serving dishes from around the globe and also hosting regular theme nights. This will soon be joined by Dusit’s signature Thai restaurant, Benjarong, which serves Thai cuisine made using authentic ingredients.

Other upcoming outlets include Antoinette’s Café, bringing a taste of Europe to Doha via fresh French pastries and other baked treats, and The House, offering premium steaks and seafood.

Ideal for weddings, corporate meetings, and memorable social gatherings, the hotel also offers a versatile ballroom that can accommodate up to 500 people. Spacious and bright with abundant natural light, this atmospheric venue features its own private terrace and can be divided into two smaller venues, each with a separate entrance.

Dusit’s signature Devarana Spa is also set to open at the hotel, offering a wide range of luxury massage therapies and wellness treatments conducted in elegant, private treatment rooms. Designed to promote maximum relaxation, the elegant spa will occupy the entire 29th floor of the hotel, offering separate male and female spaces.

“A modern oasis for people to meet, dine, stay and relax, Dusit Doha Hotel delivers the ultimate in luxury and comfort for locals and international visitors alike,” said Gerhard Stutz, cluster general manager, Dusit Doha Hotel. “Qatar is one of the fastest growing countries in terms of tourism, and its reputation as a destination of choice is only set to be cemented further when the FIFA World Cup is held here in 2022. As such, there could not have been a more opportune time to launch Dusit Doha Hotel. We now look forward to delighting guests with our unique brand of Thai-inspired gracious hospitality while positioning the property as the leading hotel in Doha.”

To celebrate its opening, Dusit Doha Hotel has introduced a range of special offers, including an exclusive opening rate available for booking from now through July 31. For more information, visit http://www.Dusit.com/ddh.