Postcards from the movies

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/travel/Postcards-from-the-movies-30283381.html

SOUTH KOREA

The murals at Dong Pirang were created by several artists, including a Thai (left). Nation/Parinyaporn Pajee

The murals at Dong Pirang were created by several artists, including a Thai (left). Nation/Parinyaporn Pajee

The pastel houses of Gamcheon Village. Nation/Parinyaporn Pajee

The pastel houses of Gamcheon Village. Nation/Parinyaporn Pajee

A group of young Korean women visit the Dong Pirang village at Tongyeong. Nation/Parinyaporn Pajee

A group of young Korean women visit the Dong Pirang village at Tongyeong. Nation/Parinyaporn Pajee

The Hallyeosudo Landscape cable car to Mt Mireuksan in Tongyeong. Nation/Parinyaporn Pajee

The Hallyeosudo Landscape cable car to Mt Mireuksan in Tongyeong. Nation/Parinyaporn Pajee

Gamcheong Village became a tourist attraction after it was renovated through an art project in 2009. Nation/Parinyaporn Pajee

Gamcheong Village became a tourist attraction after it was renovated through an art project in 2009. Nation/Parinyaporn Pajee

A must-take photo zone at the Little Prince and the Fennec Fox in Gamcheon Culture Village. Nation/Parinyaporn Pajee

A must-take photo zone at the Little Prince and the Fennec Fox in Gamcheon Culture Village. Nation/Parinyaporn Pajee

From colourful shantytowns to glorious gardens on remote islands to locations of some of the most popular TV dramas and films made in recent years, Busan and its surrounds have much to offer the visitor

Perchd on the Southeastern-most tip of the Korean peninsula, Busan is South Korea’s second largest city and with a population of more than 3.5 million, every bit as cosmopolitan as Bangkok.

Yet after three days of travelling around Japan’s rural Kyshu region as part of a cooperative agreement on tourism between Fukuoka and Busan, the frantic pace of life comes as something of a shock.

A flight of less than an hour separates the quiet from the chaos and after setting our internal clocks back to life in the fast lane, we are ready to experience the city’s culture and charms.

Over the years, Busan has expanded to include the nearby satellites of Gimhae and Yangsan and we are thus able to take in Haeundae beach, the country’s most famous strip of shoreline, a delightful temple by the sea as well as the small coastal town of Tongyeong, home to the film sets of several Korean dramas.

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Busan – which was romanised as Pusan prior to 2000 – is probably best known to Thais for its film festival, which first saw the light of day at in central Nampo-dong area before moving to Haeundae beach. The BIFF square at Nampo-dong is still home to a multiplex theatre where some of the screenings are held and also hosts such activities as printing the hands of actors and filmmakers.

Nearby is Gukje Market, which offers everything from fresh produce to fashion as well as food stalls while across the way is Jagalchi Market, famed for its marine and dried fish products as well as its restaurants.

The markets are also popular locations for filming and regularly draw movie and drama fans. The local shopkeepers make the most of this unexpected tourism boom and we are amazed to see a large queue in front of shop in crowded Gukje Market, with the owner proudly pointing to its image in the poster for “Ode to My Father”.

Not far away is Gamcheon Culture Village, which is formed by some 1,000 houses built staircase-fashion on the foothills of a mountain.

During the Korean war thousands of refugees of the Taegeuk-do religion fled to Busan fearing persecution from the communist North. Housed at first in the city centre, they were later moved to Gamcheon where they built homes from scrap iron, wood and rocks. It remained one of city’s poorest communities until 2009, when the Ministry of Culture, Sports, and Tourism stepped in, organised art projects to restore the village, hired artists to paint murals and offered incentives to artists to move there and run galleries and shops. Several descendants of the original settlers still live at Gamcheon and have profited from the thousands of visitors who pour into the village every day.

A museum at the entrance relates the history of the residents but unfortunately the information is all in Korean. Guides can however be hired for a tour of the village itself and are happy to take visitors around to admire the trick art, sculptures, and even buildings remodelled around a singular art concept including a Book Cafe shaped like a giant coffee mug,

Art projects turning old neighbourhoods into tourist attractions are popular all over South Korea and one of the most successful is Dong Pirang village in Tongyeong city – about two hours from Busan.

While Gamcheon tends to be more popular among local and foreign visitors, Dong Pirang and Tongyeong attract mainly Koreans obsessed with TV drama locations.

Dong Pirang is much smaller and more peaceful than Gamcheon village. The tiny homes stand roof to roof, with narrow alleyways zigzagging up to the hill.

Dong Pirang embraced the art project before Gamcheon when it was threatened with demolition. A civic group held a mural contest in 2006 and offered a grand prize of 30 million won (Bt915,000)

Thirty-six young artists came from all over the country to paint the walls of the homes and alleys in the neighbourhood during the week of the contest. More art projects have since been organised with artists from other countries, Thailand included, also coming to create their murals.

The houses have appeared in such TV dramas as “Innocent Man” starring Song Jung-ki and Moon Chae Won and “Padam Padam” with Jung Woo Sung and Han Ji Min.

The entrance to Dong Pirang is on the hill leading up from Gangguan Harbour, home to a thriving fish market, shops and restaurants.

The Hallyeosudo Landscape cable car to Mt Mireuksan is just 15 minutes away and well worth overcoming vertigo for the magnificent view of hundreds of small islands. This too has appeared on national TV, lending itself as the background for the teenage drama “School 2015: Who are you?”

From Tonyeongghang Harbour, Korean drama fans can pop over to Jangsa Do aka Camellia Island, a trip of about 50 minutes by boat. The island is owned by a millionaire and has been turned into a beautiful park planted with camellias or silver magnolias and home to both a maze and herb garden. The owner has faced no problems in popularising his tourist destination, having invited the famous TV programme “Running Man” to shoot here as well as the hit drama “The Man Who Came from the Star”.

BEAUTIFUL BUSAN

< For more information about the destinations, visit http://english.visitkorea.or.kr, Teongyong city at http://eng.tongyeong.go.kr/ and http://english.busan.go.kr/.

 

A splashing good time

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/travel/A-splashing-good-time-30283382.html

WATER FESTIVAL

Known as Thingyan in Burmese, the water festival runs at the same time as Songkran and involves extreme water splashing

Known as Thingyan in Burmese, the water festival runs at the same time as Songkran and involves extreme water splashing

Angkor Wat, Cambodia, is a centre stage for Cambodia's traditional New Year. Nation Photo/Phoowadon Duangmee

Angkor Wat, Cambodia, is a centre stage for Cambodia’s traditional New Year. Nation Photo/Phoowadon Duangmee

Chiang Mai celebrates traditional New Year.

Chiang Mai celebrates traditional New Year.

Travellers get a bucket of water in Chiang Mai during Songkran Festival.

Travellers get a bucket of water in Chiang Mai during Songkran Festival.

Where to go wet and wild during Southeast Asia’s various water festivals

April is here and in several Southeast Asian countries, the old traditional year is once again giving way to the new circle. The Sun God is already heating up the air from hot to far too hot, depending on where you are – Chiang Mai, Mandalay, Luang Prabang or Bangkok. And the region’s cities, long connected by a “water culture” (and more recently by a network of low-cost carriers), will as usual be answering the Sun’s call with water.

From Jinhong in China’s South to Luang Prabang in Laos’ North, from Yangon in Myanmar to Phnom Penh in Cambodia, millions of Asian folks will be gathering with buckets full of water at city landmarks to dance, sing and pray their way into a new year.

Here are the best cities in which to soak up both water and culture over the next week.

MANDALAY, Myanmar

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Date: April 13 to 15

Known as Thingyan in Burmese, the water festival runs at the same time as Songkran and involves (depending on how old you are) extreme water splashing or gentle pouring of water. Over in Myanmar, the New Year is welcomed with a week-long celebration across the country, but the best place to visit is Mandalay, where the action and festivities take place around the city moat and the walls of Mandalay Palace. Big and small stages are erected along the roads for people to sing and dance. Colourful processions and parades add a carnival atmosphere.

LUANG PRABANG, Northern Laos

Date: April 14 to 16

If the traditional New Year needed a home, it would probably be Luang Prabang – the attractive town on the banks of the Mekong River in northern Laos. Legend has it that King Kabilaprom had seven daughters (known as Nang Sangkharn), but he lost a challenge to Thammakuman and had to pay the penalty – decapitation. Since a monarch’s head couldn’t touch the ground, it was placed on a tray and kept on Mount Krailard, to be brought down every year by one of his daughters for a procession. Known as the Sang Klan Long Festival, the legend is recreated annually for Pi-mai Lao (Lao New Year), with the revered Buddha Image of Prabang, senior monks seated on a palanquin and beautiful local women competing for the title of Queen of Sang Klan. Find your way to the bank of Mekong on April 14 and admire the thousands of sand stupas. The locals make them to keep the evil spirits at bay over the New Year celebration.

CHIANG MAI, Northern Thailand

Date: April 13 to 16

Chiang Mai draws many thousands of visitors over the Thai New Year for a thorough soaking. The city plays it both gentle and wild when it comes to Songkran. Early in the day, there will the traditional and gentle sprinkling of water on temple grounds. As the day heats up, shots of water will be fired from a high-power pump and there will be cold water in balloons. The target is, of course, anything moving. Expect to finish the day looking like a wet puppy. The festival culminates at night with cultural shows at Thapae Gate.

JINHONG, Southwest China

Date: April 13 to 16

The water festival is very obvious in Jinhong, since the locals celebrate it every day to earn tourist dollars. For around 50 yuan (Bt280), tourists can enjoy throwing buckets of water at the locals – usually young women in colourful costumes and flowers. However, the real deal comes in the next two weeks when the city celebrates the Dai New Year. For three days, the streets and surrounding villages will be totally wet as the locals roam around armed with buckets of water, hoses, water-pistols and water-filled balloons. Nobody goes home dry. Follow your nose to the banks of MeSkong (or Lanchang as it is called by the Chinese) for cultural shows and dragon boat races.

BANGKOK, Thailand

Date: April 13 to 15

The traditional Songkran Festival will be celebrated all over Bangkok including at Wat Suthat, Wat Pho and Siam Square shopping district. But the centre of the action is still the backpacker ghetto of Khao San Road. For a really wet-and-wild scene, this small street is definitely the place to be. Armed with pump-action water cannons and buckets of coloured powder, thousands of fun-lovers will be soaking everything that moves. Starting from April 12, though punters can expect the fun to start on Sunday, until there is nothing left to soak, Khao San Road and Santi Chaiprakan Park in Bang Lamphu play host to the unofficial International Songkran Festival, the most boisterous of the Asia’s water festivals.

SIEM REAP, Cambodia

Date: April 13 to 15

Angkor Wat, with its rustic moats, is the near-perfect setting for the water festival. Siem Reap, once the seat and the soul of Cambodia’s art and culture, hosts Sankranta and this year is expecting to draw more than 500,000 visitors to watch Khmer traditional art performances and games and the chess competition.

 

Traditional trends

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/travel/Traditional-trends-30283383.html

AROUND THAILAND

Tree of Light in Loei province

Tree of Light in Loei province

Chiang Saen, Chiang Rai province, will play host for “Four Nations Songkran Festival” on the bank of Mekong River from April 13 to 15

Chiang Saen, Chiang Rai province, will play host for “Four Nations Songkran Festival” on the bank of Mekong River from April 13 to 15

The village of Na Haeo in Loei province celebrates the Thai New Year with a spectacular “Tree of Light” ceremony that runs from April 13 to 16.

Traditional trends

The village of Na Haeo in Loei province celebrates the Thai New Year with a spectacular “Tree of Light” ceremony that runs from April 13 to 16. This annual rite will take place at Wat Sriphonchai where the locals offer the illuminated tree made of bamboo. Monk bathing, folk music and a series of old-fashioned games add to the festivities.

A testament to faith

Wat Wang Wiwekaram in Sangkhlaburi, Kanchanaburi province, will be celebrating Songkran from April 12 to 17. As distinctive as it is unique, the festival show men’s strong commitment to their Buddhist faith as hundreds of them lay down on the ground to form a “human bridge” on which the monks walk on their way to the purifying area. Tucked away on the border between Myanmar and Thailand, the temple is the centre of the Mon community in Sangkhlaburi. Expect Mon cultural shows and eating opportunities during the festival.

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Four nations, one celebration

Chiang Saen, Chiang Rai province, will play host for “Four Nations Songkran Festival” on the bank of Mekong River from April 13 to 15. The three festive days feature a wealth of cultural shows and entertainment contributed by China, Laos, Myanmar and Thailand. The highlights are the dragon boat race on the Mekong River and the colourful flower floats and procession from all four countries.

Culture in the park

Bangkok’s Khao San Road is once again set to draw tourists for its “wild and wet” party marking the Songkran Festival. Nagaphirom Park, a short walk from Wat Pho and the Grand Palace, goes the other way offering residents and visitors a chance to celebrate a traditional Songkran with lots of cultural shows including traditional plays and puppet performances plus an old-fashioned market. The official opening takes place on Sunday at 4pm with the “Songkran Princes” procession making its way from Ratchdamneon Klang Road to the park. The event runs through April 15.

 

Swat – a beautiful tragedy

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/travel/Swat–a-beautiful-tragedy-30283384.html

PAKISTAN

A shepherd boy with his sheep

A shepherd boy with his sheep

River Swat in Pakistan

River Swat in Pakistan

Women walking home in Swat valley, Pakistan.

Women walking home in Swat valley, Pakistan.

Children in Matta, Pakistan

Children in Matta, Pakistan

Girls work on the roof of their house in Swat valley, Pakistan.

Girls work on the roof of their house in Swat valley, Pakistan.

Mingora at night

Mingora at night

High in Pakistan’s mountainous northwest and affected by both natural disasters and fighting, the idyllic valley

The stunning swat valley has been at the epicentre of so many tragedies that even the hands writing its elegies have run out of words. Whether extremism or natural catastrophe, there’s no calamity that has not yet descended upon the dwellers of Swat.

I arrive in Swat late evening after passing through so many army checkpoints that I lose count. Standing in the cool autumnal air, I am approached by a young and obviously well-educated Pakhtun cabbie.

“Sahib, are you here for a visit? Should I take you to a hotel?” he asks.

I end up going with him to Swat’s Mingora bazaar, which is bursting with life though very different from how I remember it more than 10 years ago. Now designer stores stand side by side with smaller shops, their offerings spilling out on to the narrow road.

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Mingora also brings back memories of my youth, a time of energy and no restrictions. We would joke about Pakhtuns in front of them in the bazaar. The jokes would invite nothing but lively cackles and twinkling eyes.

So much has changed since then.

After a night in one of the hotels by the River Swat in Fiza Ghat, I commence my journey to Kabal. The cemented road is busy with trucks piled high with vegetables and other goods and I see several small canals irrigating fields along with bridges bearing signboards thanking the Saudi Fund for Development Pakistan.

“Earlier the fields near the streams would absorb all the water during the drought season, leaving nothing for the tail-end fields. During the rainy season, water would overflow, creating a flood-like situation. Now, at least, all the fields receive their fair share of irrigation water,” says farmer Baz Khan, who is sitting on a charpoy in the middle of a field watching his labourers pick tomatoes.

The next night is spent in Khwazakhela, which seems very quiet in comparison to Mingora.

At a village in Matta tehsil. I observe a scared look in the eyes of children playing in the streets. Chatting to a local, I learn of the peoples’ problems, which include the lack of any link road between the hamlet and the main road.

“My father died while we were taking him to the hospital on a charpoy. It took two hours to get to the main road from here. Midway, he asked us to lower the charpoy because he knew he wouldn’t survive. We kept walking but he didn’t make it,” he says.

However, where they exist, Swat’s short link roads have paved the way for better employment opportunities. The construction of bridges over streams has made the daunting task of going to school easier for students.

Behind the snow-covered peaks of Hindu Kush, the sun is about to set and I stop at the River Swat. Two labourers were on their way home after a hard day of work.

In complete solitude, I watch cranes flying over the river with Kalaam’s mountain peaks as the backdrop. Then darkness takes over and I can see no more.

(For more Swat photos, visit www.NationMultiMedia.com/travel)

IF YOU GO

< Swat is a valley district in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Province, about 250 kilometres (or five hours) from Islamabad. The valley is noted for its beautiful landscape, the Hindu Kush mountain range and the Swat River.

 

These aerial shots of Pakistan will give you wanderlust

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/travel/These-aerial-shots-of-Pakistan-will-give-you-wande-30282958.html

PAKISTANI VIEWS

There’s something magical about seeing the ground below from a great height.

For our #DawnWeeklyProject, we asked photographers on Instagram to send us aerial shots from all over Pakistan.

Here’s a look at the top picks from the many fantastic photos submitted to us:

Arial View of metropolitan city Of pakistan..

Surviving Angkor

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/travel/Surviving-Angkor-30282837.html

CAMBODIA

A tourist takes a close look at a series of bas-reliefs depicting historical events at Angkor Wat in Cambodia.

A tourist takes a close look at a series of bas-reliefs depicting historical events at Angkor Wat in Cambodia.

Billed as the “Citadel of the Women”, Banteay Srei is the smallest yet most delicate temple, its rose-pink stone boasting beautiful carvings. Nation/Phoowadon Duangmee

Billed as the “Citadel of the Women”, Banteay Srei is the smallest yet most delicate temple, its rose-pink stone boasting beautiful carvings. Nation/Phoowadon Duangmee

The iconic Angkor Wat is always packed with tourists from around the world. Nation/Phoowadon Duangmee

The iconic Angkor Wat is always packed with tourists from around the world. Nation/Phoowadon Duangmee

A bas-relief on the Southern gallery of Angkor Wat shows Siamese troops marching with King Suryavarman II in the war against Cham warriors. Nation/Phoowadon Duangmee

A bas-relief on the Southern gallery of Angkor Wat shows Siamese troops marching with King Suryavarman II in the war against Cham warriors. Nation/Phoowadon Duangmee

Apsara angels are everywhere around temples of Angkor. Nation/Phoowadon Duangmee

Apsara angels are everywhere around temples of Angkor. Nation/Phoowadon Duangmee

A tourist takes a photo of bas-reliefs at Bayon Temple. Nation/Phoowadon Duangmee

A tourist takes a photo of bas-reliefs at Bayon Temple. Nation/Phoowadon Duangmee

Local students escape the heat under the tree canopy near the moat around Angkor Wat. Nation/Phoowadon Duangmee

Local students escape the heat under the tree canopy near the moat around Angkor Wat. Nation/Phoowadon Duangmee

To get the most out of the famed Cambodia complex and beat both the crowds and the heat, prepare properly before leaving for Siem Reap.

Fact: Two million tourists arrive in Siem Reap every year. A small, quiet township just 20 years ago, the gateway to Angkor has today morphed into a thriving resort with several five-start hotels, restaurants, bars and three golf courses, marking its importance on the world’s tourist map. Thanks to Angkor Wat and other temple complexes, not to mention a wealth cheap alcohol, Siem Reap is ranked at the very top of the world’s best city to travel in by both the TripAdvisor website and Travel+Leisure magazine.

A short flight from Ho Chi Minh, Bangkok or Singapore, visiting the ancient temples and monuments should be a dream cone true, a chance to reflect on the mysteries of ancient rites and find peace among the stones. These days, a visit is more likely to leave you stressed and exhausted.

Just as you’re trying to find the apsara angel from the Churning the Ocean scene in Angkor Wat’s gallery, you are inevitably pushed out off the way by Chinese tourists. You push back and just as you’re about to reclaim your view, you are pushed aside again, this time by Korean tourists.

So how do you survive the thousands of tourists marching through Angkor Wat daily?

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To beat the crowds and heat around Angkor Archaeological Park, the smart traveller needs a plan.

The best time to visit the temples of Angkor is from November to January when, just like in Thailand, Cambodia’s Northern Region enjoys cool weather and the rice paddy fields stretch like a golden carpet as far as the eye can see.

In March and April, the region’s hottest months, it’s best to stay away or at least spend the best part of the day chilling out in the hotel’s air conditioning.

During the summer the smart traveller visits Angkor Wat when it opens, at 5.30am, thus escaping the unbearable heat and the tourists, who won’t leave the hotels before having breakfast. On my latest trip to Siem Reap, I wake up just before 5am and jump into a local auto-trishaw and arrive at Angkor Wat just as the sun rises. The world’s largest religious monument is, of course, brimming with tourists who have also come for the sunrise. However, the number is nothing like as large as it will be a couple of hours later when the tour groups arrive en masse.

If you rise early enough, you might just get one of the temples all to yourself, which makes the whole experience even more magical. Many temples such as Ta Prohm, which I personally find the most atmospheric and photogenic ruin, are deserted. Roam Bayon before 6am and you may well have the place – and its more than 200 massive stone faces of King Jayavarman VII – all to yourself. That makes the whole experience even more magical albeit slightly spooky.

For adventurous travellers, culture buffs and photographers, this Cambodian city requires much more than a short trip. The Unesco World Heritage Site of Angkor Wat demands repeated returns. I’ve visited Angkor Wat four times so far and have yet to see every stone in the Angkor Archaeological Park.

Most tourists arrive at the historical site in vans and with tourist guides. It’s a good idea to have a local guide to demystify the stories about these ancient temples but you can’t beat a good guidebook and friendly tuk-tuk driver.

Most tuk-tuk driver charge between US$15 (Bt530) and $20 per day. The driver will drop you off at the entrance and meet you at the opposite end, but you will be wandering around the ruins on your own. Let your driver know what temples you are most interested in seeing, but also ask for suggestions: you might just end up at a hidden gem.

A first timer will find it very difficult to choose one temple over another because every one of them is unique in its own way. However, if your time is limited and you want to make it to the most famed temples, here is our shortlist.

Angkor Wat is a must, of course, although it’s always jam-packed. You’re advised to go for the sunrise. Once you’re done photographing the sun bobbing over the five iconic spires, visit the complex from the top down, starting from the top tower of Angkor Wat. Most tourists start their trip from lower parts horsing around the bas reliefs and galleries. When they make it to the top tower two hours later, they find the queues too long and weather too hot.

Thais shouldn’t miss the last scene on the Southeastern Gallery depicting Siamese troops marching with King Suryavarman II in the crusade against Cham warriors. You know they’re Thais because they look totally disorganised. One soldier, for example, appears to be poking fun at another and paying little attention to the war.

Other than the iconic Angkor Wat , you should also visit the Bayon Temple of King Jayavarman VII – the great king who converted the whole empire from Hinduism to Buddhism in the 12th Century. Then, there is Ta Prohm, with its iconic creepy trees, that formed the background to Angelina Jolie in “Tomb Raider”. Banteay Srei, 30 kilometres north of Angkor Wat, is irresistible too. Billed as the “Citadel of the Women”, Banteay Srei is the smallest yet most delicate of the temples, its rose-pink stone covered in beautiful carvings.

If you’re really into the Angkor Wat architecture, reading the Ramayana Epic will help you understand the ancient Khmer kingdom. The stories of Vishnu – and lots of his phallic symbols – can be found everywhere in the stone carvings.

A day pass for entry to Angkor Archaeological Park is $20 (3 days/$40 and 7 days/$60). However, many visitors are not aware that they don’t need a ticket to travel around the historical site without entering it. The forests, huge trees and moats make for a blissful excursion in the early morning, particularly if you are cycling.

You can also ask a motorcycle taxi to drop you off at the end of Vithei Charles De Gaulle, the street that connects Angkor Wat with Siem Reap town. The temple is about 10 kilometres from the nearest hotel.

Once you have arrived at the ancient ruins, you will come across local teenagers selling guidebooks for $1 and offering to be your guide for a modest sum, as well as little kids selling postcards. Walk away from them.

Those kids need to go to school instead of trying to flog trinkets. If you really want to help Cambodian children and take something home, tell your tuk-tuk driver to drop you at Artisans d’Angkor (www.ArtisansDAngkor.com) or Friends ‘N’ Stuff.

The “teenage guides” are also best avoided. If you decide to take one of them as a guide, chances are you will be abandoned before you can see the most beautiful Apsara.

Most importantly, don’t let the crowds, the steep steps or the heat put you off seeing these amazing temples of Angkor.

 

History on the walls

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

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CAMBODIA

Visitors enjoy the panoramic mural at Angkor Panorama Museum in Siem Reap. Nation Photo/<a href=

Visitors enjoy the panoramic mural at Angkor Panorama Museum in Siem Reap. Nation Photo/Phoowadon Duangmee

A graphic scene of war against Cham. Nation Photo/<a href=

A graphic scene of war against Cham. Nation Photo/Phoowadon Duangmee

King Jayavarman VII commands from the elephant back. Nation Photo/<a href=

King Jayavarman VII commands from the elephant back. Nation Photo/Phoowadon Duangmee

Happy citizens under the reign of King Jayavarman VII. Nation Photo/<a href=

Happy citizens under the reign of King Jayavarman VII. Nation Photo/Phoowadon Duangmee

A North Korean artist adds her self-portrait to the panoramic wall painting. Nation Photo/<a href=

A North Korean artist adds her self-portrait to the panoramic wall painting. Nation Photo/Phoowadon Duangmee

A North Korean studio recreates the reign of King Jayavarman VII in a gigantic mural

If the series of bas-reliefs on the outer walls of Bayon don’t tell you enough about King Jayavarman VII’s achievements, you might want to visit the Angkor Panorama Museum. Built by North Korea, the museum is a new destination in Siem Reap and its highlight is a 360-degree mural painted by North Korea’s Mansudae Studio.

“The panoramic painting is 122.9 metres by 12.9 metres,” says a young Cambodian guide at Angkor Panorama Museum. “Painted by 63 North Korean artists, it took 16 months to complete and has 45,000 human figures.

The mural starts with horrific scenes from the Cham War between the Khmers and the Vietnamese before moving clockwise to the construction of the famous Bayon Temple and ending with the daily life of Khmers in the 12th Century.

Mansudae Studio is an art studio in Pyongyang, North Korea. Spread over 120,000 square metres and boasting 1,000 of North Korea’s finest artists, it’s one of the largest art production centres in the world.

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The panoramic wall painting honours King Jayavarman VII, a devout Buddhist and great warrior who established Angkor Thom as the capital. He crusaded against the Cham and converted his Empire to Buddhism. Bayon Temple boasts a series of bas-reliefs depicting the king’s success through historical events on the battlefield.

Angkor Panorama Museum’s mural is way more patriotic and grandiose. The best scene is the battle against Cham warriors, which shows King Jayavarman on his elephant commanding his men to crush the Cham on the banks of Tonle Sap.

Surrounding the viewing deck of Angkor Panorama Museum is an artificial jungle constructed from fake trees, rocks, huts and sculptures which seamlessly meets the painted wall.

Angkor Panorama Museum also screens 3D movies demystifying how the grandiose temples of Angkor were built. A trip to visit the museum includes a briefing on the ancient Khmer Empire.

IF YOU GO

>> The museum is open daily from 7am to 9pm.

>> Admission is US$15; the 3D movie costs $10.

>> Photography is prohibited.

 

Great Escape

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/travel/Great-Escape-30282839.html

GETAWAYS

Escape Hua Hin

Escape Hua Hin

Enjoy a break on weekdays at Escape Hua Hin and a discount of up to 55 per-cent discount when booking two rooms or more by phone.

BEACH

Great Escape

Enjoy a break on weekdays at Escape Hua Hin and a discount of up to 55 per-cent discount when booking two rooms or more by phone. The rate is at Bt3,350 for Deluxe Poolside and includes complimentary breakfast for children aged eight and younger. The deal is available until May 1. Call (032) 653 456.

Island in the sun

Nestled on a gently curving bay bordered by picturesque rocks and jungle outcrops, Ao Prao Resort on Koh Samet is the perfect place to relax. The resort is now offering a Hot Deal Promotion starting at Bt6,955 per night that includes breakfast and free round-trip shuttle speedboat. A minimum stay of two consecutive nights is required. Call (038) 644 100-3, (061) 413 8468-70 or e-mail: fom_aoprao@samedresorts.com.

Romantic retreat

Celebrate your love with a special honeymoon package at U Zenmaya Phuket. Starting at Bt5,799 per night, the promotion includes a 60-minute Thai massage per person per stay, one bottle of house wine, complimentary honeymoon set up on arrival night, 15 per-cent discount on food and non-alcoholic beverages and 10 per-cent discount on spa treatments. A minimum stay of two consecutive nights is required. The deal is good until October 31. Call (076) 336 888 or e-mail: reserve@uzenmayaphuket.com. Visit http://www.UZenmayaPhuket.com.

Here comes the sun

Layana Resort & Spa on Koh Lanta Yai offers a Sunshine Guarantee from May 1 to September 30. The “adults-only” resort offers a refund for each full day of rain. If it rains continuously between 10am and 5pm, the resort will pay back Bt1,000 per room per day to be spent on food and beverage or spa treatments during the period of stay. Call (075) 607 100 or e-mail: resa@layanaresort.com. Visit http://www.LayanaResort.com.

MYANMAR

Executive elegance

Sedona Hotel Yangon overlooking Inya Lake, offers a Business Package from US$226 per night. It covers accommodation in a Deluxe Room, club benefits including personalised check-in and check-out service at the Executive Club Lounge, breakfast, snacks and beverages and evening cocktails at the Lounge, pressing of up to two pieces of clothing daily, and a 24-hour stay privilege (subject to availability). Book online at http://www.SedonaHotels.com.sg.

DISCOVERY

The sky at night

Wildchina, a travel company that empowers travellers to discover the real China, is offering a four days Tibetan Camping Retreat at Gansu. You’ll stay in a comfortable camp staffed by local nomads, surrounded by summer flowers and wildlife, embark on horseback or foot throughout the surrounding countryside and gaze at the stars. Prices start from US$1,620 per person. Visit http://www.Wildchina.com.

Mewar Spring Festival

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http://www.nationmultimedia.com/travel/Mewar-Spring-Festival-30282272.html

FESTIVAL DIARY

Mewar Spring Festival, India

Mewar Spring Festival, India

Udaipur’s Mewar Spring Festival is celebrated to welcome the advent of spring and coincides with the Gangaur festival.

MEWAR SPRING FESTIVAL

April 9 to 11, Udaipur, India

Udaipur’s Mewar Spring Festival is celebrated to welcome the advent of spring and coincides with the Gangaur festival. The main attraction is the procession of colourfully attired women carrying images of the Goddess Gauri to Lake Pichola. The images are transferred to special boats amidst much singing and festivity. The festival culminates with an impressive fireworks display and a procession of boats on the lake.

UISEONG SANSUYU FESTIVAL

March 26 to April 3, Gyeongsang, South Korea

Uiseong Sansuyu Village is gilded with the bright yellow of thousands of sansuyu, or Japanese Cornelian cherry flowers. The streetlights are kept on throughout the night to allow visitors to enjoy the view of flowers in the dark. The festival also features various activities including the sansuyu flower photo contest as well as hands-on experiences like rice cake pounding and sansuyu tea tasting.

IRONMAN 70.3

April 3, Putrajaya, Malaysia

An Ironman 70.3, or Half Ironman, is one of a series of long distance triathlon races organised by the World Triathlon Corporation (WTC). Each distance of the swim, bike, and run segments is half the distance of that segment in an Ironman triathlon. The Ironman 70.3 series culminates each year with a World Championship competition, for which competitors qualify for during the 70.3 series in the 12 months prior to the championship race. This year’s Time Ironman 70.3 will take place at Floria, Precinct 4, Putrajaya, the home of the Royal Floria Putrajaya Flower and Garden Festival.

ART CENTRAL

March 23 to 26, Hong Kong

Art Central, Hong Kong’s contemporary art fair with a distinctly Asian edge returns to the iconic Central Harbourfront today. The fair builds upon the success of last year’s inaugural event that attracted 30,000 art collectors, VIPs and the art-loving public from Hong Kong and around the world. The event presents more than 100 hand-selected galleries from 20 countries, 70 per cent hailing from 23 cities across greater Asia. The programme includes interactive installations, engaging panel discussions, performance art, tours and Hong Kong’s hottest eateries. Art Central 2016 is the perfect place to discover and buy art.

FOOD&HOTEL ASIA 2016

April 12to 15, Singapore

One of the most anticipated international trade events for Asia’s food and hospitality industry, this annual celebration features a wide variety of food and hospitality products. You can also enjoy six specialised exhibitions namely Food Asia, Hotel Asia, Bakery & Pastry, Hospitality Style Asia, Hospitality Technology and Speciality Coffee & TeaPlus, all in one place.

SCOPPIO DEL CARRO – EXPLOSION OF THE CART

March 27, Florence, Italy

Florence takes residents and visitors back to the ancient Crusade of 1099 with the Easter festival of the Scoppi del Carro or the Explosion of the Cart. In the morning, the 10-metre-tall antique cart is hauled by a team of white oxen from the Porta al Prato to the Piazza del Duomo. The holy fire, started with the historical shards of the Holy Sepulchre, is lit in the Church of SS Apostoli and transported to the Duomo, where the archbishop of the city lights the sacred Colombina, a dove-shaped rocket, during the Easter Mass. The rocket travels out of the Duomo along a wire, sets fire to the huge array of fireworks attached to the carro and returns back into the church the way it came. If the Cart burns right down, then the Florentines’ lives will be enriched and their harvests plentiful.

Transplanting the past

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http://www.nationmultimedia.com/travel/Transplanting-the-past-30282273.html

VIETNAM

The 19th century thatched-roof houses of poor farming families. Photo/ Viet Nam News

The 19th century thatched-roof houses of poor farming families. Photo/ Viet Nam News

Some doors are decorated with nacre paintings. Photo/ Viet Nam News

Some doors are decorated with nacre paintings. Photo/ Viet Nam News

BACH LIEN
VIET NAM NEWS
ASIA NEWS NETWORK

A popular destination with local tourists, Ninh Binh province near the Red River Delta in North Vietnam, is best known for the Trang An Scenic Landscape Complex, a Unesco World Heritage Site famous for its boat cave

tours, and Tam Coc-Bich Dong, often referred to as “the terrestrial Ha Long Bay” in a nod to its caves.

But not many tourists know that this province is also famous for its ancient Vietnamese village.

The village is nestled on the bank of the Ngo Dong River, only a few footsteps from the wharf of Tam Coc. Better known as Co Vien Lau, Tam Coc is a private museum featuring ancient houses with unique architectural and cultural features.

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Nguyen Minh Thoa is the founder of the museum. A well-known antique collector in Ninh Binh, he travelled throughout the province and through other northern Viet Nam provinces for years, looking for and buying houses that date back to the 18th-20th centuries.

He finally succeeded in buying 22 houses. He then dismantled them, moving all of the materials to Hoa Lu District, where he rebuilt them.

Spread over an area of 20,000 square metres, the village is now home to 22 antique homes, each bearing the traditional architectural traits of its home village or district, and each built of precious wood.

The Van Hai house, for example, was collected from the Hau Loc district of Thanh Hoa province and restored from a home built in 1885 during the reign of King Dong Khanh – the 9th monarch of the Nguyen Dynasty, who reigned from 1885 to 1889.The house’s curved beams are shaped like the neck of a goose and chiselled with intricate carvings.

The Y Yen ancient house, originally built in 1883, was collected from Y Yen district of Nam Dinh province. Inside the house, several ancient objects dating from the 12th-century Ly dynasty – including a plate and bowl – are displayed.

The Tho Xuan ancient house is home to a collection of more than 100 ornamental jars dating from the Gia Long period (1802), the largest collection in Vietnam. This 200-year-old house was once inhabited by a shaman in Thanh Hoa province.

Its roof was rebuilt from a Tho Xuan District home more than 200 years old. The house is made of fish fin tiles and its four corners are shaped like curved knives. Inside the house are more than 70 dragon-shaped jars.

These 22 old houses are furnished with more than 40,000 ancient objects dating back hundreds – and thousands – of years. The artefacts include coins, pictures, jars, jewellery, statues and farm tools used in the Red River Delta.

Two tiny houses built of soil, straw and bamboo stand in a corner of the village, copies of old houses of poor Vietnamese farmers in the 19th century.

The yard is home to bales of straw, water jars, and stone mortars and surrounded by vegetables, a garden, and bamboo hedges.

“Seeing the high stack of straw in the yard reminded me of my grandmother’s house. I spent happy moments of my childhood there. I used to play hide-and-seek with my sister around the straw when we were little,” says visitor Vu Thanh Nga.

The ancient Thanh Liem temple, from Thanh Liem district of Ha Nam province, is now located at the heart of the village, which also boasts thoroughly modern WiFi and accommodation for visitors wanting to stay overnight. Visitors can also participate in local folk games and enjoy regional delicacies.

AROUND NINH BINH

Ninh Binh is about three hours on public bus from Hanoi. The town itself has nothing to boast though decent beer, best enjoyed with the locals, can be found. The tourist destinations are scattered within an hour ride’s of Ninh Binh town. Most independent travellers book into the small hotels and guesthouses before exploring Ninh Binh on bicycle or motorcycle.

Here are some places worth checking out.

TAM COC

Limestone karst stands out amid the rice paddies. Most tourists jump into a rowing boat and paddle through the rice field. Sadly though, Tam Coc has become a tourist trap, with demanding rowers, aggressive hawkers and too many tourists. The secret is to wait for very last boat (5.30pm in summer, 4.30pm in winter) when you can enjoy the spectacular scenery without the hassle.

BICH DONG PAGODA

A few kilometres north of Tam Coc, Bich Dong Pagoda requires a climb of more than 100 steps. It’s a sort of stairway to “heaven” since the lookout on top offers breathtaking view of Vietnam’s countryside. The monastery itself is well worth a visit.

PHAT DIEM CATHEDRAL

Mixing and matching Eastern and Western architectural styles, Phat Diem Cathedral stands right in the middle of the canals and rice paddy. The cathedral was established during the French colonial period and has withstood wars and revolution. It’s worth an hour’s ride on a motorcycle from Ninh Binh to admire the iron wood columns and gothic chapels.

HOA LU ANCIENT CAPITAL

This royal city was an ancient capital of Vietnam a few hundreds year prior to Angkor Wat and the Sukhothai Kingdom. There is not much to show off about the ancient Vietnamese royal life in Hoa Lu, except for some beautiful and majestic archways and the temples of Dinh Tien Hoang, Nhat Tru and Le Dai Hanh.