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Thursday 8 November 2012

Thousands of pilgrims, tourists travel to Perfume Pagoda festival

The cold weather couldn't keep thousands of pilgrims and tourists away from the Huong Pagoda Festival, the nation's longest and most elaborate annual festival that opened yesterday morning in the northern province of Ha Tay ( Hanoi), Vietnam.
The Venerable Thich Minh Hien rang the bell to officially open the festival at the Perfume Pagoda, also known as the Perfume Pagoda, on the sixth day of the first lunar month. The opening ceremony began at the Thien Tru Pagoda with pilgrims and tourists invited to take part in the incense-offering ceremony. 

Traditional songs and dances took place before and after the ceremony, warming up the festival's lively ambience in the chilly weather. Yesterday proved as popular as the fourth day of the lunar new year, as both days attracted around 40,000 visitors from across the nation to visit the pagoda.


The festival is a traditional Vietnamese Buddhist celebration, lasting for three months, with most activities taking place from yesterday to the 19th of the first lunar month.
However, since the first day of the lunar new year, thousands of tourists and pilgrims have flocked to the sacred land to tour and pray for a prosperous and happy year. 
Ready to satisfy
In 2008, the Huong Pagoda Festival hopes to welcome 1 million visitors. In 2007, around 900,000 visitors attended the festival, sometimes reaching up to 30,000 in a single day. 
To accommodate the increasing number of visitors, to the festival, a system of 45 cable cars was put into operation from 4am to 8.30pm. This is the second year the festival has set up the system.
Despite the massive crowds, visitors can be re-assured that these measures have led to a decrease in the number of traffic jams. The decrease is also attributed to the festival's organising committee having restored and repaired infrastructure outside and inside the pagoda. 
To help pay for the improved service, the festival's organising committee increased the ticket price this year, according to Le Van Sang, vice chairman of the My Duc District's People's Committee. 
Entry fees during the festival this year are VND29,500 per adult, an increase over last year's price of VND22,500, while children's prices rose from VND11,250 to VND14,500. These fares apply to both domestic and international tourists.
Ticket prices for tours of the Huong Pagoda have also gone up to VND25,000 for Huong Tich trips and VND15,000 for Long Van and Tuyet Son trips.
According to Sang, stalls and restaurants have been barred from setting up in front of Huong Tich cave to help cut down on traffic.
To deal with boat traffic, around 3,600 boats, over 600 more than in 2006, were licensed to ensure steady access and fair prices for passengers. 
The organising committee was also looking to improve hygiene issues with strict regulations. Restaurants and stalls were required to put food in glass cupboards and not outside like they did before. 
Further looking to improve their hospitable skills, more than 500 people from the Huong Son Commune went on a training course, learning how to better communicate with tourists, protect their environment and guide tours of the monuments. 
Sightseeing trips to pagodas, temples and caves an the main attractions at the Huong pagoda festival, as well as visiting ceremonies to ask favours from Lord Buddha.
After the opening ceremony, tourists and pilgrims were off to three main tours: Huong Tich Cave Pagoda, Long Van Pagoda and Tuyet Son Pagoda in Huong Son in the historical complex. 
The province of Ha Tay has submitted the Huong Pagoda, located in Huong Son Commune in My Duc District, about 60km south-west of Hanoi, for designation by UNESCO as a world cultural heritage site.
Surrounded by vast green rice paddies, the site is a complex of pagodas and Buddhist shrines built into the limestone cliffs of Huong Tich Mountain, among lakes and grottoes.

Source VietnamNews

The terraced mountain of Khau Pha


Farmers in Yen Bai Province are fighting against nature to raise their crops on the terraces of Khau Pha Mountain Pass, where the farming has always been difficult with altitudes of 1,200-1,500 metres.


 The rice terraces of Cao Pha Commune

When the harvest season ends for the farmers in the delta, it is just starting for H'Mong farmers in the mountainous areas, Vietnam. They toil all day long on the picturesque paddies.


Rain is the only source of water for the fields

Family grows rice after the rain in Che Cu Nha Commune

Each terrace is about is two metres high
 
Farmers have to ride motorbikes to get to their farms
 
A lunch box
 
 
 
People pull up the young rice plants from the lower fields
 
 
Young rice plants are brought to higher fields by foot and motorbike.
 
Children playing in the field
 
 
The rice fields
Source: dtinews.vn