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A tour around emerald-green Nghe An, Vietnam’s largest province

March 1, 2021 by e.vnexpress.net

A tour around emerald-green Nghe An, Vietnam's largest province

The largest province in Vietnam, about 16,490 square kilometers in size , Nghe An adjoins Thanh Hoa Province to the north and Ha Tinh Province to the south, bordering Laos to the west and the ocean to the east.

An said he had not returned to Nghe An for nearly a decade, with his trip late last year reminding him of the province’s many beautiful, pristine landscapes he has yet to discover.

A tour around emerald-green Nghe An, Vietnam's largest province

Lam River flows past Khe Bu Village near Pu Mat National Park in Con Cuong District.

The village is inhabited by the Dan Lai ethnic minority who keep both their natural surroundings and lifestyle intact.

A tour around emerald-green Nghe An, Vietnam's largest province

A small corner of Khe Bu Village, where tourists can experience the rustic lifestyle of the Dan Lai.

Nowadays, as the smallest ethnic minority in Nghe An, the Dan Lai reside solely in the mountains bordering Laos.

Once upon a time, it is said, after a local committed a terrible crime, the king penalized the village, forcing its inhabitants to seek refuge in the dense forest where they slept upright to evade danger.

A tour around emerald-green Nghe An, Vietnam's largest province

Leaving the village, An crossed the Pha Lai suspension bridge. Late in the afternoon, he caught a group of locals crossing the bridge on their way home after a day working in the nearby rice fields.

A tour around emerald-green Nghe An, Vietnam's largest province

Located on the Ho Chi Minh trail near the border with Laos, the Thanh Chuong tea hills in Nghe An, 330 kilometers south of Hanoi, has an unusual setting.

More than 50 years ago, a dam was built here to irrigate more than 700 hectares of rice fields in Thanh An and Thanh Thinh communes of Thanh Chuong District. Three years ago, local farmers began growing green tea. Now there are nearly 200 households growing tea across more than 400 hectares.

Tea estates in Moc Chau, Thai Nguyen and Da Lat can be visited on foot, but those in the Thanh Chuong hills are only accessible by boat.

A tour around emerald-green Nghe An, Vietnam's largest province

Rice fields in Cam Son Commune of Anh Son District reflect a resplendent golden yellow.

A tour around emerald-green Nghe An, Vietnam's largest province

The ideal time to visit Nghe An is either March-April or November-December, with flowers blooming throughout the province, especially sunflowers.

June and July are referred to as the Foehn-wind period, pushing the daily temperature up to 45 degrees Celsius.

A tour around emerald-green Nghe An, Vietnam's largest province

Visitors to Nghia Dan District will notice many fields similar to the above covering hundreds of hectares, the ones with red soil used to cultivate flowers, and the green ones, to grow feed for dairy cows.

A tour around emerald-green Nghe An, Vietnam's largest province

A picturesque road in Nghia Dan District hugging Lam River.

A tour around emerald-green Nghe An, Vietnam's largest province

Phu Quy flower valley located close to Ho Chi Minh Road in Nghia Dan District covers dozens of hectares. On weekends and holidays, this place welcomes between 1,000 – 1,500 visitors, including avid photographers, per day.

A tour around emerald-green Nghe An, Vietnam's largest province

Chung Son Temple was inaugurated in May 2020, dedicated to the worship of President Ho Chi Minh’s family.

The temple is located on sacred Chung Mountain in Lien Son Commune, Nam Dan District, the hometown of the president.

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As third wave rages, show goes on at Sofia opera

March 1, 2021 by tuoitrenews.vn

With an orchestra spread out across the entire parterre, audiences limited to the balconies, and no breaks but plenty of disinfectant, the Sofia Opera is one of the few music venues still hosting live performances in Europe.

Across the continent, a third wave of COVID-19 infections is keeping opera houses and other cultural venues closed — loud singing poses a particular risk as the virus spreads through droplets — but in Bulgaria, classical music plays on, from “Tosca” to “La Traviata”.

“I am hungry for music. And the risk, why think about it? It’s not riskier here than in the supermarket or the subway,” says 81-year-old Petya Petkova, who attended Verdi’s “La Traviata” with her daughter last week.

Despite the disinfectant, social-distancing and staff taking people’s temperature, a festive spirit reigns at the historic opera house in the Bulgarian capital, a stark contrast to its silenced counterparts in Paris, Vienna or Milan.

Bulgaria first eased pandemic restrictions in June and allowed operas, concert halls and cinemas to reopen at 30 percent capacity, leading the Sofia Opera to arrange plastic and fabric flower bouquets as placeholders on the majority of the crimson plush seats.

“We perform in front of 250 spectators, but it’s better than not playing or performing,” Sofia Opera director Plamen Kartaloff says.

Even as Europe struggles with a third wave of infections, in part due to a number of mutations that spread more easily, Kartaloff expects the opera to remain open.

Acoustic challenges

Tragedy has touched the operatic community, and not just on stage: In November, Bulgarian tenor Kamen Chanev died of COVID-19, three weeks after he debuted Otello in the central Bulgarian city of Stara Zagora.

Remembering him, soprano Stanislava Momekova, 36, becomes serious.

“That’s the risk of this profession — it holds us like a drug, it’s stronger than fear,” Momekova says.

For American conductor Evan-Alexis Christ, who saw his performances in Germany cancelled, bringing “La Traviata” to the stage feels rewarding, despite a number of “acoustic challenges”.

From the pit, the orchestra had to move to the parterre, where musicians now sit far apart from one another. The singers on stage are even farther away.

“We are acoustically louder for the audience than normal so the orchestra has to play very quietly and listen even more to the singers,” Christ says.

“But overall I think everyone is very happy, also the musicians and the singers who are able to perform,” he adds, praising the discipline of the musicians, who, with the exception of singers and tube instruments, perform with face masks on.

Luring younger audiences

To Christ, the opera in Sofia and in Madrid, which has also kept its doors open, are proof that it’s still possible to play for a live audience.

“My feeling is that people are incredibly hungry, they want to hear music,” Christ says, adding that he hopes “to make a difference” for the 250 people in the audience that night.

Thanks to Kartaloff’s ingenuity, the Sofia Opera has found a number of ways to perform amid the pandemic: “Swan Lake” was staged on the pontoon of a lake near Sofia, while other operas reverberated through an old Roman fortress.

Some musical theatre performances were limited to adults with children, a way to focus on the audience of the future, Kartaloff says.

As clubs and bars have mostly remained closed, Bulgaria’s opera halls have become more alluring to younger audiences, including students who put on their prom suits to see “La Traviata”.

“It’s a huge pleasure to have the chance to attend a nice event such as the opera,” 38-year-old Nikolay Onufriev, who’s only been to the opera once before, says.

“It’s a way to escape from the grey, everyday life that we have amid the coronavirus pandemic, and for me, this is something big.”

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