Category Archives: Mekong Delta

Bonsai in Vietnam ~ They are Really Large

Bonsai is an ancient Japanese art form using miniature trees grown in containers. Similar practices exist in other cultures, including the Chinese tradition of penjing and the miniature living landscapes of Vietnamese hòn non b?. While traveling in Vietnam, I expected to see bonsai, but the size of the plants was unexpected. They, for the most part, were huge. Most I saw were in the eight-handed or Imperial class (60 – 80 inches high) or the six-handed or Hachi-uye class (40 – 60 inches high.) The plants were on display in people’s front yards, as well as Buddhist Temples, and government buildings. Large sized bonsai are evident throughout the country from Hanoi in the north to Saigon and the Mekong Delta in the south. Many of the specimens were not well trained or cared for but the plants seemed quite content in their large pots and tropical setting. Interestingly, were not many bonsai in Cambodia or Laos.

The slide show below has two examples of Hòn Non Bô, the traditional Vietnamese art of making miniature landscapes, imitating the scenery of the islands, mountains and surrounding environment found in nature.

 

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SE Asia ~ An Artist’s Palette by Lynne Mayhew

In three words I can describe SE Asia. It is an artist’s palette. A profusion of color, shapes, sizes and textures, found in and on the streets and allies of Hanoi, Saigon, Phnom Penn or the endless green paddies of rice ready to be harvested throughout the countryside of Vietnam, Cambodia, and Laos.

Halong Bay

Halong Bay (click to enlarge)

The palette becomes serene, yet surreal as we gently glide through the pristine waters of Halong Bay in a Chinese Junk, made of teak. We are mesmerized by the giant limestone karsts jutting out of the water. Lush, green tropical vegetation cling precariously to the grains of earth that have settled in its crags. Declared a United Nations World Heritage Site in 1994, more than 2000 islands dot the seascape with their wind-carved grottoes while some have caves or a sandy beach.   { read on….}

S E Asia ~ An Artist’s Palette by Lynne Mayhew
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Postcard from the Mekong Delta, Vietnam

The Mekong Delta is all about rice and fish. Everyone works at one or both. Rice becomes rice noodles, rice paper, rice wine with snakes, rice candy, popped rice, etc. Fish are farmed under floating houses and caught in a variety of nets. Wonderful tropical fruits, such as dragon fruits that grows on a vine that resembles a Christmas cactus, and fresh vegetables are abundant as well. More exotic fare such as frog, rat, and snake are available in the markets.
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