Wednesday, July 13, 2016

Ambassadors in awe of Son Doong Cave

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– Foreign ambassadors in Viet Nam who took a recent exploration trip to Son Doong Cave have returned to daily life in Ha Noi with overwhelmingly positive impressions.

Mystical place: The magic beauty of Son Doong Cave has seduced everyone who visits it. www.nationalgeographic.com

For them, the trip to the world’s biggest cave remains one of the most memorable experiences of their lives.
The ambassadors of Australia, Sweden, Italy, the United Kingdom, the Czech Republic and Argentina participated in the weeklong expedition.
US Assistant Secretary of State Tom Malinowski, Ambassador Pham Sanh Chau (head of the Foreign Ministry’s Culture and UNESCO Department) and Vietnamese model-actress Duong Truong Thien Ly, who represented Viet Nam in the Miss World 2008 pageant in South Africa, also joined the tour.
They were eager to pay for the trip to realize their dreams. They spent five days and four nights discovering the world’s largest cave, and they were amazed by its stunning beauty.
The trip, organised by the External Culture and UNESCO Department of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, is expected to help Viet Nam promote tourism to Quang Binh and the rest of the country.
“Everyone was happy with the trip. It is a really good chance to show foreigners what Viet Nam is really like,” Pham Sanh Chau said.
Unforgettable trip
Swedish Ambassador Camilla Mellander told Viet Nam News that the cave was “magical” and the most beautiful place on earth she has seen.
“My passion in life is travelling. I have travelled extensively from the Amazons in South America to the icebergs of Greenland, to the mountains of Nepal and the steppes of Mongolia. But the cave is truly the most beautiful place I’ve been to,” she said.
“The cave itself is so immense, enormous, that even when you are standing inside the cave and you are looking out, you can’t really comprehend how big it is.
“You have the feeling that you are in a place where you can see what the world looked like when it was created. You have the feeling of going back to the time of dinosaurs.”
She said she was amazed to see stone formations with stalagmites and stalactites, the underwater river and lakes, and the sinkholes and delicate flora and fauna, which combine to create a unique environment that offers spectacular sights.
“With the opening in the roof of the cave, you can see sunbeams shining into the cave,” she said. “You have fog coming in, everything is magic, it’s like a dream land. Some parts of the cave look like a ‘Lord of the Rings’ movie.”
Sharing those sentiments, Italian Ambassador Cecilia Piccioni said she was happy to realise her childhood dream of exploring beautiful caves.
“It was a real life ‘Journey to the Center of the Earth’… like in one of my favorite childhood books — a journey where I discovered a hidden world,” she said.
“Realising how small the human being is compared to the almighty creative power of Mother Nature humbled me deeply and let me appreciate even more the importance of preserving her masterpieces.”
For Argentina’s Ambassador, Claudi Ricardo Gutiérrez, the trip was a unique life experience.
“To be in the caves was like to be in paradise, literally — amazing landscapes and atmospheres that leave you breathless,” he said.
Assistant Secretary of State Tom Malinowski said he was astonished by the site’s magical charm.
“You have to come here to see the real beauty of the cave. No image can possibly capture the real beauty of this extraordinary cave,” he said.
British ambassador Gilles Lever, who was inspired by Son Doong’s magical beauty, composed a song about the cave.
Challenging trip
To conquer the cave, visitors had to cross 50 streams and pass through a 50km forest, springs and rocky mountains by foot with guides leading the way.
There were also 80m cliffs to climb, and an underground river to swim across.
In addition to a love for nature, cave explorers should also have the physical endurance and adaptation skills to cope with any potential difficulties.
Ahead of the seven-day excursion to explore the cave, the members had to undergo a health checkup and brush up on their adventure travel skills, said Nguyen Chau A, CEO of Oxalis Ltd., the operator of Son Doong exploration tours.
And a long preparation was required of the ambassadors.
Swedish Ambassador Mellander said that since the day she decided to take part in the trip five months ago, she started to work out on a regular basis. She began to go to gyms in Ha Noi three times a week, and run 5km on the weekend.
“My husband was very supportive. He works in Sweden and he helped me buy good shoes from Sweden and brought them back with me to Ha Noi,” she said.  
Italian Ambassador Piccioni also took the training seriously. She worked out every other day with a personal trainer and completed her training with focused yoga sessions.
“The training strengthened my legs and shoulders to help with the trekking and the yoga helped provide me with a positive attitude at psychological and spiritual levels to approach possible hardships,” she said.
Argentina Ambassador Gutiérrez said he prepared by cycling because it’s good for strengthening the waist and legs. He also trained in the gym with different types of exercise and aerobics.
However, despite the preparations, some faced several difficulties during the tough trip.
Gutiérrez said he experienced fatigue and discomfort due to the extreme humidity, and he injured his foot.
“I have to confess that I missed my bed and my pillows very much,” he said.
Mellander also confided that everyone had wet shoes during the entire five-day trip because they had to cross streams. And on the second day of the tour, it rained a lot, so they were soaking wet.
“We started to appreciate basic things in life: dry feet, dry clothes, dry shoes, good meals,” she said.
But they never regretted taking part in the trip, because for them it was a unique experience.
Mellander said the highlight of the tour was bonding with her colleagues.
“Once we entered the cave, we lost contact with the outer world. The moment we put down our mobile phones, we had a lot of fun together,” she said.
“We were singing songs together, playing guitars. And with our guide and porters, we were playing cards games. We were laughing so much. We had a lot of fun,” she said, adding that she felt sad when she had to leave the cave to go back to work in Ha Noi.
The cave’s ambassadors
After returning to Ha Noi with lots of good memories from the trip, the ambassadors now have the strong desire to promote the cave to the people of their countries.
“I would tell Argentina’s friends that Hang En and Son Doong caves are must-go destinations that will be memorable for their lives and bring an unforgettable experience that will always endure in their minds and hearts,” said Gutiérrez.
“I will do my very best to be Son Doong’s ambassador to Italy,” Piccioni said. “Incredibly enough, I was the first Italian ever to set foot on Son Doong soil, and that gives me a huge responsibility to share its secrets.
“I wish to share my profound appreciation for the organisers, the Oxalis people are true professionals. We put our lives in their hands, and we always felt safe and taken care of, even a bit pampered. Their love for the cave and for their job is tangible and ranges from the wonderful care they took of us to the attention with which they collected every single piece of trash along the trail whenever they found it.”
Mellander said she was happy to see that the Vietnamese Government is preserving this cave in a responsible way.
Only 10 tourists can join one exploration tour, and a tour is organised only once every five days, from February to August.  
She believes that this limitation can help preserve its pristine beauty.
She said it shows that the Vietnamese Government has recognised the uniqueness of the cave and that the fragile flora and fauna — where seven new species unique to the cave have been found — need to be protected.
“Viet Nam is acting as a responsible global partner that understands that this is a heritage that is more important to protect than making a profit,” she said. “The cave is a gem, and all people in Viet Nam should feel very proud that this is part of a UNESCO world heritage.
“Son Doong will stay with me for the rest of my life.”

 Bonding with nature: The group of ambassadors sing and play music in the cave. Photo Courtesy Oxalis
 Arduous journey: The group of ambassadors to Viet Nam on an excursion to Son Doong Cave. Photo Courtesy OxalisArduous journey: The group of ambassadors to Viet Nam on an excursion to Son Doong Cave. Photo Courtesy Oxalis
Exploring: Ambassadors of Sweden and Italy (centre) take pictures with other group members in the cave. Photo Courtesy Oxalis

Wednesday, November 18, 2015

Hollywood blockbuster to be filmed in Son Doong in February 2016

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 – Hollywood blockbuster Skull Island, the upcoming King Kong prequel by director and screenwriter, Jordan Charles Vogt-Roberts will be shot in Son Doong Cave in the central coastal province of Quang Binh.

The film crew in Quang Binh's Phong Nha-Ke Bang -- Photo: SGGP

Copies of the detailed shooting script along with its synopsis have been submitted for the approval of the Ministry of Culture, Sport and Tourism.
The film crew of more than 300 members will travel to Vietnam for the filming in next February.
Several local businesses offering location logistics, media production services and among will participate in the project.
The film crew has early made a supervision of the location survey plan since August 26 in a lot of provinces and cities in the country.
According to Hollywood Reporter magazine, Skull Island will be shot in Vietnam, Australia and Hawaii. The movie will star actors Bire Larson, Tom Hiddleston, Brie Larson, John C. Reily, Samuel L. Jackson and Toby Kebbell. The film is expected to be released in 2017.    
SGGP

Saturday, November 7, 2015

Inside Hang Son Doong, the world's largest caves in Vietnam

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At more than 200m high, 150m wide and 5km long, the Hang Son Doong cave in Vietnam is so big it has its own river, jungle and climate. Australian photographer John Spies, 59, spent a week photographing the natural wonder of the cave system. "With ceilings towering over 200 metres high in places, the cave is a humbling and belittling experience," said John, who has lived in Thailand since 1977 and runs the Cave Lodge guesthouse.
"It is amazing to be 3-4km inside the cave and have daylight illuminate the cave formations. The dimensions of the cave are incredible and to camp for five nights in the biggest cave in the world is not something most of get to do in our lifetime," said John. 
"The entrance is quite small and mist from the cave, caused by the cooler air inside meeting the hot air outside, rises into the surrounding forest. Visitors must descend 80m down a steep wall with the use of harnesses and ropes. The huge temperature difference also creates moving clouds of mist, especially near the two karst windows, which gives the cave its magically surreal atmosphere."
























Picture: John Spies/Barcroft Media

Wednesday, November 4, 2015

Va-Nuoc Nut Caves - the new wonders in Quang Binh

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Renowned for excellent pictures of the world’s largest cave of Son Doong, in Vietnam’s Quang Binh Province, American photographer Ryan Deboodt has also taken many impressive pictures of other miraculous caves in Vietnam, including Va and Nuoc Nut.









Saturday, October 31, 2015

New Year calendars to feature Son Doong Cave

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– Phuong Nam Printing Co. Ltd. held a ceremony last week to unveil its 2016 calendar designs with photos featuring astonishing scenes of the world’s renowned Son Doong Cave in Phong Nha-Ke Bang National Park in the central province of Quang Binh.
Nguyen Ha Quoc Anh, director of Phuong Nam Printing Co. Ltd., speaks at the ceremony held last week to present the company’s latest calendar designs for the New Year 2016 - Photo: Ngoc Minh

The company has picked photos of Son Doong for its calendars next year because the cave has made big headlines in both local and foreign media in 2015, especially since the American Broadcasting Company (ABC) aired live the breathtaking scenes inside the cave on its “Good Morning America” program in May.
Nguyen Ha Quoc Anh, director of the company and author of the photos, said the New Year calendars highlight scenic sites inside the biggest cave in the world discovered by the British Royal Cave Explorers’ Society in 2011, and the nearly En Cave.
Other New Year calendars of the company also promote the beauty of Vietnam and its people with photos and paintings about Vietnam’s traditional foods, craft villages, paper kites, transport means and Saigon as well as famous cities around the world.
In addition, the company will also publish more than ten sets of calendars with designs based on graduation projects of students at Van Lang University’s Faculty of Fine Arts. 
The designs include paintings of Vietnam’s traditional water puppetry, tourist attractions and folk games. 
SGT

Tuesday, October 27, 2015

Va and Nuoc Nut caves through American photographer’s lens

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 – Famous for taking photos inside Son Doong Cave, photographer Ryan Deboodt is also well-known for capturing impressive shots of the caves in the Phong Nha-Ke Bang National Park, including Va and Nuoc Nut caves.
Tours to explore Va and Nuoc Nut caves will be featured beginning July. It is considered to be new and attractive destinations for both domestic and foreign tourists, alike.
Some photos featuring the beauty of these two caves:


 Va Cave

Nuoc Nut Cave





Ryan Deboodt has lived in Ho Chi Minh City for three years and toured many places of interest throughout Vietnam

Monday, October 26, 2015

Tourism Agency backs Son Doong Cave cable-car project

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The Vietnam National Administration of Tourism said it supports a cable-car project for Son Doong Cave to meet demand by tourists to visit the world's largest cave.

Nguyen Van Tuan, chief of the Vietnam National Administration of Tourism, said Son Doong is now an international brand for Quang Binh Province, but concerns about the cave's delicate ecosystem have meant severe restrictions on the number of people who can visit at any one time.
"Tourists will be able to enjoy an overview of Phong Nha-Ke Bang National Park from the cable. When they reach designated areas, they can explore in limited areas," he said.
When the project was announced last year, many worried that it would affect the natural beauty of the cave and its environs. The proposed 10.6km-long cable system can carry 1,000 visitors an hour.
Authorities and investors said adventure tours would not be affected, as 80 UNESCO-recognised sites around the world have similar cable systems. 
The cable will improve the provincial tourism industry and create jobs for thousands of people. Moreover, the cable system will also help forest rangers protect the site from illegal loggers and fire.
Dtinews/VNN
 

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