Saturday, October 31, 2015

New Year calendars to feature Son Doong Cave

0 comments
– 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

0 comments
 – 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

0 comments
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

The incredible underworld in Vietnam

0 comments
– The lively and beautiful "underworld" of the caves of Thien Duong (Heaven), Phong Nha or Bich Dong - Tam Coc can surprise any visitor.

 Dau Go is a must-see destination on the tour of Ha Long Bay, Quang Ninh.

The stalactites inside the cave are so beautiful that each visitor can tell the story of his own about this fairy world.
Phong Nha - Ke Bang is one of the caves that both domestic and foreign tourists want to see once in their lifetime.
  The mysterious beauty of Phong Nha-Ke Bang Cave.
 Heaven (Quang Binh province) is the longest dry cave in Asia.
Inside the cave, you can imagine you are in a mystical palace with magnificent structure.
 Son Doong has recently attracted world attention as the largest cave in the world.
Son Doong ranked first in the list of the new destinations in the 21st Century, organized by Smithsonian.
The cave of Tu Lan (Quang Binh) is not as big as Son Doong, but its unique characteristics are also charming.

 The fairy landscape inside Tu Lan Cave.
 Va Cave is located in the heart of Phong Nha - Ke Bang National Park. It was discovered in 2000 but did not open for tourists until July this year.
The small door is covered with vines. To enter this cave, you need to have the support of experts. As soon as you step into the cave, you will see a fantastic, unreal world.

 To visit Huong Tich Cave, visitors have to pass the Yen River, climb to the top of the 900m mountain and walk for about 200 m.
After that long road, you will enjoy the incredible beauty inside the cave, which is called “the most beautiful cave in Vietnam”.

Cable car a threat to beauty of Son Doong cave

0 comments
Environmentalists have voiced their concern that a cable car system set up to serve tourists will spoil the natural beauty of the world’s largest cave.


Five months ago, the world was overwhelmed with reports about Vietnam’s Son Doong Cave broadcasted television channels in the US and Europe.

Located in Phong Nha – Ke Bang National Park in Quang Binh province, Son Doong, or ‘mountain river cave’ attracts people with its natural charm and wonderful primitive landscapes.

At that time, when local and foreign media all focused on describing the beauty and attractiveness of Son Doong, Lao Dong newspaper published an article titled ‘Niem tu hao va moi suy tu’ (pride and worry), warning that Son Doong’s beauty would be spoiled if it is unreasonably exploited for mass tourism.

“Imagine that in the future, people will flock to the primitive land, trample upon the trees and grass, drop litter and pollute the cave with thousands of things they bring. Will the current Son Doong be able to exist then?”

Quang Binh provincial authorities, however, have decided to build up a cable-car system to bring tourists to Son Doong.

VNAT’s General director Nguyen Van Tuan at the press conference on October 9 confirmed that a cable system would be set up to carry travelers to Son Doong. The system is designed to carry 1,000 visitors to Son Doong an hour.

He said that the cable-car system would not affect the landscapes and the ecosystem in the Phong Nha – Ke Bang National Park.

However, environmentalists do not believe that Son Doong will be safe if millions of people travel by cable car to Son Doong every year. Son Doong is attractive because it is primitive.

Son Doong is a precious treasure which needs to be cherished. Son Doong is attractive because it is behind a mountain to which not everyone can come. It challenges travelers who have a love of adventure and eagerness for discovery.

Son Doong is reserved for those who desire to explore, love travel and those who are willing to walk to reach the remote cave.

Son Doong is not the place for mass tourism, a destination for millions of people coming there in cable car in beautiful clothes just to take pictures, post images on Facebook and drop litter.

Ta Hoa Phuong from the Hanoi University of Natural Sciences said he opposes the plan to build cable car to bring tourists Son Doong, because it would spoil the rare and precious natural heritage of the world.

Lao Dong

Sunday, October 18, 2015

Son Doong cave among world’s top 15 unbelievable places

0 comments
The leading art, design and photography community website has cited Vietnam’s Son Doong Cave among top 15 unbelievable places that look like they are from another planet.


In the article’s introduction, the website wondered why people spend years training to be astronauts while they can explore strange new worlds right here on earth?
Boredpanda also stressed that the following destinations span practically every continent on Earth, so viewers can experience fantastic sites no matter where they live. 
Son Doong Cave is located in the UNESCO-recognized Phong Nha-Ke Bang National Park in Quang Binh Province, Viet Nam.
The mouth of Son Doong was first discovered by Ho Khanh, a resident of Son Trach Commune, Bo Trach District, in 1991. In 2009 he acted as a guide for an expedition by the British Cave Research Association led by Howard Limbert and his wife Deb.
That year the cave became known worldwide after being identified as the world's largest.
The five-kilometre-long cave, which is 150 meters high and 200 meters wide, has at least 150 individual caves, a dense subterranean jungle and several underground rivers.
Rounding on the list of top 15 are Fly Geyser of the US, Tianzi Moutains of China, Glowworm Cave of New Zealand, Pamukkale of Turkey, Zhangye Danxia Landforms of China, Baikal Lake of Russia, Dragonblood Trees of Yemen, Monte Roraima of Venezuela, Giants Causeway of Northern Ireland, Grand Prismatic Spring of the US, Naica Mine of Mexico, Red Beach of China, Glowing Beach of Maldives, and Antelope Canyon of the US.
Source: VNS

0 comments
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:








Son Doong Cave – great place to see in 21st century

0 comments
Son Doong Cave in the central province of Quang Binh recently overtook numerous world-renowned destinations to top the list of the 25 great places to see in the 21st century by the US magazine the Smithsonian.
Inside the Son Doong Cave (Photo: Ryan Deboodt)

The magazine described Son Doong cave in Viet Nam’s Phong Nha-Ke Bang National Park as big enough to “accommodate the Washington Monument” and “fit a pair of Boeing 747s side by side”.

“The cave is more than five miles long—about five times longer than its nearest competitor for the world’s longest, Deer Cave in Sarawak, Malaysia,” it wrote. “A shimmering blue river runs through it. Most spectacularly, a jungle flourishes under shafts of sunlight in stretches where the ceiling fell in long ago”.

The Smithsonian list also includes Cern, the God particle laboratory in Switzerland, a space line in New Mexico, a gorilla National Park in East Africa, the perfect place for watching stars in Chile and ice caves in Alaska.

Son Doong Cave, which scientists believe was formed 2-5 million years ago, was first discovered by a local resident in 1991.

In 2009, a group of British scientists from the British Cave Research Association prepared the cave for public access in a limited capacity, after extensively surveying the area.

Son Doong is at least 6.5 kilometres long, 200 metres wide and 150 metres high. Its largest chamber is a whopping 250 metres tall.

Vietnam's Infinite Cave - Hang Son Doong Cave

0 comments

Friday, October 16, 2015

Saudi Arabia Crown Prince discovers Son Doong Cave

0 comments
In the afternoon – February 11, 2014, at Saigon – Phong Nha hotel, Quang Binh People’s Committee celebrated a party for the Crown Prince of the Abu Dhabi Emirate, who has successfully conquered the world’s largest cave Son Doong, also was the first person to enter this cave in the year 2014.


According to the organizers, despite being an important person of the United Arab Emirates, Crown Prince Sheikh bin Zayed bin Sultan Al Nahyan has taken the dangerous adventure tour to discover Son Doong cave and follow strict regulations of this tour.
Mr. Tran Tien Dung, Vice Chairman of Quang Binh Province awarded the Crown Prince of the United Arab Emirates certificate for conquering Son Doong at the party.
Finishing the discovering journey, the Crown Prince along with four entourages repeatedly praised the beauty of Son Doong and the friendliness of the local people.
Reportedly, among seven countries of the United Arab Emirates, Abu Dhabi is the largest, most prosperous and most populous country. The Crown Prince Sheikh bin Zayed bin Sultan Al Nahyan (born in 1969) is famous not only for the rich as well as the collections of cars, luxury yachts but also being a dangerous adventure enthusiast.
Speaking at the party, the Crown Prince Sheikh bin Zayed bin Sultan Al Nahyan said this is the most meaningful trip of his around the world tours. Previously, he could not imagine that there was a huge and mysterious cave like that in the world. The experiences through his discovery can not described in words. For a while he feels he has reached the limits of nature.
He has the idea of introducing this cave on reputed newspapers in Arab as well as for his friends all over the world. At the same time, he will soon take his family to visit Son Doong in the most recent day.

Quang Binh to organize tourism month on caves discovery

0 comments
In June, the tourism month on caves discovery will take place in Quang Binh to promote local tourism products to domestic and international tourists and call for investment to social-economic development in the province. This is an activity of Quang Binh province responding to the National Tourism Year of the North Central Coast - Hue 2012.

The tourism month will include a series of diversified activities such as: opening tourism routes to discover new caves in Phong Nha – Ke Bang National Park (Rao Thuong – Hang En route, 1,500m Phong Nha cave at night, Hang En and Sinh Ton Valley route); art photography exhibition on Quang Binh’s natural landscapes; traditional boat race on Nhat Le river; Quang Binh’s cuisine week; public art festival; Vietnam – Laos – Thailand international trade fair…

To prepare for the tourism month, Quang Binh People's Committee directed departments, agencies, units to implement a number of activities as: preparing facilities to serve the boat race; developing content, theme of the public art festival; inviting enterprises to participate the trade fair; preparing photo books, DVDs to promote Quang Binh’s image to tourists…

In 2011, Phong Nha - Ke Bang National Park welcomed over 250,000 tourist arrivals, up 5.49%, tourism revenue reached VND 424 billion, up 5.31% over 2010. In 2012, caves discovery tourism has been chosen as a main point in tourism development strategy of Quang Binh. The completion of Huu Nghi 3 Bridge connecting Kham Muon province (Laos) and Nakhon Phanom province (Thailand) will open new opportunities for Quang Binh to enhance attracting international tourists by road. A number of tourism cooperation activities in the East- West Corridor will also be promoted and promises to bring economic- tourism benefits for Quang Binh in the near future.
Source : TITC

NHK TV to broadcast Son Doong cave reportage

0 comments
Japan’s NHK World TV will broadcast on June 25 a 3D scientific reportage on Vietnam’s Son Doong cave, which is classified as the largest cave in the world.
NHK TV’s broadcast will reach 60 countries around the world, according to the Foreign Affairs Department of the central province of Quang Binh , where Son Doong cave was found.

Department Deputy Director Nguyen Ngoc Quy said this scientific reportage is the first in the world using 3D technology.

The reportage, called “Let’s fell the grandness of nature”, has been made by Japan’s Kyodo film studio with assistance of Quang Binh province and the British Cave Research Association (BCRA).

Hang Son Doong (Mountain River Cave was announced as the largest in the world by BCRA, and selected as one of the most beautiful in the globe by the BBC news, according to Quy.

Son Doong cave was first spotted in Phong Nha-Ke Bang National Park by a local man named Ho Khanh in 1991.

The cave was then made known publicly as lately as in 2009 by a group of British scientists from BCRA, led by Howard Limbert, after their surveying trip in Phong Nha-Ke Bang Park.

According to Limbert, the cave is five times larger than the nearby Phong Nha cave, previously considered to be the largest cave in Vietnam.

Son Doong cave is found to have a length of at least 6.5km. It is estimated to be 200m in width and 150m in height. The largest chamber of the cave is judged to be 250m in height.

Scientists have also discovered a great number of stalactites in astonishingly extraordinary shapes and also primitive forests in the cave.
Source : VNA - 06/08/2011

Ho Khanh, a local farmer and biggest cave in the world

0 comments
Twenty years after he stumbled on the discovery, a local farmer leads a British caving team to the find of the century
A team of British cavers recently announced record-breaking news – the discovery in Quang Binh Province of the largest cave in the world.
But the presence of the British team has eclipsed one very important figure in the story – 40-year-old Ho Khanh – a local man and guide for the expedition who says he first found the cave nearly 20 years ago, but lost it again.
Back to the start
Today the forty-year-old farmer mans a tea stall in a village on the edge of Phong Nha-Ke Bang National Park. "I first found the cave 18 years ago, in 1991," he says.
"I was out collecting firewood near the national park. My family were very poor, so I decided to go deeper into the forest to try and find some aloe. The resin is used to make perfume and it’s very valuable. Not many people went that far into the forest at the time because they were scared of the wild animals."
After walking for about 20km Khanh says he lost his way. Clouds started gathering in the sky, so he decided to look for shelter.
"I sat down with my back to a huge boulder. Then something strange happened. I heard the sound of a strong wind and running water coming from behind me."
Khanh went to investigate and found the entrance to an enormous cave, with a wide river flowing out of it.
"I was very surprised. I thought I knew many caves in this region, but this one was so different and seemed to be untouched by man. It was pitch black, but judging by the feeling of the air, I thought I was walking into a huge space. The strong wind blowing felt like something from the underworld."
With no ropes or lights, Khanh did not venture further into the cave. A day after he’d first set out, he arrived back home.
"I didn’t have any aloe, but in my mind I had the image of a great cave."
Khanh’s story spread like wildfire, but not everyone believed him.
"I wanted to prove my word, but I couldn’t remember the way to the cave. It was a wild place, with no human tracks."
Eventually, the story became legend. Khanh quit his dream of becoming rich from aloe and went back to doing his daily chores: collecting fire wood and farming. But he never gave up on the hope that one day he would find the cave again.
All is not lost
It wasn’t until one morning in early winter, 2006, that Khanh’s cave dream was rekindled. A group of cavers from Britain, on a trip to find new caves in the Phong Nha – Ke Bang region, came to ask Khanh for help, as they had heard about his discovery 15 years before.
Khanh agreed to guide the team to find the legendary cave, but after three days in the jungle, Khanh and the team were still at a loss.
"I just couldn’t remember where it was," he says.
There were some perks. On their expedition, the group did find 11 previously unrecorded caves. The British team even named one of them after the farmer.
"One of my favourite caves that we found on our trip had a lake and many beautiful stalactites that sparkled in the light. We called it Thai Hoa, after my daughter."
The team returned to the park for two more expeditions, but each time were beaten by the density of the jungle. Finally the cavers gave in and left, asking Khanh to contact them if he found it again.
In a final effort to recover his memory, Khanh headed to the jungle one cold winter’s morning in 2009.
"I stopped by a big boulder. There was the same strong wind, the sound of water running – I knew I’d found the cave at long last. I can’t describe my feelings at the time, I was so overjoyed."
The team immediately came back to Viet Nam and followed Khanh on a six-hour treck deep into the jungle. On April 14 they found what they were looking for.
Measuring 200m high and 150m wide, the new cave, named Son Doong (Mountain River Cave) by Khanh, is believed to be almost twice the size of the current record holder, Deer Cave in Sarawak Malaysia.
The cave is in Phong Nha-Ke Bang grotto system, which belongs to the Phong Nha-Ke Bang National Park. It is a limestone region of 2,000sq.km and borders another limestone area in Hin Nammo in Laos.
According to Adam Spillane, a member of the team, the cave is over 4km long at present but the end of the main passage continues on. The team were unable to go further because of a calcite wall more than 45m high halted their progress.
"Khanh has been a guide for the team for many expeditions in the jungle to explore caves. This year he took the team to a cave which had never been explored before, not even by local people," Spillane says.
The cave was a thing of overwhelming beauty and grandeur, spokesman for the team, Haward Limbirt says.
"We plan to return to Viet Nam later to complete our expedition of the cave and conduct a full survey," he says.
Back to normal
After the team returned to Britain, Khanh settled back into his everyday routine.
"I just think about how I’m going to earn enough money to feed my family. I only earn VND800,000 (US$50) per month."
His discovery has yet to reap financial gains, Khanh says.
"We are still as poor as we were before. Actually, I still haven’t paid off the VND10 million ($550) loan I borrowed ten years ago to develop our farm and animal husbandry."
Khanh’s obsession with the cave has been hard on his nearest and dearest, his wife Le Thi Nghia says.
"Sometimes I get angry because he just wants to go to the jungle and look at caves, but I understand he is very passionate about it. After all of this, I’m proud of him."
Nghia says the only thing she asks for is recognition from the Government and the press for what her husband has done for the country.
Source : VietNamNet/VNS - 06/29/2009

Experts recommend that Son Doong cave not be opened to tourists

0 comments
The 20-member exploration team joined explorers from the British Cave Research Association (BCRA) and the Hanoi University for Natural Sciences. The explorers penetrated an additional 530 meters into the Quang Binh province cave, increasing the part that has been surveyed to 7.2 kilometers. They confirmed that Son Doong has two entrances, unlike the mammoth karst caves in Phong Nha-Ke Bang National Park (Quang Binh).
Team leader Howard Limbert called Son Doong unsuitable for tourism. It is too deep and its river flows too fast for the safety of unskilled visitors. Thus, although the cave is not very far from the western branch of the Ho Chi Minh Highway, it should be preserved in its natural state, he said.
A documentary about Son Doong will be aired after this survey, so adventure fans can look forward to exploring the cave on TV.
In mid-2009, the British Royal Cave Society announced the discovery of the world’s largest cave by Ho Khanh, a man in Quang Binh, who had named it Son Doong. The cave is 2 kilometers in length, 150 meters at the highest point, and 90 meters wide.
Before this site was discovered, Deer Cave in Malaysia was recognized as the world’s biggest cave at 100 meters high, 90 meters wide and 2 kilometers long.
Source : VietNamNet/PV - 03/26/2010

World's largest grotto unveiled in Vietnam

0 comments
The cave is named Son Doong and was found by a local man named Khanh in 2008. However, it was not explored and assessed by experts until a group of explorers from the UK, led by Howard Limbirt, made a survey in Phong Nha-Ke Bang from April 10-14, 2009.

According to explorers, the way to this cave is very difficult. From the HCM City Highway, they had to walk for six hours and pass 8-10km of forest to reach the cave.

Howard Limbirt said that this cave is five times larger than the current Phong Nha cave, the biggest cave in Vietnam, and even bigger than Malaysia’s Deer, the current greatest cave in the world (2km length, 100m height, and 90m width).

The Son Doong Cave, therefore, has been proclaimed the largest in the world (over 5km length, 200m height, 150m width).

On April 22, the British Royal exploration group reported the exploration results in the western mountainous area of the central province of Quang Binh to the local authorities.

Howard Limbrit said within one month, his group had discovered an additional 20 caves, raising the total number of grottos in Phong Nha-Ke Bang to 150.

He said each grotto has its own beauty, but he is impressed by Ca Xai. This cave is near the Vietnam-Laos border. It is very deep and has a big lake inside. Explorers measured the depth of this lake, but they had only 200m of rope and the end didn’t reach the lake bed.

Howard Limbirt warned that this cave is not ready for tourism at present. After returning to the UK, the group will finalise the file and release a programme to introduce their discoveries.

The British explorer said that they will return to Quang Binh in 2011 to continue their promising adventure there.
Source : VietNamNet/TP - 04/26/2009
 

Copyright 2008 All Rights Reserved Revolution Two Church theme by Brian Gardner Converted into Blogger Template by Bloganol dot com