Flowers on the water




Farmers in Sa Dec Flower Village take care of their daisies. Driving into Sa Dec, you can see what looks like endless rows of potted flowers on wooden racks nearby the rice fields.

As the Tet (Lunar New Year) draws closer, Sa Dec is transforming itself from a sleepy little town on the banks of the Tien River into the Mekong Delta’s mammoth flower market.

The Tien, the Mekong River’s main distributary, flows quietly through Sa Dec, a popular Mekong Delta destination during the winter months that make up the town’s high flower season.

Sa Dec’s outer villages are abuzz: gardeners are busy pruning and watering pots of apricot trees, orchids, roses, daisies, marigolds, cockscombs, hollyhocks and nearly 1,000 other kinds of flowers that will be on display in festival-like settings during the run-up to Tet.

For years, Sa Dec flowers and bonsai trees have provided local farmers solid incomes – up to several hundred million dong per hectare – while also drawing a blend of curious foreign and Vietnamese tourists.

The best place to visit during and before Tet is the town’s Tan Quy Dong Ward, the Sa Dec’s flower-growing cradle.

Business blossoms

More than 100 years ago, Tan Quy Dong rice farmers took advantage of their free time after the harvest at the end of the year to grow flowers with which they decorated their homes during Tet.

The flower growers became known for the generousness, giving out the multi-colored buds of their labor to their friends, families and neighbors.

Gradually, floriculture in Tan Quy Dong bloomed and flower fields expanded across the ward. The busiest time is before Tet, when the gardens and orchards surrounding Tan Quy Dong bloom like a quilt blanket filled with all the colors of the horticultural rainbow.

Tran Van Thang from the Sa Dec Association of Ornamental Plant and Pet Tenders said that a few decades ago only 30-40 families grew flowers as a business. “But now the number has increased to thousands,” he said.

What is now known semiofficially as the Sa Dec Flower Village covers nearly 300 hectares in buds, blossoms and petals. Certainly the Mekong Delta’s flower hub, the area is now also one of the country’s largest flower-growing regions, with Sa Dec specialties now shipping abroad to China, Laos and Cambodia. Luckily, Sa Dec is known to have “four springs” so seasonality is never a problem.

Fields of dreams

Driving into Sa Dec, you can see what looks like endless rows of potted flowers on wooden racks nearby the rice fields. Visitors are free to stroll the paths between the flower gardens on foot or wander the orchards by bicycle.

Local families usually have no problem showing off their prized plants, and many are more than willing to give impromptu tours or invite wide-eyed guests home for tea.

Typically, Sa Dec farmers grow flowers in bamboo pots filled with soil and burned rice husks that are hung on racks above their flooded fields. Looking out at the fields, you can see farmers gliding by their rice and flowers on boats as they water the tops of the plants.

Sa Dec is 140 kilometers from HCMC and is easily accessible by road. From HCMC, travel southwest along National Road 1. After crossing the My Thuan Bridge, turn right on National Road 80 and a pleasant 30-45 minute drive along the river peppered with brick kilns brings you right to the heart of Sa Dec.

BONSAI BONANZA

About 100 km south of Hanoi, a few villages in Nam Dinh Province become virtual bonsai forests every Tet season.

Just outside the provincial capital town of Nam Dinh, we crossed the Do Quan Bridge and drove along the dike bordering the Red River for about seven km to La Dien and Vi Khe villages in Dien Xa Commune, Nam Truc District. There, we found bonsai heaven.

A friend in La Dien Village welcomed us at his garden. Each plant was an incredible work of art. There were pines, figs, banyans, and many other bonsais. Our friend Thien’s favorite two trees were his the long (dragon form) sanh and si trees, which belong to the banyan family. They are the most valuable in his garden and he’s trimmed and shaped them over the years to resemble dragons. “They are nearly twenty years old and now must be worth a hundred million dong,” said the expert gardener.

There was also a small nursery in the corner of his orchard. He said that while he often bought nurslings from neighboring districts, he and many fellow bonsai specialists also proffered to keep their own nurseries.

“It is very important to choose a good nursling,” he said. “A skilled artist can see good form in a nursling very early on and he knows what he will do with it right from the start.”

Besides the quiet work of the artists in the garden, and Thien’s neat and zen-like “sculpting” of the plants, there was also a hustle and bustle around La Dien and Vi Khe. Traders and transporters were scurrying about, buying, selling, loading and unloading plants here and there.

Reported by Chi Nhan – Quang Thi – Phong Lan

Others News
Third int’l fireworks contest to light up Da Nang skies
Balloon flights offer bird’s eye view of Nha Trang
Da Lat water music stage set to make a splash
Across the three Vietnams
Crossroads of culture
Vietnam’s biggest casino opens in Da Nang
Laissez-faire dining
Hanoi: land of lakes
Indochina Airlines has license revoked
Vietnam domestic flights to cost more
HCMC flower festival the largest ever
Valentine flowers to welcome Year of the Tiger
When dense forests clear the mind
Tet traditions bring tourists to central region despite slow year
Blending in with the times
Da Lat’s bushels of blossoms
World of wetlands
Dak Nong’s lesser-known falls
One in seven Hoi An visitors come again
The edge of nirvana
Sail to Sunny Valley
Central noodle dish in Can Tho
Tranquil mountain hideaway
Stories flowing in the water
Da Lat Flower Festival rescheduled for next year
Hoi An to host Japanese exchange
Wetland wonderland
Hotel chain launches toll-free hotline for reservations
Underwater wonder
A natural break
 

Vietnam Tour | Cambodia Travel | Mekong Boat trips| Indochina Travel |South Vietnam Tours|Laos Travel|| Sapa Tours | Vietnam Travel