This tray of traditional sweets is not for the faint-hearted. Each sweet has been prepared and wrapped by hand - nothing mass produced here. The candied ginger is as hot as chilli and the mashed fig and stoneless dates have been mixed with a sour sauce that leaves Haribo sours standing. I cannot understand why any Vietnamese men who have been brought up on these don't have hairs on their chests ........ or maybe these sweets are the reason for them being hairless!
No businesses are open; no shops, no buses, no bars and very few restaurants. There is hardly any traffic on the road. Half of Saigon has left the city to return the land of their ancestors. Vietnam is a newly industrialised and urbanised nation so all families still have parents, grandparents, cousins, brothers and sisters in the countryside and provincial towns.
Prior to the new moon night flower markets pop up all over the city in parks, street corners, bridges; in fact anywhere where there is an empty space to display Hoa Mai trees, yellow crysanthemums, marigolds, cherry blossom, bougainvilla and miniature orange trees in fruit.
Vietnamese travel from all over the world to return home to their ancestors so it's impossible to get an internal flight, a train, hotel room or coach ticket unless you booked it months ago.
Local people, who have lived in our lane for generations, have smartened up the family graves by the side of the road, by burning back the weeds and giving the stonework a lick of paint.
The neighbourhood communist party office have hung banners from lamp posts on the main road and hung some jolly 'hammer and sickle' bunting across the lane
Everyone cleans their homes, paints the front wall. scrubs the yard and chucks out rubbish and old clothes in preparation for the new year.
in Vietnam the bins are emptied every night - yes, you heard me- EVERY night! the truck comes round with a team of 'sorters' on top and they sort all the glass, plastics, cans, tins, paper and cardboard. Most housekeepers enjoy making a bit of extra cash by taking bags of recycling down to the depot.
I remember, as a child, there used to be a penny to threepence deposit on lemonade bottles that encouraged people to take them back to the shop for recycling. Some young PhD economist will revive that idea as a revolution in eco-living one of these fine days and all the over 50's will roll their eyes in a 'granny suck eggs' kind of way!! Oh well.
Saigon city centre has really rolled out the party with street lights, flags, pedestrianised streets and by turning one of the main avenues into a fantastic garden and floral display with fountains, a waterfall, and acres of glorious flowers. There is a book festival and a sidewalk exhibition of all the different ethnic groups in Vietnam. Everyone comes out to pose and pout in front of the displays and to promenade in their best clothes or traditional outfits.
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At ten o'clock at night we walked a mile or so to the Thu Thiem bridge to secure a good spot to view the midnight fireworks over the city skyline. they were fantastic and the gathered crowd whooped and cheered as they grew bigger and brighter and higher.
Hi Bridget, thanks for the email and link to this blog; it's fantastic to hear that you're enjoying Vietnam and getting involved in lots of different things. This blog is wonderful, love the stories with the photos and you're right... the fireworks looked amazing!! Lots of love, Andy
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