In the hectic lead up to Tet I took some time out to have a ME day :) Luckily, this is a very easy task living in Hanoi.
I went to the local spa. I don't really need to say more.. but I will anyway...
I began with herbal indulgence, bathing in a large wooden barrel filled with a steaming mint and herb concoction. After relaxing it was into a spa bath with a tea, herb and ginger soak. Then shuffled into a steamy sauna with a ginger foot bath/soak ready and waiting.
After the cool shower was divine, being towel dried by someone else, a wee bit awkward. But they are too brisk for you to have a second thought. Then whisked into a pleasant smelling room for the massage of a lifetime.
Hot towels, a cucumber facepack, head, face, arms, legs, back, stomach everything massage. All finished off with a nice warm shower and ginger lemon tea to revitalise you.
All for 150, 000 (a little less than $10).
I'm liquid... and doing this next week!
I forget the name ~
78 Duong Yen Phu
Hanoi
Thursday, January 22
Drumming at Puku Cafe
It seems our group is now called, da da da...The Bongos! As that's how we were introduced by the Vietnamese MC.
We were invited to play at a fund raising event, raising money to ensure kids in remote villages have access to schooling, including transportation, books, pens, clothing and proper health and nutrition.
Puku Cafe is a hidey hole cafe, frequented by expats and locals, and well known in Hanoi for ambient decor and ridiculously good food! Last night it was packed to the rafters with musicians, photographic exhibits and Vietnamese supporting a great cause.
Afterward, the group, still in a drumming mood, wandered down to Hoan Kiem lake to play in the green evening lights...until the police came....which is always to be expected!
Puku Cafe
60 Hang Trong
Hanoi
Photo The Bongos from Dat Tie Suc and David Pricco.
We were invited to play at a fund raising event, raising money to ensure kids in remote villages have access to schooling, including transportation, books, pens, clothing and proper health and nutrition.
Puku Cafe is a hidey hole cafe, frequented by expats and locals, and well known in Hanoi for ambient decor and ridiculously good food! Last night it was packed to the rafters with musicians, photographic exhibits and Vietnamese supporting a great cause.
Afterward, the group, still in a drumming mood, wandered down to Hoan Kiem lake to play in the green evening lights...until the police came....which is always to be expected!
Puku Cafe
60 Hang Trong
Hanoi
Photo The Bongos from Dat Tie Suc and David Pricco.
The Art of Tet
As Hanoi disintegrates into Tet madness, Vietnamese scramble in preparation for the most important festival of the year. Best described as Thanksgiving, Christmas, New Years, moon worshiping and everybody's birthday combined!
The Vietnamese dedicate an entire week to this new year celebration, a time for family, food and harmony to welcome in a new year. It heralds the beginning of the lunar calendar and the beginning of Spring. Surprisingly, Vietnamese follow the solar calendar during the year and on the first night of the full moon they switch to the lunar calendar.
All seemingly confusing, so don't bother asking what actual 'day' Tet is. Just know you'll probably be given 10 - 12 days off sometime between the 17 - 30 Jan. It's really time to simply go with the flow.
Hanoi has a dream-like quality, floating through the end of the solar year. Hanoians are shopping to impress with delicacies, new clothing, new furniture, traditional cumquats trees. Driving in Hanoi has become like walking through an orange grove. Supernaturally bright orange cumquat trees and peach blossoms lining the streets or strapped to the back of motorbikes.
The myth or superstition attached to these plants is probably similar to the one that recommends releasing a fish at this time of year to appease the Kitchen Gods!! hehe. I hadn't thought about the fact there might be kitchen gods out there...ever.
Traditionally expats take this opportunity to leave! Flying of to more exotic locations like Thailand or Indonesia. Considering that during Tet, the whole of Hanoi shuts down and closes up shop, it may have been wiser to flee the sinking ship. But since the budget doesn't allow for Thai beaches just yet, my first Tet will be spent with the few friends left in the city.
I'll be soaking up the quiet ambience of the surprisingly peaceful city and relaxing!
The Vietnamese dedicate an entire week to this new year celebration, a time for family, food and harmony to welcome in a new year. It heralds the beginning of the lunar calendar and the beginning of Spring. Surprisingly, Vietnamese follow the solar calendar during the year and on the first night of the full moon they switch to the lunar calendar.
All seemingly confusing, so don't bother asking what actual 'day' Tet is. Just know you'll probably be given 10 - 12 days off sometime between the 17 - 30 Jan. It's really time to simply go with the flow.
Hanoi has a dream-like quality, floating through the end of the solar year. Hanoians are shopping to impress with delicacies, new clothing, new furniture, traditional cumquats trees. Driving in Hanoi has become like walking through an orange grove. Supernaturally bright orange cumquat trees and peach blossoms lining the streets or strapped to the back of motorbikes.
The myth or superstition attached to these plants is probably similar to the one that recommends releasing a fish at this time of year to appease the Kitchen Gods!! hehe. I hadn't thought about the fact there might be kitchen gods out there...ever.
Traditionally expats take this opportunity to leave! Flying of to more exotic locations like Thailand or Indonesia. Considering that during Tet, the whole of Hanoi shuts down and closes up shop, it may have been wiser to flee the sinking ship. But since the budget doesn't allow for Thai beaches just yet, my first Tet will be spent with the few friends left in the city.
I'll be soaking up the quiet ambience of the surprisingly peaceful city and relaxing!
Chuc Mung Nam Moi!
Monday, January 19
Spring...is that you?
Today the weather changed, and just like that it feels like spring.
How bizarre.
We've had all of ONE month of winter (of course I exaggerate, it was actually two) and of that month only one week was cold...like proper cold...mitten weather.
Temperamental at the best of times!
Anyway, the good news is that we've had the most gorgeous sun filled days recently. I've been spending each one painting the walls of a friends apartment. He lives in a gorgeous space, so peaceful.
The joys of living in Vietnam..paintbrush in one hand, wine in the other. Sunny afternoons in the middle of winter.
I suggest anyone with a creative urge visit Hanoi...a city where if you feel like a rainbow, tree drum, spiraling pattern on your walls (and you have access to paint), your wish is easily a reality.
Anyway... Happy Faux Spring! I suppose...
How bizarre.
We've had all of ONE month of winter (of course I exaggerate, it was actually two) and of that month only one week was cold...like proper cold...mitten weather.
Temperamental at the best of times!
Anyway, the good news is that we've had the most gorgeous sun filled days recently. I've been spending each one painting the walls of a friends apartment. He lives in a gorgeous space, so peaceful.
The joys of living in Vietnam..paintbrush in one hand, wine in the other. Sunny afternoons in the middle of winter.
I suggest anyone with a creative urge visit Hanoi...a city where if you feel like a rainbow, tree drum, spiraling pattern on your walls (and you have access to paint), your wish is easily a reality.
Anyway... Happy Faux Spring! I suppose...
Drummer Girl
Oh hello, here's me playing drums..and trying to look sober :) Last night we played spiraling beats in an upstairs studio cafe. A soulful Hai Phong/Israeli band with a blind singer that was amazing, some poetry and a packed crowd.
And..free red wine..my cup overfloweth and my tongue looseth..but the beats stayed good and the dancers kept coming forward (with more wine) all night.
Good news is regardless of the state of the subects, the photography remained excellent all night :)
and here's my photos.
And..free red wine..my cup overfloweth and my tongue looseth..but the beats stayed good and the dancers kept coming forward (with more wine) all night.
Good news is regardless of the state of the subects, the photography remained excellent all night :)
and here's my photos.
Photo Tab Drumming from Phong Le :)
Saturday, January 17
Harvest Festival
The organic farm held their first harvest festival today! Action for the City and the community arranged a big do this month and invited us to play. I've just hopped off the motorbike and I still can't feel my backside...hahaha.
The morning began in the fields armed with machetes and plastic bags. Kids and dogs running around rows of corn and trellises. We walked into a melee of families, foreigners and farmers sharing a home cooked lunch in the commune courtyard under a pink gazebo. Silver pots bubbling with vegetable soup, colorful sweet sticky rice, fried nems, fresh spring rolls and yes, more corn, but oh so good corn :)
After lunch and harvesting we played drums and listened to the farmers sing traditional songs and tell us of their stories and struggles. For most families it was a big gamble to go organic, some pulling up their only source of income, rice paddies, to grow vegetables for the first time.
I was surprised to learn organic farming in Vietnam is rare. Remember Australia's reaction to the introduction of DDT? We loved it! That's about the point Vietnam is at the moment. These farmers are incredibly brave to go against the grain, so to speak... an extremely un-Vietnamese thing to do.
So, I'm home.. feeling tanned from winter sun, with good colour on my cheeks, full of open space energy and buzzing from all day smiles!!!
Mmmmmmmm!
Click here for Rau Thanh Xuan website
Festival Photos
Click here to take a look!
Photo Women Harvesting from Lan Anh.
The morning began in the fields armed with machetes and plastic bags. Kids and dogs running around rows of corn and trellises. We walked into a melee of families, foreigners and farmers sharing a home cooked lunch in the commune courtyard under a pink gazebo. Silver pots bubbling with vegetable soup, colorful sweet sticky rice, fried nems, fresh spring rolls and yes, more corn, but oh so good corn :)
After lunch and harvesting we played drums and listened to the farmers sing traditional songs and tell us of their stories and struggles. For most families it was a big gamble to go organic, some pulling up their only source of income, rice paddies, to grow vegetables for the first time.
I was surprised to learn organic farming in Vietnam is rare. Remember Australia's reaction to the introduction of DDT? We loved it! That's about the point Vietnam is at the moment. These farmers are incredibly brave to go against the grain, so to speak... an extremely un-Vietnamese thing to do.
So, I'm home.. feeling tanned from winter sun, with good colour on my cheeks, full of open space energy and buzzing from all day smiles!!!
Mmmmmmmm!
Click here for Rau Thanh Xuan website
Festival Photos
Click here to take a look!
Photo Women Harvesting from Lan Anh.
Tuesday, January 13
House ahoy!
Well, the new year has begun with a big bang of positivity! Exactly the way I'd like it to stay.
I'm elated because I've found an apartment in Tay Ho..it's incredible.. full of light, with a view out over the water. Out the back there's even a roof top space which has the potential to become the perfect garden!
A French designer who has lived in Hanoi for 10 years is moving on in a few months. We've met and she's decided I am the perfect person to take over her gorgeous home, I agree with her.
The place comes with a few..well, quirks..unfurnished means completely bare. This means I have some serious shopping to do ..gas cooker, fridge, washing machine and all the boring stuff that makes a house livable ~ plus plants, cushions, objects d'art (all the stuff that makes shopping fun).
Only Jan and Feb and March to go. More budgeting...
But all in all, this Cancerian is one very happy little homemaking crab.
The best place in Hanoi for bamboo furniture is
Quang Trung street
Photo of my apartment to be.
I'm elated because I've found an apartment in Tay Ho..it's incredible.. full of light, with a view out over the water. Out the back there's even a roof top space which has the potential to become the perfect garden!
A French designer who has lived in Hanoi for 10 years is moving on in a few months. We've met and she's decided I am the perfect person to take over her gorgeous home, I agree with her.
The place comes with a few..well, quirks..unfurnished means completely bare. This means I have some serious shopping to do ..gas cooker, fridge, washing machine and all the boring stuff that makes a house livable ~ plus plants, cushions, objects d'art (all the stuff that makes shopping fun).
Only Jan and Feb and March to go. More budgeting...
But all in all, this Cancerian is one very happy little homemaking crab.
The best place in Hanoi for bamboo furniture is
Quang Trung street
Photo of my apartment to be.
Thursday, January 1
Happy New Year!
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