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 Transporting fruit on
Cai Be River.
 Harvest time in Tien
Giang Province.
 Raising tra
and basa fish in Mekong River
Delta.
 Processing
tra and basa fish for export in Hung
Vuong Enterprise.
 Building the cable- stayed bridge
spanning the Tien River linking with
Ben Tre
Province.
 200 year-old Vinh Trang Pagoda with
unique architectural features.
 Tourists are interested in souvenirs made
by locals.
 Dong Tam snake- raising farm – An
attraction for tourists.
| Since the 17th
century, the fertile land in the North of the Tien River has been
reclaimed and developed by generations of inhabitants into an area with
rich rice fields, fruit gardens, and busy trade along the river banks.
Gradually, the brisk market towns of My Tho and Go Cong emerged in the
fertile Cuu Long (Mekong) River Delta. This area is Tien Giang
Province.
Taking a ride for 75km from Ho Chi Minh City along
Highway 1A you will arrive at My Tho City, then going further you will visit Cho Gao
and Go Cong Districts. Turning to Cai Lay and Cai Be Districts, you will see the
My Thuan Bridge spanning the Tien River to Vinh Long Province. The second biggest cable-stayed bridge across
the Tien River to Ben Tre Province, which is under construction, will replace the Rach
Mieu Ferry. With asphalted roads running to all hamlets and a series of natural
and man-made canals, Tien Giang Province has a convenient land and water-way transport system to
all communes, districts and other provinces in the Mekong River Delta and to Ho Chi
Minh City.
An area abundant in
agricultural and aquatic products
Tien Giang Province is a
granary. Apart from a stable output of 1.2 million tonnes of rice per
year, of which more than 300,000 tonnes are for export, Tien Giang ranks
first among the provinces in raising and providing pigs with a herd of
more than 500,000 hybrid pigs that yield lean meat. Each year, the
province provides 800,000-plus tonnes of fruits to domestic and foreign
markets, ranking first in the output as well as fruit cultivation area
(72,500 hectares). Many farmers specializing in growing mango, mangosteen,
rambutan, star-apple, durian and longan trees apply high technology in
selecting strains and in farming, which results in bumper harvests. The
names of some fruit-growing areas in the province have become familiar
brands, such as Hoa Loc mango (in Cai Be District), Vinh Kim star-apple
(in Chau Thanh District), Go Cong cherry, Co Co shaddock, Tan Phuoc
pineapple and Cho Gao blue dragon.
Tien Giang Province has many
natural fishing grounds that yield high productivity. In recent years, the
province has developed the raising of catfish, tiger prawns and other
valuable aquatic products. In Go Cong District, fishermen, who were
engaged in fetching oysters on the thick alluvial coast, have raised
oysters on 2,000 ha of alluvial grounds that yield high output. Each year
the whole province produces about 120,000 tonnes of aquatic products.
Since 1990, the Province’s GDP has increased annually 10% and the export
turnover in 2005 is estimated to reach USD 145 million.
An attractive tourist
spot
It does not take much time to
go from Ho Chi Minh City to Tien Giang Province. Visitors can take a
cruise on the large Tien River or take a boat ride steered by a young girl
wearing a loose-fitting blouse and a conical hat, through canals shaded by
water coconut trees. They will have a chance to visit fruit gardens and
enjoy the tastes of ripened fruit right off the tree. In Thoi Son Island,
they will visit villages with orchards where they can taste the local
traditional food prepared by villagers and enjoy a traditional opera
performance, lovely songs and ditties of Southern Vietnam as well witness
the making of local traditional handicrafts.
Going along the Tien River
upstream, visitors will visit Cai Be floating market where hundreds of
boats and canoes gather to sell and buy the local products. Along the
banks of the river, service shops are always crowded with people.
Sometimes there is clear bell ringing from Cai Be Church built in the
early 20th century.
This year, Tien Giang Province
is expected to receive more than 500,000 domestic visitors and 300,000
foreign tourists. In the atmosphere of an area criss-crossed with many
rivers and canals as well as fruit gardens, they will visit historical
relics, temples and pagodas, such as the cultural relic of Oc Eo in Cho
Gao District and learn about the history of this area through valuable
exhibits full of Phu Nam culture in the early Christian Era. They also
visit the historical monument of the Rach Gam-Xoai Mut Victory, where they
will be told about the renowned naval battle of national hero Quang Trung,
and visit 200-year-old Vinh Trang Pagoda which has Asian-European
architecture, to contemplate the quintessence of the sculptural art of
Southern Vietnam.
There are other historical
places, such as the royal mausoleum inscribed with the merit of the family
of queen mother Tu Du, who was the grandmother of King Tu Duc, in
reclaiming Go Cong area. Buu Lam Pagoda in My Tho City, where patriots
Nguyen Sinh Sac and Phan Chu Trinh once stayed, is the most typical
ancient work of the Viet people in the Southern plain in the
19th century. The provincial characteristics are also reflected
through the festivals to commemorate the Ap Bac Victory and Nam Ky
Uprising, the worshipping ceremony to honour national heroes Truong Dinh
and Nguyen Huu Huan and the traditional festivals of the Viet, Khmer, Hoa
and Cham ethnic groups.
Tien Giang Province also boasts
Dong Tam snake-raising station that provides venoms for making medicines
and an ecological zoo where different genes of rare and precious animals
in the Southern area are conserved and there is a museum of almost all
species of pythons and snakes in Vietnam.
|
 Visitors enjoying
Southern specialities and folk songs.
|
Tien Giang
Province: Area:
2,236sq.km. Population: 1,668,000
people. Geography: It borders on
Long An Province to the North, Ben Tre Province to the South,
Dong Thap Province to the West and the sea to the
East. Administrative units: My
Tho City and seven districts including Cai Be, Cai Lay, Tan
Phuoc, Chau Thanh, Cho Gao, Go Cong Dong and Go Cong
Tay. Climate: Temperate with the dry and
rainy
seasons. | |
Story: Le Cuong - Photos: Kim Son, Le Cuong |