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Tourists
visiting Sapa Township in northern Lao Cai province in the
springtime could hardly forget the vast number of blossoming
peach trees.
Yet, the
distinctive beauty of these trees fades with each passing
year, as locals cut them down to sell.
The big
garden of peach flowers in several communes surrounding Ham
Rong Mountain bustle with tree purchases in preparation for
Tet (lunar New Year).
A Ham Rong
village patriarch, Ma A Chau, sighed as he said: “There were
hundreds of households planting peach trees for fruit, but
today they just cut the flower branches and often even the
trees themselves to sell. The picturesque gardens are going
to disappear.
Chau added
his regrets that local authorities had done nothing to
prevent this.
There has
been an increasing trend for people in cities, parricularly
Hanoi , to buy a peach flower branch or tree taken from the
forest, despite prices that are triple or quadruple that of
a tree cultivated in the capital city. The reason given is
that the colour of flowers are more beautiful, and the shape
of trees from forests look more “natural.”
According to
merchants, the consumer trend is to purchase a big tree,
which pushes prices up. The big profit is the impetus for
local people to sell their trees.
Ly My Chan in
Ta Phin commune regretted the selling off of the trees, but
also said she would sell more since the income would help
her have a better Tet.
About two
weeks before the lunar New Year, peach trees and branches
are transported by trucks to cities.
Nguyen Van
Cong, former head of the Sapa Forest Rangers, said there was
nothing that his group could do to prevent local people from
cutting trees, since peach trees are not classified as
precious timber to be protected.
Meanwhile,
Nguyen Van Phuc, deputy chairman of Sapa People’s Council,
said locals should not be blamed for harvesting wild peach
trees.
Phuc said
that peach flowers had become a hot commodity over the
years, and locals had the right to sell their products.
“They used to
sell peach fruit, but it did not bring much profit, so it is
quite understandable if they switch to selling flowers for a
bigger profits,” he said.
Phuc did
admit that fewer peach flowers did somehow affect the
landscape in an area that is important for tourism.
He added that
local authorities recognise the importance of peach flowers
to tourism, but the only thing they can do is to encourage
planters to keep their peach trees and increase their income
by planning medicinal herbs and other flowers. (VNA)
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