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Package tours are short on originality
A lot of Vietnamese travelers complain that
there’s no point in going to the same place twice. The travel agencies and
localities don’t have anything new to offer.
Mrs. Khang loves Nha Trang very much, but this year she’s going to Phan Thiet.
talked her family members into skipping it this summer. “If we go to Nha Trang,
we will do the things we’ve done every year – going to the beach, swimming,
which we did last summers: bathing in the sea, bathing in mud, riding the cable
car out to the island, water sports. “There’s nothing new,” Khang says. “I’m fed
up.”
In fact, Nha Trang has added new attractions, like surfing, balloon excursions,
and diving in the bay. However, those activities aren’t for the average tourist.
Khang says the itineraries of the tours offered by travel firms haven’t changed
a bit.
Nguyen Cong Hoan at Hanoi Redtours admits that many packaged tours, whether
domestic or outbound, are virtually identical. It doesn’t matter what the
destination is.
“A lot of small travel firms save costs by copying the products of the bigger
companies,” Hoan says. But not all -- some travel firms have been trying to
‘renovate’ tours by providing added value. Generally, however, the added value
just last for a while, and disappears when the ‘season’ ends.
For example, while the World Cup matches are underway, travelers may be given
the bulletins on the results of football matches. Some travel firms are offering
opportunities for their clients to watch football matches on giant screen TV’s
after a day of sightseeing, and have free drinks. However, these amenities will
only last one month, from mid-June until the championship match in mid-July.
Similarly, a number of agencies are arranging special trips from HCM City to
Vung Tau for its July 21-25 “World Foods Festival.”
Tran The Dung at the The He Tre (‘Young Generation’) agency agrees that the
‘added value’ that travel firms provide to ‘renovate’ familiar tours tends to be
short-lived. Dung says that travelers would be very pleased if they were led to
new and attractive destinations.
On a trip to Nha Trang, for example, travelers could be led to visit My Nghiep
brocade village or Bau Cat, a Cham pottery village which is said to be the
oldest in South East Asia. Visitors to Phan Thiet could be taken to see the
lotus blooming at Phan Ri. Not far from Hue is the marvellous Lang Co beach and
fishermens’ village and the superb views from atop the Hai Van Pass.
There are many landscapes and beautiful beaches on the north-south route,
including the Đai Lanh coast in Phu Yen Province, the Sa Huynh coast in Quang
Ngai and Đa Nhay beach in Quang Binh. If they tour the northwest, travelers can
be led to the villages of the Tai, Dao and H’mong peoples.
Vietnam has lots of places with a special attraction, Dung concludes, and it is
tour leaders who ought to be the ‘living books’ that will help their clients
appreciate their country more.
However, Nguyen Minh Quyen of the Thanh Nien Xung Phong [‘Youth Attack’] Travel
Agency says that there are many objective reasons why tours become old and
uninspired. Vietnam’s infrastructure remains underdeveloped; the number of
destinations remains limited while familiar destinations cannot invest in new
products to attract travelers
Source: Phuong Ha |
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