Viet Nam News
By Le Huong
The sun sets gradually, a huge red yolk on the saucepan of blueish clouds.
The fading light envelops vast fields. A light breeze carries the sweet scent of ears of rice, which have turned heavy and yellow with matured grains.
But this most idyllic of scenes is not quiet. The sky is rent with the sounds of hundreds of thousands of birds calling out to each other.
For eighty-year-old Nguyen Ngoc Thuyen, these are the sounds of music, a concert that makes him happy everyday.
In a way, he is the conductor of this orchestra in Thot Not District, Can Tho City, chosen by nature for the role, he knows not why.
“No one knows why the birds keep flocking to my garden,” he told Viet Nam News as he fed a wounded stork that he has been tending to for a few weeks.
He had found the black stork one morning on the ground below a high tree, unable to move. Its flock had flown away in their daily search for food.
One of the stork’s legs was broken. He took the bird home, bandaged the leg, gave it some medicine and has been feeding it everyday till it recovers and flies off to join its kin in the garden.
For the past 30 years, Thuyen has been a guardian to the birds that have chosen his garden as their home in increasing numbers, so much so that he has bought more land to host them.
Of course, a bird sanctuary draws human visitors, too, and his house has become a popular tourism spot in the Mekong Delta city.
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Family practice: Thuyen sees his garden as a maternity hospital for storks where babies are given birth to and nurtured until they are strong enough to fly away. VNS Photo Tran Hoang Nam |
Thuyen smiled as he recalled how it all began.
“In 1983, hundreds of dark-feathered stocks nested on trees in my garden. After a few months, they left, as suddenly as they’d come.
“But nearly a year later, they returned with dozens of other kinds of storks of different sizes and colours. They settled down here, and their numbers have grown steadily to several thousand now.
“In 1997, the local authorities permitted me to open my garden to tourists.”
His garden was just 2,800sq.m large in the beginning. After the birds nested there, he planted more trees. As more birds began flocking to his garden, he bought more land. His garden spans eight times larger to 22,500sq.m now.
Good for everyone
“When I saw the first baby storks born on my land, I thought I should do my best to protect them. I thought it would benefit everyone.
“More and more birds would eat harmful insects, which can help reduce the use of chemical fertilisers. It would be good for local farmers and the environment.
“When they started coming here in large numbers, I thought the garden can be an interesting tourism destination and increase my family’s income.”
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Family practice: Thuyen sees his garden as a maternity hospital for storks where babies are given birth to and nurtured until they are strong enough to fly away. VNS Photo Tran Hoang Nam |
As his dreams materialised, Thuyen, known locally as Mr Bay Co, has become something of an ornithologist.
He can spend hours talking about different species of birds like co ca, co ruoi, co quam, bac ma, cong coc, dien dien and bo nong, which mostly belong to the stork family, but look different and sport different lifestyles.
He said the birds change their residence every season.
“Storks fly to seek food in pairs or in flocks,” he said, “They find their own food all year round, but during the dry season, I often offer them extra food.
“Now you can see this kind of stork,” he said, pointing to the black stork,” but six months later they will no longer be here. Instead, there will be other birds with different feather colours, legs and beaks.”
Maternity hospital
Thuyen said he thinks of his garden as a maternity hospital for stocks. The birds give birth to babies and raise them up, but when the babies grow up, they fly away and seek homes elsewhere.
“I don’t know where the stork parents are from and where they fly to when they leave my garden,” he said. “I often joke that the maternity hospital is for both domestic and foreign storks. But when the babies grow up, they fly to other homes inside and outside the country.”
"It is good that the birds fly away every season; my garden would not be able to host them if they stayed longer," Thuyen said.
As his garden attracts more visitors, local authorities and banks have stepped in, helping Thuyen get long-term loans at low interest rates to buy more land, plant more trees, dig ponds, widen canals, raise fish and upgrade local roads.
Several thousand people visit the garden every year, but the high season for foreigners is towards the end of the year, Thuyen said.
He charges VND10,000 per Vietnamese visitor and VND20,000 per foreigner.
"Visitors are generally impressed," he added.
“This is my first time,” said Nguyen Minh Khoi, a teenager from HCM City, “The surrounding scenery is very romantic. It is great to see many storks give birth to babies here. There are a lot of big trees, so this place must suit them.
“However, it’s very difficult to get to the garden. There are no signs to direct visitors. We had to go around asking locals for directions. It would be helpful if signs are installed.”
Huynh Hoang Anh Nguyen, 27, also from HCM City said she was stunned to see the garden attracting so many birds.
However, she was of the opinion that more information displayed about the birds would make the sanctuary more attractive and helpful to children.
One official from the local culture department told Viet Nam News that authorities will continue to support Thuyen in various ways to protect the bird sanctuary.
Despite his age, Thuyen remains busy throughout the day. If he is not talking to visitors, he is planting trees, feeding fish or releasing more snails as food for the storks.
With his family members also engaged in the business now, offering drinks and snacks, helping park vehicles and keeping watch, Thuyen is happy to keep the garden going.
He has a simple message for everyone to keep in mind: “Birds gather in fertile land. And more importantly, they make friends with people who love nature.” — VNS
How to get there:
The address: Bang Lang Stork Garden, Thoi Binh I, Thuan An Ward, Thot Not District, Can Tho City.
The garden is located 60km to the south of Can Tho’s City.
From Can Tho City, follow National Highway 91 past O Mon District to reach Thot Not District, then head for the Bang Lang Bridge.
After the bridge, turn left into a small lane (big enough for a four-seat taxi). A xe om (bike taxi) is ideal on this lane. The garden is about 2km into the lane.