Bac Ha market retains identity and uniqueness

Due to rapid modernisation, many markets have lost their authenticity, but Bac Ha market in northern mountainous Lao Cai province still retains its identity and uniqueness.
Due to rapid modernisation, many markets have lost their authenticity, but Bac Ha market in northern mountainous Lao Cai province still retains its identity and uniqueness.

The road to Bac Ha district is bordered by terraced rice fields, magnificent mountains and the stilt houses of ethnic minority people. Since early morning, along the road to Bac Ha, local ethnic people in their traditional costumes on horseback, on foot and sometimes on motorbike, carry goods to the market.

Bac Ha district is inhabited by 14 ethnic minority groups, predominantly H Mong, Dao, Tay and Nung. Bac Ha market is not only a trading place, but also a venue for cultural exchanges among local people.

According to the locals, previously, the market was held on a hill in the centre of town. In recent years, due to increasing demand for trading and tourism, the old market has been replaced by a new larger market.

"The market is held on Sundays, so everybody can come because the other days of the week, people have to go to work. My family sells Thang Co, buffalo meat and pork in the market. This business is more profitable than agriculture," Radio the Voice of Vietnam quoted Lu Van Dao of the Nung ethnic group as saying.

The market is divided into different sections offering different products for sale, but the most crowded corner is the culinary one. Visitors to Bac Ha market often try Thang Co, a soup made of horse viscera flavoured with local spices. This is a traditional dish of the Mong ethnic minority.

Today, Thang Co is also prepared with the viscera of other animals such as goats or cows but it still appeals to both locals and visitors. To enjoy Thang Co with more authenticity, connoisseurs accompany it with a glass or two of corn alcohol.

Bac Ha market is also a place for local people to trade buffalos and horses. Local people come to the market to buy strong horses to help them do farm work and fast ones to enter the district’s horse race.

"The Mong consider the horse a family member because it helps them a lot. At the beginning of the New Year, young men from the Mong, Tay, and Dao groups compete in a horse race to show their courage and pray for good luck for the New Year,” said Thao Seo Cau is Vice Chair of the Bac Ha District People’s Committee.

The market also sells houseware and tools. The most popular stands sell jewelry, clothing, and brocaded fabrics.

Bac Ha market is one of the few that still maintains the authenticity and uniqueness of a mountain market session. Visiting the market is an opportunity to discover the local culture.

Five years ago, the market was selected by Serendib magazine of Sri Lanka as one of Southeast Asia’s top most famous markets.-VNA

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